Tag Archives: pollution

San Francisco Rules for Cell Phone Radiation Warnings at Retailers

Photo via Guwashi999 Cell phone radiation and its impacts on health is still a highly controversial issue with the debate raging on whether or not humans are at risk every time they hold their phone to their head. Nevertheless, some municipalities aren’t willing to take the chance that one day researchers will indeed conclude we’re frying our brains and all this while they did li… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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San Francisco Rules for Cell Phone Radiation Warnings at Retailers

MSNBC’s Scarborough Insults Republicans as ‘Genuinely Stupid’ for Criticizing Obama’s Oil Spill Response

Ad hominem attacks supplanted thoughtful discussion yet again on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.” On Monday, co-host Joe Scarborough chastised Republicans as “genuinely stupid” for criticizing President Barack Obama’s handling of the BP oil spill, adding that the GOP must think the American people are “dumb as hell.” “The Republicans blaming Obama look genuinely stupid because of eight years of deregulation,” scolded Scarborough, who is developing a penchant for favoring personal attacks over rational debate. “Is Mitt Romney suggesting he’s more hostile to the oil industry than Barack Obama?” Scarborough sardonically asked an amused Mike Allen, Politico ’s chief political correspondent. “Do we want to go back and look at the money? And again, I’m not just knocking Mitt Romney, but when Republicans come out like Sarah Palin and suggest the president is too cozy with the oil industry, this suggests that they think the American people are dumb as hell.” Always eager to elevate the dialogue with enlightened commentary, co-host Mika Brzezinski characterized Republicans more bluntly, as “stupid.” Descending into a bizarre abyss of rants and insults, the “Morning Joe” regulars are becoming increasingly irrelevant as serious political analysts. The transcript of the relevant portion of the program can be found below: MSNBC Morning Joe 6/14/10 6:24 a.m. MIKA BRZEZINSKI: Also, looking at Mitt Romney, hitting the president hard on how he’s handled the oil spill. What’s the angle here? MIKE ALLEN, Politico ’s chief political correspondent: That’s right, Mika. The White House has thought for a while that Mitt Romney is the most likely opponent to the president. You never know a couple years out, but just looking at Republican Party history you kind of think that. And Mitt Romney’s been quiet, everybody knows him, he doesn’t need to establish his name ID. But you’re seeing him start to take some whacks at the president in very high-profile forums. This weekend he was at the state Republican convention in the state of Washington, and he really went after the president on his handling of BP, saying that it shows his inability to lead–he questioned his leadership ability. And of course that’s what Mitt Romney tells voters he has to bring to the table. JOE SCARBOROUGH: So, what did Mitt Romney say exactly he would have done that Barack Obama is not doing? ALLEN: He doesn’t of course. And when President Bush does interviews about his book this fall you can bet that that’s one of the first questions he’s going to be asked. SCARBOROUGH: Is Mitt Romney suggesting that he’s more hostile to the oil industry than Barack Obama? ALLEN: (laughter) SCARBOROUGH: Do we want to go back and look at the money? And again, I’m not just knocking Mitt Romney, but when Republicans come out like Sarah Palin and suggest the president is too cozy with the oil industry, this suggests that they think the American people are– BRZEZINSKI: Stupid. SCARBOROUGH: –dumb as hell. ALLEN: They may not want to go there. Democratic staffers are looking at polling that shows that voters are very receptive to the idea of saying we need to crack down on the companies that took advantage of the government. So, especially with swing voters, there’s not a lot of sympathy for oil companies obviously. BRZEZINSKI: Alright, Mike Allen thank you very much, we’ll see you in just a little bit. SCARBOROUGH: And by the way, really quickly, nobody’s going to be able to play this–really–come the fall, saying “oh, it’s all the Republicans” or these Republicans saying “it’s all the Democrats.” The Republicans blaming Obama look genuinely stupid because of eight years of deregulation. But as Dee Dee Meyers and other Democrats have admitted, that deregulation started in the 1990’s under Bill Clinton. You’ve had three administrations that have basically given oil companies a free pass. And Mike we always talk about the Wall Street Journal article. Five minutes– MIKE BARNICLE: Five minutes for an approval. SCARBOROUGH: for approval for some of these BP regulatory waivers. –Alex Fitzsimmons is a News Analysis intern at the Media Research Center. Click here to follow him on Twitter.

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MSNBC’s Scarborough Insults Republicans as ‘Genuinely Stupid’ for Criticizing Obama’s Oil Spill Response

Study Says Drug Manufacturing Facilities are Source of Drugs in Drinking Water

U.S. Geological Survey hydrologic technicians collect a stream sample from Hallocks Mill Brook downstream of the outfall of one of the wastewater treatment plants investigated. Photo courtesy of USGS. Guest bloggers Andrea Donsky and Randy Boyer are co-founders of NaturallySavvy.com . A five-year study conducted by U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) researchers has found that pharmaceutical manufact… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Study Says Drug Manufacturing Facilities are Source of Drugs in Drinking Water

Analyst: BP Oil Spill Clean-Up Will Have $60-Billion Price Tag; Dividend Elimination Hurts Retirees

We all know the BP oil spill is a huge mess. It’s going to be costly to clean up – but just how much? And while some outspoken critics are calling for BP to eliminate its dividend, they probably aren’t realizing the residual effects. On the June 10 broadcast of Fox Business Network’s “Bulls & Bears,” Fadel Gheit, a senior analyst at Oppenheimer & Co., offered a huge estimate. But, he explained what is done is done and that going after BP with harsh penalties, as in elimination of the BP stock dividend, now will hurt a lot of American retirees. “Couple of things – I mean, it is water under the bridge, it is over and you will have to live with it,” Gheit said. “BP will have to live with it. We have to remember one thing — BP bought 10 years ago, Amoco, Arco, a very large American corporation with a lot of people working for BP today. And the retirees are pensioners from the Amoco and Arco days. So by cutting the dividend we’re penalizing completely innocent people that worked very hard for many years. And now, the dividend is the way they support themselves. So, I don’t understand.” And he suggested a compromise – not the total elimination of the BP’s stock’s dividend but that something should come down in the middle.  “Yes, I understand clearly that we have to set the money aside to clean up and all those things but we have to reach a compromise and not throw [out] the baby with the bath water,” Gheit continued. “So there has to be some balance between my view here, BP should cut dividend by at least 50 percent. And I think they will have the financial feasibility to clean up the mess they created.” But over time, the spill would be cleaned up he explained. “Eventually it will be cleaned up,” Gheit said. “It will cost more” How much more? A lot more, he said. “I estimate it will cost about $60 billion,” Gheit said. This figure was a bit of a shock to “Bulls & Bears” co-host David Asman: “Wow! $60 billion.” And although BP (NYSE: BP ) has a market cap of roughly $100 billion, Gheit explained it won’t come in one lump sum but over 10 years. “But it’s not going to be in a day or a week or a year,” Gheit said. “Might take about 10 years. So, that the present value of the $60 billion is pretty manageable.”

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Analyst: BP Oil Spill Clean-Up Will Have $60-Billion Price Tag; Dividend Elimination Hurts Retirees

Plastic Century Dares You: Sip from Trash-Filled Water

The installation at the California Academy of Sciences. Photo via Boing Boing . Visitors who come across the ” Plastic Century ” art installation while searching for a sip of water at the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco tomorrow may find their options less than appealing: Drink from a trash-filled water cooler or go thirsty…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Plastic Century Dares You: Sip from Trash-Filled Water

Unlike With Katrina, Media Stay Away from Gulf Spill Competency Questions

The mainstream media seem to have boiled down the president’s reaction to the Gulf spill to two caricatures: either he has failed to satiate public appetites by feigning outrage, or he is succeeding by acting angry. Whereas journalists rightly expected President Bush to do something about Katrina–and excoriated him when he supposedly didn’t do enough–the media seem content listening to Obama speak. That the president may not be doing everything in his power, like, say, meeting with the CEO of British Petroleum , seems not even to cross their minds. So the only critique of the president that remains is one of style. By focusing on what the president has said–rather than what he has done–and how he has said it, the media have diverted (albeit unintentionally) attention from the administration’s actual response to the spill to its emotional and verbal response. Obama and his predecessor both accepted responsibility for the spill and Hurricane Katrina, respectively. But the mainstream press took the former at his word; they rightfully held him accountable for his administration’s actions. No such accountability is present in the media’s reporting on Obama’s response to the Gulf spill. “I as president am responsible for the problem, and for the solution,” Bush stated. Obama echoed this sentiment late last month, when he said, “I take responsibility. It is my job to make sure that everything is done to shut this down.” Now contrast, by way of example, the two New York Times headlines covering the respective admissions of responsibility. “Responding to Spill, Obama Mixes Regret With Resolve,” the Times’s editors wrote on May 27. That tone stands in stark contrast to this headline , from September 16, 2005: “Bush admits Katrina response was inadequate”. The Times captured the spirit of the media’s coverage. In Bush’s case, the concern was with what had and had not been done. But today the same journalists seem more concerned with what the White House is saying about the spill than with what it is doing about it. Some, such as MSNBC’s Norah O’Donnell, have even bemoaned how badly the administration feels about the situation. White House staffers are apparently having nightmares in between beer pong games . If Obama hasn’t succeeded at solving a problem, the media narrative goes, it is because the problem cannot be solved, not because he has failed in any way. After all, he caaaares . After the president claimed he was looking for “whose ass to kick” in an interview with Matt Lauer on Monday, the media seized on the statement as a tangible example not just of the president’s new commitment to mitigating the disaster, but even as an example of his hands-on attitude towards the spill. NewsBusters reported Tuesday on network TV journos going gaga over the president’s newfound combativeness. “In a TV interview aired today, the President said if BP’s CEO worked for him, he’d be fired,” stated Katie Couric. So Couric parroted the president saying what he would do in a hypothetical situation with a person with whom he has not actually met in the 50 days since the spill began. Obama’s kick-ass quote or his hypothetical threats against Tony Hayward have been touted as proof that the president is responding to the public demands that he do domething about the spill. But Obama still has not done much of anything. That fact seems lost on the media. So readers are left shaking their heads when the Atlantic’s Marc Ambinder says this : The American Prospect’s Adam Serwer notes today, “One of the things I used to like about the president is that he always seemed indifferent to village demands that he acquiesce to whatever empty political gesture they wanted him to make.” Well, Serwer can relax. President Obama did not conjure up the posterior metaphor on his own. He turned Matt Lauer’s “butt” into an “ass,” and his annoyance seemed to be more a consequence of Lauer’s questions than of any effort to appear angry.    Appearing angry and appearing engaged are two different things. The White House understands how anger can be appropriately channeled and employed, but at this point, they are eager for the public to see the president as engaged — as problem solving. If President Obama hadn’t said “ass,” then he’d be accused of not being angry enough. Because he did say “ass,” he’s accused of titrating his response to criticisms that he’s not angry enough about the oil leak. The man cannot win. Well yes, as Ace notes , “he can win — he can do something about the oil slick.” Not just talk about it or “strike the right emotional notes,” but actually do something about it, something tangible, something real, something with real-world impact. That’s how he “wins,” dude. And that, I’m sad to report, is the only way he wins. But for media personalities so used to covering a president whose tongue won him the White House, talking has supplanted action. Obama talking is Obama acting. Hence before the president’s kick-ass moment, the public’s sour mood towards the Gulf spill response was due to Obama’s failure to adequately communicate how well he has been doing. Now that he has succeeded in communicating, the narrative goes, he has simply succeeded. Why anyone would continue to deny him credit accordingly is completely lost on these pundits. Ace hits the nail on the head: So, that’s what we have going on. We are allowed two permissible storylines — Obama’s not emoting enough, or Obama’s emoting just enough — and the MFM won’t entertain other storylines, like, “This has nothing at all to do with emoting, but rather to do with reality and real-world achievements.”

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Unlike With Katrina, Media Stay Away from Gulf Spill Competency Questions

New York Toughens Up on Electronics Manufacturers with New e-Waste Law

Photo via Mark, Vicki, Ellaura and Mason New York City has had its share of difficulty in regards to setting strict regulations for e-waste recycling. When they set up a regulation requiring manufacturers to provide door-to-door pickup of electronics, manufacturers bit back with a lawsuit . But now, the city has some degree of support from the state of New York, which just implemented a law toughening up manu… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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New York Toughens Up on Electronics Manufacturers with New e-Waste Law

What We Don’t Know About the Ocean Can Kill Us

Jo aboard the Plastiki; Photos via The Plastiki Guest post by Jo Royle, Skipper on the Plastiki ‘The sea is everything. It covers seven tenths of the terrestrial globe. Its breath is pure and healthy. It is an immense desert, where man is never lonely, for he feels life stirring on all sides’ – Jules Vern, Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea. I think most of us feel an emotional tie to the oceans. Most of us breathe a sigh of relief or relaxation as soon as we set eyes upon the deep blue wilderness, a feeling of coming home. My childhood mem… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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What We Don’t Know About the Ocean Can Kill Us

Today Is A Starting Point – Thoughts on World Oceans Day

Photos via The Plastiki It’s very exciting to have a world ocean day, and when you think about our planet being covered in 72% of water, one would think that rather than calling it Planet Earth we would call it Planet Ocean. Today, the 8th of June is a very special day , we get to recognise and appreciate the scale of the ocean and how integral it is to our ability to live on this planet. Often we don’t connect with the ocean; it is often out of sight out of mind, an endless horizon that in real… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Today Is A Starting Point – Thoughts on World Oceans Day

USEPA Upgrades SO2 Air Standard For First Time In 40 Years – Asthmatics Have Much To Gain

” Figure A shows the location of the lungs and airways in the body. Figure B shows a cross-section of a normal airway. Figure C shows a cross-section of an airway during asthma symptoms. ” Caption & Image credit: National Heart Lung & Blood Institute Look past the oil globs and political waffling for a minute and you’ll find good news lurking. USEPA has upgraded the an outdated SO2 standard, which involved long term (daily) average concentration limits, to a short-term standard that better protects asthmatics, for example. By early 2013 expect enfor… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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USEPA Upgrades SO2 Air Standard For First Time In 40 Years – Asthmatics Have Much To Gain