Monday, August 10, 2015

FREE TRADE DEALS MORE OFTEN BENEFIT THE RICH AND HURT THE POOR! 


"Many activists in Puerto Rico are calling for debt forgiveness. Others are more visceral, saying the hedge fund millionaires who caused so much of the mess can shove it.

Martha QuiƱones Dominguez, an economics professor at the University of Puerto Rico, says what's needed is an independent audit to see which creditors' claims are valid and which aren't. The island needs to raise taxes on corporations and the rich, she said, as well as invest in sustainable development to cut down on dependency and imports.

While corporate powers are pursuing another mammoth trade deal in the Pacific, similar trade regimes have bankrupted another economy in the Caribbean.

As for the hedge funds plotting against Puerto Rican workers and families, these are the same forces pushing austerity and privatization on the U.S. mainland. If they succeed in Puerto Rico, they will be more powerful than they already are — and more dangerous."  

http://teamsternation.blogspot.ca/
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Gentle People:

 Place your money on life sustaining and nature enhancing systems and remove your money from polluting non sustainable industrial economic systems. It won't be long before you are living in a Green paradise. Even giant Box stores can be life sustaining during Winter months when they provide shelter for thousands of people. These buildings can greatly improve their value by creating Greenhouse gardens on their roofs and sound-free quiet spaces that allow shoppers a few minutes to relax away from the incessant and horrible mind numbing noise currently infecting these buildings. Joseph Raglione.



Monday, August 3, 2015

Better late than never! A message from the White House.

 THE WHITE HOUSE 

Our biggest step yet in fighting climate change:
President Obama just announced America's Clean Power Plan -- the biggest and most important step our country has taken in the fight against climate change.
Our power plants are responsible for about a third of America's carbon pollution -- more than our cars, airplanes, and homes combined -- and that pollution is fueling climate change. But until now, there have never been federal limits on how much carbon pollution existing power plants can generate.
The Clean Power Plan sets the first-ever carbon pollution standards for these power plants, while providing states and utilities with the flexibility they need to meet those standards.
Watch this video on the Clean Power Plan.
You've heard the numbers by now: 2014 was the planet's warmest year on record. Fourteen out of the 15 warmest years on record fell within the first 15 years of this century. Earth's current levels of carbon dioxide, which heats up our atmosphere, are the highest they've been in 800,000 years.
We can see the effects of the changing climate in our everyday lives. Our summers are hotter. Our droughts are deeper. Our wildfire seasons are lasting longer. Our storms are more severe. And these disasters are becoming more frequent, more expensive, and more dangerous.
But as the President said today, "There is such a thing as being too late when it comes to climate change."
That's why he directed the Environmental Protection Agency in 2013 to tackle the issue of carbon pollution from our power plants -- and today's plan sets the first-ever nationwide limits on this pollution.
Learn more about the Clean Power Plan.
By 2030, this new plan will reduce carbon pollution from our power plants by 32 percent from 2005 levels. In total, it will keep 870 million tons of carbon dioxide pollution out of the atmosphere -- the equivalent of taking 166 million cars off the road, or cutting every ounce of emissions due to electricity from 108 million American homes.
Because of this plan and other steps we've taken to combat climate change, we'll reduce premature deaths from power plant emissions by nearly 90 percent by 2030, and we'll see 90,000 fewer asthma attacks among our children each year.
Combined with more investments in clean energy, smarter investments in energy efficiency, and a global climate agreement by the end of this year, we can slow -- and maybe eventually stop -- the harm we've inflicted on our climate over the past century.

https://www.whitehouse.gov/climate-change?utm_source=email&utm_medium=email&utm_content=email488-graphic1&utm_campaign=climate

A VICTORY FOR LIONS AND TIGERS AND ELEPHANTS.

A victory for lions‏

A victory for lions

To: Joseph Raglione

SumOfUs just won a victory to protect lions and other endangered animals. And it all started with a petition.
Now, you can start your own petition too! Create a petition at SumOfUs -- and if it goes well, it could be sent to the whole SumOfUs community!
Dear Joseph,
Delta Airlines just contacted SumOfUs to announce that it will officially ban the shipment of all lion, leopard, elephant, rhinoceros and buffalo trophies worldwide as freight. This is all because of people power -- 250,000 SumOfUs members called on Delta to ban the transport of 'trophies' on flights, and within days Delta announced a ban!
It's some good news after Cecil the Lion's tragic death. With airlines refusing to profit from the transport of illegal trophies, hunters will struggle to transport their prizes home and might never go on these trips in the first place.
These wins are a huge deal for lions and our most precious endangered animals. But there are thousands of other companies who need to do what's right -- if only we made them.
Now, starting your own petition against any corporation is easy with SumOfUs Community. And if it takes off, it could be sent to millions of SumOfUs members.
With SumOfUs Community, now you can start a petition just like the one that got some of the biggest airlines in the world to do the right thing. Moroccan soccer player Abdeslam Ouaddou started a petition calling on Barcelona Soccer to drop Qatar Airlines as their sponsor because of worker abuse, and tens of thousands have already signed the petition. The petition has gotten major media coverage. And a few hours after Delta contacted SumOfUs, the New York Times and other major newspapers have already contacted us to cover the campaign.
The fight against corporate power has always been one of many fronts and many faces -- more fronts than one organization could handle. But now, we are giving you the tools tolaunch your very own campaign on the issues you care about most.
From the very beginning we’ve believed in the strength of numbers (you can see proof of that in our name). So far we have focused our attention on critical issues: bringing attention to the plight of workers in Bangladesh working in sweatshop conditions, helping persuade massive fast food chains like McDonald’s to adopt more responsible palm oil sourcing policies, and protecting thousands of bunnies from being tortured in the cruel fur industry. With you at the helm, and other SumOfUs members all over the world starting campaigns to challenge corporate power, who knows what we will accomplish.
Just sign in and start a campaign. Recruit your friends. Grow the community. It’s that easy. Really.
We’ll be right here lending you support every step of the way.

Thanks for all that you do to make this movement real,
Paul, and the rest of the team at SumOfUs.org


SumOfUs is a worldwide movement of people like you, working together to hold corporations accountable for their actions and forge a new, sustainable path for our global economy. Please help keep SumOfUs strong by chipping in CA$3 .
Have a great idea for a SumOfUs campaign? Start your own petition and the best ones could be emailed to the whole SumOfUs community.
This email was sent to human4us@bell.net.
=================================

Congratulations! That is one great victory! Keep up the great work and I will keep publicizing your "SumOfUs" around the world. It would be great if you could unite with GreenPeace and a few other international non-profits. Tell Annie Leonard I sent you. She is the director of GreenPeace U.S.A. and she started small with a project known as "The Story Of Stuff." Pay the site a visit as the information is important.
Joseph Raglione.
Ex/Dir. The World Humanitarian Peace and Ecology Movement.



Sunday, August 2, 2015

SOLID PROOF OF GLOBAL WARMING AND CLIMATE CHANGE.





This Is How The World’s Climate Changed Last Year

 JUL 20, 2015 8:00AM
CREDIT: NOAA

The state of the world’s climate is complex enough that it takes 413 scientists from 58 countries half a year to completely summarize a year’s worth of data.
And 2014 was a doozy.
According to the American Meteorological Society and NOAA’s “State of the Climate in 2014″ report, several markers measuring the earth’s climatic trends set historical records. This is the 25th year that scientists have provided this report, and it was full of hundreds of pages of detailed atmospheric and oceanic summaries of what’s happening to our air, land, and water.
“The year 2014 was forecast to be a warm year, and it was by all accounts a very warm year, in fact record warm according to four independent observational datasets,” the report said. The reason: “the radiative forcing by long-lived greenhouse gases continued to increase, owing to rising levels of carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, and other radiatively active trace gases.”
The world’s experts know that climate change is happening, and why, and provide reports like these every year spelling out the impacts in excruciating detail.
“The variety of indicators shows us how our climate is changing, not just in temperature but from the depths of the oceans to the outer atmosphere,” said Thomas R. Karl, director of NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information.
For those without the time to peruse nearly 300 pages of scientific summaries, here are seven records that fell in 2014.

Heat

Average temperature in 2014 compared to the 1981-2010 average. Adapted from Plate 2.1c in State of the Climate in 2014.
Average temperature in 2014 compared to the 1981-2010 average. Adapted from Plate 2.1c in State of the Climate in 2014.
CREDIT: NOAA/BAMS
Though the world knew this back in January thanks to NOAA data, the report confirmed, and elaborated upon, the certainty around the record broken by 2014 as the hottest year on record.
With the glaring exception of the eastern North American continent, many countries — more than 20 — broke high temperature records last year. Much of Europe and Mexico had their hottest years, while Australia, Argentina, Uruguay, and much of Africa came close.
“Australia’s annual mean temperature anomaly, with respect to 1961–90, was +0.91°C, making 2014 the third warmest year for the country since national temperature records began in 1910,” the report said. The year before, 2013, was thehottest year on record.
With emissions continuing and El Nino coming on strong, it should not be a surprise that 2015 looks to easily break 2014’s global average surface temperature record.

Sea Levels

To convey the surreality of their findings, G.C. Johnson and A.R. Parsons, the authors of the Global Oceans section of the report used a tactic uncommon in climatology. Haikus. Haikus for sea level rise and rising temperatures.
Not quite El NiƱo,
North Oceans’ fluxes, warmth shift,
dance with weird weather.

Seas warm, ice caps melt,
waters rise, sour, rains shift salt,
unceasing, worldwide.
Measuring average global sea level is fantastically complex stuff. Winds can move large volumes of water around, temperature shifts can make the ocean shrink in some places and not others, while the daily tides, currents, and other variables conspire together to sabotage an accurate reading. So experts use a variety of different measurements and data streams to get something accurate and useful. And it told them that 2014 broke another sea level record.
slr
CREDIT: BASM
“Owing to both ocean warming and land ice melt contributions, global mean sea level in 2014 was also record high and 67 mm greater than the 1993 annual mean, when satellite altimetry measurements began,” the report said.
Sea levels do not rise when icebergs or ice sheets floating in them melt — the water has already been displaced. Melting land ice does make sea levels rise, and this is the cause of sea level rise that most people know. However, the heat being pumped into the oceans from the greenhouse effect not only increases the temperature, it also causes the water to expand, which makes sea levels rise.

Hot Days, Warm Nights

daysnights
CREDIT: NOAA/BAMS
“The year 2014 experienced a relatively large number of warm days,” the report said. The worldwide anomaly was the midwestern United States, which had a steady flow of Arctic cold keeping things chilly. Similarly, the world saw more warm nights and fewer cool nights outside of the Midwest.
Most of Europe had excessively large numbers of hot days and nights — daily maxima and minima. Several countries set records for warmest annual values.
“These continuous warm anomalies contributed to 2014 seeing the largest frequency of warm days and nights on record: on a continental average over a quarter of days (and nights) had temperatures in the warmest 10% of the climatological (1961–90) temperature distribution,” the report said.
The winter minimum in most of Alaska was also the warmest on record, which helped it break its regional heat record.

Storms In Hot Water

“Across the major tropical cyclone basins, 91 named storms were observed during 2014, above the 1981–2010 global average of 82,” the report said. “The Eastern/Central Pacific and South Indian Ocean basins experienced significantly above-normal activity in 2014; all other basins were either at or below normal.”
By many accounts, however, 2014 was a weak year for tropical cyclones, especially compared to the large number of strong storms in 2013. But the strong cyclones of 2014 were often extremely powerful.
Of the 91 named storms, seven became Category 5 systems: Marie and Genevieve, Cyclone Gillian, and then Super Typhoons Halong, Vongfong, Nuri, and Hagupit.
“The rate of typhoons that reached super typhoon status in 2014 was 67%, exceeding the previous record rate of 58% in 1970,” the report noted. Usually, only 23 percent of normal typhoons can hit super typhoon intensity each year.
Yearly mean Optimal Interpolation of Sea Surface Temperature anomaly.
Yearly mean Optimal Interpolation of Sea Surface Temperature anomaly.
CREDIT: BAMS
One factor at play is extremely high ocean surface temperatures.
“But it was the oceans that drove the record global surface temperature in 2014,” the report said. “Although 2014 was largely ENSO-neutral [EL NiƱo Southern Oscillation], the globally averaged sea surface temperature (SST) was the highest on record.”

Disappearing Glaciers

“In higher latitudes and at higher elevations, increased warming continued to be visible in the decline of glacier mass balance, increasing permafrost temperatures, and a deeper thawing layer in seasonally frozen soil,” the report said. This was particularly dramatic in Greenland. Warm temperatures melt ice faster than snowfall can replenish it, and darker melt pools on the top of the glaciers absorb more energy from the sun than frozen white ice.
This has been going on for decades, and the rate has been accelerating:
glacierloss
The World Glacier Monitoring Service received preliminary data from Argentina, Austria, Chile, China, France, Italy, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Nepal, Norway, Russia, Sweden, and the United States. It indicated that for the 31st consecutive year, the world saw no “positive annual balances,” of the water stored by glaciers. Specifically, the earth saw the loss of 0.853 meters of water equivalent — “the equivalent depth of water resulting from snow or ice melt.”
Since 1980, that cumulative mass balance loss hit 16.8 meters in 2014.

Pollution

The report said carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide all hit record concentrations in the atmosphere last year, as they have for essentially each year beforehand.
“Carbon dioxide increased by 1.9 ppm [parts per million] to reach a globally averaged value of 397.2 ppm for 2014,” the abstract began. “Altogether, 5 major and 15 minor greenhouse gases contributed 2.94 W/m² of direct radiative forcing, which is 36% greater than their contributions just a quarter century ago.”
ghgemissionschart
CREDIT: BAMS
Some climate watchers are familiar with the Keeling Curve, which has plotted the carbon dioxide concentration readings taken from the Mauna Loa Observatory in Hawaii since 1958. In 2013, the trackerpassed above 400 ppm for the first time in recorded history, and each year since, more days have been spent above that symbolic number.
Using other measurements to supplement the data, the report estimated that the 2014 global average was 397.2 ppm of CO2 in the atmosphere, a 1.9 ppm bump from 2013. This year, the number will continue its inexorable climb, unless global emissions slow significantly.
One graph unknown to most is the methane concentration graph, let alone the nitrous oxide graph. Those, according to the report, show a similar upward sweep. The CFC graph at the bottom alone displays a slow decline in atmospheric concentrations because the world came together more than 25 years ago to address the hole in the ozone layer CFCs were creating, and agreed on theMontreal Protocol. This limited CFCs’ use in aerosols and other products. They were largely replaced, however, by HFCs, which are also extremely potent greenhouse gases.
The CFC graph shows what a successful emissions reduction regime might look like for the other greenhouse gases.

DO YOU CONSIDER YOURSELF INTELLIGENT? GET OVER IT!

     Do you consider yourself intelligent? If yes, how about explaining the concept of eternity?....... Not easy, is it?  I am a perpetual s...