I have been telling you for years now that Florida is heading for a massive crisis because of climate change and large parts of the state are going underwater. In part this is because the people of Florida elected such an incompetent governor and legislature of racist MAGAt christofascists who are doing far too little to prepare for climate change. Here is the latest in this trend.
Real estate expert and realtor Steven Kupchan has revealed what he thinks the ‘worst case scenario’ would be as the costs of condos have soared, especially in southern Florida.
Kupchan, an agent for One Sotheby’s International Realty, told DailyMail.com he thinks the Florida housing market will become severely affected and cause an intense domino effect.
‘In the worst-case scenario, a significant number of condo associations could go bankrupt due to the inability to cover the costs of necessary repairs and maintenance,’ Kuplan said.
‘This could lead to widespread foreclosures, plummeting property values, and a ripple effect throughout the local real estate market.
Shondiiin Silversmith, Navajo Journalist - AZ Mirror
Stephan:
I confess I had not realized the impact on Native Americans cause by the decision of the christofascist Supreme Court Majority. Here is the story.
With the recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling that now requires potential voters to provide proof of citizenship with their state-created voter registration forms, Indigenous voting rights advocates want Indigenous people to know that they can still register to vote as tribal citizens.
Patty Ferguson-Bohnee said that Indigenous people living in Arizona who are enrolled in a federally recognized tribe can use their tribal identification numbers to prove their citizenship.
“As long as a tribal member is an enrolled member of their tribe, they can use that tribal ID number to register on the state form, and that will prove citizenship for purposes of voter registration,” she said, adding that it’s because all Indigenous peoples were declared citizens of the United States in 1924.
This essay by a retired newsman closely reflects my own feelings: What happened to journalists in the United States that they treat this election like a horse race between equals. It is nothing like that. Who could have imagined in the over two centuries of our nation’s history that in the third decade of the 21st century one of the candidates would be a convicted rapist, multiple felon, multiple-bankrupt traitor, and con artist, committed along with the party putting him forward to ending our democracy, and that this would not be the biggest story since the Second World War? I read The New York Times, and The Washington Post and all the other major newspapers, and watch MSNBC, CNN, and Fox Propaganda. With the possible exception of Rachel Maddow and Lawrence O’Donnell, none of them are covering the news correctly. And, as a country, we are very much the worse for journalism’s failure.
We need to talk about the abominable headline below: Trump Can Win on Character, and how it is we have come to the fatal point where The New York Times and our broken mainstream media seem to need the America-attacking Donald Trump a helluva lot more than the America-attacking Donald Trump seems to need The New York Times and our broken mainstream media.
Aside from platforming maniacal, caustic headlines topping spurious content like the one above (which I promise to get to in a minute), this newspaper’s inability to spot the biggest news story of our lifetimes, and treat it with the heft it deserves, is journalistic […]
Here is the first report I have seen on something I had suspected but not been able to find reliable data on. I see this trend as yet another function of what is happening to the United States because of our grotesque wealth inequality and the reality that as a culture we have no social priority more important than greed and profit. If this is to end we must once again become a society where fostering wellbeing is social goal and purpose. In November, we are going to find out which path we will go down.
The share of Americans moving has reached its lowest in history — and it doesn’t look like it’s climbing back up anytime soon.
Why it matters: Moving — across town, across the state and across the country — for new jobs and better lives was once a common part of American life. Now, staying put longer is the norm.
By the numbers: In the 1960s, around 1 in 5 Americans moved each year, according to the Brookings Institution.
As of 2022, that’s fallen to 8.7% — even accounting for the pandemic-era moves out of big coastal cities and into places like the Sun Belt.
Breaking it down: A collision of key demographic, social and economic trends is driving the decline, William Frey, senior demographer at Brookings, tells Axios.
Thom Hartmann, Contributing Writer - Raw Story | Commentary
Stephan:
Thom Hartmann, has it right. This is what journalists should be covering, what their editors and producers should be asking them to focus on. I don’t think most Americans really understand what the christofascists and the billionaires who control them are really trying to achieve. But Hartmann gets it just as I do. Have you realized this?
Republicans have pulled off a coup against an entire branch of government, and nobody seems to have noticed. But if you pay attention, it’s shocking.
Sometimes you can learn as much from attending to what Republicans suddenly stop saying as from what they are talking about. In this case, it’s their half-century-long obsession with convening a constitutional convention to rewrite the US Constitution. Under Article V of our Constitution, when two-thirds of the states formally call for a “con-con” to rewrite our nation’s founding document, it officially comes into being.
They can then make small changes like enshrining the right of billionaires and corporations to bribe judges and politicians, or insert the doctrine of corporate personhood into the document, or simply throw the whole thing out and start over. Many on the right are hoping to insert a national ban on abortion into a new constitution; others want to end the […]
Here is some good news about the U.S. transition out of the carbon energy era. We are making progress.
The United States increased its electricity generation from utility-scale solar power by nearly one-third in the first half of this year compared to the same period last year.
Despite that considerable increase in solar, the climate benefits of this growth were undermined by a rapid rise in electricity demand, which was met in large part by an increase in generation from fossil fuels.
This week, the Energy Information Administration released electricity generation statistics for June, which allows for a close look at where we stand halfway through 2024. The numbers tell a story of a country moving in the right direction, but not nearly fast enough.
First, the topline: Generation from utility-scale power plants was 2.1 million gigawatt-hours from January to June, an increase of 5 percent from January to June of 2023. That’s the highest percentage increase in decades when comparing the first half of a year to the first half of the prior year.
Grid planners and analysts have warned that the country is entering a period of rapid growth in electricity consumption to meet the needs of data centers, factories and other new construction. This follows […]