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<font size="+2" face="Calibri"><i><b>February 4, 2023</b></i></font><font
face="Calibri"><br>
</font> <font face="Calibri"> </font> <br>
<font face="Calibri"><i>[ police killed 2 climate activists -
reports 350.org ] </i><br>
</font> <font face="Calibri"><b>Climate Justice Must Address State
& Police Violence</b><br>
</font><font face="Calibri">CW: Police violence<br>
This year we have already been faced with the dark realities of
police and state violence against people of color.<br>
<br>
In Tennessee, Tyre Nichols was on his way home from taking
pictures of the sunset and admiring the beauty of our earth when
police officers pulled him over, brutalized, and killed him.<br>
<br>
In Georgia, Manuel Esteban Paez Teran, also known as Tortuguita
(Little Turtle), was shot and killed by police for protesting and
resisting the building of “Cop City” – a city plan to build a
police and military training site in Weelaunee Forest.<br>
<br>
Both Nichols and Teran deserved to live and to be treated with
dignity and respect. We’re left with complete rage and horror that
their lives were brutally and unnecessarily ended by a violent
policing institution that is rooted in white supremacy and
prioritizes power and abuse over the needs of our people.<br>
<br>
This state-sponsored violence and over-policing disproportionately
impacts Black, Latinx, and Indigenous people – and it mirrors
state-sponsored police violence towards environmental defenders
worldwide, especially in the Global South.<br>
<br>
Decades of environmental justice activism have shown that these
same communities also bear the burden of the climate crisis. While
a select few corporations and billionaires in the Global North
profit, our communities shoulder the harmful effects of fossil
fuel extraction, pollution, and their related health impacts.<br>
<br>
As an organization and as a movement: we cannot say we are for
climate justice, without also rising up against state-sponsored
violence.<br>
<br>
Our work to achieve climate justice and end the era of fossil
fuels must be intersectional and focused on liberation.<br>
<br>
There is no way to tackle the scale of the climate crisis without
addressing the systemic racism that fuels it or the violent
institutions willingly destroying our environment for training
grounds to further more unchecked abuses of power and violence.<br>
</font><font face="Calibri"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://350.org/climate-justice-intersectional-and-focused-on-liberation">https://350.org/climate-justice-intersectional-and-focused-on-liberation</a></font>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<font face="Calibri"><i>[ this also works for anyone facing a
predictable hardship - perhaps tell FEMA ]</i><br>
</font><font face="Calibri"><b>Climate disasters hit poor people
hardest. There’s an obvious solution to that.</b><br>
New experiments show the power of giving cash right before extreme
weather strikes.<br>
By Sigal Samuel <br>
</font><font face="Calibri">Feb 3, 2023<br>
</font><font face="Calibri">- -</font><br>
<font face="Calibri"><b>How just-in-time climate cash transfers work</b><br>
Humanitarian relief organizations are used to doing two things:
helping people out after disaster has already struck, and helping
them out by giving them stuff. A hurricane strikes, and in comes
the Red Cross or the United Way with water and tarps for victims.<br>
<br>
Just-in-time climate cash transfers turn that model on its head.<br>
<br>
First, they offer people support before the shock hits, making
them more resilient and limiting the economic and human damage
when it comes. Second, they give straight-up cash. Not food. Not
Super Bowl merchandise from the team that didn’t win the Super
Bowl. Money.<br>
</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">We know from research on poverty alleviation
that cash is preferable because it gives people the agency to buy
the things they really need, as opposed to what outsiders think
they need. And it can be disseminated much faster than goods,
thanks to cellphone-based banking. Cash is now considered the
baseline standard for challenges like poverty alleviation, with
other interventions judged on whether they’re superior to cash.<br>
<br>
And in the past few years, evidence is mounting that cash works
very well for climate adaptation, too. Let’s look at three
examples.<br>
<br>
In July 2020, data-driven forecasts of river levels in Bangladesh
showed that many households were about to experience severe
flooding. The World Food Programme sent 23,434 households around
$53 each a few days prior to and during the floods.<br>
<br>
The preemptive action turned out to be a great bet. Those floods
ended up being some of the worst and longest in decades: Over a
million households were inundated, and food markets and health
services were disrupted.<br>
<br>
Compared to households that didn’t get a cash transfer, households
that did were 36 percent less likely to go a day without eating,
12 percent more likely to evacuate household members, and 17
percent more likely to evacuate their livestock.<br>
<br>
And the impacts were surprisingly durable. As the study authors
write, “Three months after the flood, households that had received
the transfer reported significantly higher child and adult food
consumption and wellbeing. They also experienced lower asset loss,
engaged in less costly borrowing after the flood, and reported
higher earning potential.”...</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">- -<br>
</font><font face="Calibri">Soon after, the World Food Programme
also tried anticipatory cash transfers in Somalia and Ethiopia,
with similarly positive results: The cash infusions protected
communities’ food security and livelihoods from the worst impacts
of a forecasted drought.<br>
<br>
In 2021, the government of Niger kicked off its own anticipatory
cash transfer program for responding to water scarcity. The pilot
program detects droughts early by using the satellite-based Water
Requirement Satisfaction Index. When the index shows that water
has fallen 10 percent below its median at the end of the
agricultural season, it automatically triggers the unconditional
cash transfers to be sent out.<br>
<br>
The trigger was activated for the first time in November 2021, and
since March 2022, emergency transfers have been sent to 15,400
drought-affected households. These transfers have allowed farmers
to get help three to five months earlier than they would if they
were just relying on traditional humanitarian aid. And receiving
the support earlier meant they were less likely to have to resort
to coping responses with costly social effects like reducing food
consumption or pulling kids out of school.<br>
<br>
The nonprofit GiveDirectly, a big believer in unconditional cash
transfers, launched a climate adaptation program last year in
Malawi. The extremely low-income country — where nearly
three-quarters of the population lives on less than $1.90 a day —
has already been hit with climate-related storms, with more
expected to come.<br>
<br>
Knowing how climate-vulnerable Malawi is, GiveDirectly gave 5,000
farmers in the Balaka region two payments of $400, one in April
and one in October, to coincide with key moments in their
agricultural schedule. October is also the beginning of the wet
season, when 95 percent of precipitation falls, meaning it’s when
cyclones and extreme weather are most likely to occur.<br>
<br>
Simultaneously, a group called United Purpose gave the farmers
trainings on climate-smart agriculture, irrigation practices, and
soil conservation. GiveDirectly and United Purpose had coordinated
on timing, but they didn’t inform the farmers of the connection
because they didn’t want to make the farmers feel they were
expected to spend the cash on building climate resilience. They
wanted the cash to be truly unconditional.<br>
<br>
The results so far are promising. More farmers are using better
seeds (which are drought- and flood-resistant), more are
intercropping (which improves fertility), and fewer are going
hungry (specifically, there was about a 60 percent drop in the
proportion of recipients who went a whole day without eating).<br>
<br>
For Laker-Oketta, the research director at GiveDirectly, it’s
clear that anticipatory cash transfers for climate adaptation are
a good idea. “The cash we give is not sufficient to put up a
seawall — that’s something governments have to do,” she said. “But
the lowest-hanging fruit is actually giving people agency to make
certain decisions they need to make now. The question is not,
‘Does cash work?’ but, ‘What is the right amount, frequency, and
timing?’”<br>
<br>
Now, GiveDirectly is planning to experiment with the timing. They
want to see if getting cash to people mere days before a weather
shock, as opposed to weeks before, improves resilience more. So
they’re launching a pilot with the government of Mozambique to
give out just-in-time transfers, sending people around $225 just
three or four days before the next flood strikes.<br>
<br>
In January, they began pre-enrolling individuals in vulnerable
villages, which are selected by overlaying poverty maps,
population data, and flood risk maps. That way, people will be
able to get fast payments directly ahead of likely storms during
the rainy season in March and April...</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">- -<br>
<b>“The best adaptation is to be rich”</b><br>
Climate mitigation and climate adaptation, along with poverty
alleviation, are all absolutely crucial if we want a safe and just
world. They’re also expensive, with mitigation projects alone
slated to cost trillions over the next decade. How should the
world divide funding between them?<br>
<br>
When it comes to climate financing, the United Nations has called
for a 50/50 split on mitigation and adaptation. But what we see so
far is still more like 90/10 in mitigation’s favor — a sore point
at last year’s COP27 climate conference in Egypt. And instead of
giving poorer nations additional money for adaptation, some rich
nations have diverted development aid — which is already
insufficient — to fund more mitigation projects...</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">- -</font><br>
<font face="Calibri">In other words, climate adaptation and reducing
poverty go hand in hand.<br>
<br>
That’s part of why Laker-Oketta, the GiveDirectly research
director, said her organization didn’t worry about whether
recipients would spend their unconditional cash on building
climate resilience or on something else. “If someone makes the
decision to spend the money on something else, it means that was
their priority at that time,” she told me.<br>
<br>
For Laker-Oketta personally, climate resilience was very much the
priority the day we spoke. It’s currently supposed to be the dry
season in Uganda, where she lives, and yet it was raining. Just
hours before our call, her office flooded.<br>
<br>
“I believe a lot of people who want most of the funding to be
focused on mitigation are people who are not being directly
affected by climate change right now,” she said. “Their only worry
is, ‘If the climate gets worse, then I’ll be affected as well, so
can we put as much as is necessary into preventing me from being
part of those people who are affected?’ But if you’re living in a
place where it’s flooding right now, then you’re going to think
differently. Right now, what I need is a way to stop the rain from
coming in!”<br>
</font><br>
<font face="Calibri"><i>Sigal Samuel is a senior reporter for Vox’s
Future Perfect and co-host of the Future Perfect podcast. She
writes primarily about the future of consciousness, tracking
advances in artificial intelligence and neuroscience and their
staggering ethical implications.</i><br>
</font><font face="Calibri"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/23574798/climate-adaptation-anticipatory-cash-transfers-givedirectly">https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/23574798/climate-adaptation-anticipatory-cash-transfers-givedirectly</a><br>
</font>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<font face="Calibri"> <i>[ speak of the seas, the rising seas ]</i><br>
<b>Lost for words: fears of ‘catastrophic’ language loss due to
rising seas</b><br>
Climate crisis could be ‘final nail in the coffin’ for half of all
surviving languages, say linguists, as coastal communities are
forced to migrate<br>
Karen McVeigh<br>
16 Jan 2023<br>
Every 40 days a language dies. This “catastrophic” loss is being
amplified by the climate crisis, according to linguists. If
nothing is done, conservative estimates suggest that half of all
the 7,000 languages currently spoken will be extinct by the end of
the century.<br>
<br>
Speakers of minority languages have experienced a long history of
persecution, with the result that by the 1920s half of all
Indigenous languages in Australia, the US, South Africa and
Argentina were extinct. The climate crisis is now considered the
“final nail in the coffin” for many Indigenous languages and with
them, the knowledge they represent.<br>
<br>
“Languages are already vulnerable and endangered,” says Anastasia
Riehl, the director of the Strathy language unit at Queen’s
University in Kingston, Ontario. Huge factors are globalisation
and migration, as communities move to regions where their language
is not spoken or valued, according to Riehl.<br>
<br>
“It seems particularly cruel,” she says, that most of the world’s
languages are in parts of the world that are growing inhospitable
to people.<br>
<br>
Vanuatu, a South Pacific island nation measuring 12,189 sq km
(4,706 sq miles), has 110 languages, one for each 111 sq km, the
highest density of languages on the planet. It is also one of the
countries most at risk of sea level rise, she says.<br>
<br>
People sit beneath a banyan tree, a centrepiece of village life in
Ifira, Vanuatu.<br>
Vanuatu, in the South Pacific Ocean, is rich with languages, but
its communities face the prospect of upheaval caused by climate
crisis. Photograph: Mario Tama/Getty Images<br>
“Many small linguistic communities are on islands and coastlines
vulnerable to hurricanes and sea level rise.” Others live on lands
where rising temperature threaten traditional farming and fishing
practices, prompting migration.<br>
<br>
<br>
“When climate change comes in, it disrupts communities even more,”
says Riehl. “It has a multiplier effect, the final nail in the
coffin.”<br>
<br>
If sea level rise or another climate impact hits, communities
scatter to places where their language is not valued<br>
Anouschka Foltz<br>
Although the effects of global heating on language have not been
well studied, it has caused increased instances of heatwaves,
droughts, floods and sea level rise, which have already exposed
millions of people to food insecurity, water shortages and driven
them from their homes. Disasters, the majority of them weather
related, accounted for 23.7m internal displacements in 2021, up
from 18.8m in 2018. Over the past 10 years, Asia and the Pacific
were the regions most affected by displacement worldwide, with the
Pacific island states the worst by population size.<br>
<br>
Yet, it is precisely here where many Indigenous languages have
thrived. One in five of the world’s languages are from the
Pacific, according to the New Zealand Māori language commission.<br>
<br>
“The Pacific, including the Philippines, India and Indonesia, has
a lot of linguistic diversity. Some languages only have a few
hundred speakers,” says Anouschka Foltz, an associate professor in
English Linguistics at the University of Graz, in Austria.<br>
<br>
“If sea level rise or another climate impact hits, they have to
leave. Communities scatter to places where their language is not
valued.”<br>
<br>
Felix Mauricio, a member of the Uru Murato Indigenous community,
puts a miniature replica of a boat known as a “totora boat” on a
desert at the site of former Lake Poopo, near the village of
Punaca Tinta Maria, province of Oruro, Bolivia.<br>
Culture and traditional crafts and skills are also lost when an
Indigenous language becomes extinct. Photograph: Aizar
Raldes/AFP/Getty Images<br>
A map of the world’s 577 critically endangered languages reveals
clusters around equatorial Africa and in the Pacific and the
Indian ocean region.<br>
<br>
In response to the crisis, the UN launched the International
Decade of Indigenous Languages in December. Preserving languages
of Indigenous communities is “not only important for them, but for
all humanity,” the UN general assembly president, Csaba Kőrösi,
said, urging countries to allow access to education in Indigenous
languages.<br>
<br>
“With each Indigenous language that goes extinct, so too goes the
thought, the culture, tradition and knowledge it bears,” said
Kőrösi, echoing the sentiments of Ken Hale, the late US linguist
and activist, who compared losing any language to “dropping a bomb
on the Louvre”.<br>
<br>
Dr Gregory Anderson is director of the Living Tongues Institute
for Endangered Languages, a non profit based in the US that
documents and records endangered languages.<br>
<br>
“We are heading for a catastrophic language and cultural loss into
the next century,” he says.<br>
<br>
Anderson notes that the death of a language, when the last fluent
speaker dies, is often the result of “some sort of assault” on
Indigenous communities. It can be overt, such as when Indigenous
children were forced into boarding schools and banned from
speaking their native language in countries including the US,
Canada, Australia and Scandinavian nations in the 1900s, or
covert, where people with a strong accent are excluded from jobs.<br>
<br>
Studies show that, while the suppression of Indigenous language is
associated with mental health problems, the reverse can also be
true. One study in Bangladesh showed that Indigenous youth capable
of speaking their native language were less likely to consume
alcohol or illicit substances in risky amounts, and were less
exposed to violence.<br>
<br>
Some efforts to save Indigenous languages have been successful,
with the introduction of ‘immersion schools’ for young children
being particularly effective. Photograph: Martín Mejía/AP<br>
<br>
There are some bright spots, too: such as New Zealand and Hawaii,
where Indigenous languages have been resurrected.<br>
<br>
In the 1970s, only 2,000 native speakers of Hawaiian remained,
most in their seventh decade of life, but advocates launched
“immersion schools”, where children are taught in Hawaiian. Today,
more than 18,700 people speak it. In New Zealand, only 5% of young
Māori people spoke the language in the 1970s, but due largely to
efforts by the Māori, backed by the government, more than 25% now
speak it...<br>
- -<br>
Prof Rawinia Higgins, a member of the Global Taskforce for the
International Decade of Indigenous Languages 2022-2032 and the New
Zealand Māori language commissioner says: “Indigenous languages
are an anchor to the past, as well as a compass to the future.
Thirty-five years ago, people fought to save the Māori language
with the government of the day boldly making it an official
language protected by law. Once banned and seen by many as
worthless, now more than eight in 10 of us see it as part of our
identity as New Zealanders.”<br>
<br>
The New Zealand broadcaster, journalist and Māori interpreter
Oriini Kaipara was taught the language by her grandparents, in
kōhanga reo, or “language nests” where only Māori is spoken...<br>
- -<br>
“My generation were fortunate enough to be raised in total
immersion,” says Kaipara, who, as a primetime newsreader with a
Māori chin marking, or moko kauae, has become an ambassador for
Māori. “But language loss is still a huge threat to us. Those
generations who were native speakers, held the customs, the
understanding, the indigenous knowledge that was handed down by
their parents. And that has gone.”<br>
<br>
Māori have a “unique way” of connecting with their environment
that is only accessible through their language, she says. The word
matemateāone is almost untranslatable into English, she said, but
expresses “a deep, emotional, spiritual, physical” longing for the
Earth. “In essence, it means I belong,” she says. “My language is
a gateway to my world.”<br>
</font>
<p><font face="Calibri"><a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/16/linguists-language-culture-loss-end-of-century-sea-levels-rise">https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/16/linguists-language-culture-loss-end-of-century-sea-levels-rise</a><br>
</font></p>
<p><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></p>
<p><i><font face="Calibri"><br>
</font></i></p>
<font face="Calibri"><i>[Mongabay Series: Covering Climate Now,
Oceans]</i><br>
<b>An El Niño is forecast for 2023. How much coral will bleach
this time?</b><br>
by Elizabeth Claire Alberts <br>
</font><font face="Calibri">2 February 2023<br>
</font>
<blockquote>-- Forecasts suggest that an El Niño climate pattern
could begin later this year, raising sea temperatures at a time
when global temperatures are already higher than ever due to
human-driven climate change.<br>
<br>
-- If an El Niño develops and it becomes a moderate to severe
event, it could raise global temperatures by more than 1.5°C
(2.7°F) above pre-industrial levels, the threshold set by the
Paris Agreement.<br>
<br>
-- An El Niño would generate many impacts on both terrestrial and
marine ecosystems, including the potential for droughts, fires,
increased precipitation, coral bleaching, invasions of predatory
marine species like crown-of-thorns starfish, disruptions to
marine food chains, and kelp forest die-offs.<br>
</blockquote>
- -<br>
“When the next El Niño comes, whether it be in August or January or
whatever … there’s no doubt about it, the corals will bleach and it
will probably be the largest [event], even more widespread than the
last ones,” Houk said. “But I think we’re starting to learn more and
more about factors that offer resistance and recovery to this.”<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="https://news.mongabay.com/2023/02/an-el-nino-is-forecast-for-2023-how-much-coral-will-bleach-this-time/">https://news.mongabay.com/2023/02/an-el-nino-is-forecast-for-2023-how-much-coral-will-bleach-this-time/</a><br>
<p><br>
</p>
<p><br>
</p>
<font face="Calibri"> <i>[The news archive - looking back at early
mis, dis, and regular information battles ]</i><br>
<font size="+2"><i><b>February 4, 1992</b></i></font> <br>
February 4, 1992: In one of the worst examples of mainstream media
false-balance in US history, Ted Koppel hosts a “debate” on ABC's
"Nightline" between Sen. Al Gore (D-TN) and Rush Limbaugh on
global warming and other environmental issues. <br>
<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N9rZKJt4ZC4">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N9rZKJt4ZC4</a>
(Part 1)<br>
<br>
<a class="moz-txt-link-freetext"
href="http://youtu.be/WbC-yWycHfM">http://youtu.be/WbC-yWycHfM</a>
(Part 2) <br>
<br>
<br>
</font>
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