Tuesday, August 30th, 2011
ERIK JENSEN, - The Sydney Morning-Herald (Australia)
Stephan: While the climate deniers rant, or invoke God as the source of the extreme weather, ordinary people just experience greater and greater stress. Few talk about this but, as this research shows, the individual and social effects of climate change are very real, including dimensions not usually considered.
Rates of mental illnesses including depression and post-traumatic stress will increase as a result of climate change, a report to be released today says.
The paper, prepared for the Climate Institute, says loss of social cohesion in the wake of severe weather events related to climate change could be linked to increased rates of anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress and substance abuse.
As many as one in five people reported ”emotional injury, stress and despair” in the wake of these events.
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The report, A Climate of Suffering: The Real Cost of Living with Inaction on Climate Change, called the past 15 years a ”preview of life under unrestrained global warming”.
”While cyclones, drought, bushfires and floods are all a normal part of Australian life, there is no doubt our climate is changing,” the report says.
”For instance, the intensity and frequency of bushfires is greater. This is a ‘new normal’, for which the past provides little guidance
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Tuesday, August 30th, 2011
EUGENE LINDEN, - Los Angeles Times
Stephan: If you live in Texas, Arizona, Oklahoma, New Mexico or Florida where the governors think climate change is just a fraud being perpetrated by money grubbing scientists, if you voted for these bozos you have no one to blame but yourself when your state suffers from the effects of that 'fraudulent' climate change.
Eugene Linden is the author of 'The Winds of Change: Climate, Weather, and the Destruction of Civilizations,' among other books. In 2005, he helped edit 'Climate Change Futures: Health, Ecological and Economic Dimensions,' a project undertaken by Harvard Medical School and sponsored by the United Nations Development Program and Swiss Re, a worldwide reinsurer.
Leon Trotsky is reputed to have quipped, ‘You may not be interested in war, but war is interested in you.’ Substitute the words ‘climate change’ for ‘war’ and the quote is perfectly suited for the governors of Texas, Oklahoma and New Mexico, all of whom have ridiculed or dismissed the threat of climate change even as their states suffer record-breaking heat and drought.
In his book, ‘Fed Up!,’ Texas governor and presidential aspirant Rick Perry derided global warming as a ‘phony mess,’ a sentiment he has expanded on in recent campaign appearances. Susana Martinez, the governor of New Mexico, has gone on record as doubting that humans influence climate, and Mary Fallin of Oklahoma dismissed research on climate change as a waste of time. Her solution to the extraordinary drought: Pray for rain (an approach also endorsed by Perry).
Although they may dismiss climate change, a changing climate imposes costs on their states and the rest of us as well.
In Texas, the unremitting heat has been straining the capacity of the electric grid, killing crops and livestock, and threatening water supplies. As reported in the Wall Street Journal, the grid’s governing body, the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, bases its forecasts on […]
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Monday, August 29th, 2011
JOHN DEANS and WILL VICKERY, - Greenpeace
Stephan:
Koch industries puts over 4 million people at risk of a poison gas disaster and they have mounted one of the biggest lobbying campaigns to keep it that way.
In 2010 Koch Industries and the billionaire brothers who run it were exposed as a major funder of front groups spreading denial of climate change science and a key backer of efforts to roll back environmental, labor, and health protections at the state and federal levels. Through enormous campaign contributions, an army of lobbyists, and funding of think tanks and front groups, David and Charles Koch push their agenda of a world in which their company can operate without regard for the risks they pose to communities, workers, and the environment. This report, Toxic Koch: Keeping Americans at risk of a Poison Gas Disaster, examines how Koch Industries has quietly played a key role in blocking yet another effort to protect workers and vulnerable communities; comprehensive chemical security legislation.
Since before the September 11, 2001 attacks, security experts have warned of the catastrophic risk that nearly every major American city faces from the bulk storage of poison gasses at dangerous chemical facilities such as oil refineries, chemical manufacturing facilities, and water treatment plants. […]
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Monday, August 29th, 2011
Enrique Rivero, - UCLA Health & Medicine News
Stephan: This is the latest in the illness profit system trend corrupting the scientific medical literature. It is of a piece with Big Pharma paying prominent physicians to put their names on papers they did not actually write. Greed is simply overpowering all other considerations in American health care. Actual national health is no more than a reference point.
Studies about medications published in the most influential medical journals are frequently designed in a way that yields misleading or confusing results, new research suggests.
Investigators from the medical schools at UCLA and Harvard analyzed all the randomized medication trials published in the six highest-impact general medicine journals between June 1, 2008, and Sept. 30, 2010, to determine the prevalence of three types of outcome measures that make data interpretation difficult.
In addition, they reviewed each study’s abstract to determine the percentage that reported results using relative rather than absolute numbers, which can also be a misleading.
The findings are published online in the Journal of General Internal Medicine.
The six journals examined by the investigators- the New England Journal of Medicine, the Journal of the American Medical Association, The Lancet, the Annals of Internal Medicine, the British Medical Journal and the Archives of Internal Medicine – included studies that used the following types of outcome measures, which have received increasing criticism from scientific experts:
Surrogate outcomes (37 percent of studies), which refer to intermediate markers, such as a heart medication’s ability to lower blood pressure, but which may not be a good indicator of the medication’s impact on more important clinical outcomes, like heart […]
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Monday, August 29th, 2011
JEFFREY TOOBIN, - The New Yorker
Stephan:
It has been, in certain respects, a difficult year for Clarence Thomas. In January, he was compelled to amend several years of the financial-disclosure forms that Supreme Court Justices must file each year. The document requires the Justices to disclose the source of all income earned by their spouses, and Thomas had failed to note that his wife, Virginia, who is known as Ginni, worked as a representative for a Michigan college and at the Heritage Foundation. The following month, seventy-four members of Congress called on Thomas to recuse himself from any legal challenges to President Obama’s health-care reform, because his wife has been an outspoken opponent of the law. At around the same time, Court observers noted the fifth anniversary of the last time that Thomas had asked a question during an oral argument. The confluence of these events produced the kind of public criticism, and even mockery, that Thomas had largely managed to avoid since his tumultuous arrival on the Court, twenty years ago this fall.
These tempests obscure a larger truth about Thomas: that this year has also been, for him, a moment of triumph. In several of the most important areas of constitutional law, Thomas has emerged […]
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