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<p><i><font size="+1"><b>July 11, 2021</b></font></i></p>
[Easy to build a custom smoke report]<br>
<b>Forecast for vertically integrated wildfire smoke</b><br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://hwp-viz.gsd.esrl.noaa.gov/smoke/#">https://hwp-viz.gsd.esrl.noaa.gov/smoke/#</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
[sections of the draft report read aloud in video]<br>
<b>Devastating climate future from leaked IPCC report</b><br>
Jul 9, 2021<br>
Peter Carter<br>
The completed parts ongoing 6th IPCC assessment were leaked to the
French media. This is a compilation from all the media reports of
it. A globally disastrous degraded world is now unavoidable and
coming soon with 1.5C at 2030. Multiple impacts to food production
will cause crop declines.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WafnqhmJDPg">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WafnqhmJDPg</a><br>
<p>- -</p>
[opinion on the IPCC report]<br>
<b>Greta Thunberg Gets Brutally Honest About Climate Leak</b><br>
Jun 27, 2021<br>
The Damage Report<br>
Greta Thunberg is brutally honest about the IPCC leak. John Iadarola
and Dan Evans break it down on The Damage Report. <br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PP8kXESywwU">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PP8kXESywwU</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
[Worker protection]<br>
<b>Washington state is latest to pass heat rules for workers</b><br>
Associated Press -- July 9th 2021<br>
SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) — Washington state on Friday became the second
state in the Pacific Northwest in as many days to announce emergency
rules that provide farmworkers and others who work outdoors more
protection from hot weather in the wake of an extreme heat wave that
is believed to have killed hundreds of people.<br>
<br>
The announcement comes a day after Oregon approved what advocates
call the nation's most protective emergency heat rules for workers
and as temperatures are spiking again this week in parts of the U.S.
West, though not as severely as the end of June. The heat is making
it difficult to fight wildfires in parts of a region struggling with
a historic drought tied to climate change.<br>
<br>
"The heat experienced in our state this year has reached
catastrophic levels," Washington Gov. Jay Inslee said. "The physical
risk to individuals is significant, in particular those whose
occupations have them outdoors all day."<br>
<br>
Washington's new rules take effect Tuesday and update existing
mandates that are in place from May through September, when the
state's multibillion-dollar agricultural industry relies on tens of
thousands of farmworkers to tend and harvest crops such as apples,
cherries, hops and asparagus...<br>
- -<br>
At 80 F (27 C) or above, employers must provide sufficient shade and
an adequate supply of drinking water.<br>
<br>
Agricultural-rich California adopted the nation's first rules
requiring shade and water for farmworkers in 2005 following 10
heat-related deaths — four of them farmworkers — in a two-month
period.<br>
<br>
The regulations have since been beefed up, requiring employers to
provide shade when temperatures rise above 80 F (27 C) and 15-minute
breaks in the shade each hour when temperatures rise higher.
Employers also must provide cool drinking water in easily accessible
locations, toilets and hand-washing facilities. When it's hot, many
work in the middle of the night.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://komonews.com/news/local/washington-state-is-latest-to-pass-heat-rules-for-workers">https://komonews.com/news/local/washington-state-is-latest-to-pass-heat-rules-for-workers</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
[Good question]<br>
<b>In California’s interior, there’s no escape from the desperate
heat: ‘Why are we even here?’</b><br>
Maanvi Singh - - 10 Jul 2021 <br>
In Cantua, a small town deep within California’s farming heartland,
the heat had always been a part of life. “We can do nothing against
it,” said Julia Mendoza, who’s lived in this town for 27 years. But
lately, she says, the searing temperatures are almost unlivable.<br>
<br>
By midday on Thursday, the first day of a protracted, extreme
heatwave in California’s Central Valley, the country roads were
sizzling with heat. A young volunteer with a local environmental
justice non-profit who had come to check in on the neighborhood
collapsed on the sidewalk, her face bright red and damp.
Construction crews working nearby quickly swept her into an
air-conditioned car and handed her a cold bottle of water.<br>
<br>
“¡Mira, el calor!” gasped Mendoza as she rushed over from her front
porch. Arcelia Luna, her friend and neighbor shook her head as she
poured a bottle of refrigerated water over the head and body of the
two-year-old boy she was watching...<br>
<br>
Much of California is suffering through record-breaking
temperatures, just two weeks after a deadly heat dome blistered the
Pacific north-west. Across the west, 28 million Americans will have
endured triple-digit heat this week. While coastal regions,
including the Bay Area, will have been spared by cool marine air,
California’s Central Valley – the state’s sprawling, agricultural
innards – will have broiled.<br>
<br>
The National Weather Service issued an “excessive heat warning” for
the Central Valley from Thursday through Monday. And by mid-morning
on Thursday, asphalt- and concrete-paved Fresno began shimmering
with heat. There was no breeze to rustle the rows and rows of almond
and pistachio trees that radiated for miles and miles out of the
city. The occasional irrigation canal melded into the heat mirage
that radiated off the country roads.<br>
<br>
Global heating is driving stronger, longer heatwaves in the region,
said Jose Pablo Ortiz Partida, a climate scientist for the Union of
Concerned Scientists, a non-profit advocacy group...<br>
<br>
Researchers have been warning of such extreme heatwaves for decades,
he said, but the barrage of heat surges that California and the
western US have been alarming, he said. Temperature records are
being broken earlier than expected or predicted...<br>
<br>
“We are breaking temperature records this summer. And are going to
keep breaking temperature records, as long as we keep burning fossil
fuels,” said Ortiz, who lives in the valley. “It’s infuriating, it’s
tiring and it’s emotionally draining to see.”<br>
<br>
The vicious cycle of the climate crisis has merged with a vicious
cycle of inequity in the region. Racial disparities in access to
shade and air conditioning are increasingly becoming dangerous, even
deadly.<br>
<br>
Here, changing weather patterns have wrought not only periods of
extreme heat, but also an extended drought – two phenomena that feed
into each other. The heat has caused water reserves to evaporate too
quickly, drying out the reservoirs that feed the region’s $50bn
agricultural industry. With scarcely any moisture left in the
ground, the desiccated landscape heats up like a hot plate,
amplifying the scorching ambient temperatures.<br>
<br>
On hot weeks like this one, Mendoza and a group of other women who
live in the area gather on her front porch, seated in a circle on
folding chairs under a nylon tent. The group has been campaigning to
build an air-conditioned community center or a small park with trees
where people can go to stay cool during what have become
increasingly frequent bouts of extreme heat.<br>
<br>
In Cantua Creek, and throughout the valley, the over-pumping of
groundwater has led to a concentrating of nitrates from pesticides,
fertilizer and dairy waste runoff from farms and naturally occurring
arsenic. Mendoza and her neighbors aren’t able to drink the water
from their taps, so trucks lug jugs of potable water to them each
day. “We don’t want anything big, you know,” Mendoza said. “Just
somewhere to stay cool. And clean water.<br>
<br>
“On days like this,” she added, “I just want to be able to shower in
tranquility.”<br>
<br>
Hotter, drier conditions also mean harder, and less work for the
region’s hundreds of thousands of farm workers. This week, Jesús
Zúñiga has been up at 3am, to get to the fields by 5am. “I pick
tomatoes – which is one of the toughest jobs out here,” he said,
showing off the thick calluses that have developed on his hands. For
hours each day, the harsh valley sun bears down on his back as he
hunches over the tomato vines. Once he’s collected 50 pounds of
fruit, he sprints down the neat, irrigated rows, to dump buckets
full of the fruit on to trucks. His harvest ends up in grocery
stores as well as fast food restaurant chains.<br>
<br>
On several days this week, temperatures reached dangerous highs by
10am. “So on these hot days we’re only able to work five or six
hours, before we’d start to get sick,” he said. “But then, we only
get paid for five or six hours.” At $14 an hour that isn’t enough to
pay his rent and soaring electricity bills, or to support his family
of five...<br>
<br>
“By the end of the shift we are wet. Everything is wet with sweat.
Sometimes my head starts to hurt, and I get dizzy,” he said. “That
is when I start to have doubts, so many doubts: why are we even
here?”<br>
<br>
Farm workers die of heat at roughly 20 times the national rate,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But as
the climate crisis triggers longer, hotter heatwaves, the risks for
agricultural workers will rise, said Michelle Tigchelaar, a
researcher at Stanford University. Based on climate models
projecting a global temperature increase of 2F (1C) by 2050,
Tigchelaar discovered that agricultural workers who currently labor
through an average of 21 dangerously hot days a year will see that
number nearly double over the next few decades.<br>
<br>
In some parts of the Central Valley, the heat index through most of
the summer will surpass what even healthy, young and well-hydrated
workers could safely handle, according to the study, published last
year. “These are the hidden costs of keeping our supermarkets and
shops well-stocked,” she said.<br>
<br>
In Fresno, the wide sidewalks were eerily empty by late afternoon.
The 500,000 people who live here had all retreated to
air-conditioned homes, malls or public libraries. At the Community
Regional medical center in downtown Fresno, Dr René Ramirez said
he’d already seen a few patients coping with severe sunburns, heat
exhaustion and other heat-related illnesses in the emergency
department that day. Many of his patients don’t have insurance, and
many suffer from underlying health issues including heart disease,
high blood pressure and, in a region with some of the worst air
pollution in the country, asthma. All of those conditions make it
harder for people to cope with extreme heat, even those who are
acclimatized to high temperatures.<br>
<br>
“From my perspective, everybody should be entitled to access
cooling, whether that’s at home or at community centers,” he said “I
think that is something that’s an inherent right.”<br>
<br>
Nora Madden, 65, who has been living in her car or staying at motels
for the past year, said her usual strategy to survive heatwaves is
to buy a bag of ice from the dollar store in the morning, stow it in
her icebox and chew the cubes throughout the day.<br>
<br>
But on Thursday afternoon it had become too hot to sit in her car,
so she headed over to a community cooling center downtown. The city
opens these centers when temperatures are forecasted to reach 105F
(41C), or higher. “But what about when it’s 103F, or 100F?” Madden
said. The stark, unshaded rows of concrete that make up some of
Fresno’s poorest neighborhoods are unforgiving heat islands. “Do we
have to die at 103?” she said.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jul/10/california-central-valley-extreme-heat-race">https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jul/10/california-central-valley-extreme-heat-race</a><br>
<br>
<p><br>
</p>
[June interview hour video]<br>
<b>Noam Chomsky | 2021 | Oxford | Interview</b><br>
Jul 5, 2021<br>
Investing Rationally<br>
2021 | Noam Chomsky at The University of Oxford. <br>
from:<br>
Noam Chomsky on global challenges (June 10, 2021):
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://youtu.be/XZthEbT2DBw">https://youtu.be/XZthEbT2DBw</a> <br>
Noam Chomsky biographical interview (June 4, 2021):
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://youtu.be/VVm1PdEQlFM">https://youtu.be/VVm1PdEQlFM</a> <br>
<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IpQ2zi6gd_w">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IpQ2zi6gd_w</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<br>
[Climate Psychologist in video book talk]<br>
<b>Sally Weintrobe | Climate Breakdown Shakedown - Climate Grief |
Extinction Rebellion UK</b><br>
Jul 10, 2021<br>
Extinction Rebellion<br>
Sally Weintrobe speaks to XR Greenwich on the topic of Climate
Grief.<br>
<br>
“Most of us have been living in a bubble of disavowal about global
heating”, Sally Weintrobe writes. “We were aware it was happening,
but we minimized its impacts. What might people be feeling as they
emerge from the climate bubble?” <br>
<br>
No-one is better qualified to discuss these questions than Sally, a
founder member of the Climate Psychology Alliance and chair of the
International Psychoanalytic Association's Climate Committee, whose
new book, Psychological Roots of the Climate Crisis: Neoliberal
Exceptionalism and the Culture of Uncare, has just been published.<br>
<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.sallyweintrobe.com/noahs">https://www.sallyweintrobe.com/noahs</a>-...<br>
<br>
"Climate Breakdown Shakedown" is an ongoing series of talks from
guest experts on a variety of topics relating to the climate and
ecological emergency. <br>
<br>
For more please visit: <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://xrb.link/u8my4r9bj2">https://xrb.link/u8my4r9bj2</a>
for previous sessions or <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://xrgreenwich.com/climate-break">https://xrgreenwich.com/climate-break</a>...
for upcoming talks. <br>
<br>
Help XR mobilise and donate: <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://extinctionrebellion.uk/donate/">https://extinctionrebellion.uk/donate/</a>
<br>
<br>
Extinction Rebellion UK: <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://extinctionrebellion.uk/">https://extinctionrebellion.uk/</a>
<br>
International: <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://rebellion.global/">https://rebellion.global/</a> <br>
Twitter: <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://twitter.com/ExtinctionR">https://twitter.com/ExtinctionR</a>
<br>
Facebook: <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.facebook.com/XRebellionUK/">https://www.facebook.com/XRebellionUK/</a>
<br>
<br>
1. Tell The Truth <br>
2. Act Now <br>
3. Beyond Politics <br>
<br>
World Map of Extinction Rebellion Groups: <a
class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://rebellion.global/branches/">https://rebellion.global/branches/</a>
<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Htf30nQMaQY">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Htf30nQMaQY</a><br>
<br>
<p><br>
</p>
[disinformation warfare]<br>
<b>Fox News’ planned 24-hour weather channel has climate experts
worried</b><br>
Climate crisis researchers worry about the channel’s reach to
perpetuate misinformation and advance political goals<br>
Adam Gabbatt - 10 Jul 2021 <br>
<br>
Fox News Media, the company that owns the reactionary, climate
crisis-skeptical Fox News, is launching a weather channel this year
– a development that has climate crisis experts worried.<br>
<br>
Fox Weather, a 24-hour channel devoted to all things meteorological,
promises “cutting-edge display technology”, according to a press
release, with “forecasting experts surrounding every major weather
event”.<br>
<br>
But it is Fox News’ output, and the potential for Fox Weather to
adopt a similar tone to its sister channel, that has onlookers
concerned. Hosts on Fox News have spent years rubbishing or
undermining the idea of manmade climate breakdown, and the fact that
two Fox News-linked executives are behind the weather channel launch
doesn’t bode well.<br>
<br>
“Fox News has access to and is highly trusted by a wide range of
conservative Americans – which is precisely the audience that least
well understands the serious threats that climate change poses to
the safety, security and health of all Americans,” said Edward
Maibach, director of George Mason University’s Center for Climate
Change Communication.<br>
<br>
“If Fox chooses to use its access and credibility to inform viewers
about the realities of climate change and its impacts on the
weather, it could be a game changer. Conversely, if it opts to
perpetuate misinformation to advance political goals, it will be a
huge disservice to all Americans – conservative, liberal and
moderate,” Maibach said.<br>
<br>
Last year, Tucker Carlson rubbished the idea that forest fires on
the west coast were a result of climate crisis – serious climate
scientists, however, agree that the fires are very much linked to
the breakdown – and suggested environmental hazards were a liberal
conspiracy.<br>
<br>
Carlson’s colleague Laura Ingraham has insisted, contrary to
experts’ findings, that the planet is in a “natural” cycle of
warming, and suggested that environmental activists like Greta
Thunberg had been “brainwashed”, while Sean Hannity said the left’s
“obsession” with the climate was a “political tool”.<br>
<br>
“The danger of [Fox News Media] running a weather channel is that if
they pervert news about the weather anything like how they’ve
perverted news about climate change and energy politics, millions of
Americans will be further misled about this crisis,” said Geoffrey
Supran, research fellow at Harvard University’s department of the
history of science.<br>
<br>
“It’s been shown that the most important predictors of public
support for climate action are understanding that this crisis is
real, human-caused, serious and solvable,” Supran said.<br>
<br>
“If, as I and I’m sure others fear, [Fox News Media’s] weather
channel downplays the links between global warming and extreme
weather, it will only solidify their viewers’ existing biases
against climate action.”<br>
<br>
The tenor of Fox News hosts’ commentary matches with data from
Public Citizen, a non-profit thinktank. In 2019, Public Citizen
found that in the first half of the year Fox News devoted 247
segments to climate crisis. Of those, “212 (86%) were dismissive of
the climate crisis, cast warming and its consequences in doubt or
employed fearmongering when discussing climate solutions”, Public
Citizen reported.<br>
<br>
“Fox News has been a powerful engine of climate misinformation for
years – so powerful, in fact, that its influence has been named the
‘Fox News Effect’,” Maibach said.<br>
<br>
“One of our studies, for example, showed that before Fox News began
its attack on the Green New Deal, most conservatives supported its
core policy proposals. Six months later – after Fox had relentlessly
attacked it and its sponsors – support for those proposals dropped
to near zero among frequent Fox viewers.”<br>
<br>
Fox Weather has already poached meteorologists from around the
country, according to the New York Times, including the Weather
Channel’s “senior weather product architect” Shane Brown. The
channel, based in New York City, will be advertiser-funded, and
stream 24 hours a day.<br>
<br>
Sharri Berg, formerly the executive vice-president of news
operations for the Fox News channel, will oversee Fox Weather, along
with Suzanne Scott, CEO of Fox News Media. In announcing the channel
last year, Berg said “weather is a vital component to news”.<br>
<br>
“Combining our trusted reporters and expert meteorologists from Fox
News and [Fox Television stations] nationwide, the Fox Weather
products will be built to serve our audiences in a customized
fashion,” Berg said.<br>
<br>
In a statement, a Fox Weather spokesperson said:<br>
<br>
“With a dedicated team of leading meteorologists and experts
stationed across the country, Fox Weather will provide in-depth
reporting surrounding all weather conditions and we are excited to
showcase to viewers what a full-service comprehensive weather
platform can deliver beginning this fall.”<br>
<br>
If Fox Weather does not interfere with the weather information its
new staff is putting out, then Maibach said there is hope – for the
weather channel at least.<br>
<br>
“I don’t expect that Fox News will change its ways or its views
about climate change anytime soon, but Fox Weather has the
opportunity to get the facts right. Let’s hope it chooses to,”
Maibach said.<br>
<br>
Viewers will have to wait and see what approach Fox Weather takes,
but in the meantime, there is serious concern given the damage the
American right has already done to efforts to mitigate the climate
crisis.<br>
<br>
“We’ve already seen the ways in which 40 years of disinformation in
the United States has stifled both climate action and the narrative
around climate,” said Lily Gardner, a community organizer with the
Sunrise Movement, a youth-led organization which aims to stop
climate crisis.<br>
<br>
“Nancy Pelosi [the Democratic House speaker] and Newt Gingrich [a
Republican former House speaker] went from releasing an ad together
in 2007 that indicated that they were interested in working on
climate policy, to climate becoming a deeply partisan issue in which
the facts are debated as opposed to the solutions.”<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.theguardian.com/media/2021/jul/10/fox-news-weather-channel-climate-crisis">https://www.theguardian.com/media/2021/jul/10/fox-news-weather-channel-climate-crisis</a><br>
<br>
<br>
<p> </p>
<br>
[Opinion Manipulation watch]<br>
[If you don't read the newspaper, you're uninformed. If you read the
newspaper, you're mis-informed.<br>
Mark Twain]<br>
<b>If You Don't Trust The Media: WATCH THIS!!!</b><br>
Jul 10, 2021<br>
Russell Brand<br>
The United States ranks last among 46 countries when it comes to
public trust in the media. Is this surprising when, as Glenn
Greenwald revealed, a court recently ruled during a defamation case
that “Rachel Maddow's viewers know she offers exaggeration and
opinion, not facts”. <br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aLa5zAsj6V0">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aLa5zAsj6V0</a><br>
<br>
<p><br>
</p>
[The news archive - looking back]<br>
<font size="+1"><b>On this day in the history of global warming July
11, 1990</b></font><br>
<br>
The Los Angeles Times observes that President George H. W. Bush
seems to have dissociative identity disorder when it comes to
climate:<br>
<blockquote> "The tension is often explained as a dispute between
Bush's strong-willed chief of staff, John H. Sununu, who is deeply
suspicious of environmentalists, and his Environmental Protection
Agency chief, William K. Reilly.<br>
<br>
"That explanation, however, is an inaccurate characterization,
Administration officials say. Although Reilly has advocated a
stronger environmental policy, he has neither the clout nor the
access to Bush to challenge Sununu, the officials say. In fact,
Reilly has been conspicuous by his absence from the economic
summit, virtually the only senior Administration official with an
interest in the summit issues whom Bush left in Washington.<br>
<br>
"Instead, the disputes within the Administration reflect Bush's
own ambivalence about the issues. Throughout his Administration,
he has been pulled in opposite directions on the environment,
tugged between his desire to placate environmentally-conscious
voters on the one side and his instinct to protect business people
from government regulation on the other."<br>
</blockquote>
<b>The Times also notes:</b><br>
"Bush's top aides are unanimous in believing that the scientific
evidence is shaky on all aspects of global warming--the problem's
dimensions, its potential effects and its causes."<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="http://articles.latimes.com/1990-07-11/news/mn-224_1_global-warming-issue">http://articles.latimes.com/1990-07-11/news/mn-224_1_global-warming-issue</a><br>
<br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p>/-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------/</p>
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