Stephan: You didn't think the oil industry was going to sink into the oblivion shared with carriage makers, and whale oil without a fight did you? Of course not. As this article makes clear they are going to spend millions in hopes of protecting billions. It's not going to work, of course, because climate change is going to trump their greed. But they are certainly going to try.
When Royal Dutch Shell published its annual environmental report in April, it boasted that it was investing heavily in renewable energy. The oil giant committed to installing hundreds of thousands of charging stations for electric vehicles around the world to help offset the harm caused by burning fossil fuels.
On the same day, Shellissued a separate report revealing that its single largest donation to political lobby groups last year was made to the American Petroleum Institute, one of the US’s most powerful trade organizations, which drives the oil industry’s relationship with Congress.
Contrary to Shell’s public statements in support of electric vehicles, API’s chief executive, Mike Sommers, has pledged to resist a raft of Joe Biden’s environmental measures, including proposals to fund new charging points in the US. He claims a “rushed transition” to electric vehicles is part of “government action to limit Americans’ transportation choice”.
Shell donated more than $10m to API last year alone.
And it’s not just Shell. Most other oil conglomerates are also major funders, including ExxonMobil, Chevron and BP, although they have not made their contributions public.
Stephan: The American Southwest and Northwest are being ravaged by forest fires, Brazil's Amazon rain forest is being devastated by fire, and Russia's Siberian forest, as this report describes, is aflame.
You would think this would create an emergency congress of nations to address the climate change that is such a factor in these fires. But no. Corporate greed in each of those countries is too powerful and is blocking a sensible international response. These events are treated as disconnected singularities instead of the coordinated collapse of the earth's ecosystem they actually represent.
Millions are going to die, tens of millions more are going to suffer, and hundreds of millions are going to become migrants as a result of this stupidity. Be prepared.
Record heat and a historic drought in the Siberian republic of Sakha are furthering the spread of extensive wildfires across the region, regional officials have said.
The republic of Sakha, also known as Yakutia, is especially vulnerable to wildfires as more than 80% of the region is covered by boreal forest known as taiga. So far this year, Sakha has already seen record-breaking droughts and abnormally high temperatures, creating ideal conditions for severe wildfires.
More than 250 fires covering 607,000 hectares of land are currently burning across the republic, Russia’s largest region, the region’s emergencies ministry said Monday.
Smoke from the fires has reached the region’s capital of Yakutsk some 4,900 kilometers east of Moscow, damaging air quality and increasing levels of dangerous particles.
Regional head Aisen Nikolayev linked the fast-spreading wildfires to the historic drought conditions.
“There hasn’t been such a dry June [in Yakutsk] for almost 150 years,” Nikolayev said in a Facebook livestream last week. “Of course it leads to huge fires.”
Jack Healy and Sophie Kasakove, National Correspondent | Reporting Fellow - The New York Times
Stephan: If you read me regularly I have been predicting the effects climate change, and lack of water are going to have on the American Southwest. Here is an early report on that now emerging trend. This is going to become a much bigger deal in the months ahead.
OAKLEY, UTAH — The mountain spring that pioneers used to water their hayfields and now fills people’s taps flowed reliably into the old cowboy town of Oakley for decades. So when it dwindled to a trickle in this year’s scorching drought, officials took drastic action to preserve their water: They stopped building.
During the coronavirus pandemic, the real estate market in their 1,750-person city boomed as remote workers flocked in from the West Coast and second homeowners staked weekend ranches. But those newcomers need water — water that is vanishing as a megadrought dries up reservoirs and rivers across the West.
So this spring, Oakley, about an hour’s drive east of Salt Lake City, imposed a construction moratorium on new homes that would connect to the town’s water system. It is one of the first towns in the United States to purposely stall growth for want of […]
Stephan: What this pandemic has taught us, I think, is that about a third of Americans do not function capably in the real world. They prefer to hold beliefs and to base their decisions on their fears, hates, and resentments. They care only about themselves, and maybe their immediate family and a few friends. They elect officials who reflect this and watch media that supports them in their prejudices. If one of the people they trust says something like the absurd ideas in this article, no matter how bizarre and undocumented, they will believe it.
Some 20% of Americans believe in the conspiracy theory that microchips may have been planted inside COVID-19 vaccines that millions of people have already taken worldwide, according to a study by YouGov and The Economist that was conducted last week.
Despite a lack of evidence to support such a claim, the poll concluded overall that 15% of Americans said this conspiracy theory was “probably true” while another 5% said it was “definitely true.”
The same poll concluded that 27% of people aged 30-44 support this theory, with 8% of Biden voters and 29% of Trump voters believed it. Some 14% of Democratic voters and 32% of Republican voters also shared the same sentiment.
Misinformation regarding COVID-19 has been a controversial subject during the past year. Just recently, US President Joe Biden said that misinformation spreading on social media regarding the virus has been “killing people.”
False content has been published on social media […]
Professors Laurence H. Tribe and Stephen I. Vladeck, Emeritus Professor of Constitutional Law at Harvard Law School | Professor University of Texas School of Law in Austin. - The New York Times
Stephan: The absolute hysteria of the christofascist Right over maintaining male dominance and the legal control of a woman's body has reached this level in Texas. It is another measure of political karma that the women of Texas voted these people into office, and will now live under their control. But, as this excellent essay makes clear, the state is now encouraging people spying on one another for reward, and that takes everything up to another level. And they expand what the Right is doing and how it could play out. I'm sorry, I would not live in Texas.
Efforts in red states to pass increasingly restrictive limits on abortions have ramped up in the past few years as the composition of the Supreme Court has made it more likely that those laws will be upheld. But a new law in Texas that’s set to go into effect on Sept. 1 is especially worrisome.
Not only has Texas banned virtually all abortions after the sixth week of pregnancy, a point at which many women do not even know they’re pregnant; it has also provided for enforcement of that ban by private citizens. If you suspect that a Texan is seeking to obtain an abortion after the sixth week of pregnancy, not only will you be able to sue the provider to try to stop it, but if you succeed, you’ll also be entitled to compensation. (And what’s known as the litigation privilege would likely protect you from a defamation claim even if you’re wrong.) The law, known as S.B. 8, effectively enlists the citizenry to act as an anti-abortion Stasi.