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Outside Conservative Conference, Wisconsinites Protest Ryan Budget And GOP Attempt To Dismantle Health Care Reform | MILWAUKEE, Wisconsin — Outside the conservative corporate front group Americans For Prosperity’s Milwaukee convention this morning, Wisconsinities gathered to protest the Ryan budget and Republican opposition to health care reform. The Grim Reaper was among the protestors, holding a sign that read, “Only a grim reaper can be excited about fewer people getting healthcare.” Protest organizer Robert Kraig of Milwaukee summed up their message to ThinkProgress: “more people will die if Obamacare is repealed.”

Climate Progress

Manmade Climate Change Accelerated In 2001-2010, World Meteorological Organization Reports

WMO: The global temperature increase rate has been “remarkable” during the previous four decades, according to the preliminary summary. The global temperature has increased since 1971 at an average estimated rate of 0.166°C per decade compared to the average rate of 0.06 °C per decade computed over the full period 1881-2010.

World Meteorological Organization annual statement for 2011 — full report here

WMO annual statement confirms 2011 as 11th warmest on record

Climate change accelerated in 2001-2010, according to preliminary assessment

GENEVA, 23 MARCH 2012 (WMO) – The World Meteorological Organization’s Annual Statement on the Status of the Global Climate said that 2011 was the 11th warmest since records began in 1850. It confirmed preliminary findings that 2011 was the warmest year on record with a La Niña, which has a cooling influence. Globally-averaged temperatures in 2011 were estimated to be 0.40° Centigrade above the 1961-1990 annual average of 14°C.

Precipitation extremes, many of them associated with one of the strongest La Niña events of the last 60 years, had major impacts on the world. Significant flooding occurred on all continents, whilst major droughts affected parts of east Africa and North America. Arctic sea ice extent fell to near record-low levels. Global tropical cyclone activity was below average, but the United States had one of its most destructive tornado seasons on record.

The annual statement for 2011 was released for World Meteorological Day 23 March. In addition, WMO also announced preliminary findings of the soon to be released Decadal Global Climate Summary, showing that climate change accelerated in 2001-2010, which was the warmest decade ever recorded in all continents of the globe.

The rate of increase since 1971 has been “remarkable” according to the preliminary assessment. Atmospheric and oceanic phenomena such as La Niña events had a temporary cooling influence in some years but did not halt the overriding warming trend.

The “dramatic and continuing sea ice decline in the Arctic” was one of the most prominent features of the changing state of the climate during the decade, according to the preliminary findings. Global average precipitation was the second highest since 1901 and flooding was reported as the most frequent extreme event, it said.

The full report will be released later in the year following further analysis of data received from National Meteorological and Hydrological Services and collaborating monitoring agencies. The decadal summary aims to increase understanding of our varying and changing climate from a longer-term perspective and complements WMO’s annual reports.

“This 2011 annual assessment confirms the findings of the previous WMO annual statements that climate change is happening now and is not some distant future threat. The world is warming because of human activities and this is resulting in far-reaching and potentially irreversible impacts on our Earth, atmosphere and oceans,” said WMO Secretary-General Michel Jarraud.

Highlights

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Economy

Norquist: Republicans (Like Reagan) Who Vote For Tax Increases Are ‘Rat Heads In A Coke Bottle’

HARRISBURG, Pennsylvania — Republican lawmakers who vote for tax increases are “rat heads in a Coke bottle,” anti-tax activist Grover Norquist said during a speech Friday at the Pennsylvania Leadership Conference, a conservative gathering where he was a featured speaker.

Last week, Norquist called Nevada Gov. Brian Sandoval a “rat” for supporting tax increases. This week, Norquist expanded the attack, saying that the same way Coca-Cola would lose customers if a rat head was found in a Coke bottle, Republicans voting for tax increases “damage the brand.” Instead, Norquist said, the GOP needs conservatives like former President Ronald Reagan who oppose taxes at all costs:

NORQUIST: Don’t raise taxes. Tax reform? Sure. Reduce rates, broaden the base, like Reagan did. … No net tax increases! [...]

Republican elected officials who vote for tax increases are rat heads in a Coke bottle.

Watch it:

By invoking Reagan to make his case, however, Norquist is again ignoring Reagan’s legacy. Reagan was a serial revenue raiser, hiking taxes a total of 11 times and in seven of his eight years in office. His 1982 tax increase was the largest peacetime increase in American history, and contrary to Norquist’s anti-tax beliefs, was immediately followed by “exceptionally strong” economic and job growth.

Norquist, of course, is well aware of Reagan’s tax raising legacy, he just chooses to ignore it. In a recent appearance on The Daily Show, Norquist laughably refused to criticize Reagan, saying he didn’t hold the tax increases against the conservative hero because “he hadn’t signed the pledge.”

Alyssa

Lionsgate Won’t Shut Down ‘Hunger Games’-Inspired Anti-Hunger Advocates

Score one for the Districts against the Capitol.

Lionsgate, which is set for a record-breaking opening weekend with its movie adaptation of the dystopian young adult novel The Hunger Games, has reconsidered the takedown notice the company sent to imagine Better, an organization running an anti-hunger campaign inspired by the franchise.

The takedown notice, exclusively reported by ThinkProgress yesterday, targeted the Hunger Is Not A Game campaign, which is building support for Oxfam’s GROW program aimed at making food aid more efficient and less wasteful. The entertainment company accused Imagine Better of “causing damage to Lionsgate and our marketing efforts” — even though Lionsgate had previously wished Imagine Better luck while declining to sign on as a formal partner.

But now Lionsgate has reconsidered in the wake of widespread fan outrage. The company will not pursue legal action to back up the takedown notice. And Kate Piliero, the vice president for corporate communications for Lionsgate’s film division, emailed me to say that the company’s main concern was that their official charitable partners for the film have exclusive use of the film’s official images and logo (Imagine Better had created its own, separate set of images and branding).

“Lionsgate’s partnership with the United Nations’ World Food Programme as well as Feeding America, both tied to the release of The Hunger Games, is helping to generate awareness of and funds for this global issue,” she wrote. “We absolutely support and encourage the efforts of organizations battling world hunger and would encourage fans to join our efforts by visiting www.hungergames.com.”

In America, if not in Panem, it seems, fans and corporations can co-exist without a legal fight to the death.

Climate Progress

Building A Business (And Culture) Around Sustainability At A Ski Resort

by Kelly Vaughn, via Rocky Mountain Institute. On March 22, RMI sat down with Matthew Hamilton and Dana Dalla Betta of Aspen Ski Company (SkiCo) to discuss solar and energy efficiency.

Since its carbon reduction efforts began in the early 1990s, SkiCo has made strides toward achieving a 10 percent carbon emissions reduction by 2012 by investing heavily in energy efficiency and renewables,. Taking its sustainability practices beyond the mountain to the company’s hotels and other operations has provided a tremendous payback. SkiCo has already witnessed 10 percent energy reductions at the Little Nell and Limelight hotels, largely achieved by upgrading equipment and increasing the efficiency of snowmelt systems.

The next stage is to optimize SkiCo’s 250 buildings, equipment, and countless operations as one system that can be tuned to reduce energy use across the board, and be powered by clean, renewable sources.

“If it’s just one or two people in a company making a commitment to sustainable operations in one or two buildings, it won’t work. Reaching our goals requires a full company commitment,” said Hamilton. “Employee engagement is the biggest struggle. We’re improving in that area every day.”

This whole-systems approach has been a hallmark of RMI since it was co-founded by Amory Lovins almost 30 years ago. Since then, RMI has worked with companies worldwide to hedge against the risks of fossil fuel volatility and gain competitive advantage by pursuing efficiency and renewables.

“Recognizing the interconnections in the system allows businesses to make better investments than they would have if these decisions were made in isolation,” said [RMI solar experts Ned] Harvey. “Getting everyone from the boardroom to the factory floor to look for opportunities often hidden in these complex systems is difficult, and it doesn’t happen overnight. But your employees can be your biggest assets in achieving energy reduction goals and allowing your company’s sustainability efforts to evolve over time.”

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NEWS FLASH

Houston Mayor Would Be ‘Shocked’ If Obama Supported Marriage Equality In 2012 | At a convening of LGBT journalists in Houston Friday evening, Mayor Annise Parker, who is openly lesbian, fielded questions about the role marriage equality in the 2012 election. She said that “it’s important to have the debate” in the Democratic Party, so long as it doesn’t cause division and take away from re-electing President Obama, who she pointed out is a better candidate on LGBT issues than any of the Republican hopefuls. As for whether Obama will complete his “evolution” on marriage equality this year, Parker said she’d be “shocked” if he changed his position because he’s already doing everything he can to support the recognition of same-sex couples. Annise Parker is serving her second term as mayor of Houston and is co-chair of the Mayors for Freedom to Marry project, which around 200 mayors have joined.

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