Watch out Whole Foods. The Sri Lankan army, who no longer is at war with the defeated Tamil Tiger rebel group, has turned to selling vegetables to the country’s poor populace in order to counteract the increasing costs of living there. With economic problems riddling the South Asian nation of Sri Lanka, the country’s army has moved to sell vegetables at a fixed price lower than current market value. —JCL The BBC: As the people of Sri Lanka grapple with the rising cost of everyday living, the country’s huge army has started buying up vegetables from producers. It is then selling them on at fixed prices lower than current shop prices. The army, which no longer has a war to fight, says it is doing its bit to ease people’s lives in peacetime. Read more Related Entries January 7, 2011 Food Riots Rock Algeria January 7, 2011 Jobless Rate Drops as People Give Up Looking
Continue reading …The Algerian capital city of Algiers has been rocked by protest this week after a doubling of food prices and a hovering 25 percent unemployment rate sparked dissent in the North African nation. The Algerian government has deployed police and shut down scheduled soccer games in response to the demonstrations. —JCL The Guardian: Fresh rioting broke out in Algiers today as police were deployed around mosques and football matches were suspended after protests over food prices and unemployment. Riot police armed with teargas and batons maintained a strong presence around the Algerian capital’s main mosques. In the popular Belcourt district, rioting resumed after Friday prayers. Young protesters pelted police with stones and blocked access to the area. The official APS news agency said protesters ransacked government buildings, bank branches and post offices in several eastern cities overnight, including Constantine, Jijel, Setif and Bouira. In Ras el Oued this morning, buildings belonging to the state-run gas utility Sonelgaz, the council and the tax authority were seriously damaged along with several schools, APS reported. Read more Related Entries January 7, 2011 Food Riots Rock Algeria January 7, 2011 Jobless Rate Drops as People Give Up Looking
Continue reading …Parts of China evacuated for extreme cold weather, an area in Australia the size of Texas under water, extended periods of colder weather and record floods. In the meantime, via Treehugger , the news of the official murder of the House climate change committee. In keeping with the Republican motto of “See no evil” , global extreme weather will accelerate and, I suppose, the rest of us are probably screwed for good. I have to say, I don’t think we’re the only people who are noticing that the Republicans are destroying the planet, and at some point, someone’s going to start shooting these evil people. And then they will not only have destroyed the environment, but the last vestiges of a civil society. Oh well! We knew it was going to happen, and now it has: Republicans have killed the House Select Committee for Energy Independence and Global Warming. They did so as promised, shortly after taking office. The committee was designed specifically to shape policy on global warming and energy issues. Since its creation in 2006, it held 80 hearings and briefings, according to Mother Jones . Here’s what the Committee accomplished, and why it will be missed: Tackling issues from the politicization of climate science to the explosion of the Deepwater Horizon, the committee held 80 hearings and briefings. It played a role in shaping policy for the 2007 energy bill, the 2009 stimulus package (which included $90 billion in energy, efficiency, and other green elements), and, of course, the 2009 climate bill (the one that never became law, of course, because the Senate didn’t act on it). That’s Mother Jones on a few of the highlighted achievements of the science-based committee’s tenure. The committee, lead by a bipartisan coalition of both Republican and Democratic leaders, helped steer the US towards greener policies. It brought climate scientists and skeptics together for debate, and put on Congressional record the scientific evidence behind the wide scope of the threat posed by global warming. Under the leadership of chairman Ed Markey (D-MA), it was a prolific and productive body — and its influence will be missed in Congress. This will especially be the case as those who disbanded the committee assume power — the nascent Republican-lead Congress is unlikely to make any effort at all to address climate change. Over 50% of the incoming Republican congressmen are on record as being opposed to any kind of climate policy (and most are stated climate skeptics ), and the leadership is actually considering opening a congressional investigation on alleged wrongdoing of climate scientists. Some Republicans even wanted to keep the global warming committee alive solely to use it to mock Democrats and climate scientists.
Continue reading …In what can only be described as a fairly stunning display of hypocrisy , Freshman Rep. Richard Nugent (R-FL) says he will pay $9,000 to keep his health insurance through his “employer”, not through the FEHBP plan for members of Congress because he might have an accident and need treatment he couldn’t otherwise afford. NUGENT: I will tell you this, what I will pay for insurance to get through my employer, not through the House, will be almost — will costs me $9,000 more a year. But I wan to remain with that, because I think it’s the right thing to do. Because I think that when you have Americans that are struggling, why should I get a cost saving because I just got elected to the United States House of Representatives? How nice for Rep. Nugent. He has options, like keeping that insurance through his ‘employer’. Only, isn’t his employer the House of Representatives now? I paid a visit to his website to see who employed him before he was elected. It seems he was the Sheriff of Hernando County. In fact, in all of the literature I’ve been able to find about him, I cannot find any evidence that he has ever been employed by a business. He was in the military, and then in law enforcement. It’s possible he worked for the Sheriff’s department long enough to have earned the right to keep his health insurance with them until he is Medicare-eligible, in fact, since his bio indicates he began his public safety career in 1972. If so, then what we have here is a guy who is a career public servant with a public pension and a right to health insurance without fear of being dropped for pre-existing conditions, with a nice fat paycheck from the US government to help pay the premiums. And he would never, ever go without health insurance, right? Here’s another freshman Republican Representative who may be even more of a hypocrite than Nugent — Rep. Michael Grimm , (R-NY). He’s upset because he couldn’t get on the Congressional plan fast enough and is quoted in a print article as saying this: “What am I, not supposed to have health care?” Grimm told the New York Daily News (the article hasn’t appeared online, only in print). ” It’s practicality. I’m not going to become a burden for the state because I don’t have health care and, God forbid I get into an accident and I can’t afford the operation…That can happen to anyone. ” God forbid. Which is why Rep. Grimm thinks it’s a great idea to repeal that access for everyone else. Got it.
Continue reading …enlarge Credit: LIFE Magazine Shown: Gingrich and his “frequent breakfast companion” circa 1997. I was aware that Newt Gingrich was having an affair with Callista Bisek while impeaching Bill Clinton for the same exact thing. I was also aware that Vanity Fair Magazine had referred to Ms. Bisek as the Speaker’s “frequent breakfast companion.” I did not know that his extramarital affair lasted six years. I believe Newt Gingrich did pay the $300,000 fine leveed by the House Ethics Committee . I also remember that he resigned in disgrace to the House of Representatives, whether he has any shame or not. Explain to me why ABC News and Politico are able to discuss his potential 2012 candidacy without leaving laugh-spittle all over their pixels.
Continue reading …The hold of Mexican narcotraffickers has overflowed the country’s southern border, as the Mexican Zeta cartel has seized control of parts of northern Guatemala, leading the government there to suspend local civil liberties and declare a state of siege in the area. —JCL The Guardian: Narco gangs have opened a new front in South America’s expanding drug war by seizing control of parts of northern Guatemala, prompting the government to suspend civil liberties and declare a state of siege in the area. Hundreds of soldiers have reinforced police units in an offensive against a Mexican cartel known as the Zetas which is said to have overrun Alta Verapaz province. The mayhem has deepened alarm that Mexico’s drug war has spilled across southern neighbours and corrupted state institutions that are proving no match for well-funded, ruthless crime syndicates. Read more Related Entries December 30, 2010 New Year’s Call for a Border Reboot December 24, 2010 Happy Holidays
Continue reading …Bad news on the U.S. job front: While the country’s unemployment rate took its biggest drop since April 1998, the decrease was due not so much to a recovering economy, but to the fact that 260,000 people have given up looking for work. A problem with existing job figures is that those who are employed part-time, and those who have given up looking for work, are not counted in the overall unemployment figure. For a more appropriate gauge of unemployment, try the “underemployment” measure. —JCL The BBC: The US unemployment rate dropped to 9.4% in December from 9.8% in November, the biggest one-month drop since April 1998, official figures show. Some 103,000 jobs were created last month, the Labor Department said, although this was fewer than the 145,000 to 175,000 forecast. The lower rate came not only because more people found jobs, but also because 260,000 had given up looking. Read more Related Entries December 30, 2010 New Year’s Call for a Border Reboot December 24, 2010 Happy Holidays
Continue reading …I was 14 years old and it was just after dinner on the last day of summer vacation in the Alabama portion of Southern Jersey, where the only black people I ever saw were sunburned Italians. Related Entries December 30, 2010 New Year’s Call for a Border Reboot December 24, 2010 Happy Holidays
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Bill O’Reilly’s show is becoming a real snoozefest these days, which may be why I glazed over his discussion of religion with David Silverman of American Atheists earlier this week, which mostly entailed O’Reilly accusing atheists of “insulting” believers by running ads calling religion a “scam.” Fortunately, Nicholas Graham at the HuffPo has more patience than I and happened to notice this little exchange: O’REILLY: I’ll tell you why [religion's] not a scam, in my opinion: tide goes in, tide goes out. Never a miscommunication. You can’t explain that. SILVERMAN: Tide goes in, tide goes out? O’REILLY: See, the water, the tide comes in and it goes out, Mr. Silverman. It always comes in, and always goes out. You can’t explain that. Seriously? I mean, we knew that Bill O’Reilly was fond of pushing around his right-wing prejudices as conventional wisdom, and he’s displayed ignorant buffoonery on many an occasion. But this is epic ignorance, the kind you really don’t expect from a major TV news anchor. Hell, I bet even Glenn Beck knows that the tides are created by lunar cycles. So, yes, Bill, we can explain that. Quite scientifically and quite precisely, in fact. From Wikipedia : Tides are the rise and fall of sea levels caused by the combined effects of the gravitational forces exerted by the Moon and the Sun and the rotation of the Earth. Most places in the ocean usually experience two high tides and two low tides each day (semidiurnal tide), but some locations experience only one high and one low tide each day (diurnal tide). The times and amplitude of the tides at the coast are influenced by the alignment of the Sun and Moon, by the pattern of tides in the deep ocean (see figure 4) and by the shape of the coastline and near-shore bathymetry. Most coastal areas experience two high and two low tides per day. The gravitational effect of the Moon on the surface of the Earth is the same when it is directly overhead as when it is directly underfoot. The Moon orbits the Earth in the same direction the Earth rotates on its axis, so it takes slightly more than a day—about 24 hours and 50 minutes—for the Moon to return to the same location in the sky. During this time, it has passed overhead once and underfoot once, so in many places the period of strongest tidal forcing is 12 hours and 25 minutes. The high tides do not necessarily occur when the Moon is overhead or underfoot, but the period of the forcing still determines the time between high tides. The Sun also exerts on the Earth a gravitational attraction which results in a (less powerful) secondary tidal effect. When the Earth, Moon and Sun are approximately aligned, these two tidal effects reinforce one another, resulting in higher highs and lower lows. This alignment occurs approximately twice a month (at the full moon and new moon). These recurring extreme tides are termed spring tides. Tides with the smallest range are termed neap tides (occurring around the first and last quarter moons). We’ve known about this for some time, Bill. In fact, Isaac Newton famously first accurately described and predicted tides by lunar cycles in the Principia, published in 1687. Next from O’Reilly: The calendar is proof that God exists and religion is not a scam. You can’t explain why we have 365 days every year, can you?
Continue reading …Appearing on FNC's Fox & Friends on Friday, NewsBusters publisher and Media Research Center president Brent Bozell reacted to the resignation of National Public Radio executive Ellen Weiss and credited the incoming Republican Congress: “NPR is hearing footsteps, their hearing the footsteps of Republicans, who are saying…what in the world are we doing spending hundreds of millions of dollars a year on this network that is completely unnecessary.” As NewsBusters' Tim Graham earlier reported , an internal review of NPR's firing of news analyst and Fox News contributor Juan Williams led to Weiss being forced out.
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