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Poll: 51% Call Boehner’s Lawsuit Illegitimate A majority of Americans view House Speaker John Boehner’s (R-Ohio) lawsuit over President Obama’s delayed implementation of ObamaCare’s employer mandate as a “political stunt,” according to a new poll released Monday. The survey, commissioned by liberal advocacy group Americans United for Change, found that 51 percent of voters don’t believe the lawsuit is legitimate, versus just 41 percent who do. Moreover, 56 percent say the lawsuit is wasteful spending, with just 36 percent saying it is a good use of taxpayer dollars.
Through Lens, 4 Boys Dead by Gaza Shore Tyler Hicks, New York Times, in Gaza City: I had returned to my small seaside hotel around 4 p.m. to file photos to New York when I heard a loud explosion. My driver and I rushed to the window to see what had happened. A small shack atop a sea wall at the fishing port had been struck by an Israeli bomb or missile and was burning. A young boy emerged from the smoke, running toward the adjacent beach. I grabbed my cameras and was putting on body armor and a helmet when, about 30 seconds after the first blast, there was another. The boy I had seen running was now dead, lying motionless in the sand, along with three other boys who had been playing there.
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California homeowners warned about brown lawns LOS ANGELES (AP) — Some homeowners following the state’s new drought-conscious motto that brown is the new green are being warned by local governments that they could be slapped with fines because of those dried up lawns.
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Obama: Don’t fund infrastructure with a “Band-Aid” President Obama urges Congress to pass long-term funding for infrastructure improvements instead of just kicking the can down the road with short-term funding solutions.
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Fox News host Greta Van Susteren sharply criticized Fox News correspondent Todd Starnes for “very bad taste” over tweeting petty attacks on the president in response to the deadly crash of Malaysia Airlines Flight MH17.
Starnes has tweeted that Obama isn’t “interested” in the crash because it doesn’t involve “beer or golf,” “Russia bracing for a severe hash tag from the Obama Administration,” and “Obama won’t comment on Malaysian jetliner crash until he’s had a chance to read tomorrow’s paper.”
In a post on her blog headlined, “NOTE TO FNC’s TODD STARNES: THIS IS VERY BAD TASTE, 295 PEOPLE DIED,” Van Susteren wrote: “I was just sent a Mediaite article with these tweets on it. I don’t know Todd Starnes (he works in NYC), but I do know he works at Fox News Channel and so do I. I don’t like his tweets. They are very bad taste. This is not the time to be snarky or some pathetic attempt at humor. Let me repeat… 295 people died.”
Starnes is also a Fox News Radio host and frequent presence on the Fox News Channel. He has a long history of incendiary remarks about progressives, the LGBTcommunity, and the president.
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A Humanitarian Crisis That Brings Out the Worst In Us Mike Littwin, RealClearPolitics There is a rush to send the children back. That’s the message we get from Washington. There are 50,000 unaccompanied minors at the border now. The number may grow to as many as 90,000 by year’s end. It doesn’t seem to matter so much why they came here, just so long as they go. We hear stories. We hear awful stories. Stories of rape and murder and even dismemberment. There is the now famously sad quote from the young boy to the Women’s Refugee Commission: “In El Salvador, there is a wrong — it is being young. It is better to be old.” The young are…
Children’s Deportations; God and Man in Arkansas; Apollo 11 Carl M. Cannon, RealClearPolitics Good morning. It’s Wednesday, July 16, 2014. Forty-five years ago today, at 9:32 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time, Apollo 11 was launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida. Destination: the surface of the moon. On their third day in space, after having voyaged 240,000 miles, astronauts Neil Armstrong, Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin, and Michael Collins entered into lunar orbit. The following day, Sunday, July 20, 1969, the landing vehicle known as Eagle, with Armstrong and Aldrin aboard, separated from the command module and began its historic descent to a place on the moon’s surface named…
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EU summit fails to fill two top jobs EU leaders fail to agree on who should fill two top EU jobs, foreign policy chief and European Council president, and will meet again on 30 August.
“If they keep their commitments,” President Barack Obama said on Wednesday, referring to the two remaining contenders for the Presidency of Afghanistan, then the country “will witness the first democratic transfer of power” in its history.
Secretary of State John Kerry forged those commitments last weekend, when he flew in to prevent a coup attempt and succeeded, for now. His dealmaking salvaged the possibility that, almost thirteen years after the United States and its allies installed Hamid Karzai in power, there would be a manageable political transition in Kabul.
“Would you rather have a one percent tax increase on everyone in the country or kill one percent of the population? Because it’s about the same impact [on GDP].”
When it comes to obstacles to climate action, the climate change deniers in American government are pretty well known. But there’s also a subgroup of “reasonable” critics who concede the science of climate change, then denythatanythingparticularlydramatic needs to be done about it policy-wise.
Their argument revolves around something economists call GDP, and they use to wriggle out of supporting major climate action by effectively saying, “Yeah, even if climate change is real, it’s not going to be a big deal.”
For the uninitiated, “gross domestic product” (GDP) is the total value, in dollars, of all the goods and services produced by the American economy in a given year and it’s become the go-to measure of our society’s material standard of living and even its general well-being. The U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) generally projects that losses to global GDP from climate change will be between one and five percent per year by century’s end, assuming the planet warms 4°C in that time. (We could hit 6°C or more assuming the world makes no major changes.) One to five percent is a seemingly small number. So the “reasonable” skeptics then argue an all-hands-on-deck effort to cut greenhouse gas emissions is unnecessary, and that it would likely reduce GDP even more than doing nothing.
But to hear Kate Gordon tell it, this is a terrible way to frame the debate.
Gordon is the Vice President at Next Generation, the nonprofit founded by hedge fund manager turned environmental activist Tom Steyer. When Steyer and several heavy-hitters in the economics world decided to spearhead a study of climate change’s coming impact on the U.S. economy — down to the effects by county — they brought Gordon on as executive director, running the nuts and bolts of the project.
“I hate talking about GDP, frankly,” Gordon said. “Business decision-makers and people who work in individual sectors don’t think about GDP. It’s not their metric. They think about their own supply chain, their own business, their own decision making. They think very regionally because they are in particular places, and they think about very specific impacts.”
The same goes for most lawmakers at the state and national level. In Gordon’s experience, no one who works outside the realm of macro-economic planning at the national policy level talks about GDP.
“It masks everything,” she said.
Modeling Complex Systems Is Really Hard
Start with the practical difficulties: we’ve been tallying up GDP for most of this century, but projecting climate change’s impact on the economy is a whole other ballgame. On their own, the climate and the economy are enormously complex systems for computer models to even crudely replicate. Accounting for the effects of the first system on the second simply compounds the problem. So complexities, complicating factors, and feedback loops that could have profound ripple effects are all simplified away, because we just don’t have the information to know how to appropriately model those effects.
“Risky Business,” the report Gordon headed up, dealt with this problem by going deep rather than broad. They focused on three sectors of the economy where lots of data is available on how past changes in climate and weather affected productivity and behavior: energy, agriculture, and coastal infrastructure. Using forty climate models, they projected how global warming would affect those sectors going forward, and teased out the resulting impacts on labor productivity, mortality, and crime.
What affect climate change would have on water scarcity — and how that would in turn impact the economy — wasn’t included because there wasn’t sufficient data available at the time. Increased wildfire risks, and the way rising heat makes air pollution more toxic weren’t included because of the complexities involved.
Relative change in water resources at 2°C of warming compared to present day. Color is percent change, color saturation is degree of agreement between models. (See below at right.)
CREDIT: Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research
Those choices are representative of the choices any attempt to model the economic impacts of climate change has to make. “We took a really conservative approach to the data,” Gordon said.
Yet even with those simplifications, the potential hits “Risky Business” found to national GDP varied widely, from a two-thirds chance GDP would drop one to five percent, to a one-in-twenty chance it would drop ten percent. The variations depended on how the model was designed and how much a human life is valued in dollar terms, serving as a concrete lesson on how difficult it is to actually project climate change’s affect on GDP.
Other models can also descend into ad absurdum results pretty quickly. For example, most scientists agree an 18°C rise global temperatures would literally render the Earth uninhabitable. But the standard computer model used by the IPCC projects that rise would only cut global GDP by half.
Lord Nicholas Stern, a climate change economist, put together a previous report for the British government that estimated global GDP reductions between five and twenty percent. And more recent work by Stern and others to create more sophisticated versions of the IPCC model yield GDP projections that are two-thirds lower under the business-as-usual scenario.
Global consumption per capita, 2000 – 2200, under different assumptions for modeling economic and climate systems.
CREDIT: Simon Dietz & Nicholas Stern, Working Paper No. 180 – June 2014
The point isn’t so much that one approach is better than the other, but that GDP projections are flung all over the map even by small changes to input information or underlying assumptions of the models. It’s just an inherently bad metric for understanding the damage climate change will do.
How Do You Put A Price Tag On Africa?
Another problem with measuring climate change with one single GDP number is that it requires ignoring vast differences between states, regions, communities, and socio-economic strata. That can hide tremendous amounts of real human suffering that’s hard to put a price tag on. “You have to aggregate all of the impacts up to one number,” Gordon said. “Which is insane.”
She offered agriculture as an example: “We have a gigantic country with extremely different climate zones. If you want to move little corn symbols around on a map from place to place, you can move them all up north and then they’re still there,” Gordon said. “So that’s not that big a hit to GDP overall. But it’s a huge hit to the Southern Midwest and the Southeast.”
Another example of the inherent perversities in using GDP overall is Hurricane Katrina: the catastrophic event was ultimately a net positive for national GDP, even as it was a negative for Louisiana’s state GDP, because of all the construction jobs created and the materials bought during the reconstruction of New Orleans. Yet Katrina also killed thousands, and nearly obliterated the social fabric of an entire city, with all its accompanying history and culture. Similarly, moving all of those crop symbols up north could be a net positive for GDP, but would also entail uprooting or even completely destroying communities and ways of life that have existed throughout the Midwest and Southeast for generations. How all that should be valued, and how much we should sacrifice as a society to avoid it, is a question GDP calculations cannot even begin to answer.
Or consider issues like ecosystem services and ocean acidification. The former encompasses all the functions the natural world performs that are of value to human society — such as crop production, the way coastal marshlands can blunt storms, and the ability of plant life to prevent soil erosion. The latter is the way carbon dioxide is absorbed out of the atmosphere and into the oceans, changing the chemical makeup of the water.
The science of how to measure and objectively value ecosystem services is still in its infancy, and as Gordon pointed out, we don’t really know how to model the economic effects of ocean acidification because we’ve never seen it happen before. But ocean acidification and the changes to ecosystem services could vastly reshape Earth as we know it. The IPCC’s own model hints that anywhere from 40 to 70 percent of Earth’s species could go extinct if greenhouse gas emissions stay on their current trajectory.
So what value do we place on the ocean’s coral reefs and the myriad animals they support, and how do we weigh their loss against other values? What price tag do you put on a species of bird or fish or mammal which, once gone, will never return? How does humanity weigh moral accountability if our own carbon emissions contributed to that destruction?
The point can be summed up with a simple example: the continent of Africa has amounted to something around three to five percent of global GDP for the last two centuries. In other words, losing one to five percent of GDP is arguably the equivalent of the entire African economy simply disappearing from the planet. That’s 1.1 billion people, many exceedingly vulnerable to the worst impacts of climate change. Does it make any moral sense to say the IPCC’s projections don’t justify dramatic action, simply because the GDP percentage is small?
Trevor Houser, one of Gordon’s colleagues, sometimes asks, “Would you rather have a one percent tax increase on everyone in the country or kill one percent of the population? Because it’s about the same impact [on GDP].”
Think Of It Like Insurance
To their credit, most actual economists realize GDP was never meant to measure something as sweeping as the well-being of a society. It’s politicians and the figures and writers encased in the macroeconomic debate in Washington, DC that have focused on it to the exclusion of all else. Gordon argues against using GDP at all, and concentrating instead on the risks of what climate change could actually do to people and communities.
On the question of how much we should spend to ward off climate change, Gordon uses the common experience of buying insurance as an analogy. When buying a health care plan, everyone instinctively considers factors like their own risky behaviors (like smoking), their own family history (say, heart disease), their future economic prospects and their future lifestyle, among many others.
“People make adaptation and mitigation decisions in their own lives, and then buy insurance because of things that are a probability but not a certainty,” Gordon continued. “But you wouldn’t just say, ‘I don’t believe that there’s any impact there. I don’t believe those numbers are true so I’m not going to buy insurance.’ Unless you’re a very high risk person.”
She recommends going granular: giving different businesses owners, different industrial sectors, different voter constituencies, and politicians from different congressional districts the information on how climate change could impact them and the people their responsible for directly. That makes the risks personal and concrete. People can imagine how their own home, businesses, or community might change, and everyone can deal honestly with who faces what risk. If you’re a property developer in Miami, for instance, the threat climate change and rising seas pose to the city probably won’t matter to your economic calculations, because you’ll likely get the money you sunk into the development back in five years or so. But if you’re an insurer in the city, or the government backing that insurance, or you’re a bond rater underwriting long-term investments in new bridges, roads, or sewer systems, then climate change starts to loom very large indeed.
Number of dangerously hot and humid days per year under business-as-usual carbon emissions. These days would be equivalent to the hottest and most humid parts of current Louisiana summers.
CREDIT: “Risky Business” prospectus
Another thing that is standard practice in risk management techniques is breaking down the odds of a particular event. When deciding how much to pay to avoid a risk, you don’t just factor in the likelihood. You factor in the damage that would come if the risk panned out. So even if a particular result of climate change has a low probability of occurring, it could also inflict massive damage if it does occur. In which case, you’d be justified in spending the same amount of money to avoid it as if you were anticipating a low-damage risk with a high probability of occurring. At Washington, DC’s roll-out conference for the “Risky Business” report, one of Gordon’s colleagues compared climate risk to national security risk by taking former Vice President Dick Cheney’s famous quip that “if there was even a one percent chance of terrorists getting a weapon of mass destruction … the United States must now act as if it were a certainty” — replacing “terrorists getting a weapon of mass destruction” with “extreme climate change impacts.”
So the report also broke risks into a “likely” category — meaning a spread of outcomes that all had a roughly 67 percent chance of occurring — versus events that fell into the one-chance-in-twenty category. (To return to the health insurance analogy: one-in-twenty is the risk the average American faces of developing colon cancer.)
Within the “likely” category by 2100? A national shift from about seven days every year getting over 95°F, to an average of 50 days a year. For the eastern half of the country, a few days each year where both heat and humidity are so high people cannot sweat to stay cool, so remaining outside risks their health or even their lives. Thanks to the heat, there’s also a potential drop of two percent for the nation’s labor productivity, and a one-in-twenty chance of a three percent drop — “like losing all of Connecticut’s labor force.”
“But it’s also preventable,” Gordon added. “Unlike some of the sea level rise that’s already baked in, we can actually bring some of those numbers down on heat. If we act. If we cut back emissions now.”
That’s especially important for climate change, which is different than many other problems risk management assesses. Those other risks can go up and down over time due to political factors, security factors, etc. But because the risks of climate change are driven by the accumulation of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere, the risks just keep ratcheting up the more we release. “What are today outlier risks become the median over time,” Gordon said. “So we have to plan for that.”
So talking about climate change as a matter of specific risks, rather than as a matter of GDP or of carbon taxes or who’s to blame for the problem, is the strategy Gordon goes with: “I’ve already gotten traction with that with audiences that do not want to have a conversation necessarily about who caused climate change. If you begin there you’d have a big climate denial conversation.”
As deceptive right-wing attacks on Social Security continue, some Democrats have gone on the offensive—seeking to expand rather than cut the vital program.
On Sept. 11th, 2001 George Bush said he would catch bin Laden dead or alive.
He never did, we used to run a counter showing how many days it had been, but Obama finally took care of it for him. Just another Bush lie.
The Hollywood Liberal started in 2004 at the height of the Bush Administration madness in America.
We were inspired by the late great Bartcop.com. The very first thing I did when the site started was to get arrested at the 2004 Republican National Convention in New York. My arrest at the start of a march from The World Trade Center was later ruled unconstitutional by a federal judge. On New Years Eve 2014 the case was finally settled, with a judge awarding a class action suit that I was part of over $26 Million. I posted daily on the blog up until the end of The Bush error, and the site is now run as a history of the whole fiasco. Feel free to browse the old postings, pictures, & comics (an HL favorite) It reveals the twisted history of the times. Thanks H.L.