Today’s blog might appear downright scary, especially to those who believe there’s no cause for concern, but good and courageous people don’t deserve to have scare tactics used against them. My intention here is not so much to scare you, but to affirm your right to know.
Some time back, I hastily scanned a headline which
seemed to indicate Noam Chomsky wanted to address the same theme, but I cannot
find the article. What I have found is a talk by Chomsky opining that the two
greatest dangers facing humankind (and presumably other animals and plants of a
non-human-kind) are global warming and nuclear war.
I want to offer the opinion here that the greatest
danger facing livingkind is global warming acting
in concert with the nuclear apparatus of both the war-and energy-making
kind.
Here’s how the scenario works:
1. The economic rationale for establishing a nuclear
plant (there are some nearly 95 still chugging away in the U.S. and irradiating
the air, ground water, and soils wherever the wind takes their ventings) is to
supply the nation with enough weapons-grade plutonium to keep the nuclear war
program in full swing.
2. Water: Fuel rods, whether they are located within
the reactor itself or in “spent” fuel pools require cooling water at all times.
As the planet heats up with the burning of fossil fuel (and the U.S. armed forces
are one of the worst global polluters) water no longer has the capacity to keep
those nuclear plants cooled. For example, during the last month, some reactors in
France and Finland had to be temporarily shut down because the water had become
too warm to cool them. Or consider
the potential of some accident as nuclear waste is transported over land or water,
as a plan proposes for the Great Lakes; or Edison’s
storage plans for San Onofre’s nuclear waste which place it barely above the
level of seas which promise to rise.
San Onofre at high tide |
3. Fires: As fires continue occurring and spreading
with greater frequency, they run the extreme danger of reaching irradiated
ground, such as, for example, the land surrounding the nuclear weapons lab at
Los Alamos, which they did in 2011.
4. Which leads me to conclude that the nuclear war
we dread so much may not be in the form of an active fire exchange so much as a
slow war presently being waged passively against all forms of life on Earth.
Popular
Resistance carries an article titled the Suicide of
Capitalism which makes the point that “capitalism thinks
that there is absolutely nothing to worry about, that whatever it’s doing will
result in no harmful outcomes, and that anyone who tells it not to do such a
thing is a hoaxer of the worst order. Inadvertently killing oneself with a
loaded handgun is bad enough. What capitalism is doing of course is far worse. Not
only will it kill itself as a system, but it will likely take our species along
with many others right along with it.” Another article says we have time for life on
Earth till 2026.
William Blum writing in
the anti-empire report yesterday sums one of these threats up neatly:
“The argument
I like to use when speaking to those who don’t accept the idea that extreme
weather phenomena are largely man-made is this….We can proceed in one of two
ways:
- We can do our best to limit the greenhouse effect by curtailing greenhouse gas emissions (carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide) into the atmosphere, and if it turns out that these emissions were not in fact a significant cause of the widespread extreme weather phenomena [we are seeing], then we’ve wasted a lot of time, effort and money (although other benefits to the ecosystem would still accrue) or
- We can do nothing at all to curtail the emission of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, and if it turns out that these emissions were in fact the leading cause of all the extreme weather phenomena, then we’ve lost the earth and life as we know it. So, are you a gambler?
Protest war in
all forms, and nuclear war actively by joining Code Pink or any other organization working for
peace.
Become an
active anti-nuclear activist by monitoring the Nuclear Information and Resources website, and
following its suggestions.
Read this.
Energy & climate
leadership
Ireland passes a bill divesting its #370 million worth of investments in fossil fuel companies
within the next five years. (Your town can too!)
India’s Karnataka province produces more renewable energy
than the Netherlands.
With Tesla’s help, the island of Samoa is going 100%
renewable.
Antonio
Vicente replants thousands of acres of Brazil heartland creating forests where
nothing grew and restoring active water flows. (worth watching.)
Thanks to advocacy, Levi’s makes an ambitious commitment to
tackle pollution in its supply chain.
Renovagen, a UK company, markets solar panels which can be
rolled out from a trailer.
Clean up of the Great Pacific Garbage Patch begins.
After a ten-year-long campaign, the Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals rules that the EPA must ban chlorpyrifos, a toxic pesticide linked to
brain damage in children.
Monsanto is ruled “guilty on all counts’ and ordered to pay
$289 million in Roundup Cancer lawsuit.
With their merger pending, Bayer shares plunge after court
orders Monsanto to pay $289 million to cancer victim
NFWF awards $2.2 million to 59 projects nationwide to
restore wildlife habitat and urban waters,
In just five years, China plants 83.5 millions acres of new
forest, saving animals from extinction.
Chinese scientists have invented solar panels that can generate
power at night.
Physicians for Social Responsibility announces Arjun
Makhijani, life-time anti-nuclear activist and president of the Institute for
Energy and Environmental Research, received their 2018 Visionary Leader Award.
Discovery of resistant corals off the coast of Sulawesi may
teach scientists how to save reefs around the world.
New Zealand Proposes planting 1 billion trees to fight
climate change.
Dominica launches one of the strongest plastic bans in the
world.
“Aerial Art Action” demands end to planned fossil fuel
extraction in Portugal.
Portugese coast from the air |
65 California communities opposed offshore drilling plan.
Chicago’s NEIS spends a year planning a Congressional
briefing on the “Age of Decommissioning” nuclear reactors and dealing with radioactive wastes.
Federal Court orders full environmental review of Trump’s
“Illegal Rubber Stamp” of the Keystone XL
A federal appeals court’s ruling finds U.S. Forest Service
neglected its long-standing concerns regarding soils erosion and orders work on
the million-dollar Mountain Valley Pipeline to stop.
Citizen groups sue Atlantic Coast pipeline, taking aim at
the federal certificate that undergirds all other permits for the complex
interstate gas project.
Court rules that Chevron must pay for environmental mayhem
in Ecuador.
Freedom of the Press
In coordinated editorials, hundreds of newspapers denounce
Trump’s attack on media.
Although
unreported, the Time’s No. 2 lawyer tells a group of judges that a prosecution
of Julian Assange could have dire consequences for The Times itself.
Thanks to
advocacy, the Sinclair-Tribune merger is derailed, kicked to an administrative
hearing process that signals its death knell.
Mexican
journalist Emilio Gutiérrez Soto is freed from detention.
Immigration
Senate Dems demand immediate action to reunite immigrant
families torn apart by Trump.
A group of
refugees from Central America facing beatings and abuse in detainment launch a
legal battle against ICE, the GEO group’s private prison, and the City of
Adelanto, and its “concentration camp” prisons.
Federal court
orders broad changes in how the U.S. detains and treats migrant children.
Elizabeth
Hotzman addresses a letter to Kirstjien Nielsen, Secretary of Homeland Security
urging her to resign.
Lancaster
County, PA., says no to GEO Group, a for-profit prison company.
Cosecha’s anti-ICE
protests target Northeastern contract with ICE.
A recent
Supreme Court decision causes some deportation orders to be tossed and cases to
be thrown out in a procedural issue over how to properly provide notices to
immigrants to appear in court for deportation hearings.
District
Judge John Bates rules the DACA program should be fully restarted.
Labor
New Zealand
company makes a 4-day week permanent after trial success.
Domestic
workers in Seattle win most comprehensive Bill of Rights in the U.S.
In Indianapolis, entire construction crew walks off the job
after racist boss fires Latino co-workers for confronting him.
Thanks to unions, Disneyland’s non-union workers are getting
a big raise.
Voters reject Missouri right-to-work law.
Resistance
For four hours, the Kings Bay Plowshares appeared before
U.S. Magistrate Stan Baker arguing that all charges against them be dropped
based on the Fifth Commandment: Thou Shalt Not Kill.
Indiana church replaces “detained” immigrant Holy Family
with new display—your own reflection.
In the face of massive community opposition, the BLM
suspends plans to capture and remove the wild horse herd from Gardnerville,
Nev.
Thousands of small businesses join day of action for net
neutrality.
International
Politics
Extradition of Catalan leader fails, calling for resolution
in which King Carlos offers to negotiate.
Warm welcome greets Ahed and Nariman Tamini as they are
released from Israeli prison. (Ahed slapped Israeli soldier in the face
following the shooting of her brother in the face.)
After 432 days behind bars, Taner Kilic, honorary chair of
Amnesty Turkey, has been released.
Domestic Politics
Kochs admit single payer health saves trillions. Health
costs would go down, and wages would increase.
U.S. District court Judge Beryl A, Howell rules against
bundling super pac donations to political candidates, invalidating Federal Election Commission (FEC) regulations
that allowed contributions to so-called dark money organizations to avoid
disclosure.
Kansas City doctors team up to pay off $1.4 million in
medical debt for local patients.
Medical marijuana initiative is filed in Mississippi.
Voters in Vermont, Connecticut, Minnesota, and Wisconsin
cast their ballots, nominating impressive women candidates, Christine
Hallquist, Jahana Hayes, Ilhan Omar, and incumbent Tammy Baldwin and Amy
Klobuchar. Senator Tina Smith, former lieutenant governor of Minnesota, secured
the Democratic nomination ahead of a special November election allowing her to
serve the remainder of her term and union organizer and ironworker Randy Bryce
wins Wisconsin’s first district primary hoping to replace Speaker Paul Ryan. And
in Wisconsin progressive candidates
Mandela Barnes, Marisabel Cabrera, Jeff Smith, and Sarah Godlewski win big.
Calling into question Trump administration’s claims that
continuing reliance on fossil fuels is necessary for energy dominance, only 1%
of offshore drilling leases sells at auction.
Fox News correspondent resigns amid reports that network
staff are sick of acting as a Trump propaganda channel.
Bob McCulloch, the Missouri prosecutor who refused to indict
Michael Brown’s killer, loses race to Wesley Bell in epic upset.
Sharice David, a Kansas Democrat could become the first
Native American woman ever in congress.
With the help of activists the Carl D. Perkins Career and
Technical Education Act guaranteeing federal funding for school equality
regardless of zip code, is approved by both houses.
Watchdog groups call for access to all records of SCOTUS
toxic nominee Kavanaugh.
Chicago may become the largest U.S. city to try universal
basic income.
Under a new Government-funded scheme, male, pale and stale
university professors to be given reverse female minority mentors to help them
confront their own biases.
And best rose of all, following 187 organizations calling
for a mass protest, AP reports that Trump’s $92 million military extravaganza is postponed—to next year.
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