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<p><font size="+2"><i><b>January 17, 2023</b></i></font></p>
<i>[ news reports of recent rains ] </i><br>
<b>California turns into an Ocean! Record flooding in San Diego and
Sacramento</b><br>
Wild Weather US<br>
8,560 views Jan 16, 2023 CALIFORNIA<br>
In this video, we're witnessing record flooding in California. San
Diego and Sacramento are both experiencing record flooding, and the
entire state is on high alert.<br>
<br>
If you're in California right now, please be careful! This flooding
is really serious, and if you're in any danger, please call 911.
We'll be updating this video with more information as it becomes
available. In the meantime, please stay safe and stay informed!<br>
<br>
#storm #snow #flooding #usstorm #usnews #hail #California
#SanFrancisco #atmosphericriver <br>
<br>
Flooding in Santa Barbara, CA - <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://youtu.be/EXFWcCs_JRU">https://youtu.be/EXFWcCs_JRU</a><br>
Heavy Snowstorm hit Ontario - <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://youtu.be/ZP0yrAtbeH8">https://youtu.be/ZP0yrAtbeH8</a><br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S64grzkhmTQ">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S64grzkhmTQ</a><br>
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<i>[ KTVU tv news report California reservoirs ]</i><br>
<b>California reservoirs filling quickly from steady storms</b><br>
KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco<br>
1,298,417 views Jan 10, 2023<br>
The recent series of storms that have drenched the Bay Area and
other parts of California are having a significant impact on the
state's reservo<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ZYTKxH9Wlc">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ZYTKxH9Wlc</a><br>
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<i>[ Meta analysis report -- from Axios ]</i><br>
Jan 14, 2023 - Energy & Environment<br>
<b>Global warming is about to accelerate</b><br>
Andrew Freedman, author of Axios Generate<br>
- -<br>
Animation showing global average surface temperature departures from
average vs. 1951-1980. Image: NASA GISS.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://images.axios.com/eYUjJ_SuH34kE0QMRRLfw8G-Isg=/0x0:1280x720/1920x1080/2023/01/13/1673625006487.gif?w=1920">https://images.axios.com/eYUjJ_SuH34kE0QMRRLfw8G-Isg=/0x0:1280x720/1920x1080/2023/01/13/1673625006487.gif?w=1920</a><br>
- -<br>
Believe it or not, average global surface temperatures have actually
been relatively cool over the last three years — but that's about to
change.<br>
<br>
<b>Why it matters: </b>Temperatures are expected to jump this year
— and 2024 could set a new global record.<br>
<br>
<b>The big picture: </b>A rare "triple dip" La Niña in the tropical
Pacific Ocean kept temperatures in check in 2022, with the year
ranking fifth-warmest since instrument records began.<br>
<blockquote>- La Niña events are characterized by
cooler-than-average waters in the equatorial tropical Pacific, and
tend to put a lid on global temperatures.<br>
- But 2022 still wound up as the fifth warmest year on record
according to NASA and the Copernicus Climate Change Service. And
if the phenomena dissipates, as forecasts increasingly indicate,
global temperatures would likely jump this year and even more so
next year.<br>
- If an El Niño event — characterized by milder than average ocean
temperatures — sets in across the tropical Pacific, 2023 could
even meet or come close to hitting a record high.<br>
</blockquote>
<b>What they're saying: </b>"I forecast about a 15% possibility of
a new record in 2023. And if we are in an El Niño by the end of
2023, an almost certainty of a new record in 2024," Gavin Schmidt,
who heads NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York,
told Axios via email.<br>
<br>
<b>Zoom in:</b> According to NASA, the record-warmest year occurred
in 2020 and 2016, the latter of which occurred when there was a
major El Niño underway. This has led some climate change doubters to
claim that global warming halted in 2016.<br>
<blockquote>- - However, surface temperatures are just one sign of
global warming. Other climate indicators all showed signs of
continued global warming during 2022. Ocean heat content hit a
record high, a recent study found.<br>
- - Glaciers continued to shrink, sea levels kept rising, and
extreme weather and climate events continued to batter countries
around the world.<br>
- - Studies tied many of these deadly extreme events to
human-caused climate change.<br>
</blockquote>
<b>What's next: </b>This year looks milder than the last few years
have been. It has a decent chance of at least making it into the top
five, if not the top three warmest years, depending on how a
transition to an El Niño plays out.<br>
<blockquote>- - Then 2024 has a higher likelihood of setting a new
record, scientists told Axios. This is in part because there is a
lag in the atmosphere's response to El Niño.<br>
</blockquote>
<b>Threat level: </b>The U.K. Met Office is forecasting that global
average temperatures in 2023 will be at least 1.2°C (2.16°F) above
the pre-industrial average. Keep in mind that the Paris Agreement
tries to limit warming to 1.5°C.<br>
<blockquote>- - If warming exceeds this goal, studies show, the odds
of potentially devastating climate change consequences will
increase, such as greater melting of the polar ice sheets and the
loss of tropical coral reefs.<br>
- - Zeke Hausfather, climate research lead at payments company
Stripe, said 2023 looks warmer than the past few years, but
pinpointing exactly how much is difficult at this point.<br>
- - "Given lags in the surface temperature response a transition
to El Niño conditions in the latter half of 2023 would have more
of an impact on 2024," he said via email.<br>
</blockquote>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.axios.com/2023/01/14/global-warming-accelerates-2023">https://www.axios.com/2023/01/14/global-warming-accelerates-2023</a><br>
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<i>[ new crimes of our times - text and video report ]</i><br>
<b>Vehicle charging stations targeted by copper thieves, Seattle
City Light says</b><br>
by Mo Haider, KOMO News Staff<br>
Sunday, January 15th 2023<br>
SEATTLE, Wash. — Metal thieves have found a new target: electric
vehicle charging stations.<br>
<br>
Seattle City Light says it's seen a rash of vandalism. It turns out
the thieves are after the copper in an electric car's charging
cables.<br>
<br>
Jenn Strang, Media Relations Manager for Seattle City Light, says
this has been a problem on the rise.<br>
<br>
“Since March of 2022, we have seen an increase of activity where
we’ve have had people coming and removing the charging cables from
our public charging stations,” said Strang.<br>
<br>
Seattle City Light says 8 charging stations of theirs have been hit,
and they believe it has to do with the copper in the cables.<br>
<br>
“They are taking the metal and they are turning it in for monetary
gain. Unfortunately, the amount of money they are going in is
nominal. It’s about ten dollars,” said Strang.<br>
<br>
The cost to replace the cables comes at a price tag of about $2,000
plus about $500 to have them installed.<br>
<br>
Jim Fuda, the Exec. Dir. of Crime Stoppers of Puget Sound, says
copper theft has been a problem for decades and electric vehicle
chargers are just another way for thieves to get a hold of it.<br>
<br>
“What’s a charging cable, anywhere from 6 to 10 to 12 feet, they cut
that up in two to six foot lengths, and haul it out quickly, and
strip it and go sell it to a fence,” said Fuda.<br>
<br>
Seattle City Light is looking at other ways to stop cable thefts
such as increasing security when it comes to access to chargers and
a pilot program for curbside stations in communities.<br>
<br>
“Instead of via a charging station that someone would drove up to,
it’s something that’s mounted up to a pole and then you have to have
an app, so by accessing the app the charger comes down,” said
Strang.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://komonews.com/news/local/vehicle-charging-stations-targted-by-copper-thieves-electric-tesla-public-seattle-city-light-car-wire-strang-curbside-puget-sound-washington-truck-drive-cable-app-supply-chain">https://komonews.com/news/local/vehicle-charging-stations-targted-by-copper-thieves-electric-tesla-public-seattle-city-light-car-wire-strang-curbside-puget-sound-washington-truck-drive-cable-app-supply-chain</a><br>
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</p>
<i>[ A distilled lessons in misleading and disinformation - share
and replay 41 min video classic]</i><br>
<b>23 Ways to Mislead</b><br>
John Cook<br>
2.73K subscribers<br>
6,841 views Oct 8, 2020<br>
This Critical Thinking About Climate video explains 23 rhetorical
techniques used in misinformation. Understanding the techniques of
science denial is like a universal vaccine against misinformation.
Once you know these red flags, you’ll be able to spot attempts to
mislead you.<br>
<br>
For more info on the logical fallacies and rhetorical techniques in
science misinformation, see <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://sks.to/flicc">http://sks.to/flicc</a><br>
Timestamps (h/t Jem Segal)<br>
<blockquote>Fake Experts: 1:30<br>
Bulk Fake Experts: 3:44<br>
Magnified Minority: 5:22<br>
False Balance: 5:43<br>
Logical Fallacies: 6:56<br>
Ad Hominem: 7:08<br>
Ambiguity: 8:49<br>
False Equivalence: 10:12<br>
Apples vs Oranges: 11:04<br>
False Analogy: 12:12<br>
False Balance (2): 13:58<br>
Oversimplification: 14:24<br>
Single Cause: 15:39<br>
False Choice: 17:28<br>
Red Herring: 19:59<br>
Blowfish: 21:08<br>
Strawman: 22:37<br>
Impossible Expectations: 24:09<br>
Moving Goalposts: 26:01<br>
Lowered Expectations: 27:52<br>
Cherry Picking: 29:36<br>
Anecdote: 31:28<br>
Slothful Induction: 33:30<br>
Wishful Thinking: 35:53<br>
Conspiracy Theories: 37:34<br>
</blockquote>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gecDy9wDuCs">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gecDy9wDuCs</a><br>
<p>- -</p>
<i>[ reminder of the classic web site for climate information -
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://skepticalscience.com/">https://skepticalscience.com/</a> ]</i><br>
<b>Explaining climate change science & rebutting global warming
misinformation</b><br>
Global warming is real and human-caused. It is leading to
large-scale climate change. Under the guise of climate "skepticism",
the public is bombarded with misinformation that casts doubt on the
reality of human-caused global warming. This website gets skeptical
about global warming "skepticism".<br>
<br>
Our mission is simple: debunk climate misinformation by presenting
peer-reviewed science and explaining the techniques of science
denial.<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://skepticalscience.com/">https://skepticalscience.com/</a><br>
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</p>
<i>[ humans now have a true but imperfect glimpse into their
precarious future - clips from text ]</i><br>
<b>‘If you win the popular imagination, you change the game’: why we
need new stories on climate</b><br>
So much is happening, both wonderful and terrible – and it matters
how we tell it. We can’t erase the bad news, but to ignore the good
is the route to indifference or despair<br>
<br>
by Rebecca Solnit<br>
Thu 12 Jan 2023 <br>
Every crisis is in part a storytelling crisis. This is as true of
climate chaos as anything else. We are hemmed in by stories that
prevent us from seeing, or believing in, or acting on the
possibilities for change. Some are habits of mind, some are industry
propaganda. Sometimes, the situation has changed but the stories
haven’t, and people follow the old versions, like outdated maps,
into dead ends.<br>
<br>
We need to leave the age of fossil fuel behind, swiftly and
decisively. But what drives our machines won’t change until we
change what drives our ideas. The visionary organiser adrienne maree
brown wrote not long ago that there is an element of science fiction
in climate action: “We are shaping the future we long for and have
not yet experienced. I believe that we are in an imagination
battle.”<br>
<br>
In order to do what the climate crisis demands of us, we have to
find stories of a livable future, stories of popular power, stories
that motivate people to do what it takes to make the world we need.
Perhaps we also need to become better critics and listeners, more
careful about what we take in and who’s telling it, and what we
believe and repeat, because stories can give power – or they can
take it away.<br>
<br>
To change our relationship to the physical world – to end an era of
profligate consumption by the few that has consequences for the many
– means changing how we think about pretty much everything: wealth,
power, joy, time, space, nature, value, what constitutes a good
life, what matters, how change itself happens. As the climate
journalist Mary Heglar writes, we are not short on innovation.
“We’ve got loads of ideas for solar panels and microgrids. While we
have all of these pieces, we don’t have a picture of how they come
together to build a new world. For too long, the climate fight has
been limited to scientists and policy experts. While we need their
skills, we also need so much more. When I survey the field, it’s
clear that what we desperately need is more artists.”<br>
<br>
What the climate crisis is, what we can do about it, and what kind
of a world we can have is all about what stories we tell and whose
stories are heard. Climate change was a story that fell on mostly
indifferent ears when it was first discussed in the mainstream more
than 30 years ago. Even a dozen years ago, it was supposed to be
happening very slowly and in the distant future. There were a lot of
references to “our grandchildren’s time”. It was a problem that was
difficult to grasp – this dispersed, incremental, atmospheric,
invisible, global problem with many causes and manifestations, whose
solutions are also dispersed and manifold. That voices from the
climate movement have finally succeeded in making the vast majority
understand it, and many care passionately about it, might be the
biggest single victory the movement will have. Because once you’ve
won the popular imagination, you’ve changed the game and its
possible outcomes. But this was a long, slow, arduous process, and
misconceptions still abound.<br>
<br>
<br>
A lot of people don’t know that we’ve largely won the battle to make
people aware and concerned. The LA Times ran a well-intentioned
editorial last year about how most Americans don’t care about
climate breakdown. That was true once, but no longer is. A Pew
Research poll in 2020 concluded that two-thirds of Americans wanted
to see more government action on climate, but last summer the
scientific journal Nature published a study concluding that most
Americans believe that only a minority (37-43%) support climate
action, when in reality a large majority (66-80%) does. That gap
between perceived and actual support undermines motivation and
confidence. We need better stories – and sometimes better means more
up to date.<br>
<br>
Outright climate denial – the old story that climate change isn’t
real – has been rendered largely obsolete (outside social media) by
climate-driven catastrophes around the globe and good work by
climate activists and journalists. But other stories still stop us
from seeing clearly. Greenwashing – the schemes created by fossil
fuel corporations and others to portray themselves as on the
environment’s side while they continue their profitable destruction
– is rampant. It’s harder to recognise a false friend than an honest
enemy, and their false solutions, delaying tactics and empty
promises can be confusing for non-experts. Fortunately, as the
climate movement has diversified, one new organisation, Clean
Creatives, focuses specifically on pressuring advertising and PR
agencies to stop doing the industry’s dirty work. Likewise, climate
journalists are exposing how fossil fuel money is funding
pseudo-environmental opposition to offshore wind turbines.<br>
<br>
(As the climate activist and oil policy analyst Antonia Juhasz
recently told me, the climate movement is now going after every
aspect of the fossil fuel industry, including funding by banks and,
via the divestment movement, shares held by investors; donations to
politicians; insurers; permits for extraction; transport;
refinement; emissions, notably through lawsuits concerning their
impact; shutting coal-fired power plants; and pushing for a rapid
transition to electrification.)<br>
<br>
But we still lack stories that give context. For example, I see
people excoriate the mining, principally for lithium and cobalt,
that will be an inevitable part of building renewables – turbines,
batteries, solar panels, electric machinery – apparently oblivious
to the far vaster scale and impact of fossil fuel mining. If you’re
concerned about mining on indigenous land, about local impacts or
labour conditions, I give you the biggest mining operations ever
undertaken: for oil, gas, and coal, and the hungry machines that
must constantly consume them.<br>
<br>
Extracting material that will be burned up creates the incessant
cycle of consumption on which the fossil fuel industry has grown
fabulously rich. It creates climate chaos as well as destruction and
contamination at every stage of the process. Globally, burning
fossil fuels kills almost 9 million people annually, a death toll
larger than any recent war. But that death toll is largely invisible
for lack of compelling stories about it.<br>
<br>
All mining needs to be done with respect for the land and people in
the vicinity, but the impact of mining for renewables needs to be
weighed against the far more devastating impact of mining for and
burning fossil fuel. The race is on to find battery materials that
are more commonly available and less impactful than lithium and
cobalt, and some of the results look promising. Last summer,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology announced an aluminium-sulphur
battery is in the works, while a US company is developing one that
stores electricity using iron – the so-called “iron-air” battery.
Efforts to extract battery materials from longterm coal waste in
West Virginia are among the many others under way. And the Inflation
Reduction Act includes funding to research better battery materials
and domestic US sources.<br>
<br>
Other stories of premature defeat are all too common. In the
400,000-strong 2014 climate march in New York City, one section
marched behind a huge banner declaring “WE HAVE THE SOLUTIONS” – but
many people still believe we do not. We have the solutions we need
in solar and wind; we just need to build them out and make the
transition, fast. Looking to wildly ineffectual carbon sequestration
and other undeveloped technologies as a relevant solution is like
ignoring the lifeboats at hand in the hope that fancy new ones are
coming when the ship is sinking and speed is of the essence.<br>
<br>
One story I frequently encounter frames the possibilities in
absolutes: if we can’t win everything, then we lose everything.
There are so many doom-soaked stories out there – about how
civilisation, humanity, even life itself, are scheduled to die out.
This apocalyptic thinking is due to another narrative failure: the
inability to imagine a world different than the one we currently
inhabit.<br>
<br>
People without much sense of history imagine the world as static.
They assume that if the present order is failing, the system is
collapsing, and there is no alternative. A historical imagination
equips you to understand that change is ceaseless. You only have to
look to the past to see such a world, dramatically different half a
century ago, stunningly so a century ago. The UK, for example, ran
almost entirely on coal power until the 1960s, and if you had said
then that it would have to quit coal, many would have imagined this
meant an utter collapse of the energy system, not its
transformation. Even in 2008, the organisation Carbon Brief noted,
“four-fifths of the UK’s electricity came from fossil fuels. Since
then, the UK has cleaned up its electricity mix faster than any
other major world economy. Coal-fired power has virtually
disappeared and even gas use is down by a quarter. Instead, the
country now gets more than half of its electricity from low-carbon
sources, such as solar, wind and nuclear.” Scotland already
generates nearly all the electricity it needs from renewables.<br>
<br>
While I often hear people casually assert that our world is doomed,
no reputable scientist makes such claims. Most are deeply worried,
but far from hopeless. There are already profound losses, but our
action or inaction determine how much more loss will occur, and
whose it will be, and some repair is possible. Efforts sufficient to
reduce the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere could lower
temperatures and reverse some aspects of climate breakdown.<br>
<br>
Even the journalist David Wallace-Wells, who rose to fame with a
deeply pessimistic book about climate a few years ago, has shifted
his view. He currently describes a future somewhere between the best
and worst case scenarios, a future “with the most terrifying
predictions made improbable by decarbonisation and the most hopeful
ones practically foreclosed by tragic delay. The window of possible
climate futures is narrowing, and as a result, we are getting a
clearer sense of what’s to come: a new world, full of disruption …
yet mercifully short of true climate apocalypse.”<br>
<br>
A climate story we urgently need is one that exposes who is actually
responsible for climate chaos. It’s been popular to say that we are
all responsible, but Oxfam reports that over the past 25 years, the
carbon impact of the top 1% of the wealthiest human beings was twice
that of the bottom 50%, so responsibility for the impact and the
capacity to make change is currently distributed very unevenly.<br>
<br>
By saying “we are all responsible”, we avoid the fact that the
global majority of us don’t need to change much, but a minority
needs to change a lot. This is also a reminder that the idea that we
need to renounce our luxuries and live more simply doesn’t really
apply to the majority of human beings outside what we could perhaps
call the overdeveloped world. What is true of Beverly Hills is not
true of the majority from Bangladesh to Bolivia.<br>
<br>
When it comes to who’s harming the climate, it’s also been popular
to focus on individual contributions. The fossil fuel industry likes
the narrative of personal responsibility as a way to keep us
scrutinising ourselves and one another, rather than them. They’ve
promoted the concept of climate footprints as a way to keep the
focus on us and not them, and it’s worked. Usually if I ask people
what they’re doing about the climate emergency, most will talk about
what they’re not consuming or doing – but these will never add up to
the speed and scale of change needed to change the system.<br>
<br>
One of the goals of system change is to supersede individual virtue.
Just as you no longer have to opt in to buying a car with seatbelts
or ask for the no-smoking section on the train or restaurant, at
some point in the near future you won’t have to opt into travelling
in an electric car or bus, or living or working in all-electric
buildings. Electrification will have happened because of the
collective action that takes shape as policy and regulation...[more]<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.theguardian.com/news/2023/jan/12/rebecca-solnit-climate-crisis-popular-imagination-why-we-need-new-stories">https://www.theguardian.com/news/2023/jan/12/rebecca-solnit-climate-crisis-popular-imagination-why-we-need-new-stories</a><br>
<br>
<p><br>
</p>
<br>
<i>[The news archive - looking back at recent attempts to bring in
politics ]</i><br>
<font size="+2"><i><b>January 17, 2016</b></i></font> <br>
January 17, 2016:<br>
Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders and former Maryland Governor Martin
O'Malley discuss the pressing need to address climate change at the
NBC/YouTube Democratic primary debate. <br>
<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vbE5PSu-p0s">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vbE5PSu-p0s</a><br>
<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/sanders-trump-climate-change-hoax-chinese">http://talkingpointsmemo.com/livewire/sanders-trump-climate-change-hoax-chinese</a><br>
<br>
<br>
<p>======================================= <br>
<b class="moz-txt-star"><span class="moz-txt-tag">*Mass media is
lacking, many </span>daily summaries<span class="moz-txt-tag">
deliver global warming news - a few are email delivered*</span></b>
<br>
<br>
=========================================================<br>
<b>*Inside Climate News</b><br>
Newsletters<br>
We deliver climate news to your inbox like nobody else. Every day
or once a week, our original stories and digest of the web’s top
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<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
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--------------------------------------- <br>
*<b>Climate Nexus</b> <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://climatenexus.org/hot-news/*">https://climatenexus.org/hot-news/*</a>
<br>
Delivered straight to your inbox every morning, Hot News
summarizes the most important climate and energy news of the day,
delivering an unmatched aggregation of timely, relevant reporting.
It also provides original reporting and commentary on climate
denial and pro-polluter activity that would otherwise remain
largely unexposed. 5 weekday <br>
================================= <br>
<b class="moz-txt-star"><span class="moz-txt-tag">*</span>Carbon
Brief Daily </b><span class="moz-txt-star"><a
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class="moz-txt-star"><span class="moz-txt-tag">*</span></b> <br>
Every weekday morning, in time for your morning coffee, Carbon
Brief sends out a free email known as the “Daily Briefing” to
thousands of subscribers around the world. The email is a digest
of the past 24 hours of media coverage related to climate change
and energy, as well as our pick of the key studies published in
the peer-reviewed journals. <br>
more at <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.getrevue.co/publisher/carbon-brief">https://www.getrevue.co/publisher/carbon-brief</a>
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/-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------/
<br>
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