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<font size="+1"><i>August 13, 2018</i></font><br>
<br>
[confrontational anger - see video]<br>
<b><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/protesters-rips-zinke-who-snaps-you-havent-served_us_5b6f819ce4b0bdd06209e0ed">Protester
Confronts Zinke On Climate Change, He Snaps: 'You Haven't
Served'</a></b><br>
"I'd like to see your child have to fight for energy," the Interior
secretary at the conservative Freedom Conference.<br>
By Mary Papenfuss<br>
A protester at a Colorado right-wing conference challeged Interior
Secretary Ryan Zinke over his failure to recognize the danger of
climate change, and he inexplicably blasted her for not "serving."<br>
It wasn't clear if Zinke meant serving in the government or the
military.<br>
The confrontation occurred Friday in Steamboat Springs at the
Freedom Conference, which features "leading conservative thought and
policy leaders."<br>
Local protester Sallie Holmes stood up during a speech by Zinke,
calling out: "Why won't you acknowledged that climate change is
causing and accelerating wildfires, even in Routt County?"<br>
Steamboat Springs is located in Routt County in western Colorado,
where officials have been battling fires.<br>
Holmes, 27, was immediately escorted out by security as the crowd
booed. Zinke angrily shouted: "You know what? You haven't served and
you don't understand what energy is. I'd like to see your child have
to fight for energy."<br>
Holmes added as she was being led out the door: "Our community is
suffering because you will not acknowledge climate change." <br>
Zinke appeared to be implying that Holmes had no standing to
complain about the Trump administration's position on climate change
because she hadn't "served," and he assumed she knew nothing about
energy.<br>
- - - -<br>
She said she was stunned by Zinke's anger as he jabbed the air with
his finger and angrily yelled at her. <br>
She said it was her first time participating in such a protest. The
ticket to get into the event cost her $382, she told HuffPost.<br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/protesters-rips-zinke-who-snaps-you-havent-served_us_5b6f819ce4b0bdd06209e0ed">https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/protesters-rips-zinke-who-snaps-you-havent-served_us_5b6f819ce4b0bdd06209e0ed</a></font><br>
<br>
<br>
[10 min video of wildfire news ]<br>
<a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://tamino.wordpress.com/2018/08/13/year-of-wildfires/#comment-102148">Year
of Wildfires</a><br>
Posted on August 13, 2018<br>
As bad as it has been, it's going to get worse.<br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x5cDWh7PH4I">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x5cDWh7PH4I</a></font><br>
<br>
<br>
[Climate Grief]<br>
<b><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://www.yesmagazine.org/mental-health/the-best-medicine-for-my-climate-grief-20180809">The
Best Medicine for My Climate Grief</a></b><br>
A climate scientist talks to a psychologist about coping with the
crushing stress related to climate change. Here's what he learned.<br>
Peter Kalmus [talking with Renee Lertzman] posted Aug 09, 2018<br>
Sometimes a wave of climate grief breaks over me. It happens
unexpectedly, perhaps during a book talk, or while on the phone with
a congressional representative. In a millisecond, without warning,
I'll feel my throat clench, my eyes sting, and my stomach drop as
though the Earth below me is falling away. During these moments, I
feel with excruciating clarity everything that we're losing-but also
connection and love for those things.<br>
<br>
Usually I don't mind the grief. It's clarifying. It makes sense to
me, and inspires me to work harder than ever. Occasionally, however,
I feel something quite different, a paralyzing sense of anxiety.
This climate dread can last for days, even weeks...<br>
- - - - -<br>
With so much at stake-our security and normalcy; the futures we'd
envisioned for our children; our sense of progress and where we fit
in the universe; beloved places, species, and ecosystems-the
psychology is going to be complex. So I reached out to Renee
Lertzman to gain insight into how we're coping with such huge
impending losses. Lertzman is a psychologist studying the effects of
environmental loss on mental health and the author of Environmental
Melancholia: Psychoanalytic Dimensions of Engagement.<br>
"There is overwhelming research that distress and anxiety relating
to climate is on the rise," she told me. "Many people, I'd argue,
are experiencing what I'd call a 'latent' form of climate anxiety or
dread, in that they may not be talking about it much but they are
feeling it."<br>
<br>
If we're feeling these emotions or if we know others who are, it
would be helpful to talk about them. "The main thing is that we find
ways to talk about what we are experiencing in a safe and
nonjudgmental context, and to be open to listening. All too often,
when anxiety or fear comes up, we all want to push it away and move
into 'solutions.'"<br>
- - - -<br>
Finally, I actively work to be hope-oriented. In the film
Melancholia, about a mysterious planet on a collision course with
Earth, the protagonist passively accepts, even embraces, apocalypse.
Nothing can stop it; ecological annihilation is inevitable.<br>
<br>
Modern climate change is completely different: It's 100 percent
human-caused, so it's 100 percent human-solvable. If humans pulled
together as if our lives depended on it, we could leave fossil fuel
in a matter of years. This would require radical change across
global society, and I'm not suggesting it will happen. But it could,
and this possibility leaves open a middle path, something between
sweeping climate action and an unavoidable planetary collision-a
rapid cultural shift, one that we all can contribute to through our
conversations and our daily actions. And that's a very hopeful
thing.<br>
<br>
<font size="-1">If you're having suicidal thoughts, or know someone
who is, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at
1-800-273-8255 (TALK).</font><br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.yesmagazine.org/mental-health/the-best-medicine-for-my-climate-grief-20180809">https://www.yesmagazine.org/mental-health/the-best-medicine-for-my-climate-grief-20180809</a></font><br>
<br>
<br>
PUBLIC HEALTH<br>
<b><a
href="https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2018/08/10/637704465/in-parts-of-california-blanketed-with-wildfire-smoke-breathing-is-a-chore">In
Parts Of California Blanketed With Wildfire Smoke, Breathing Is
'A Chore'</a></b><br>
- - - - -<br>
Lisa Suennen, 52, who lives in Marin County, about 100 miles from
the Mendocino fire, has gone to the doctor three times in recent
weeks because of lingering respiratory issues. She says her problem
started as a cold, but as the air got worse, she developed
bronchitis and her asthma flared up.<br>
"My lungs do not feel healthy right now," she says. "It is just not
natural to breathe."<br>
Air quality experts and physicians say more fires are bound to
occur, and people with health issues need to have a plan for the bad
air days, such as keeping extra medications on hand.<br>
For people who do need to go outside in the smoke, air quality
experts recommend wearing a specialized mask that protects from fine
particulate matter. Cheap paper dust masks from the hardware store
won't cut it, says Kobza, of the local air district<br>
"People have a false sense of security," she says. "If it's small
enough to get into the bloodstream, it's small enough to get through
paper."<br>
An N95 respirator can filter out 95 percent of smoke particles, if
it's fitted properly and dirty air doesn't leak around the sides, as
NPR reported last year.<br>
"This isn't the first fire season California has had and it won't be
the last," says Patrick Chandler, spokesman for the South Coast Air
Quality Management District. "You can't really tough this out...<br>
- - - -<br>
Some people are wearing masks even in their cars. Dobrosky, of
Riverside County, says she recently ordered a pack of specialized
masks from Amazon after running out during last year's blazes. After
those fires, she also bought a treadmill so that she could exercise
inside. Even so, Dobrosky says, her lungs are sore.<br>
"Breathing" she says, "has become a chore."<br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2018/08/10/637704465/in-parts-of-california-blanketed-with-wildfire-smoke-breathing-is-a-chore">https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2018/08/10/637704465/in-parts-of-california-blanketed-with-wildfire-smoke-breathing-is-a-chore</a></font><br>
<br>
<br>
[Video Paul Beckwith discusses the Hothouse paper]<br>
<b><a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dpEHWY0mRw">Earth
Climate System: Terrible Trajectories to Hothouse</a></b><br>
Paul Beckwith<br>
Published on Aug 11, 2018 - video 15 minutes<br>
Ten years ago Timothy Lenton spearheaded a scientific paper
examining expert assessments on the types and likelihoods of Tipping
Elements in the Climate System. A number of top European climate
scientists published an update a few days ago, to get a handle on
the risk of cascading climate feedbacks propelling the Earth into a
hothouse state. They suggest that we are on that path now, and have
a decade or two to avoid the worst. I fear that we have already gone
over that cliff, and I declare a global climate change emergency to
claw back up the rock face to attempt to regain system stability, or
face an untenable calamity of biblical proportions.<br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dpEHWY0mRw">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dpEHWY0mRw</a></font><br>
<br>
<br>
[Some reading]<br>
<a
href="https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/03/books/global-warming.html"><b>Read
These 3 Books About Global Warming</b></a><br>
By Concepción de León - Aug. 3, 2018<br>
This year has seen record-high temperatures around the world,
including in Japan, where triple-digit temperatures killed at least
86 people since May and hospitalized more than 20,000 over one week
in July. According to scientists, this is an upward trend, and 2018
may be one of the hottest years on record. Here are three books that
predict how global warming may affect humanity and what we can still
do...<br>
<blockquote> <b>SIX DEGREES Our Future on a Hotter Planet</b><br>
By Mark Lynas<br>
336 pp. National Geographic. (2008)<br>
In this book, Lynas draws on scientific research on climate change
to predict how the planet will be affected by each degree of
temperature rise. The Earth's average global surface temperature
has increased about 1 percent since 1880, and Lynas wrote that a 2
degree rise would constitute a point of no return. After 3
degrees, Greenland's ice sheet would disappear, as would the
Amazon, and deserts would begin to form across southern Africa and
the American Midwest. Once we've reached 6 degrees, which is
projected to happen by the end of the 21st century, most life on
Earth would be eliminated, too.<br>
Image<br>
- - -<br>
<b>DRAWDOWN The Most Comprehensive Plan Ever Proposed to Reverse
Global Warming</b><br>
Edited by Paul Hawken<br>
256 pp. Penguin Books. (2017)<br>
This New York Times best seller gathers leading scientists and
policymakers to present the 100 most effective solutions to global
warming, which they argue would roll back global greenhouse gas
emissions within thirty years. The solutions are modeled in the
book, showing their cost and potential carbon impact through 2050.
Items on the list are ranked based on the potential amount of
greenhouse gases they can avoid or remove, and though some are
directly tied to emissions - moderating use of air-conditioners
and refrigerators, for instance, is number one - sociocultural
shifts like adopting a plant-rich diet or family planning are also
ranked highly.<br>
Image<br>
- - -<br>
<b>THE CARBON DIARIES 2015</b><br>
By Saci Lloyd<br>
384 pp. Holiday House. (2009)<br>
This young adult novel is told in short diary entries, narrated by
a 16-year-old girl named Laura who lives in Britain, which has
become the first country to implement a carbon rationing plan.
Residents receive carbon debit cards, and Laura manages this new
responsibility and London's rapidly changing environment (think:
drought, riots and disease), all while juggling school, trying to
get the attention of her crush, Ravi, and playing in a band. It
offers a teenager's perspective on a collapsing world.<br>
</blockquote>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/03/books/global-warming.html">https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/03/books/global-warming.html</a></font><br>
<br>
<br>
[fiction reaches too deep]<br>
<b><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/trump-immigrant-climate-dystopian-novels_us_5b69f83de4b0fd5c73de6f82">Trump's
Immigrant Crackdown Is Worse Than What Climate Dystopian
Novelists Imagined</a></b><br>
The "cli-fi" genre is whiter than reality, and the Trump
administration's policies are more punitive.<br>
By Alexander C. Kaufman<br>
Three years ago, Claire Vaye Watkins published Gold Fame Citrus, a
novel that envisions a dystopian Southern California parched by
extreme drought and smothered by paranormally fast-moving sand dunes
that rapidly transform the region into a new Dust Bowl. <br>
Watkins' novel vividly depicts the tribulations of millions of
displaced people, but it already feels quaint to her. <br>
It was only in one brief chapter, exactly three-quarters of the way
into the 354-page book, that she dwelled on the fate of Latino
immigrants in this dark, resource-strapped future. One of the main
characters finds himself locked up in a secret prison located in an
old desert mine, where he meets "los detenidos fantasmas" - ghost
detainees, some of whom have spent their entire lives behind bars. <br>
<br>
It's only then that the narrator recalls that counts of evacuees
from the desertified zone found a 31 percent drop in the number of
Latinos in California before and after the evacuation. State
officials said migrant farm workers had "self-deported" to their
countries of origin when the drought hit - but at that moment, it
becomes clear they were disappeared and incarcerated.<br>
<br>
Now, seeing images of caged children, reading reports of authorities
abusing imprisoned asylum-seekers and separating families at the
border over the past few months, reality seems even crueler than the
dystopia of her fiction, Watkins says. <br>
<br>
"This seems like another level to me right now," she told HuffPost
by phone. "I didn't seriously consider the possibility of these
nightmarish, Holocaust-like events."<br>
Around the world, there are 68.5 million people who have fled their
homes; 40 million of those people have been displaced within their
own country, according to the United Nations. <br>
It's hard to know how many migrants are driven by environmental
crises, as there is nearly no legal framework for designating
climate change as the reason someone has been uprooted. But in many
parts of the world, the links are clear. <br>
<br>
Thousands of Puerto Ricans fled to Florida, New York and other
mainland states after Hurricane Maria, the kind of Category 5 storm
expected to become more frequent as the oceans warm. The seven-year
civil war that scattered 5.6 million Syrian refugees from their home
began with a historic drought, leading many to call it the "first
climate war," despite some research claiming otherwise.<br>
Surging sea levels, extreme storms and drought-diminished food and
water resources are projected to displace more than 1 billion people
globally by 2050, and 2 billion by 2100. The displacement will be
particularly severe in tropical regions, where many of the roughly
20,000 to 40,000 migrants who crossed the U.S. southern border each
month in the past year came from, according to U.S. Customs and
Border Protection's statistics. <br>
<br>
That's just a fraction of the 1 million to 1.6 million foreigners
who illegally entered the country annually from the 1980s to the
mid-2000s. But already, the Trump administration is pursuing the
kind of ruthless border policies writers like Watkins thought would
only come in response to massive waves of climate migrants. Reality
has outstripped some of the gnarliest dystopias of a genre premised
on the idea of casting the reader forward into a recognizable but
still remote future.<br>
<br>
"It's happening a lot sooner," Watkins said. "I never say when Gold
Fame Citrus is, but I thought it would be ... not now."<br>
I didn't seriously consider the possibility of these nightmarish,
Holocaust-like events.<br>
Claire Vaye Watkins<br>
Even for writers of the bleakest climate fiction, it's difficult to
extrapolate what a White House already willing to enact such
draconian policies would do to millions of climate refugees. Omar
El-Akkad, the Egyptian-Canadian author of American War, said he
finished writing his debut novel just three weeks before Trump
declared his candidacy for president. <br>
<br>
The 352-page book chronicles a gory sequel to the Civil War in 2074,
when a band of Southern states rebels against the federal government
- which, with Washington, D.C., underwater, is based now in
Cleveland - after the passage of a fossil fuel ban. The death tolls
from suicide bombings, marauding militias and armed drones that
slaughter civilians pale in comparison to the lethal plagues
unleashed in biological attacks in the final chapters. <br>
<br>
But the milieu of American War is a world ravaged by risen,
acidified seas and sweltering heat waves - and a nation whose
brutality is born of environmental strife.<br>
<br>
"What's happening on the southern border in the United States right
now, besides being an act of outright inhumanity and fascism, is a
made-up response to a made-up problem," he said.<br>
"The United States does not have an immigration crisis," El-Akkad
added. "Jordan has an immigration crisis. Lebanon has an immigration
crisis. The countries that have a million or so refugees from
war-torn Syria have an immigration crisis."<br>
Writing American War today would be impossible, the Portland,
Oregon-based author said. <br>
<br>
"Every day, I wake up in this country and I'm bombarded with a new
and borderline-surreal scandal or moment of strangeness or cruelty
that makes it incredibly difficult to write about this particular
moment," said El-Akkad. "Right now, everything is just very, very
loud, and very fast-moving." <br>
<br>
He's not alone. Few books in the nascent "cli-fi" genre - the term
first appeared in Google searches in 2009 and started becoming
popular around 2014 - deal directly with climate refugees and
migrants, according to Amy Brady, who writes a column on climate
fiction for the Chicago Review of Books. Part of the problem is that
books about immigration tend to focus on the struggles of leaving
one's home rather than the environmental catalyst for doing so. <br>
<br>
"Immigration is such a large and multifaceted issue that once a
novel starts addressing it, it becomes a novel about immigration,"
she said. <br>
<br>
The genre is also dominated by white writers from rich, northern
countries, who focus on how environmental catastrophe might affect
things they care about. The fixations, Brady said, include: "What's
it going to do to our capitalism? What's it going to do to our
telecommunications systems?"<br>
<br>
"That's a real blind spot when it comes to the genre as a whole,"
she said. <br>
Watkins self-diagnosed that as a problem with Gold Fame Citrus: "The
characters are privileged people." <br>
<br>
El-Akkad agreed that the genre is dominated by white writers who
don't often conceptualize the experience of the black and brown
people who are most vulnerable to climate change. <br>
<br>
"One of the things with climate change, in particular, is that the
universality of the problem might give some authors the thought that
it could be represented outside issues of race, gender or
ethnicity," he said. "But we don't supersede these issues - every
issue in the United States is tangled up with issues of race and
gender and those forms of discrimination. Climate change isn't going
to be any different."<br>
<br>
Every issue in the United States is tangled up with issues of race
and gender and those forms of discrimination. Climate change isn't
going to be any different.<br>
Omar El-Akkad<br>
Kim Stanley Robinson, the godfather of the cli-fi genre, takes a
more optimistic view. His acclaimed 2017 novel New York 2140 depicts
life in a flooded, Venice-like metropolis where New Yorkers traverse
Lower Manhattan by nautical hovercraft and skybridges, Central Park
is a refugee camp and the Upper East Side is home to Dubai-like
megatowers. But even as American capitalism prevails, with Wall
Street honchos trading on tide-based derivatives, the peons of that
system ultimately revolt, propelling a revolutionary plot Robinson
describes as utopian. <br>
<br>
Smaller countries with strong ethnocultural identities may turn away
climate refugees with violence, he said. "Think about Hungary," he
said. "There's only 5 million Hungarians that speak that language
and have that culture. If they took on more than a couple million
refugees, then they've got a situation where they can feel their
entire culture and language are going to go away." <br>
But the United States is an ethnic patchwork, constantly absorbing
and adapting once-foreign cultures and customs, he said. The growing
progressive movement in favor of open borders could make the country
"so multicultural that it stays the place people can move when
they're desperate." <br>
<br>
Watkins, in the meantime, has turned her attention to writing a new
novel about a utopia where borders don't exist. <br>
<br>
"For some people, the idea of a border is so obvious," she said.
"They can't think of what it would be like to not have ICE or not
have a border at all." <br>
Science fiction, she said, could help propel that conversation into
reality. <br>
"It sounds corny as fuck," she said. "But one thing novelists are
good at is imagining."<br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/trump-immigrant-climate-dystopian-novels_us_5b69f83de4b0fd5c73de6f82">https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/trump-immigrant-climate-dystopian-novels_us_5b69f83de4b0fd5c73de6f82</a></font><br>
<br>
<br>
[possible isostatic rebound]<br>
<b><a
href="https://www.cbsnews.com/news/alaska-north-slope-strong-earthquake-today-2018-08-12/">Strongest-ever
earthquake strikes Alaska's North Slope region</a></b><br>
KAVIK RIVER CAMP, Alaska -- Alaska's North Slope was hit Sunday by
the most powerful earthquake ever recorded in the region, the
state's seismologist said. At 6:58 a.m. Sunday, the magnitude 6.4
earthquake struck an area 42 miles east of Kavik River Camp and 343
miles northeast of Fairbanks, the state's second-biggest city. The
agency says the earthquake had a depth of about 6 miles.<br>
State seismologist Mike West told the Anchorage Daily News that the
quake was the biggest recorded in the North Slope by a substantial
amount. "This is a very significant event that will take us some
time to understand," he told the Daily News.<br>
The previous most powerful quake in the North Slope was in 1995 at
magnitude 5.2, West told the newspaper.<br>
The jump from a 5.2 to Sunday's 6.4 is significant because
earthquakes rapidly grow in strength as magnitude rises, he said.<br>
"That's why at 6.4 this changes how we think about the region," West
said. "It's a little early to say how, but it's safe to say this
earthquake will cause a re-evaluation of the seismic potential of
that area."<br>
The magnitude 6.5 earthquake was felt by workers at the
oil-production facilities in and around Prudhoe Bay, the News
reported.<br>
The newspaper says that Alyeska Pipeline said the earthquake did not
damage the trans-Alaska pipeline.<b> The company says in a tweet
that "there are no operational concerns" related to the
earthquake, but the pipeline will be inspected.</b><br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.cbsnews.com/news/alaska-north-slope-strong-earthquake-today-2018-08-12/">https://www.cbsnews.com/news/alaska-north-slope-strong-earthquake-today-2018-08-12/</a><br>
- - - -<br>
</font>[UAF Alaska Earthquake Center]<br>
<b><a href="https://earthquake.alaska.edu/event/20076877">Magnitude
6.4 - 52 miles SW of Kaktovik</a></b><br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://earthquake.alaska.edu/event/20076877/release">https://earthquake.alaska.edu/event/20076877/release</a><br>
- - - -<br>
USGS most recent data<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/map/#%7B%22autoUpdate%22%3A%5B%22autoUpdate%22%5D%2C%22basemap%22%3A%22grayscale%22%2C%22feed%22%3A%221day_m25%22%2C%22listFormat%22%3A%22default%22%2C%22mapposition%22%3A%5B%5B68.54833327770818%2C-147.90344238281247%5D%2C%5B70.49557354093136%2C-141.3885498046875%5D%5D%2C%22overlays%22%3A%5B%22plates%22%5D%2C%22restrictListToMap%22%3A%5B%22restrictListToMap%22%5D%2C%22search%22%3Anull%2C%22sort%22%3A%22newest%22%2C%22timezone%22%3A%22utc%22%2C%22viewModes%22%3A%5B%22list%22%2C%22map%22%5D%2C%22event%22%3Anull%7D">https://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/map/#%7B%22autoUpdate%22%3A%5B%22autoUpdate%22%5D%2C%22basemap%22%3A%22grayscale%22%2C%22feed%22%3A%221day_m25%22%2C%22listFormat%22%3A%22default%22%2C%22mapposition%22%3A%5B%5B68.54833327770818%2C-147.90344238281247%5D%2C%5B70.49557354093136%2C-141.3885498046875%5D%5D%2C%22overlays%22%3A%5B%22plates%22%5D%2C%22restrictListToMap%22%3A%5B%22restrictListToMap%22%5D%2C%22search%22%3Anull%2C%22sort%22%3A%22newest%22%2C%22timezone%22%3A%22utc%22%2C%22viewModes%22%3A%5B%22list%22%2C%22map%22%5D%2C%22event%22%3Anull%7D</a><br>
</font><br>
<br>
[angry humor short 1:50 video]<br>
<a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/jimmy-kimmel-donald-trump-climate-change_us_5b6a7f3fe4b0de86f4a67e03">Jimmy
Kimmel Dumbs Down Climate Change So Even Donald Trump Can
Understand It</a><br>
Sinking golf courses and "fried chicken shortages Kentucky-wide."<br>
video <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="blob:https://www.huffingtonpost.com/98def31d-68df-464d-887e-73ba6c40bdd7">blob:https://www.huffingtonpost.com/98def31d-68df-464d-887e-73ba6c40bdd7</a><br>
<font size="-1"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/jimmy-kimmel-donald-trump-climate-change_us_5b6a7f3fe4b0de86f4a67e03">https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/jimmy-kimmel-donald-trump-climate-change_us_5b6a7f3fe4b0de86f4a67e03</a></font><br>
<br>
<br>
<font size="+1"><b><a moz-do-not-send="true"
href="http://www.msnbc.com/the-ed-show/watch/damaging-impact-of-severe-weather-317880899851#">This
Day in Climate History - August 13, 2014</a> - from D.R.
Tucker</b></font><br>
August 13, 2014: On MSNBC's "The Ed Show," Jane Kleeb of Bold
Nebraska discusses the recent onslaught of poisoned weather in the
US.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.msnbc.com/the-ed-show/watch/damaging-impact-of-severe-weather-317880899851#">http://www.msnbc.com/the-ed-show/watch/damaging-impact-of-severe-weather-317880899851#</a>
<br>
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