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<p><i><font size="+1"><b>June 8, 2021</b></font></i></p>
[CBS News video report]<br>
<b>Record-breaking heat wave threatens millions</b><br>
Jun 7, 2021<br>
CBS Evening News<br>
Millions of Americans are under a heat advisory as some states
record record-high temperatures on Monday. Meanwhile, severe drought
conditions helped fuel two wildfires in Arizona. <br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESXes2gj6FM">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESXes2gj6FM</a><br>
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[Not the game, the metaphor]<br>
<b>Climate tipping points could topple like dominoes, warn
scientists</b><br>
Analysis shows significant risk of cascading events even at 2C of
heating, with severe long-term effects<br>
Ice sheets and ocean currents at risk of climate tipping points can
destabilise each other as the world heats up, leading to a domino
effect with severe consequences for humanity, according to a risk
analysis.<br>
<br>
Tipping points occur when global heating pushes temperatures beyond
a critical threshold, leading to accelerated and irreversible
impacts. Some large ice sheets in Antarctica are thought to already
have passed their tipping points, meaning large sea-level rises in
coming centuries.<br>
<br>
The new research examined the interactions between ice sheets in
West Antarctica, Greenland, the warm Atlantic Gulf Stream and the
Amazon rainforest. The scientists carried out 3m computer
simulations and found domino effects in a third of them, even when
temperature rises were below 2C, the upper limit of the Paris
agreement.<br>
Ice sheets and ocean currents at risk of climate tipping points can
destabilise each other as the world heats up, leading to a domino
effect with severe consequences for humanity, according to a risk
analysis.<br>
<br>
Tipping points occur when global heating pushes temperatures beyond
a critical threshold, leading to accelerated and irreversible
impacts. Some large ice sheets in Antarctica are thought to already
have passed their tipping points, meaning large sea-level rises in
coming centuries.<br>
<br>
The new research examined the interactions between ice sheets in
West Antarctica, Greenland, the warm Atlantic Gulf Stream and the
Amazon rainforest. The scientists carried out 3m computer
simulations and found domino effects in a third of them, even when
temperature rises were below 2C, the upper limit of the Paris
agreement...<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/jun/03/climate-tipping-points-could-topple-like-dominoes-warn-scientists">https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/jun/03/climate-tipping-points-could-topple-like-dominoes-warn-scientists</a><br>
- -<br>
[There's big excitement about this paper]<br>
<b>Interacting tipping elements increase risk of climate domino
effects under global warming</b><br>
Overall, we find that the interactions tend to destabilise the
network of tipping elements. Furthermore, our analysis reveals the
qualitative role of each of the four tipping elements within the
network, showing that the polar ice sheets on Greenland and West
Antarctica are oftentimes the initiators of tipping cascades, while
the AMOC acts as a mediator transmitting cascades. This indicates
that the ice sheets, which are already at risk of transgressing
their temperature thresholds within the Paris range of 1.5 to 2 ∘C,
are of particular importance for the stability of the climate system
as a whole.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://esd.copernicus.org/articles/12/601/2021/">https://esd.copernicus.org/articles/12/601/2021/</a><br>
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[Wildfire Today]<br>
<b>Additional evacuations ordered for Telegraph Fire southwest of
Globe, Arizona</b><br>
Bill Gabbert -- June 7, 2021<br>
Additional evacuations ordered for Telegraph Fire southwest of
Globe, Arizona<br>
Evacuation orders still in effect for Mescal Fire<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://wildfiretoday.com/2021/06/07/additional-evacuations-ordered-for-telegraph-fire-southwest-of-globe-arizona/">https://wildfiretoday.com/2021/06/07/additional-evacuations-ordered-for-telegraph-fire-southwest-of-globe-arizona/</a><br>
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[Esquire article]<br>
<b>We're Inching Towards Actual Violence Over Access to Water</b><br>
The Hoover Dam is losing its reason for being.<br>
Here at the shebeen, one of the larger elements in our portfolio is
water—specifically, the increasing political salience of water,
especially in the West, where they are experiencing such profound
drought conditions that the Hoover Dam, of all things, is losing its
reason for being. From CBS News:<br>
<blockquote>For more than eight decades, the iconic Hoover Dam has
relied on water from Nevada's Lake Mead to cover up its backside.
But now, at age 85, it finds itself uncomfortably exposed. Much of
the water the dam is supposed to be holding back is gone. "This is
like a different world," said Pat Mulroy, the former head of the
Southern Nevada Water Authority. She told CBS News senior national
and environmental correspondent Ben Tracy that Lake Mead, the
nation's largest reservoir, is on track to soon hit its lowest
level ever recorded.<br>
</blockquote>
The dam is estimated to have lost a quarter of its customary
hydroelectric power. Worse, the lower Colorado River, without which
the country would have a lot of new deserts, is at a crisis stage,
and the federal government may have to take serious action that will
affect the region’s farmers—and that I guarantee you will set off
the Bundy-ite fringe.<br>
<blockquote>For the first time ever, the federal government is
expected to declare a water shortage on the lower Colorado River
later this summer. That will force automatic cuts to the water
supply for Nevada and Arizona starting in 2022. Homeowners have
higher priority and, at first, won't feel the pain as badly as
farmers. Dan Thelander is a second-generation family farmer in
Arizona's Pinal County. The water to grow his corn and alfalfa
fields comes from Lake Mead. "If we don't have irrigation water,
we can't farm," he said. "So, next year we are going to get about
25% less water, means we're going to have to fallow or not plant
25% of our land.” In 2023 Thelander and other farmers in this part
of Arizona are expected to lose nearly all of their water from
Lake Mead, so they are rushing to dig wells to pump groundwater to
try to save their farms.<br>
</blockquote>
Meanwhile, a few degrees north, the High Country News reports the
drought is killing fish and local economies, in that order.<br>
<blockquote>Fish have been dying on the Klamath since around May 4,
according to the Yurok Tribal Fisheries Department. At that time,
97% of the juvenile salmon caught by the department’s in-river
trapping device were infected with the disease C. shasta, and were
either dead, or would die within days. Over a two-week period, 70%
of the juvenile salmon caught in the trap were dead.<br>
<br>
Irrigators upriver from the fish kill were told in mid-May that
for the first time since “A” Canal in the Klamath Project began
operating in 1907, they would not receive any water from it. The
irrigators say they need 400,000 acre-feet of water but this year,
they will receive just 33,000 acre-feet from the Klamath Project —
a historic low. The situation has put pressure on an embattled
region already caught in a cyclical mode of crisis due to a drying
climate. “For salmon people, a juvenile fish kill is an absolute
worst-case scenario,” Myers said in a statement.<br>
</blockquote>
As is obvious, this is all yet another crisis within the general
climate crisis. We are inching closer to the days when we might see
actual violence over access to water. As if we all need another
excuse.<br>
Charles P. Pierce<br>
Charles P Pierce is the author of four books, most recently Idiot
America, and has been a working journalist since 1976.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.esquire.com/news-politics/a36651183/hoover-dam-water-shortage-colorado-river/">https://www.esquire.com/news-politics/a36651183/hoover-dam-water-shortage-colorado-river/</a>
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[NPR report]<br>
<b>Carbon Dioxide, Which Drives Climate Change, Reaches Highest
Level In 4 Million Years</b><br>
June 7, 2021<br>
The amount of carbon dioxide in Earth's atmosphere reached 419 parts
per million in May, its highest level in more than four million
years, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced
on Monday.<br>
<br>
After dipping last year because of pandemic-fueled lockdowns,
emissions of greenhouse gases have begun to soar again as economies
open and people resume work and travel. The newly released data
about May carbon dioxide levels show that the global community so
far has failed to slow the accumulation of heat-trapping gases in
the atmosphere, NOAA said in its announcement...<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.npr.org/2021/06/07/1004097672/atmospheric-carbon-dioxide-fueling-climate-change-hits-a-four-million-year-high">https://www.npr.org/2021/06/07/1004097672/atmospheric-carbon-dioxide-fueling-climate-change-hits-a-four-million-year-high</a><br>
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[NBC Bay Area]<br>
<b>As Sea Level Rise Threat Grows, SF Officials Don't Have Public
Plan to Save Sewers</b><br>
Rising seas that flood sewage treatment plants can prevent toilets
from flushing. How will the Bay Area keep sewers working? NBC Bay
Area's Investigative Unit asked 10 sewage treatment facilities for
their survival plans. All had one to show - except San Francisco.<br>
Because Bay Area low-lying sewage treatment plants remain vulnerable
to rising sea levels, government regulators told sewage facility
managers to “provide a written plan for coping with SLR by the fall
of 2021 - or they will be given a plan.” The NBC Bay Area
Investigative Unit reached out to 10 “at risk” sewage treatment
plants to see those plans. All except one provided extensive
documents of their proposals, the cost to address them, and even
provided tours of completed work. San Francisco’s Public Utilities
Commission replied to the Investigative Unit’s public records
request that after a “diligent search for records...no records were
found.”...<br>
- -<br>
At East Bay Municipal Utility District (EBMUD), wastewater director
Eileen White has been facing a monumental task to “keep the
stormwater in the stormwater system and the wastewater in the
wastewater system,” she said. <br>
<br>
East Bay MUD is working on repairing its 1,600 miles of leaking
pipes because when a big storm comes, the storm water can overwhelm
the sewer pipes. <br>
<br>
“We're very fortunate at this treatment plant ... we’re higher than
(some of the) other wastewater treatment plants in the Bay Area,”
said White.<br>
<br>
Even so, EBMUD’s plans to protect against sea level rise include, as
a last resort, the construction of a mile and a half long,
4-foot-high floodwall at a cost of $140 per linear foot or about $2
million dollars in total.<br>
<br>
“We're expected to have about 12 to 15 inches of sea level rise by
the year 2050,” White said. “We've adopted design guidelines so...we
make sure we raise the electrical equipment up so it won't be
impacted by sea level rise.”...<br>
- -<br>
“Nobody knows how quickly sea level is going to rise and I think if
you just look back in the past 10 years, what we thought 10 years
ago, where we'd be today, we've already blown past that,” said
Roche. ..<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.nbcbayarea.com/investigations/as-sea-level-rise-threat-grows-sf-officials-dont-have-public-plan-to-save-sewers/2554470/">https://www.nbcbayarea.com/investigations/as-sea-level-rise-threat-grows-sf-officials-dont-have-public-plan-to-save-sewers/2554470/</a><br>
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[opportunistic disinformation warfare]<br>
<b>The far right is weaponizing climate change to argue against
immigration</b><br>
The right-wing solution to environmental problems: more borders and
exclusion.<br>
By Jariel Arvin Jun 3, 2021<br>
- -<br>
Some advocates are worried that the Arizona case, which uses climate
change as a weapon against immigrants, communities of color, and
poor people, could become a more common means of attack for the
right.<br>
<br>
This idea has deep roots in right-wing environmentalism. But it also
has disturbing echoes of a far-right ideology known as “ecofascism.”<br>
<br>
Ecofascism refers to “groups and ideologies that offer
authoritarian, hierarchical, and racist analyses and solutions to
environmental problems,” Blair Taylor, program director at the
Institute for Social Ecology, told me.<br>
<br>
The solution to those problems, ecofascists believe, is “the same as
the right’s answers to many other issues: more walls, more borders,
more exclusion, and more justification of hierarchy and elite rule,”
said Taylor, author of “Alt-Right Ecology: Ecofascism and far-right
environmentalism in the United States.”...<br>
- -<br>
But although these far-right environmentalists blame immigrants for
environmental problems, the science indicates otherwise. It’s the
world’s richest who are driving the climate emergency.<br>
<br>
A September 2020 report by Oxfam found that from 1990 to 2015 — a
critical 25-year period during which humans doubled the amount of
carbon dioxide in the atmosphere — the wealthiest 1 percent of the
world’s population accounted for more than twice as much carbon
pollution as the 3.1 billion people who made up the poorest half of
humanity...<br>
- -<br>
To recognize [and counter] ecofascism requires understanding the
tropes and the longer history of environmentalism’s racist,
classist, and sexist components. The environmental movement must
offer an articulation of environmental concerns that is emancipatory
and social and doesn’t fall into the traps it has fallen into in the
past. Avoiding those mistakes means having a bit of sensitivity and
understanding that ideas can point us in better and worse directions
politically.<br>
<br>
This is why I’ve argued for a social ecology — not just looking at
numbers and population growth but looking at how different groups
and systems are disproportionately to blame and face
disproportionate impacts. This is largely the kind of work we do at
the Institute for Social Ecology, offering democratic and
emancipatory answers to environmental and social problems<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.vox.com/22456663/arizona-environment-immigration-climate-change-right-wing">https://www.vox.com/22456663/arizona-environment-immigration-climate-change-right-wing</a><br>
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[looking ahead]<br>
<b>Climate crisis to shrink G7 economies twice as much as Covid-19,
says research</b><br>
G7 countries will lose $5tn a year by 2050 if temperatures rise by
2.6C..<br>
- -<br>
The G7 countries – the world’s biggest industrialised economies –
will lose 8.5% of GDP a year, or nearly $5tn wiped off their
economies, within 30 years if temperatures rise by 2.6C, as they are
likely to on the basis of government pledges and policies around the
world, according to research from Oxfam and the Swiss Re
Institute...<br>
- -<br>
The leaders of the G7 countries – the UK, the US, Japan, Canada,
France, Germany, Italy – and the EU will meet in Cornwall on Friday
to discuss the global economy, Covid-19 vaccines, taxes on business,
and the climate crisis.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/jun/07/climate-crisis-to-shrink-g7-economies-twice-as-much-as-covid-19-says-research">https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2021/jun/07/climate-crisis-to-shrink-g7-economies-twice-as-much-as-covid-19-says-research</a><br>
<p>- -</p>
[Report from Swiss Re]<br>
<b>The economics of climate change: </b><b>no action not an option</b><br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.swissre.com/dam/jcr:e73ee7c3-7f83-4c17-a2b8-8ef23a8d3312/swiss-re-institute-expertise-publication-economics-of-climate-change.pdf">https://www.swissre.com/dam/jcr:e73ee7c3-7f83-4c17-a2b8-8ef23a8d3312/swiss-re-institute-expertise-publication-economics-of-climate-change.pdf</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
[Washington State]<br>
<b>Wildfire season 2021: What to expect this summer</b><br>
Oregon, and much of the Pacific Northwest, is heading into fire
season very dry.<br>
<blockquote>So just how dry has it been? In March we only saw 1.55
inches of rain, April was the driest on record with .39 inches of
rain. In May, it was .58 inches of rain. Those three months
combined add up to about 2.50 inches of rain. In a normal spring
we should get over nine inches of rain during those three months.
Now, there is a lot of concern heading into summer.<br>
</blockquote>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.kgw.com/article/news/local/wildfire/wildfire-season-2021-what-to-expect/283-8171052a-4246-4e26-8cc2-20201e01cad8">https://www.kgw.com/article/news/local/wildfire/wildfire-season-2021-what-to-expect/283-8171052a-4246-4e26-8cc2-20201e01cad8</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
[Huffington Post]<br>
<b>David Attenborough Says Climate Change Is A ‘Crime’ Humanity Has
Inflicted On The Planet</b><br>
The documentarian reiterated his grief that society has destroyed
large swaths of the natural world, but said humanity is “not beyond
redemption.”<br>
In his book and documentary, Attenborough pointed to existing
technology that could help greatly alleviate the threat of climate
change, primarily an immediate shift away from fossil fuels and an
effort to “rewild” large tracts of the planet, giving the natural
world time to recover.<br>
<br>
The threat, he concluded, has grown so large as to be beyond the
burden of any one nation.<br>
<br>
“I would say that the time has come to put aside national ambitions
and look for an international ambition of survival,” he said. He
later added: “What good does it do to say, “Oh, to hell with it, I
don’t care.’ You can’t say that. Not if … you love your children.
Not if you love the rest of human― how can you say that?”<br>
- -<br>
In his book and documentary, Attenborough pointed to existing
technology that could help greatly alleviate the threat of climate
change, primarily an immediate shift away from fossil fuels and an
effort to “rewild” large tracts of the planet, giving the natural
world time to recover.<br>
<br>
The threat, he concluded, has grown so large as to be beyond the
burden of any one nation.<br>
<br>
“I would say that the time has come to put aside national ambitions
and look for an international ambition of survival,” he said. He
later added: “What good does it do to say, “Oh, to hell with it, I
don’t care.’ You can’t say that. Not if … you love your children.
Not if you love the rest of human― how can you say that?”<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.huffpost.com/entry/david-attenbourough-climate-change-crime_n_60bd88c7e4b0882193c5e7b7">https://www.huffpost.com/entry/david-attenbourough-climate-change-crime_n_60bd88c7e4b0882193c5e7b7</a><br>
<br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p>[wake up, guys]<br>
<b>Disaster patriarchy: how the pandemic has unleashed a war on
women</b><br>
In disaster patriarchy, women lose their safety, their economic
power, their autonomy, their education, and they are pushed on to
the frontlines, unprotected, to be sacrificed.<br>
<br>
As Covid-19 has swept the world there has been an explosion of
violence against women, and a full-blown assault on their rights.
It’s time to fight back against a system that allows women to be
sacrificed, erased and violated<br>
V (formerly Eve Ensler) - 1 Jun 2021 <br>
Covid has unleashed the most severe setback to women’s liberation
in my lifetime. While watching this happen, I have started to
think we are witnessing an outbreak of disaster patriarchy.<br>
<br>
Naomi Klein was the first to identify “disaster capitalism”, when
capitalists use a disaster to impose measures they couldn’t
possibly get away with in normal times, generating more profit for
themselves. Disaster patriarchy is a parallel and complementary
process, where men exploit a crisis to reassert control and
dominance, and rapidly erase hard-earned women’s rights. All over
the world, patriarchy has taken full advantage of the virus to
reclaim power – on the one hand, escalating the danger and
violence to women, and on the other, stepping in as their supposed
controller and protector...<br>
- -<br>
The feminist author Gerda Lerner wrote in 1986: “The system of
patriarchy in a historic construct has a beginning and it will
have an end. Its time seems to have nearly run its course. It no
longer serves the needs of men and women, and its intractable
linkage to militarism, hierarchy and racism has threatened the
very existence of life on Earth.”<br>
<br>
As powerful as patriarchy is, it’s just a story. As the
post-pandemic era unfolds, can we imagine another system, one that
is not based on hierarchy, violence, domination, colonialisation
and occupation? Do we see the connection between the devaluing,
harming and oppression of all women and the destruction of the
Earth itself? What if we lived as if we were kin? What if we
treated each person as sacred and essential to the unfolding story
of humanity?<br>
<br>
What if rather than exploiting, dominating and hurting women and
girls during a crisis, we designed a world that valued them,
educated them, paid them, listened to them, cared for them and
centred them?<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2021/jun/01/disaster-patriarchy-how-the-pandemic-has-unleashed-a-war-on-women">https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2021/jun/01/disaster-patriarchy-how-the-pandemic-has-unleashed-a-war-on-women</a><br>
</p>
<p>- -</p>
[this article is 14 years old]<br>
<b>Disaster capitalism: how to make money out of misery</b><br>
Naomi Klein<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2006/aug/30/comment.hurricanekatrina">https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2006/aug/30/comment.hurricanekatrina</a>
<p><br>
</p>
<p> </p>
<p><br>
</p>
[Deep dive into psychology of Earnest Becker]<br>
<b>Sheldon Solomon at Town Hall Seattle</b><br>
Feb 4, 2016<br>
ernestbecker<br>
Sheldon Solomon speaks on Terror Management Theory, Ernest Becker,
and his new book, "The Worm at the Core."<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SS0mwd9cR24">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SS0mwd9cR24</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<br>
<br>
[The news archive - historic debate between two esteemed scientists]<br>
<font size="+1"><b>On this day in the history of global warming June
8, 1990</b></font><br>
The Massachusetts Institute of Technology hosts a global-warming
debate between climate scientist Stephen Schneider and climate
denier Dick Lindzen. Reporting on the debate the next day, the
Boston Globe notes:<br>
<br>
"A long-anticipated showdown at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology yesterday between two prominent voices in the
global-warming debate brought little agreement about the reliability
of current predictions for the rate and magnitude of climate change.
But despite the seriousness of the topic, the event did provide a
theatrical and sometimes humorous presentation of the arguments on
either side.<br>
<br>
"Underscoring the range of scientific opinion on the issue, the
organizers put MIT meteorologist Richard Lindzen on one side and
climate researcher Stephen Schneider of the National Center for
Atmospheric Research on the other side of a table divided down the
middle. Schneider, who believes there is a better-than-even chance
of 'unprecedentedly fast climate change' in the next century, sat at
the red end in front of a palm tree, while Lindzen, one the most
vocal skeptics, commanded the blue extreme before a scraggly spruce.
The moderator straddled the border.<br>
<br>
"These models are made up of equations that are meant to represent
the important physical processes -- such as motion and heat
transport in the atmosphere -- that work together to create weather
and climate. Based on the work of five climate modeling teams in the
United States and Britain and forecasts of energy use, scientists
have projected that the earth's average temperature will rise
between 3 and 9 degrees Fahrenheit by the middle of the next
century. While such a temperature rise might not sound like much,
climate researchers say that such a sharp rise in global temperature
in such a short time almost certainly would cause major shifts in
climate."<br>
<p><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-8177663.html">http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-8177663.html</a> [dead site I am
unable to find a video or audio record of this event]<br>
</p>
/-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------/
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