The oldest rock on earth?  Found on the moon according to Ashley Strickland of  CNN:
When the Apollo 14 astronauts returned samples from the moon's 
surface, they probably didn't realize that they were reuniting Earth 
with a bit of its early history.
The 
"moon rock" probably collided with the moon after an impact sent it 
hurtling from Earth 4 billion years ago, according to research published
 Thursday in the journal
Earth and Planetary Science Letters.
The 
researchers believe that a large comet or asteroid hit Earth and sent 
the rock up through the atmosphere and into space. The rock was able to 
make this serendipitous collision with the moon because it was three
 times closer to Earth at the time. 
The rock contains quartz, feldspar and zircon, which are very common on Earth but not so much on the moon.
They thought they were bringing us foreign rocks but they actually were merely returning to the earth what originated here.
In other news, we've been talking about the melting of the artic shelf but Don Paul (BUFFALO NEWS) reports:
That 
Greenland’s ice mass is melting faster than projected is no small thing. Simply put, it is a big thing and a bad thing for the planet.
A study 
published this week in the Proceedings of the National Academy of 
Sciences and summarized by National Geographic demonstrates the loss of 
ice mass is proceeding much faster than had been expected. A warming
 climate is the culprit, as you might guess. It is the Arctic region 
where warming is proceeding fastest, as forecast decades ago in early 
climate models.
Greenland is the world’s largest island. Its ice mass is second only to much larger Antarctica, a continent.
Michael Belvis, 
an Ohio State University geoscientist, is the lead author in this newest
 study. He is convinced Greenland has hit a “tipping point” in ice loss.
 That point began around 2002-2003, when ice mass loss
 radically accelerated. Belvis told National Geographic ice loss had 
increased by 2012 to four times the rate of loss in 2003, which was 
“unprecedented.” Much of this accelerated loss came from a part of 
Greenland which previously had been experiencing less
 ice loss than most of the rest of the island, the southwest portion. 
The ice loss from other parts of Greenland had been mainly from ice 
discharges, breaking off into the sea. This southwest ice loss has been 
mainly meltwater, as “rivers which flow into the
 sea.”
Here are a few Tweets on the topic:
- How can we morally be talking about new pipelines when the world is literally collapsing before our eyes? https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/21/climate/greenland-ice.html … “Greenland’s enormous ice sheet is melting at such an accelerated rate that it may have reached a “tipping point”#ActOnClimate#GreenNewDeal
Search results
- New Study Shows Just How Frighteningly Fast Greenland Is Melting https://earther.gizmodo.com/new-study-shows-just-how-frighteningly-fast-greenland-i-1830867678?utm_medium=sharefromsite&utm_source=earther_twitter&utm_campaign=sharebar … via@EARTH3R
- In Greenland and Antarctica, supposedly “safe” ice is melting alarmingly fast http://ow.ly/KrrA30nspjb
- Antarctica and Greenland both melting faster The Anthropocene Thermal Maximum is going to be very bad for the cryosphere. In other words, global warming is going to mean less ice, most places it's found. Now... https://www.facebook.com/EcoVoice.org/posts/2290659804291024 …
- 'We Are Watching the Ice Sheet Hit a Tipping Point': Greenland Melting Even Faster Than Feared https://goo.gl/2h1qEE
"Iraq snapshot" (THE COMMON ILLS):
This morning at NYT's AT WAR blog, Melissa Thomas shares:
When the doorbell rang on New Year’s Eve
 four years ago, I knew something was wrong. It was 9 p.m. I was alone. I
 opened the door to three men in uniform. This was something I had 
imagined many times before, although in my visions they wore Army dress 
blues instead of the grays worn by the El Paso County sheriff’s 
deputies.
My husband, Maj. 
Christopher Thomas, left in the morning to go snowshoeing in the 
mountains west of Denver. When he did not return after dark I started to
 expect the worst. He was trained as an outdoor guide and had been to 
the summits of Mount McKinley, Mount Rainier and too many of Colorado’s 
tallest peaks to count. Yet the sun was down, and he hadn’t answered my 
phone calls or text messages all day.
Chris and I were both in the military. Between us we had six deployments
 to Iraq and Afghanistan. We met in 2000 as cadets at West Point. He had
 previously served in the Army and was two years ahead of me in school. 
We went on our first date a few days before the Sept. 11 attacks: a 
picnic at a Labor Day concert by the academy’s band. He brought a 
blanket, sandwiches and a gorgeous smile over a sophisticated cleft 
chin. After Chris graduated that December, we kept up a long-distance 
relationship, including writing letters in 2003 during the invasion and 
early occupation of Iraq. Chris sent a marriage proposal in one of those
 letters, writing, “We don’t need a lavish affair, just a ceremony that 
lets us tell the world how we feel about each other, and that our family
 can come together to celebrate with us.” Then he jokingly offered to 
trade vows at home plate at Fenway Park in Massachusetts, where I grew 
up. He didn’t often show his emotions; I treasured his loving words.Melissa Thomas and her late husband served in Iraq at the start. All this time later -- the Iraq War turns 16 years old in March -- US troops are still being sent to Iraq. Indiana's TIMES-HERALD reports:
Private First Class Kyle Montgomery, Bravo Company, 326th Brigade Engineer Battalion deployed, from Fort Campbell, Kentucky, Jan. 5 to Iraq. He will be clearing IEDs and will be a primary gunner. In March of 2018 he graduated IAIT combat engineering at Fort Leonard Wood, Missouri, and in June he completed 40 hours of combat lifesaver course.
He served as the primary gunner for the platoon sergeant during rotation 18-10 at the Joint Readiness Training Center in Fort Polk, Louisiana. On Aug.3 he graduated from the Sabalauski Air Assault School 101st Air Borne Division (Air Assault) and earned the Army Achievement Medal as a machine gunner in Fort Campbell, Kentucky.
The Iraq War doesn't end, it just goes on and on.
My name is Penny Evans and I've just gone twenty-one
A young widow in the war that's being fought in Vietnam
And I have two infant daughters, I thank God I have no sons
Now they say the war is over but I think it's just begun
-- Melanie's version of "The Ballad of Penny Evans" used as an intro to "Peace Will Come (According to Plan)"
The Vietnam War dragged on for years
 and years.  One difference?  Each year the American people grew more 
and more vocal about calling for an end to it.  Of course, back then, 
the network news was the only televised news outlet.  You didn't have 
idiots like Rachel Maddow posing as reporters -- MSNBC presents her as a
 'reporter.'  She's not.  She's a talk show host and she does not do "in
 depth reporting" -- or any reporting at all -- for that matter, no 
matter how many press releases MSNBC issues.  With all these hours to 
fill, the cable channels do not do reporting.  They'll do an interview 
and pass that off as reporting or news but it's not. 
And it's always about a 'hot' topic 
that's 'trending.'  It's not about issues that actually matter.  I doubt
 anyone watching an evening newscast in the US in, say, 1967, would have
 thought the day would come where the US could be at war (multiple wars 
today, actually) and the war wouldn't be a nightly staple on the news.  
But we don't have news.  We have 
feel good clips.  We have interviews.  We have opinions.  And the 
opinions aren't even on things that matter.  
The American people are shaped by 
their media.  I don't deny that.  But let's get honest about how 
willfully stupid so many are -- especially over here on the left.  The 
Iraq War continues but they'd rather bore you with any number of other 
topics.
NEWSWEEK proclaims that the only 
winner in the Iraq War, per the US military, is Iran.  And they do it on
 the 22nd of this week.  It's the report we covered on the 18th. 
 That day, NEWSWEEK was too busy with Jason Leopold's latest implosion. 
 It hadn't imploded yet, so they spent forever running with it.  But it 
did implode, didn't it?  Maybe the next time the US military releases a 
report that they've refused to release for years, NEWSWEEK focuses on 
that and not the conjecture of a reporter who has had one scoop after 
another explode in his face?
There are real issues at play here.  But the media is too busy playing to notice.  There are exceptions.  For example, the editorial board of THE TOLEDO BLADE observes:
Toxic smoke from open burn pits in Iraq and Afghanistan may be responsible for sickening countless Americans who served there.
Just how many veterans may have suffered cancer and other illness caused by the burn pits remains unclear because military doctors are not even examining service members and veterans during regular medical exams to discover whether those who worked near the burn pits may have been affected by the toxic smoke.
A bill that would have required such screening died in Congress last year. Then, earlier this month, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear an appeal in a lawsuit filed by service members who claim their illnesses were caused by burn pit exposure.
[. . .]
In the case of Agent Orange the government dragged its feet for decades before acknowledging its responsibility and compensating victims for birth defects and other health issues related to the chemical. The U.S. must not repeat this mistake.
Supposedly, the answer is Congress. Again. And again and again. They're noting one overruling by the Supreme Court. But this issue has been going on forever. What's going to change this? Maybe some real attention. Maybe the Court would feel more vested in doing the right thing if the American people actually paid attention to these issue and the media fully covered them?
Last week, Burn Pits 360 noted:
| 
 | 
The useless cable talk shows have hours to waste. A real shame they can't highlight issues that actually matter instead of the conjecture and gossip they specialize in.
Equally true, the evening news broadcasts have no reporters stationed in Iraq. They don't cover the war (or the other wars). Even though US troops remain there. You'd think they'd at least manage to cover these wars until the troops came home. Apparently, that's expecting too much -- despite all the profits ABC, CBS and NBC generate. Once upon a time, they were expected to meet certain public needs. Not anymore, clearly.
The media rushed to declare ISIS defeated and vanquished in Iraq (December 2017). Maybe so they'd be able to stop talking about Iraq? It seemed to tax them so, didn't it? As we noted repeatedly, ISIS was not gone. This morning, XINHUA reports:
Iraq's security forces' increasing dependence on thermal cameras is now met by a new tactic from the Islamic State (IS) militants, who tried tinfoil cloaks to evade detection by the cameras.
"Thermal cameras played a major role in monitoring IS militants' movements in rugged areas in northern Diyala, such as Himreen mountainous area," Abu Ahmed al-Shammari, leader of Hashd Shaabi, told Xinhua.
According to Shammari, Hashd Shaabi foiled an infiltration attempt by IS militants four days ago in al-Safra area, some 90 km north of Diyala's provincial capital Baquba despite tinfoil cloaks worn by some of the extremist militants.
Other news?
ASHARQ AL-AWSAT reports:
The Iraqi Parliament failed on Thursday to vote on Prime Minister Adel Abdul Mahdi’s new candidates for the education and justice ministries, respectively Safana al-Hamdani and Rakan Qader Wali.
Parliament voted Wednesday on the country’s general budget for 2019. On Thursday, it was set to approve the PM’s proposal for the two cabinet posts. However, Abdul Mahdi, who should have attended the session to present some clarifications about a decision by the cabinet secretariat general to restrict the powers of deputies, failed to show up. He did not give any reasons for his absence.
And he still hasn't been able to select a Minister of Defense or Interior despite the war continuing in Iraq. He's a failure and US troops have to remain on the ground to prop him up. It's the 'strategy,' US troops must repeatedly prop up these puppets until one finally takes.
No wonder the war never ends.
The following community sites -- plus Jody Wately and PACIFICA EVENING NEWS -- updated:








 
