One of the rarely discussed negative consequences of the materialist paradigm which fails to recognize that all life is interdependent and interconnected in the matrix of consciousness is the greedy stupidity that is driving our fellow beings on earth to extinction. This report suggests we may be awakening to this. I certainly hope so.
As world governments gathered in Uzbekistan Monday for the United Nations conference on migratory species, they centered the theme “Nature Knows No Borders”—an idea that a new landmark report said must take hold across the globe to push policymakers in all countries and regions to protect the billions of animals that travel each year to reproduce and find food.
The Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species of Wild Animals (CMS) marked the opening of the 14th Conference of the Parties (CMS COP14) to the United Nations biodiversity treaty by releasing the first-ever State of the World’s Migratory Species report, showing that nearly half of migrating species are declining in population.
The crisis is especially dire for more than 1 in 5 species that are threatened with extinction, and 70 species listed under the CMS which have become more endangered, including the steppe eagle, the Egyptian vulture, and the wild camel.
The populations of nearly all species of fish listed in the U.N. treaty, including sharks and rays, have declined by […]
Personally, I think both of them are too old. I think Trump is a criminal who was the worst president in American history, and he ought to be in prison. Biden has been a good and effective President but will be 86 by the end of a second term, and that is simply too old. My preference would be for a younger progressive president, and my ticket would be Gavin Newsom and Gretchen Whitmer. That said the media’s obsession with Biden’s age is a disgraceful example of what is going wrong with media. Biden, as I said, has been an excellent president in most regards, and what he has accomplished is not getting anything close to the attention and reportage it deserves. I also think that there should be much more detailed coverage of Trump’s criminality and the fact that American voters are not recognizing this. Trump’s comments about NATO are not only virtually a repeat of Hitler’s words as he invaded Poland, they are also factually wrong, which most Americans don’t seem to understand. The nations of NATO don’t pay dues, nor are they supposed to pay anything to us. The NATO agreement is that each country pays at least 2% of their gross domestic product (GDP, a measure of national production) for the support of its own armed forces. The intention was that if that were done then all the member nations would be prepared to come to the aid of any nation attacked as described in Article 5. Trump seems to think NATO has dues like a country club. His ignorance like his blatant criminality is one of his defining characteristics.
WASHINGTON, D.C. — A new ABC News/Ipsos poll conducted after the release of the Hur Report finds that a majority of Americans (59%) believe that both Joe Biden and Donald Trump are too old for another term as president. This finding, coming after allegations in Special Counsel Hur’s report of President Joe Biden’s memory lapses, suggests that age will continue to be a factor in the 2024 election. An additional quarter of Americans (27%) say that only Biden is too old to serve another term (but not Trump). Only one in ten Americans (11%) say that neither is too old to serve another term. Partisanship plays a large part in assessments of the candidates’ age with the majority of Republicans (62%) saying only Biden while the majority of both Democrats (69%) and Independents (70%) say both are too old.
On the substance of the Hur Report, Americans are divided about whether Biden should have been charged with a crime for his handling of classified documents after he left office as vice president. On this question, similar shares say […]
I think Clare Malone and The New Yorker have published a critically important coherent report on what is happening in the media. The media you grew up with, and read, listened to, and watched is dying, and fact-based journalism is disappearing. Replaced by misinformation, biased reporting, and AI. I have been doing SR since 1991, because as long ago as that I was finding fact-based journalism to be harder and harder to find. I have done SR ever since funding it myself with your help, and it is getting ever more expensive to do it. Thankfully, when my computer was recently attacked by MAGAts to stop me from doing SR, and the repair costs became an issue, a number of you stepped forward and helped out, for which I am deeply appreciative, as I told you. I think the need to keep doing SR has never been greater and let me ask a favor of you. If you like and read SR regularly would you recommend it to a few friends? Culture is the creation of collective individual choices, and we, you and me, need to get as many people as we can involved with facts and in support of wellbeing.
My first job in media was as an assistant at The American Prospect, a small political magazine in Washington, D.C., that offered a promising foothold in journalism. I helped with the print order, mailed checks to writers—after receiving lots of e-mails asking, politely, Where is my money?—and ran the intern program. This last responsibility allowed me a small joy: every couple of weeks, a respected journalist would come into the office for a brown-bag lunch in our conference room, giving our most recent group of twentysomethings a chance to ask for practical advice about “making it.” One man told us to embrace a kind of youthful workaholism, before we became encumbered by kids and families. An investigative reporter implored us to file our taxes and to keep our personal lives in order—never give the rich and powerful a way to undercut your journalism. But perhaps the most memorable piece of advice was from a late-career writer who didn’t mince words. You want to make it in […]
Paul Krugman, Nobel Laureate Economist and Distinguished Professor of Economics at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York - The New York Times
Stephan:
Here is Paul Krugman’s view of the state of America, which I read after writing my commentary for the previous article. I was very pleased to discover we saw things much the same way. The illiteracy and ignorance of American voters, particularly the MAGAt crowd, and the failure of U.S. media to do its job properly has left me, like Krugman, very concerned about the future of the country as a democracy.
Until a few days ago, I was feeling fairly sanguine about America’s prospects. Economically, we’ve had a year of strong growth and plunging inflation — and aside from committed Republicans, who see no good, hear no good and speak no good when a Democrat is president, Americans appear to be recognizing this progress. It has seemed increasingly likely that the nation’s good sense would prevail and democracy would survive.
But watching the frenzy over President Biden’s age, I am, for the first time, profoundly concerned about the nation’s future. It now seems entirely possible that within the next year, American democracy could be irretrievably altered.
And the final blow won’t be the rise of political extremism — that rise certainly created the preconditions for disaster, but it has been part of the landscape for some time now. No, what may turn this menace into catastrophe is the way the hand-wringing over Biden’s age has overshadowed the real stakes in the 2024 election. It reminds me, as it […]
PEARL MARVELL, Contributing Writer - Yale Climate Connections
Stephan:
This article explains how you can foster social wellbeing by something you do. Change your bank to one that is not investing and supporting carbon energy. You can click through the article to find a list of banks that meet that standard. If enough people do this the carbon supporting banks will change their policies. This is how individual actions can change a society.
I grew up knowing that when you had extra money, you put it under a bed, stashed it in a book or a clock, or, if there was enough of it, it went into a savings account at a bank.
It hadn’t occurred to me that my bank account could be contributing to the climate crisis until I learned that since the adoption of the Paris agreement in 2015, 60 of the world’s largest banks have invested $5.5 trillion into the fossil fuel industry. And they’re using our money to do it.
When we deposit our paychecks, the money doesn’t just sit there. Generally, banking institutions will use our money for investments and loans to other individuals and businesses, including fossil fuel companies.
So I realized that one of the levers that I could pull to fight climate change would be to take my money out of banks that invest in fossil fuels. And I could use my skills as a journalist to figure out […]