Random Politics & Religion #00

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2010-06-21
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Random Politics & Religion #00
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 Leviathan.Chaosx
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By Leviathan.Chaosx 2015-02-17 07:22:03  
Forget global warming, let's talk about the real issue, ozone erosion.

Quote:
Environmental scientists raised concern Monday at rising levels of gases that attack Earth's protective ozone layer, including manmade chemicals not covered by a key UN treaty.

Researchers at Leeds University in northern England said two computer models highlighted the impact of so-called "very short-lived substances" -- VSLS -- that deplete the stratospheric shield.

The damage they do to the ozone layer is significant and likely to increase, they said, as emissions of man-made chlorine gases rise.

Ironically, one of the chemicals named in the report, dichloromethane, is used in the manufacture of substitutes for ozone-depleting gases outlawed by the UN's 1987 Montreal Protocol.

VSLS are gases that have a short lifetime, usually breaking down in less than six months.

They are not covered by the landmark Montreal Protocol that requires the phaseout of longer-lasting chlorofluorocarbon (CFCs) and halon gases.

"Our model simulations indicate that VSLS account for a significant portion of ozone loss in the stratosphere," lead investigator Ryan Hossaini told AFP by email.

"In the Antarctic region, where the ozone hole forms each year and where ozone decreases are the most dramatic, we estimate that VSLS account for about 12.5 percent of the total ozone loss.

"Globally averaged, the ozone loss due to VSLS in the lower stratosphere could be as much as 25 percent, though it is much smaller at higher altitude."

Around 90 percent of VSLS are natural -- they are bromine compounds produced by seaweed and the ocean's phytoplankton.

The rest is man-made chlorine gases, and their contribution to the VSLS total is rising fast.

"Dichloromethane appears to be one of the most abundant man-made VSLS that we know of," said Hossaini.

Compared with the notorious CFCs, dichloromethane's impact today is small. The computer models suggest it reduces the ozone layer by less than one percent, he said.

"However, our study also shows that the atmospheric concentration of dichloromethane has increased dramatically in recent years," said Hossaini.

"At some locations its atmospheric concentration has doubled since the late 1990s."

The study, published in the journal Nature Geoscience, looked at two decades of raw data provided by the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

Ozone is a three-atom molecule of oxygen. At ground level, as a byproduct of traffic pollution, it can be a dangerous respiratory irritant.

Ozone defence -

But in the stratosphere, a layer that lies between 10 and 50 kilometres (six to 52 miles) in altitude, it is a life-saver: it filters out harmful ultraviolet light that can cause skin cancer and cataracts and damage crops.

The ozone "hole" -- in reality, a thinning -- occurs naturally because of extreme cold.

But it is also eroded by man-made chlorine compounds such as coolants in air conditioners and refrigerators, insulation foams and propellants in hair sprays.

Most of these are being phased out under the Montreal treaty, which has been ratified by all 197 UN members.

Last September, UN agencies said the ozone was "well on track" for recovery by mid-century, although fixing it over Antarctica would take longer.

Some of the progress, though, would be offset if VSLS continue to increase, the paper said.

It was unclear whether global warming would hasten VSLS emissions by unlocking ocean sources, Hossaini said.

The gases were, however, not contributors to the greenhouse gas effect, which is separate from the ozone hole as an environmental problem.

Instead, VSLS exert an indirect cooling impact through the ozone loss.
Scientists alarmed at short-term ozone-eroding gases
 Asura.Kingnobody
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By Asura.Kingnobody 2015-02-17 07:36:20  
I'm sure that Republicans will get the blame for that too.
 Asura.Kingnobody
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By Asura.Kingnobody 2015-02-17 07:40:44  
Federal Court halts Obama's Executive Order to stop deportations

Quote:
A federal judge in South Texas on Monday temporarily blocked President Barack Obama's executive action on immigration, giving a coalition of 26 states time to pursue a lawsuit that aims to permanently stop the orders.

U.S. District Judge Andrew Hanen's decision comes after a hearing in Brownsville in January and puts on hold Obama's orders that could spare as many as five million people who are in the U.S. illegally from deportation.

Hanen wrote in a memorandum accompanying his order that the lawsuit should go forward and that without a preliminary injunction the states will "suffer irreparable harm in this case."

"The genie would be impossible to put back into the bottle," he wrote, adding that he agreed with the plaintiffs' argument that legalizing the presence of millions of people is a "virtually irreversible" action.

The White House in a statement early Tuesday defended the executive orders issued in November as within the president's legal authority, saying that the U.S. Supreme Court and Congress have said federal officials can set priorities in enforcing immigration laws.

"The district court's decision wrongly prevents these lawful, commonsense policies from taking effect and the Department of Justice has indicated that it will appeal that decision," the statement said. An appeal would be heard by the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans.

The first of Obama's orders — to expand a program that protects young immigrants from deportation if they were brought to the U.S. illegally as children — was set to start taking effect Wednesday. The other major part of Obama's order, which extends deportation protections to parents of U.S. citizens and permanent residents who have been in the country for some years, was not expected to begin until May 19.

Joaquin Guerra, political director of Texas Organizing Project, called the ruling a "temporary setback."

"We will continue getting immigrants ready to apply for administrative relief," he said in a statement.

The coalition of states, led by Texas and made up of mostly conservative states in the South and Midwest, argues that Obama has violated the "Take Care Clause" of the U.S. Constitution, which they say limits the scope of presidential power. They also say the order will force increased investment in law enforcement, health care and education.

In their request for the injunction, the coalition said it was necessary because it would be "difficult or impossible to undo the President's lawlessness after the Defendants start granting applications for deferred action."

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton called the decision a "victory for the rule of law in America" in a statement late Monday. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who as the state's former attorney general led the state into the lawsuit, said Hanen's decision "rightly stops the President's overreach in its tracks."

Hanen, who's been on the federal court since 2002 after being nominated by President George W. Bush, regularly handles border cases but wasn't known for being outspoken on immigration until a 2013 case. In an order in that case, Hanen suggested the Homeland Security Department should be arresting parents living in the U.S. illegally who induce their children to cross the border illegally.

Congressional Republicans have vowed to block Obama's actions by cutting off Homeland Security Department spending for the program. Earlier this year, the Republican-controlled House passed a $39.7 billion spending bill to fund the department through the end of the budget year, but attached language to undo Obama's executive actions. The fate of that House-passed bill is unclear as Republicans in the Senate do not have the 60-vote majority needed to advance most legislation.

Among those supporting Obama's executive order is a group of 12 mostly liberal states, including Washington and California, as well as the District of Columbia. They filed a motion with Hanen in support of Obama, arguing the directives will substantially benefit states and will further the public interest.

A group of law enforcement officials, including the Major Cities Chiefs Association and more than 20 police chiefs and sheriffs from across the country, also filed a motion in support, arguing the executive action will improve public safety by encouraging cooperation between police and individuals with concerns about their immigration status.

Now, sit back and watch people accuse Republicans for not passing an immigration bill that they agree with.
 Shiva.Nikolce
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By Shiva.Nikolce 2015-02-17 08:42:33  
Leviathan.Chaosx said: »
Scientists alarmed


Pfft... when aren't they alarmed about the whatever... and we don't pay any attention to them now because they are the same spazoids that were trying to drill us with pokemon statistical analysis at lunch... /crams one in a locker .

better luck next time chicken little... you and Churchy LaFemme TheEndIsNear can go hide in the bunker together and whip each other up into a frenzy
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 Garuda.Chanti
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By Garuda.Chanti 2015-02-17 09:06:45  
Asura.Kingnobody said: »
I'm sure that Republicans will get the blame for that too.
And gleefully embrace it.
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By fonewear 2015-02-17 09:09:28  
I always thought the only difference between Science and religion is the tax status !

I'm sure Bill Nye will fix the ozone layer ! Light the Science signal.
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 Leviathan.Chaosx
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By Leviathan.Chaosx 2015-02-17 10:59:05  
Quote:
A new poll of 162 members of the American Political Science Association ranks President Obama 18th among the 43 men who have served as President of the United States.

The poll indicts itself as being an immediate relic of this historical moment by placing Obama as the second most polarizing chief executive in U.S. history, behind George W. Bush, who is ranked 35th overall. The fact is we’ve entered into the “cable news” era of the presidency. We should probably expect every current president to be seen as the most polarizing when s/he is in office. And none of them will ever be as polarizing as the man who cut taxes on the rich while starting two wars.

The answer to the question “Will Obama is seen as a great president who is truly more transformative — in a good way — than his immediate predecessors?” has never been in greater flux.

His defining achievement — the Affordable Care Act — is proving to be a spectacular success, adding coverage to more than 10 million while helping to reduce our future debt by $600 billion. But five Supreme Court Justices could gut easily it over complete nonsense.

His eagerness to recede the tide of war has brought us to the brink of a historic nuclear arms agreement with Iran. But neo-conservatives in our country and in Israel are attempting to destroy that with the same sort of rhetoric that gave us the Iraq War. Meanwhile strategic misjudgements of ISIS have drawn American forces back into the Iraq, and we’re on the verge of a proxy war with Russia in the Ukraine.

Consequential executive actions — which have delayed deportations of law-abiding undocumented immigrants who came here as kids or are related to American citizens, along with modest carbon regulations and a breakthrough climate agreement with China — could also be gutted by the courts or his successor.

The reason these things seem polarizing now, though they used to represent a bipartisan concession, is because the right has been in nonsensical hysterics since the day Barack Obama was elected. This, of course, was his most “polarizing” act.

Republicans accuse Obama of tyranny when he delays a mandate for employers and doesn’t deport grandmothers. Then they demand that he give himself broader powers to make war.

That’s almost as tyrannical as using your rival’s health care reform as a model for the nation, exactly as your rival suggested.

Regardless how these questions are resolved, President Obama will always be the leader who prevented a Greater Depression and saved the auto industry. Despite the egregious failure of programs of like HAMP, our recovery has been among the best in the world. And it has only heated up as millions gained health insurance financed by new taxes on the rich, despite Republican predictions of doom.

His election and re-election as the first African-American president will be increasingly significant in a country that will be nearly 50 percent first-or-second generation immigrants by the middle of the century. He’ll probably seem a lot less “polarizing” then.

When it comes to LGBTQ rights and clean energy, Obama has accomplished more than all 42 of his predecessors combined. It’s not even close.

The obvious truth remains that all of our presidents — even the greats — have been flawed.

FDR allowed the New Deal to be scarred by segregation, did little-to-nothing to hinder the beginnings of the Holocaust and created Japanese-American internment camps. Even our greatest president George Washington had flaws. For instance, he could have owned our current president. Obama’s inability or unwillingness to rein in the security state continues to frustrate his liberal critics.

But in recent months, his embrace of net neutrality, local broadband, paid leave, and tuition-free community college have represented a progressive vision that could carry the Democratic Party on into the next decade.

The easiest job in the world is criticizing the hardest job in the world.

But there is a real opportunity for this president to do more to fight the wealth gap and correct some of the lapses in his leadership. So I humbly offer these suggestions to help ensure that Obama is regarded as one of the greats — and not just great-ish.

1. Go big on overtime rules.
These first two ideas are being championed by Nick Hanauer, the billionaire who created a sensation with his TED Talk warning his fellow .01 percenters that inequality is an issue that should worry them too. Democrats know they will be running against both a presidential campaign and a Koch brothers-led shadow campaign that will spend around a billion dollars each to make sure the next president — who will decide the makeup of the Supreme Court for a generation — is a Republican.

They need money and in this economy, the richest — who have a great racket going — have a lot of it to spend.

Democrats are thus struggling to engineer a platform that appeals to the middle class without alienating the donors they need. The only hope is to err on the side of the middle class, boldly, while reminding the sympathetic rich the current trend of all the gains of the recovery going to the richest is simply unsustainable and destructive.

Stagnant wages are the most immediate way workers feel the bite of the inequality. Raising the minimum wage isn’t enough. Wages need to be raised and revising outdated overtime regulations could do that for millions, adding as much as $970 a week for some workers. Hanauer is daring the administration to cover as many as 10.4 million workers with the new rules

Do it and force Republicans to run against bigger paychecks.

2. Make executive compensation reform a priority.
Hanauer has also been trumpeting the work of scholar William Lazonick, who has pointed out how corporations have been turned into self-cannibalizing “ATMs for the wealthy” thanks to SEC rule changes that began under Ronald Reagan.

More than 3 out of every 4 dollars in the trillions in profits earned by the 449 companies in the S&P 500 index went to paying off shareholders through stock buybacks that artificially inflate stock prices and dividend payments. As a result, workers’ wages have stagnated and even some investors are worried that our largest companies are failing to invest “in the future growth of their companies.”

The administration should call for a review of SEC rule Rule 10b-18 and Rule 10b-18, which have “legalized stock market manipulation through open-market repurchases.”

The freakout from Wall Street would be intense. And it’s that kind of freakout that would make it clear that tackling inequality is a sincere priority of the left — and Republicans would be forced to defend a con that mostly benefits the richest.

3. Advocate real surveillance reform.
Is there anyone alive who thinks a court with 11 men appointed by one man — Chief Justice John Roberts – with no advocate arguing in favor of privacy is ample protection from the potential abuses of mass surveillance?

The president’s achievements on civil rights — expanding them to LGBTQ people and defending voting rights — have a dark shadow when it comes to civil liberties. Creating a FISA court with some semblance of sanity (or just letting the PATRIOT Act expire) would be a real step toward redemption.

4. Refuse to commit ground troops to lead the fighting in Iraq or anywhere in the Middle East and call for an end to the authorization of military force that began the Iraq War.
The president’s expansive use of war powers is another disappointment that risks severely tarnishing his legacy. Leaving the original AUMF in Iraq open would give his successor — perhaps named Bush — the legal ability to re-invade the country at any time.

This prospect seemed ridiculous a few years ago but Americans have proven that they are easily persuaded by videos of beheadings. A majority even support sending ground troops back into the region — even though that’s exactly what ISIS wants. Democrats need to be honest and admit that if a Republican were using war powers the way this president is, we’d be losing our ***.

The president shouldn’t let his flagging poll numbers when it comes to terrorism erode his vision of becoming the president who ended endless war. Replacing the 2002 AUMF with a new AUMF that has a solid expiration date would be a nice step toward renewing that vision. It may not be possible now but with a new coalition emerging against ISIS, it could be a defining issue of his last year.

5. Do everything you can to make sure your successor is a pro-mom Democrat.
So much depends on who replaces this president. It’s the red wheelbarrow in the room.

If the Affordable Care Act and his actions on immigration and climate change become the foundation for even greater change, his legacy will be capacious. If the opposite is true, his legacy would dwindle.

The president seems to have his eye on leaving his party a legacy to run on.

Republicans have historically better at branding themselves for decades — think “pro-life” and turning the word “liberal” into a pejorative. Now President Obama has given Democrats a new brand they can be proud of — pro-mom. Obama’s championing of universal child care gives the left a starkly moral issue the reveals the lie in the right’s constant pantomime of concern for kids.

It’s a perfect legacy for the next Democratic nominee to embrace to connect herself — let’s say herself — to Obama’s vision while giving the middle class a new vision of a fairer America for all.
5 ways Obama can ensure he will go down as great and not just a great-ish president
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By fonewear 2015-02-17 11:00:03  
Leviathan.Chaosx said: »
Quote:
Stuff



Me: I got the play doh mold ready for his statue !



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By Jetackuu 2015-02-17 11:04:05  
fonewear said: »
Leviathan.Chaosx said: »
Quote:
Stuff



Me: I got the play doh mold ready for his statue !



3 opening quotes, 2 closing, I wonder how my quoting it will butcher it, yay it didn't, after I added another closing.
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By fonewear 2015-02-17 11:08:38  
I ain't got time for learning quote structure !


@ ChasoX article

is a pro-mom Democrat.

translation single mother !
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 Siren.Mosin
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By Siren.Mosin 2015-02-17 11:14:48  
Does anyone else find all the 'middle-class' references funny?
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By fonewear 2015-02-17 11:18:08  
Not even done with second term ready to cement Obama as the greatest President since 2009 Obama !
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By fonewear 2015-02-17 11:25:47  
Since when did women vote...19th amendment... touche Fonewear !
 Siren.Mosin
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By Siren.Mosin 2015-02-17 11:30:50  
we need to find you a new game addiction so you don't have to talk to yourself on a forum.
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By fonewear 2015-02-17 11:34:31  
I used to be addicted to XI but SE ruined it many years ago.

My hobby is not having any hobbies.

I do read the Huff Post just so I know what my daily feminist agenda is.
 Siren.Mosin
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By Siren.Mosin 2015-02-17 11:43:22  
fonewear said: »
My hobby is not having any hobbies.

O c'mon.

let's get you making some ships in bottles, or painting, or something. have you tried WoW? any other games that might pique your interest?
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By fonewear 2015-02-17 11:44:44  
Siren.Mosin said: »
fonewear said: »
My hobby is not having any hobbies.

O c'mon.

let's get you making some ships in bottles, or painting, or something. have you tried WoW? any other games that might pique your interest?

WoW yes a long long time ago. I don't have the patience to build a ship in a bottle/paint. As far as gaming I go through phases of playing a decent amount and not playing at all.

Last game I really enjoyed was GTA V and that got old fairly quick.
 Siren.Mosin
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By Siren.Mosin 2015-02-17 11:46:26  
maybe you could write a terrible screenplay...
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By fonewear 2015-02-17 11:47:33  
I think Judd Apatow already has that job.
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 Siren.Mosin
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By Siren.Mosin 2015-02-17 11:48:08  
elder scrolls online? that looks to be a time sink.
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By fonewear 2015-02-17 11:48:41  
Siren.Mosin said: »
elder scrolls online? that looks to be a time sink.


I would but my PC probably can't run it.

I am looking forward to Fallout 4 hopefully. They better announce it !

That and Uncharted 4 looks good.

After XI I've sworn off of MMO's for a long time also.
 Siren.Mosin
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By Siren.Mosin 2015-02-17 11:50:51  
Ok, now we're getting somewhere, we just need to keep you busy until june when ESO comes out on ps4.

so. that's 4 months....

what takes four months....
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By fonewear 2015-02-17 11:52:53  
I would like to hibernate for four months but I don't think I stored enough fat from Thanksgiving.

I thought about writing for the Huff Post. But the pay sucks and I'm a guy.

Plus I've seen better writing on bathroom walls than on Huff Post.
 Siren.Mosin
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By Siren.Mosin 2015-02-17 11:54:57  
I tried to google it, but it was just a bunch of nonsense about what your baby should be doing at 4 months old.
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By fonewear 2015-02-17 11:55:28  
In four months ISIS will take over most of Libya !

Next up Jordan then Syria then goingto take over the White House YAHH!
 Siren.Mosin
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By Siren.Mosin 2015-02-17 11:57:05  
trans-navigate the world by means of hitch hiking. that could take 4 months or better. chances are you'll only get a little raped or killed by a truck driver along the way.
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By fonewear 2015-02-17 11:59:20  
A little rape goes a long ways.
 Siren.Mosin
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By Siren.Mosin 2015-02-17 12:00:56  
you bet your sweet, bored, ***.

so we're going with the hitch hiking then? I wish you the best of luck, & do drop in & update us with your progress.
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By fonewear 2015-02-17 12:02:46  
I see hitch hikers all the time. Sadly most of them aren't young vulnerable women.

Mostly the serial killer type.

One serial killer hitch hiker ruined it for everyone.
 Siren.Mosin
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By Siren.Mosin 2015-02-17 12:05:20  
/pushesfoneoutthedoor

GO ON, GET!!!

there's a big wide world out there for you! you'll never make it all the way around the world sitting here hating women.
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