Brett Kavanaugh Accuser Goes Public: ‘I Thought He Might Inadvertently Kill Me’

HuffPost

Brett Kavanaugh Accuser Goes Public: ‘I Thought He Might Inadvertently Kill Me’

Hayley Miller, HuffPost        September 16, 2018

The GOP Rode The Trump Train, And Now It’s Derailing

HuffPost

The GOP Rode The Trump Train, And Now It’s Derailing

Michelangelo Signorile, HuffPost        September 13, 2018

Homeland Security Shifted $10 Million From FEMA For Immigrant Crackdown, Senator Says

HuffPost

Homeland Security Shifted $10 Million From FEMA For Immigrant Crackdown, Senator Says

Nick Visser, HuffPost       September 12, 2018 

 

Homeland Security shifted $10 million from FEMA for crackdown on immigration

Here’s what would happen if the Sahara was covered in solar and wind farms

Digital Trends – Science

Here’s what would happen if the Sahara was covered in solar and wind farms

Luke Dormehl, Digital       September 11, 2018 

Trump administration rushes to lease federal lands

Yahoo News

Trump administration rushes to lease federal lands

Alexander Nazaryan                    September 11, 2018 

Wildfire that closed key California highway explodes in size

Associated Press

 Associated Press       September 9, 2018

Climate Change Could Completely Transform Earth’s Ecosystems

Climate Change Could Completely Transform Earth’s Ecosystems

By Olivia Rosane       September 1, 2018

Lake Atescatempa in Guatemala has dried up due to drought and high temperatures. MARVIN RECINOS / AFP / Getty Images

Fifty two million years ago, crocodiles swam in the Arctic. Twenty thousand years ago, an ice sheet covered Manhattan. Earth’s ecosystems have changed dramatically as the climate has shifted, and now scientists are trying to determine how they might respond to the current era of human-caused climate change.

Forty-two scientists contributed to a study published in Science Friday that examined how land-based plants had responded to temperature changes of four to seven degrees Celsius since the height of the ice age in order to predict how land-based ecosystems might respond to similar temperature changes predicted for the future.

They found that, if we do not act quickly to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, the earth’s entire terrestrial biome is 75 percent likely to change completely, impacting biodiversity and making life difficult for anyone whose livelihood is based around an ecosystem as it exists now.

“Having this kind of change occur at such a massive scale in such a short period of time is going to create unprecedented challenges for natural-resource management,” study author and U.S. Geological Survey climate scientist Stephen Jackson told The Atlantic.

The researchers looked at 594 examples of ecosystem change over time to get an understanding of what sorts of changes we could expect from unmitigated global warming.

“Five miles from where I sit is the middle of the Sonoran Desert and Saguaro National Park,” Jackson told The Atlantic from his desk in Tucson, Arizona. “Today, there’s big saguaro cacti, mesquite trees, ironwood trees. If we were to roll back the calendar 20,000 years, and we went to the same place, we would find a woodland of evergreen trees.”

But while the period the researchers studied spanned around 21,000 years, similar temperature changes could occur within the next 100, and the speed of change could have a major impact.

“If you’re a wildlife manager and your ecosystem changes, if you’re a forest manager trying to respond to wildfires, if you’re a water manager who is responsible for converting rainfall estimates into reservoir levels,” Jackson told The Atlantic, “then the old rules are not necessarily going to apply.”

Another study, published Thursday in Trends in Ecology & Evolution, looked at how the individual species within ecosystems might respond to these dramatic temperature changes.

The study, led by the Center for Macroecology, Evolution and Climate at the University of Copenhagen, looked to the past to see how plants and animals had responded to changes in their environment over the past million years.

“From fossils and other biological ‘archives,’ we have access to a nearly limitless number of case studies throughout Earth’s history. This provides us with valuable knowledge of how climate changes of various rates, magnitudes and types can affect biodiversity,” Jackson, who also co-authored the second study, said in a University of Copenhagen press release.

Scientists had previously believed species would simply migrate in response to changing climates, but the historical examples reviewed for this study showed they often adapted over time by changing their behavior or body color or shape.

However, researchers were concerned the pace of current climate change might be too fast for evolution to keep up.

“We know animals and plants have prevented extinction by adapt or migrate in the past. However, the models we use today to predict future climate change, foresee magnitudes and rates of change, which have been exceptionally rare in the last million years,” co-author Francisco Rodriguez-Sanchez from the Spanish Research Council (CSIC) said in the university release.

Rodriquez-Sanchez said more research was needed to predict how species might respond to current climate change, but hoped the past examples of successful adaptation could help policy makers craft effective conservation decisions.

Stunning Victory for Indigenous Nations as Canada Halts Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion

EcoWatch

Stunning Victory for Indigenous Nations as Canada Halts Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion

By Lorraine Chow         August 30, 2018

Pipeline intended to cross Jasper National Park in the Canadian Rocky Mountains. Robert McGouey / Getty Images

A Canadian court “quashed” approval of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion on Thursday, a major setback for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, whose government agreed to purchase the controversial project from Kinder Morgan for $4.5 billion Canadian dollars (U.S. $3.5 billion) in May.

It’s a stunning victory for Indigenous groups and environmentalists opposed to the project, which is designed to nearly triple the amount of tar sands transported from Alberta to the coast of British Columbia.

The Federal Court of Appeal ruled that the National Energy Board’s review—as explained by the Canadian Press—”was so flawed that the federal government could not rely on it as a basis for its decision to approve the expansion.”

The project has been at the center of widespread protests from environmental groups and First Nations ever since November 2016, when Trudeau approved a $7.4 billion expansion of the existing Trans Mountain pipeline that would increase the transport of Alberta tar sands oil from the current 300,000 barrels per day to 890,000 barrels per day and increase tanker traffic nearly seven-fold through the Burrard Inlet.

Specifically, the court said it was an “unjustifiable failure” that the National Energy Board did not consider the environmental impacts of the increased tanker traffic.

The court additionally concluded that the government “fell well short” with properly consulting with the Indigenous groups involved in the case, including the Tsleil-Waututh and Squamish on British Columbia’s south coast.

The ruling will force the National Energy Board to redo its review of the pipeline and the government to restart consultations with the Indigenous groups. It also means that the construction that has already began in central Alberta must cease.

In effect, the court has halted the 1,150-kilometer project indefinitely and it will remain in “legal limbo until the energy regulator and the government reassess their approvals to satisfy the court’s demands,” CBCwrote about today’s decision.

Notably, the decision was made the same day Kinder Morgan’s shareholders voted to approve the $4.5 billion sale to Canada, which means the country owns a proposed pipeline project that could be subject to years of further review, the publication pointed out.

The court’s judgment could be appealed a final time to the Supreme Court of Canada.

The Minister of Finance Bill Morneau said that the government has received the ruling and will review the decision.

Largest offshore wind farm opens off England’s coast

engadget

Largest offshore wind farm opens off England’s coast

It can power nearly 600,000 homes.
By Mallory Locklear      September 7, 2018
Ørsted 

The largest offshore wind farm to date has officially opened off of the Cumbrian coast in the Irish Sea and it has the ability to power 590,000 homes. The 659-megawatt Walney Extension takes up an area roughly the size of 20,000 soccer pitches and is made of 87 wind turbines. “The UK is the global leader in offshore wind and Walney Extension showcases the industry’s incredible success story,” said Matthew Wright, the UK managing director at Ørsted, the Danish company that developed the wind farm. “The project, completed on time and within budget, also marks another important step towards Ørsted’s vision of a world that runs entirely on green energy.”

While Walney Extension may currently be the largest offshore wind farm in the world, it won’t be for long. A number of other larger projects are in the works including ScottishPower’s East Anglia One and Ørsted’s Hornsea Projects One and Two. East Anglia One and Hornsea Project One, which have capacities of 714 megawatts and 1,200 megawatts, respectively, are both scheduled to be operational in 2020. The 1,400-megawatt Hornsea Project Two is scheduled to be operational by 2022 and will be capable of powering 1.8 million homes.

Bob Woodward’s Reporting Shows Trump’s Very Good Brain Is Trapped in the 1980s

Esquire

Bob Woodward’s Reporting Shows Trump’s Very Good Brain Is Trapped in the 1980s

Most of Donald Trump’s “knowledge” is just fragments of reality that have been fermenting, completely unexamined.

By Jack Holmes       September 5, 2018

Donald J. Trump;Kate Wollman [Misc.]Getty ImagesTed Thai.

As the President of the United States flails about wildly in response to a new book on his White House, desperately insisting that he has never called his own attorney general “mentally retarded,” there’s somehow a school of thought that there’s nothing much to see here. We already knew Donald Trump was a vindictive know-nothing, the thinking goes. We knew members of his staff work to prevent him from wreaking even more havoc on the world. But in addition to the revelations about how senior staffers literally steal documents off Trump’s desk to stop him from unleashing chaos on a whim, there are further insights into how the president’s brain works.

Surprise, surprise: it doesn’t work all that well. Axios also got its hands on a copy of Bob Woodward’s Fear:

“Several times [chief economic adviser Gary] Cohn just asked the president, ‘Why do you have these views [on trade]?’ ‘I just do,’ Trump replied. ‘I’ve had these views for 30 years.’ ‘That doesn’t mean they’re right,’ Cohn said. ‘I had the view for 15 years I could play professional football. It doesn’t mean I was right.'”

This is a stunning reminder that what constitutes Donald Trump’s knowledge is mostly just fragments of reality he internalized around 1982. They have been fermenting there ever since, continually filtering through his kaleidoscopic reasoning faculties as he dispenses crank observations at cocktail parties, never to be altered or removed because the governing forces of his psyche are almighty stubbornness and delusional ego. The president’s views on trade are his views because they’ve been his views for 30 years. They’re right because they’re his views and always have been. For Christ’s sake, this is trade. No wonder he’s said climate change is a Chinese hoax.

President Trump Holds Listening Session With Business Leaders

He also just doesn’t believe in reality. He’s also incredibly lazy.

Trump to Tom Bossert, the president’s adviser for homeland security, cyber security and counterterrorism, who asked Trump if he had a minute: “I want to watch the Masters. … You and your cyber … are going to get me in a war — with all your cyber shit.”

Jesus Christ almighty, the man thought that once you get elected the job basically involves watching TV coverage about how great you are. Plenty of time for golf, too. And there’s even golf on the teevee!

It’s easy to take a more passive approach when you genuinely don’t care about what happens to people you’re not related to—which is what longtime Trump chronicler Tim O’Brien highlighted in Bloomberg this morning:

Trump – about to be on the receiving end of a potentially damaging book written by a Washington insider with bipartisan, established credentials – is utterly calm on the recording. And he’s calm, despite daily temper tantrums over media coverage, because he generally doesn’t care about the long-term damage he might inflict on himself or those around him as long as he’s the center of attention.

This plays out in larger and more troubling ways as well, according to Woodward’s book, and history may judge most of Trump’s White House team and political party harshly for enabling the president’s radical solipsism. After Trump criticizes the U.S.’s military commitment to South Korea, one White House adviser asks Trump what he would “need in the region to sleep well at night.”

“I wouldn’t need a [expletive] thing,” Trump replies. “And I’d sleep like a baby.”

He knows nothing about anything and cares less. That’s just as true if the thing is a person. It’s even debatable whether he’d bat an eye if the kid who shares his name is thrown in the slammer. Meanwhile, he’s retweeting his chief of staff and Secretary of Defense as they boldly deny ever calling him “unhinged,” an “idiot,” or having the mental sophistication of a “sixth-grader.” It’s all about him, and anything in the world can be contorted, however implausibly, to keep the air in his heaving balloon of an ego. It’s all as it seems, but that doesn’t make it any less horrifying.