Tag Archives: united-states

Wikileaks: Banned In Antarctica

Our government's idiotic war on Wikileaks extends even to America's tiny presence in Antarctica. A memo sent to all Americans in Antarctica effectively censors Wikileaks material from the entire continent. Can't tip off the penguins about our secret plans! The memo was sent out to the 1,500-or-so Americans currently living in Antarctica as part of the United States Antarctic Program (USAP). It reminds them that leaked Wikileaks documents are still technically classified, and “the transmission, processing, storage, and/or use of classified information with USAP information systems are prohibited.” Given that the USAP is in charge of the United States' three Antarctic research bases and their communications networks, this amounts to a total Wikileaks blackout for all Americans in Antarctica, who are mostly scientists and support staff. Never mind that one geologist working with the USAP actually blogs for the New York Times, which has been publishing many of Wikileaks' leaked cables. Maybe all government employees should just be sent to Antarctica until this whole Wikileaks thing blows over. It's the only way to protect America. See the memo at the link . . . http://gawker.com/5714434/wikileaks-banned-in-antarctica added by: pjacobs51

Santa Better Get a Bike: Reindeer Numbers in Decline

Photo via CardCow That plump and jolly man has had it good for centuries, relying on his trusty team of reindeer to carry him across the world to deliver presents for all the good boy and girls — but soon Santa Claus may find getting around a bit more difficult. According to one conservation scientist, reindeer (or caribou, as they’re known in North America) are in a precarious state of decline due to the habitat loss driven by global warming and development. Sorry Rudolph, you might not be able t… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Santa Better Get a Bike: Reindeer Numbers in Decline

Santa Better Get a Bike: Reindeer Numbers in Decline

Photo via CardCow That plump and jolly man has had it good for centuries, relying on his trusty team of reindeer to carry him across the world to deliver presents for all the good boy and girls — but soon Santa Claus may find getting around a bit more difficult. According to one conservation scientist, reindeer (or caribou, as they’re known in North America) are in a precarious state of decline due to the habitat loss driven by global warming and development. Sorry Rudolph, you might not be able t… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Santa Better Get a Bike: Reindeer Numbers in Decline

Tipping Point: 25 Signs That The Coming Financial Collapse Is Now Closer Then Ever

The financial collapse that so many of us have been anticipating is seemingly closer then ever. Over the past several weeks, there have been a host of ominous signs for the U.S. economy. Yields on U.S. Treasuries have moved up rapidly and Moody's is publicly warning that it may have to cut the rating on U.S. government debt soon. Mortgage rates are also moving up aggressively. The euro and the U.S. dollar both look incredibly shaky. Jobs continue to be shipped out of the United States at a blistering pace as our politicians stand by and do nothing. Confidence in U.S. government debt around the globe continues to decline. State and local governments that are drowning in debt across the United States are savagely cutting back on even essential social services and are coming up with increasingly “creative” ways of getting more money out of all of us. Meanwhile, tremor after tremor continues to strike the world financial system. So does this mean that we have almost reached a tipping point? Is the world on the verge of a major financial collapse? added by: Revelation1217

UN Peacekeepers Trying To Head Off Christmas Massacre In Congo (Over Blood Minerals For Consumer Goods)

The United Nations has ordered 900 peacekeepers to a remote region of Democratic Republic of Congo, where the LRA killed more than 1,000 adults and children around Christmas in 2008 and 2009 and kidnapped hundreds more, to head off feared Christmas attacks by Lord's Resistance Army fighters. ===== report ============== UNITED NATIONS — The United Nations has ordered 900 peacekeepers to a remote region of Democratic Republic of Congo, to head off feared Christmas attacks by Lord's Resistance Army fighters, a spokesman said Tuesday. UN forces will go to a region where the LRA killed more than 1,000 adults and children around Christmas in 2008 and 2009 and kidnapped hundreds more. The UN mission in DR Congo is also sending extra humanitarian supplies to the region, UN spokesman Martin Nesirky told reporters. A special operation against the LRA has been launched in the Dungu district of Upper Uele region and would carry on until mid-January because of fears of the “holiday season” attacks, Nesirky said. The announcement came after the UN Security Council called for greater international action against the LRA, which is led by Joseph Kony who is wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes and crimes against humanity. The LRA sprang out of a rebellion in Uganda in the 1980s but now terrorizes communities in Central African Republic, southern Sudan and DR Congo. The Security Council welcomed an African Union move to set up a joint task force to fight the LRA and deploy joint border patrols. “It calls for the countries of the region to enhance coordination and information sharing regarding the the threat posed by the LRA,” said a Security Council statement on efforts to bring peace to Central African Republic. Ugandan special forces currently lead the international hunt for Kony, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court for war crimes and crimes against humanity. In December 2008, LRA fighters killed 865 men, women and children in the northeastern DR Congo and in southern Sudan, and kidnapped hundreds of others. A year later 300 people were murdered between December 14 and 17, also in northeast DR Congo. The United States has promised to support a new effort to catch Kony and halt the conflict generated by the LRA, but in a report titled “Ghosts of Christmas Past,” 19 aid agencies said the Security Council should do more. The report said LRA attacks remote communities in Sudan, Central African Republic and DR Congo almost four times a week. “These communities await Christmas with fear,” added the groups, who include Oxfam, Christian Aid, Refugees International, World Vision and War Child UK, among others. The UN refugee agency said in October that the rebels had killed 2,000 people since December 2008, kidnapped more than 2,600 and displaced more than 400,000 in DR Congo, the Central African Republic and southern Sudan. “The acute suffering and mass population displacement the LRA has generated across international borders is undermining stability in an already fragile region, where southern Sudan is preparing to hold a landmark referendum on secession in early 2011,” the report said. The aid groups welcomed recent steps by the United States and the African Union. But it said kidnapped people had to be helped to return home and villages had to be protected. The aid groups called on the UN Security Council to set up an expert panel as “there is a chronic lack of information about the motivation, composition and location of the LRA.” The LRA began their rebellion in northern Uganda in the late 1980s, but have not carried out an attack there since 2006. Since south Sudanese-hosted peace talks broke down in 2008, the fighters have roamed the jungles of central Africa and been repeatedly blamed for the slaughter of defenseless civilians. The African Union has said the LRA should be called “terrorists” rather than rebels. ############# ARTICLE LINK ############# UN peacekeepers to head off Christmas massacre http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iduTBApHLCmGUF9clnqdrlk-L8TQ?… (AFP) – Dec 13, 2010 added by: twohawks

Obama backs U.N. indigenous rights declaration | Reuters

President Barack Obama said on Thursday he was giving a belated U.S. endorsement to the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People, drawing hearty applause from a gathering of Native Americans. The U.N. declaration recognizes the rights of indigenous groups, like American Indians, in such areas as culture, property and self-determination. The United States was one of a handful of countries to refrain from backing the doctrine in the past, but following a recent review of the government's position, Obama said, “I can announce that the United States is lending its support to this declaration. “The aspirations it affirms — including the respect for the institutions and rich cultures of Native peoples — are ones we must always seek to fulfill,” he said in opening the White House Tribal Nations Conference at the Interior Department. He added that “what matters far more than words, what matters far more than any resolution or declaration, are actions to match those words.” added by: Vierotchka

U.S. Border Crossing to Become Wastewater-Recycling Living Machine

Image: Worrell Water Technologies Enter the United States at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry on the Mexican border, and you’ll never know just by looking around that you’re walking through a “living machine” wastewater recycling system. But when installation is complete, a custom-designed system will treat and recycle wastewater on site, reducing “generation of wastewater and demand for potable water, while increasing the local aquifer recharge,” according to the company that designed the system, Worrell Water Technologies…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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U.S. Border Crossing to Become Wastewater-Recycling Living Machine

50,000 MW of Nation’s Dirtiest Coal Plants Could be Shut Down

Photo: Richard Harrison , Geograph, CC The EPA is planning on increasing the pollution controls on coal plants — a move that is being fought tooth and nail by industry and the politicians who support it. And they’re fighting for good reason: The new regulations, which, among other things, will clamp down on the amount of toxic pollution (sulfur dioxide, mercury, etc) coal plants can emit, will likely cause a massive wave of coal plant closures — or hefty, hefty fines — across the nation. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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50,000 MW of Nation’s Dirtiest Coal Plants Could be Shut Down

First Molten Salt Power Plant Approved in California

Image: Solar Reserve The most common complaint lodged against solar power is that — say it with me now — it’s only able to provide power when it’s light outside. Solar developers have tried to solve this problem a number of ways, and using molten salt to store the heat is one of the most promising… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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First Molten Salt Power Plant Approved in California

REVIEW: Jack Abramoff is More Folk Hero Than Scoundrel in Casino Jack

Until he was convicted in 2008, Jack Abramoff was a wearer of many hats: Washington lobbyist supreme, bedfellow of right-wing creeps like Tom DeLay and Ralph Reed, bilker of Indian nations, sometime film producer, restaurateur, observant Jew. Within the past year, he also became the star subject of two movies: First the sharp, complex Alex Gibney documentary Casino Jack and the United States of Money, and now the more straightforwardly titled Casino Jack , directed by the late George Hickenlooper and starring Kevin Spacey in the title role. If Abramoff fancies himself a charming scamp, he’ll be a lot happier with how he’s portrayed in the latter movie — and that’s the problem with it.

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REVIEW: Jack Abramoff is More Folk Hero Than Scoundrel in Casino Jack