What keeps you up at night?

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Revenge of the ‘Shoe Bomber’

Full article (here).

From the outset of his administration, Mr. Obama has been trying to thread the needle between national security policy and his ideological affinity with civil liberties lawyers and human-rights activists, meeting with and consulting them prior to making detainee-related decisions. Though his executive order shutting Guantanamo closely followed the blueprint provided by Human Rights First, leaders of key organizations were stunned when he revealed in an awkward, off-the-record meeting the day before his public announcement at the National Archives that he planned to continue President George W. Bush’s policy of preventive detention.

Michael Ratner, whose human rights organization, the Center for Constitutional Rights, filed the first successful detainee lawsuit in 2002, called Mr. Obama’s proposed U.S. detention scheme a “road to perdition” and nothing more than a plan to “repackage Guantanamo.” Leaders of the so-called Gitmo bar appear poised to launch a flurry of legal challenges the moment the last departing detainee’s feet touch U.S. soil.

In January, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Colorado issued a statement saying that conditions at supermax are “simply another form of torture” worse than Gitmo which “make a mockery of ‘innocent until proven guilty.’” Last month, the ACLU filed a civil lawsuit mirroring Reid’s religious rights claim on behalf of two terrorism inmates held at the Communications Management Unit inside a medium security prison in Terre Haute, Ind.

...

Mr. Obama has repeatedly suggested that the security challenge of bringing more than 100 trained and dangerous terrorists onto U.S. soil can be solved by simply installing them in an impenetrable fortress. This view is either disingenuous or naïve. The militant Islamists at Guantanamo too dangerous to release believe that their resistance behind the wire is a continuation of holy war. There is every reason to believe they will continue their jihad once they have been transported to U.S. soil where certain federal judges have signaled a willingness to confer upon them even more rights.

The position of civil rights activists with regard to these prisoners is plain. “If they cannot be convicted,” says ACLU lawyer Jameel Jaffer, “then you release them.”

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Global warming is the new religion of First World urban elites

Full article (here).
Plimer presents the proposition that anthropogenic global warming is little more than a con trick on the public perpetrated by fundamentalist environmentalists and callously adopted by politicians and government officials who love nothing more than an issue that causes public anxiety.

While environmentalists for the most part draw their conclusions based on climate information gathered in the last few hundred years, geologists, Plimer says, have a time frame stretching back many thousands of millions of years.

The dynamic and changing character of the Earth's climate has always been known by geologists. These changes are cyclical and random, he says. They are not caused or significantly affected by human behaviour.

Polar ice, for example, has been present on the Earth for less than 20 per cent of geological time, Plimer writes. Plus, animal extinctions are an entirely normal part of the Earth's evolution.

...

Plimer gets especially upset about carbon dioxide, its role in Earth's daily life and the supposed effects on climate of human manufacture of the gas. He says atmospheric carbon dioxide is now at the lowest levels it has been for 500 million years, and that atmospheric carbon dioxide is only 0.001 per cent of the total amount of the chemical held in the oceans, surface rocks, soils and various life forms. Indeed, Plimer says carbon dioxide is not a pollutant, but a plant food. Plants eat carbon dioxide and excrete oxygen. Human activity, he says, contributes only the tiniest fraction to even the atmospheric presence of carbon dioxide.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Some Photos and Captions

...of non-bad things in Afghanistan.

http://www.michaelyon-online.com/some-photos-and-captions.htm

Here's a sample:

Government monopsony distorts climate science, says SPPI

Full story (here).
The Science and Public Policy Institute announces the publication of Climate Money, a study by Joanne Nova revealing that the federal Government has a near-monopsony on climate science funding. This distorts the science towards self-serving alarmism. Key findings:

Ø The US Government has spent more than $79 billion of taxpayers’ money since 1989 on policies related to climate change, including science and technology research, administration, propaganda campaigns, foreign aid, and tax breaks. Most of this spending was unnecessary.

Ø Despite the billions wasted, audits of the science are left to unpaid volunteers. A dedicated but largely uncoordinated grassroots movement of scientists has sprung up around the globe to test the integrity of “global warming” theory and to compete with a lavishly-funded, highly-organized climate monopsony. Major errors have been exposed again and again.

Ø Carbon trading worldwide reached $126 billion in 2008. Banks, which profit most, are calling for more. Experts are predicting the carbon market will reach $2 - $10 trillion in the near future. Hot air will soon be the largest single commodity traded on global exchanges.

Ø Meanwhile, in a distracting sideshow, Exxon-Mobil Corp is repeatedly attacked for paying just $23 million to skeptics—less than a thousandth of what the US government spends on alarmists, and less than one five-thousandth of the value of carbon trading in 2008 alone.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Schwarzenegger’s Newfound Fiscal Conservatism

Full article (here).
The Golden State can’t seem to catch a break these days, with a budget deficit that widens by the hour, factory closings, declining exports, state-issued IOUs, and restive labor unions seeking to reinstate higher taxes for California’s beleaguered businesses.

When my last HUMAN EVENTS column appeared in June, California’s deficit was $24.3 billion. Now, three weeks later, it’s $26.3 billion. It may likely be $27.3 billion as State Controller John Chiang (D.) has reported that June personal income taxes were $987 million below Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s May estimates with sales taxes down $154 million. California gets about half of its general fund revenue from income taxes, having the second-highest personal income tax rates in the U.S. after Maryland recently raised theirs to eclipse California in at least one category of economic stupidity. California increased its highest-in-the-nation state sales tax rate from a base of 7.25% to 8.25% beginning April 1, a 14% increase.

At last count, California was going into debt by about $25 million a day. In the fiscal year ended June 30, California went about $10.4 billion in the red.

Meanwhile, a coalition of government employee unions, led by the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees California (AFSCME) has filed paperwork to repeal $2.5 billion in tax breaks for business. These tax cuts were enacted to encourage economic activity as part of last February’s budget agreement that also saw the largest state tax increase in U.S. history. The public sector unions have long lobbied to hike taxes, including property taxes and taxes on crude oil production.

As if to signal enough is enough, the Toyota Motor Co. has announced it is preparing to close its New United Motor Manufacturing Inc. (NUMMI) plant and the 4,700 Bay Area jobs that go with it. NUMMI, a joint venture between Toyota and General Motors Corp., has been on shaky ground since GM decided it would back out of its end of the business as part of its bankruptcy reorganization. No doubt, California’s high energy, labor and tax costs, along with its uniquely crushing regulatory burden, played a role in Toyota’s decision.

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Gore: U.S. Climate Bill Will Help Bring About 'Global Governance'

Full story (here).
Former Vice President Al Gore declared that the Congressional climate bill will help bring about “global governance.”


“I bring you good news from the U.S., “Gore said on July 7, 2009 in Oxford at the Smith School World Forum on Enterprise and the Environment, sponsored by UK Times.


“Just two weeks ago, the House of Representatives passed the Waxman-Markey climate bill,” Gore said, noting it was “very much a step in the right direction.” President Obama has pushed for the passage of the bill in the Senate and attended a G8 summit this week where he agreed to attempt to keep the Earth's temperatures from rising more than 2 degrees C.


Gore touted the Congressional climate bill, claiming it “will dramatically increase the prospects for success” in combating what he sees as the “crisis” of man-made global warming.


“But it is the awareness itself that will drive the change and one of the ways it will drive the change is through global governance and global agreements.”

Monday, July 6, 2009

New climate strategy: track the world's wealthiest

Full story (here).
To fairly divide the climate change fight between rich and poor, a new study suggests basing targets for emission cuts on the number of wealthy people, who are also the biggest greenhouse gas emitters, in a country.

Since about half the planet's climate-warming emissions come from less than a billion of its people, it makes sense to follow these rich folks when setting national targets to cut carbon dioxide emissions, the authors wrote on Monday in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

As it stands now, under the carbon-capping Kyoto Protocol, rich countries shoulder most of the burden for cutting the emissions that spur global warming, while developing countries -- including fast-growing economies China and India -- are not required to curb greenhouse pollution.

Rich countries, notably the United States, have said this gives developing countries an unfair economic advantage; China, India and other developing countries argue that developed countries have historically spewed more climate-warming gases, and developing countries need time to catch up.

The study suggests setting a uniform international cap on how much carbon dioxide each person could emit in order to limit global emissions; since rich people emit more, they are the ones likely to reach or exceed this cap, whether they live in a rich country or a poor one.

For example, if world leaders agree to keep carbon emissions in 2030 at the same level they are now, no one person's emissions could exceed 11 tons of carbon each year.

That means there would be about a billion "high emitters" in 2030 out of a projected world population of 8.1 billion.