Last week, I was blogging about the permafrost melting ("The
permafrost is melting -- and that's scary"). This is from Stephanie Pappas (LIVE SCIENCE):
As levels of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide rise and warm the
globe, Antarctica's ice will become more vulnerable to cycles on an
astronomical scale, particularly the tilt of our planet is as it spins
around its axis.
New research finds that over 30 million years of history,
Antarctica's ice sheets responded most strongly to the angle of
Earth's tilt on its axis when the ice extends into the oceans,
interacting with currents that can bring warm water lapping at their
margins and leading to increased melting. The effect of the
tilt peaked when
carbon dioxide levels were similar to what scientists predict for the next century, if humans don't get emissions under control. [Collapsing
Beauty: Image of Antarctica's Larsen Ice Shelf]
As carbon dioxide levels push past 400 parts per million, the climate will become more sensitive to the Earth’s tilt, or obliquity, researchers reported Jan. 14 in the journal Nature Geoscience.
As carbon dioxide levels push past 400 parts per million, the climate will become more sensitive to the Earth’s tilt, or obliquity, researchers reported Jan. 14 in the journal Nature Geoscience.
I guess that goes to how interconnected we all are -- ourselves, our environment, etc. THE WEATHER CHANNEL adds:
Currently, the Antarctic ice sheet holds about 90 percent of the world's ice, and if it were all to melt,
sea level would rise some 240 feet, according to the U.S. Geological
Survey. If the rest of the glacier ice on Earth were to melt — a measly
25 feet on top of Antarctica's drastic total — every coastal city on
the planet would flood.
I should also note this from CNN:
Last year was the hottest for the planet's oceans since global
records began in 1958, according to an international team of scientists
who track the data. Their findings were
published Wednesday in the scientific journal Advances in Atmospheric Sciences.
The
year 2018 passed the previous record set just the year before, in 2017;
the top five years of ocean heat have come in the last five years. Last
year continues a startling trend of global ocean warming that is a
direct result of humans' warming of the planet, the authors say.
So each of the last five years have been the warmest? Not good.
Yes, they've only been tracking this since 1958 but still not good.
"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):
Wednesday, January 16, 2019. In Iraq, the war continues -- maybe even
heats up -- but in the US the media is as useless as it was in the lead
up to 9/11 attacks. It can offer useless gossip, it just can't cover
the most basic events of the day.
Patrick Martin (WSWS) observes:
When President Trump made a prearranged call in to Jeannine Pirro of Fox News during her Saturday night program, she asked him, in a joking tone, “Are you now or have you ever worked for Russia, Mr. President?” Pirro was clearly phrasing the question as a way to mock the media assault spearheaded by the Times, and Trump responded in kind, denouncing the question as “the most insulting thing I’ve ever been asked.”
The Times and its media chorus responded, however, as Senator McCarthy would have. “Aha,” they declared, “Trump didn’t answer the question directly. He’s hiding something!” The newspaper’s web site noted the exchange with Pirro on Sunday, writing, “Mr. Trump did not directly answer the question.”
This became the media mantra over the next 24 hours.
The Associated Press: “[T]he president avoided directly answering when Pirro asked whether he currently is or has ever worked for Russia.”
The Hill: “President Trump late Saturday declined to directly answer a question from Fox News host Jeanine Pirro about whether he had ever ‘worked for Russia,’ calling it ‘insulting.’”
The Washington Post’s opinion editor, James Downie: Pirro’s question “triggered a two-minute rant, none of which included the word ‘no.’”
Similarly questions were raised on the Sunday television interview programs, with CNN’s Jake Tapper, host of “State of the Union,” playing a tape of the Pirro-Trump exchange and declaring, “The president did not directly answer the question.”
The media commentary came full circle with a front page report by Peter Baker of the New York Times, published Monday, which began: “So it has come to this: The president of the United States was asked over the weekend whether he is a Russian agent. And he refused to directly answer.”
Baker’s “news analysis,” an editorial in all but name, declared that this question—in effect, whether Trump is guilty of treason, a capital offense—“has hung over his presidency now for two years.”
What a load of nonsense from our idiotic and wasteful media. All it's going to take is one 9/11 to send them all scattering yet again from the lawn of Senator Gary Condit and have them insisting that they've learned their lesson. Remember that? Does anyone? They were going to be real and serious and stop the endless chatter by actually focusing on real news.
ADDED 12:48 pm EST 1/16/19, NPR reports, "American troops were killed in an explosion in northern Syria, the spokesperson for the U.S.-led coalition against the Islamic State says. The ISIS extremist group has claimed responsibility." This is real news, the endless chatter of basic cable 'news' is garbage.
They don't know real news, they know cheap coverage of gossip and that's all they've got, that's all they'll ever have. They are useless and they waste our time with their drivel.
In the real world, wars take place, wars continue and they don't have time to cover those, they lost interest long ago. Better to be the global Ethel Mertz than to ever actually provide any coverage that actually matters.
Another 9/11 and they'll be revealed as the useless gossips they are.
Don't think another one could happen? The Council on Foreign Relations begs to differ. On their "Top Conflicts to Watch in 2019" is a terrorist attack:
Of the thirty contingencies included in this year’s Preventive Priorities Survey, a mass casualty terrorist attack on the U.S. homeland—or a treaty ally—by a domestic or foreign terrorist was assessed as a top tier priority for the United States in 2019. The contingency was deemed moderately likely to occur and, if it does, of having a high impact on U.S. interests.
Repeating: "This year, a mass casualty terrorist attack on the U.S. homeland or treaty ally was included as a top tier priority in the Center for Preventive Action’s annual Preventive Priorities Survey."
And still the media wastes all of our time with nonsense.
"The most trusted name in news"? Did I just hear people chuckle? Yeah, I think I did.
Remember the Iraq War?
Patrick Martin (WSWS) observes:
When President Trump made a prearranged call in to Jeannine Pirro of Fox News during her Saturday night program, she asked him, in a joking tone, “Are you now or have you ever worked for Russia, Mr. President?” Pirro was clearly phrasing the question as a way to mock the media assault spearheaded by the Times, and Trump responded in kind, denouncing the question as “the most insulting thing I’ve ever been asked.”
The Times and its media chorus responded, however, as Senator McCarthy would have. “Aha,” they declared, “Trump didn’t answer the question directly. He’s hiding something!” The newspaper’s web site noted the exchange with Pirro on Sunday, writing, “Mr. Trump did not directly answer the question.”
This became the media mantra over the next 24 hours.
The Associated Press: “[T]he president avoided directly answering when Pirro asked whether he currently is or has ever worked for Russia.”
The Hill: “President Trump late Saturday declined to directly answer a question from Fox News host Jeanine Pirro about whether he had ever ‘worked for Russia,’ calling it ‘insulting.’”
The Washington Post’s opinion editor, James Downie: Pirro’s question “triggered a two-minute rant, none of which included the word ‘no.’”
Similarly questions were raised on the Sunday television interview programs, with CNN’s Jake Tapper, host of “State of the Union,” playing a tape of the Pirro-Trump exchange and declaring, “The president did not directly answer the question.”
The media commentary came full circle with a front page report by Peter Baker of the New York Times, published Monday, which began: “So it has come to this: The president of the United States was asked over the weekend whether he is a Russian agent. And he refused to directly answer.”
Baker’s “news analysis,” an editorial in all but name, declared that this question—in effect, whether Trump is guilty of treason, a capital offense—“has hung over his presidency now for two years.”
What a load of nonsense from our idiotic and wasteful media. All it's going to take is one 9/11 to send them all scattering yet again from the lawn of Senator Gary Condit and have them insisting that they've learned their lesson. Remember that? Does anyone? They were going to be real and serious and stop the endless chatter by actually focusing on real news.
ADDED 12:48 pm EST 1/16/19, NPR reports, "American troops were killed in an explosion in northern Syria, the spokesperson for the U.S.-led coalition against the Islamic State says. The ISIS extremist group has claimed responsibility." This is real news, the endless chatter of basic cable 'news' is garbage.
They don't know real news, they know cheap coverage of gossip and that's all they've got, that's all they'll ever have. They are useless and they waste our time with their drivel.
In the real world, wars take place, wars continue and they don't have time to cover those, they lost interest long ago. Better to be the global Ethel Mertz than to ever actually provide any coverage that actually matters.
Another 9/11 and they'll be revealed as the useless gossips they are.
Don't think another one could happen? The Council on Foreign Relations begs to differ. On their "Top Conflicts to Watch in 2019" is a terrorist attack:
Of the thirty contingencies included in this year’s Preventive Priorities Survey, a mass casualty terrorist attack on the U.S. homeland—or a treaty ally—by a domestic or foreign terrorist was assessed as a top tier priority for the United States in 2019. The contingency was deemed moderately likely to occur and, if it does, of having a high impact on U.S. interests.
Repeating: "This year, a mass casualty terrorist attack on the U.S. homeland or treaty ally was included as a top tier priority in the Center for Preventive Action’s annual Preventive Priorities Survey."
And still the media wastes all of our time with nonsense.
"The most trusted name in news"? Did I just hear people chuckle? Yeah, I think I did.
Remember the Iraq War?
MOOSE81 100214 #USAF C17A tracking south over #Iraq, east of Baghdad. Operation #InherentResolve. 1232z
The American media doesn't appear to. How strange when you remember how many lies that they repeated and concocted to start that illegal war.
US military officers in Anbar province in #Iraq, who occupy Iraq against the wishes of the Iraqi parliament...
demanded to inspect Hashd Al-Shaabi units (Popular Mobilization Forces), which Hashd immediately rejected.
Why does the US continue to treat Iraq like a US colony?
Jane Arraf shows up on NPR's MORNING EDITION today to offer, "There's an ongoing push here among some political parties to get rid of the US troops in Iraq. The prime minister, yesterday, here said there were 6,000 of them still here."
"Among some"? It's the Parliament, Jane.
After Trump's Visit Iraq Wants All US Troops Out. #Iraq wants us out of their country, I don't blame them: #Iraqi parliament demands timeline for foreign troop withdrawal via aaboulenein, Ahmed_Rasheed_R reuters.com/article/us-mid… …
But she learned to spin at CNN, after all. Another issue? If the prime minister is stating 6,000, that's a higher number than the US government has told the American people. Somehow Jane missed that, didn't she?
Strange she can remember it for Twitter:
And despite the prime minister's claims, others insist the number of US troops in Iraq is unknown.
#Iraqi politician, Nayef al Shamari, says that the @IraqiGovt does not know the exact number of #US #troops or #bases in #Iraq #failedstate
THE NATIONAL notes MP Wajih Abbas:
"The actual number of US forces in Iraq is 9,000, we do not have accurate information on their whereabouts or what their role is," Mr Abbas said, adding that it is vital for parliament to intervene to reduce their presence on Iraqi land.
Jane Arraf misses so much in her little over three minute NPR segment.
For example, she speaks to and quotes the president of Iraq's spokesperson Lukman Faily. She doesn't note who he is other than the spokesperson. Starting in 2013, for example, he was the Iraqi ambassador to the US. Today, he's just a spokesperson. Talk about a public demotion. And, though you'd never know it to look at him, he was only born in 1966. Apparently, being a coward ages you -- yes, he's yet another person the US put in charge -- another coward who fled Iraq and lived abroad for decades until the US-invaded Iraq.
Meanwhile, MIDDLE EAST MONITOR reports:
US
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has called on the Iraqi government to
disarm 67 Shia militias and freeze their activities in preparation to
them being disbanded. In response to the US request, Iraqi Prime
Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi has asked Washington to give him some time to
act.
Why the sudden interest? Hmmm.
#Iraq's Hashd Al-Shaabi forces block US troops from conducting survey along Syrian border: report
Does that explain it?
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