Category: General news

Managing director of Ebono Institute and major sponsor of The Generator, Geoff Ebbs, is running against Kevin Rudd in the seat of Griffith at the next Federal election. By the expression on their faces in this candid shot it looks like a pretty dull campaign. Read on

  • New Report: March 2015 Easily Set The Record For Hottest March Ever Recorded

    Neil deGrasse Tyson: Politicians Denying Science Is ‘Beginning Of The End Of An Informed Democracy’

    Neil deGrasse Tyson: Politicians Denying Science Is ‘Beginning Of The End Of An Informed Democracy’

    The Link Between Fracking Activity And Earthquakes Is Getting Stronger

    The Link Between Fracking Activity And Earthquakes Is Getting Stronger

    Big Insurance Companies Are Warning The U.S. To Prepare For Climate Change

    Big Insurance Companies Are Warning The U.S. To Prepare For Climate Change

    New Report: March 2015 Easily Set The Record For Hottest March Ever Recorded

    Posted on April 20, 2015 at 8:00 am

    New Report: March 2015 Easily Set The Record For Hottest March Ever Recorded

    2015Jan-MarNOAA

    This was easily the hottest March — and hottest January-to-March — on record, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. NOAA’s latest monthly report makes clear Mother Nature is just getting warmed up:

      • March 2015 was not only the hottest March in their 135-year of keeping records, it beat “the previous record of 2010 by 0.09°F (0.05°C).”
      • January-to-March was not only the hottest start to any year on record, it also beat “the previous record of 2002 by 0.09°F.”
      • March was so warm that only two other months ever had a higher “departure from average” (i.e. temperature above the norm), February 1998 and January 2007, and they only beat March by “just 0.01°C (0.02°F).”
      • Arctic sea ice hit its smallest March extent since records began in 1979.

    The human-caused global warming trend that made 2014 the hottest year on record is continuing. We may even be witnessing the start of the long-awaited jump in global temperatures.

    Last week, NASA also reported this was the hottest three-month start of any year on record. In NASA’s database, though, this was the third warmest March on record. It was the warmest in the dataset of the Japan Meteorological Agency. These three agencies use slightly different methods for tracking global temperature, so their monthly and yearly rankings differ slightly, even as they all show the same long-term trend driven by carbon pollution.

    It is increasingly likely that 2015 will be the hottest year on record. El Niños typically lead to global temperature records, as the short-term El Niño warming adds to the underlying long-term global warming trend. NOAA has predicted there’s a 60 percent chance the El Niño it declared last month will continue all year. If it does, 2015 may well top the 2014 record by a significant margin.

  • SBS adverts: update on the petition you signed

    Click here to enable desktop notifications for Gmail.   Learn more  Hide
    2 of 35

    SBS adverts: update on the petition you signed

    Inbox
    x

    Margaret Pomeranz & Quentin Dempster . via CommunityRun info@communityrun.org via controlshiftlabs.com 

    11:24 AM (18 minutes ago)

    to me

    Hi friends,

    Both of us want to thank you very much for recently signing our petition to stop even more ads on SBS. Some 62,000 others signed too. None of us want SBS to become yet another commercial broadcaster pandering to advertisers at the expense of the Charter. It wouldn’t be the same. Soon we will present the petition. We’ll keep you posted on that.

    We’d like to let you know the latest on our petition and also mention that the campaign, which has not finished yet, was made possible by the good work of GetUp! and Save Our SBS.

    The news

    A month ago, the Communications Minister, Malcolm Turnbull introduced the Communications Legislation Amendment (SBS Advertising Flexibility and Other Measures) Bill 2015 into the parliament and this Bill – that would double advertising and permit ‘product placement’ on SBS – was referred to the Senate Communications Committee who will write a report. The Committee may recommend the Bill remains as is, be amended or dropped. If it is not dropped, the Bill could be voted on in May. Around that time we’ll email you about the next phase of the campaign and be doing everything we can to stop SBS from being further commercialised.

    Have you heard of Save Our SBS?

    If it weren’t for Save Our SBS supporters & friends of SBS, our multicultural broadcaster would be far worse off and our petition never would have commenced.

    Many people who signed the petition are members of Save Our SBS, and a number joined as a result. You may be one. But if you are not, we’d like to ask you to consider joining as campaigns like this take time and funds. Save Our SBS is the national peak body of supporters & friends of SBS. It is a grass roots not-for-profit organisation run by ordinary people like you, who, have run a number of successful campaigns over the years.

    We’d like to suggest you join Save Our SBS – if you are not already a member. You can join as either an active member or simply an expression of support and friendship. Join here.

    SBS – the world’s first multicultural broadcaster – is unique and special. However, with less funding than any other national broadcaster, it is constantly under threat from government and commercial interests. Save Our SBS supports the decommercialisation of SBS and diverse multicultural/multilingual programs. Save Our SBS actively lobbies for greater public funding for SBS and scrutinises it to operate in a fair and transparent manner, mindful of its Charter and speaks out when governments undermine or threaten it – hence the petition that you signed. Join Save Our SBS now.

    For more information, just browse SaveOurSBS.org and read some of their articles.

    Save Our SBS was instrumental in getting our petition off the ground but let’s ensure it doesn’t stop here.

    Will you join Save Our SBS and help to ensure this good work continues? Look here and act now.

    Best Wishes,

    Margaret Pomeranz & Quentin Dempster

    PS: Existing financial members of Save Our SBS do not need to click.

  • The day Bentley was dreading… Lock the Gate ORG au

    Click here to enable desktop notifications for Gmail.   Learn more  Hide
    1 of 33

    Inbox
    x

    Meg and Peter Nielsen, at Bentley, Northern NSW <info@lockthegate.org.au>

    10:25 AM (32 minutes ago)

    to me
    Lock the Gate Alliance
    Dear Neville,
    It’s the day we were dreading here in Bentley! Last Friday gas driller Metgasco had the suspension of their drilling operations quashed in court and they are already threatening to return to drill for gas in our beautiful valley.

    Metgasco’s licence was suspended last year after thousands of people from across the region joined us at the Bentley blockade, keeping their promise to defend the Northern Rivers and keep it Gasfield Free.

    The Government saw fit to suspend Metgasco’s licence, and we were grateful for that action, but we’ve never stopped calling for the licences across our region to be cancelled.

    Now that the Metgasco suspension has been lifted, it is more urgent than ever that the Government act in the parliament to create the power to cancel the licences and make our region gasfield free, as the people have already declared it to be.

    We don’t think people should have to blockade to protect their home from industrial gasfields. That’s why we are asking for your help today.

    Parliament is sitting next week. Urgent legislation could be made to give the Minister power to cancel mining titles in the public interest. Can you help us by calling Resources Minister Anthony Roberts right now urging him to act before Metgasco tries to force their way back into our peaceful valley?

    Minister Roberts’ number is: (02) 8574 5600

    Please call him and urge him to pass legislation next week that ensures mining titles can be cancelled in the public interest.

    Here are some things you might like to say

    • The people of the Northern Rivers have come together in an unprecedented movement of direct community democracy to declare the region gasfield free. Please keep faith with the public and urgently implement legislation next week to protect the Northern Rivers from unconventional gas mining.
    • The results of last month’s State election in Northern Rivers seats showed categorically the massive community opposition to unconventional gas in our region. In a democracy, people should not have to blockade to protect their basic rights. Please respect and respond to the will of the people by passing legislation next week to support our wish to remain gasfield free.
    • Other political parties in New South Wales have indicated they are willing to support measures to limit coal seam gas and make some parts of the state off-limits. Please work with them for bi-partisan legislation to protect the Northern Rivers before Metgasco returns.

    Thank you for your support

    Meg & Peter Nielsen

    Bentley Landholders

  • The John James Newsletter 56

    Click here to enable desktop notifications for Gmail.   Learn more  Hide

     

     

    More

     

    2 of 34

     

    The John James Newsletter 56 – Nepal

    Inbox x

    John James

    5:45 AM (3 hours ago)

    The John James Newsletter 56
    27 April 2015

    THE PHOTOSThe quake that killed in four countries Monster 7.8 magnitude earthquake struck Nepal causing massive damage in the capital Kathmandu. The effects were felt in neighbouring countries with at least 36 dead in India, 12 in Tibet and four in Bangladesh Quake also triggered a massive avalanche on Mount Everest killing 18 people and injuring at least 30 climbershttp://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3055745/

    to John
  • Thawing Permafrost: the Arctic’s Slow, Giant Carbon Release

    Thawing Permafrost: the Arctic’s Slow, Giant Carbon Release

    As the Arctic melts and organic matter decays, vast stores of carbon in the permafrost will be released triggering an unstoppable feedback system.

    By Sabrina Shankman, InsideClimate News

    Apr 23, 2015

    Permafrost is seen here on northeastern Spitsbergen, Svalbard, a Norwegian archipelago in the Arctic Ocean. As the world’s permafrost thaws from global warming, it could release 92 gigatons of carbon into the atmosphere by the end of this century—consuming more than one-third of the remaining “carbon budget.” Credit: NASA

    Permafrost—a vast, frozen subsurface layer of soil—covers nearly a quarter of the land in the northern hemisphere. It contains centuries worth of carbon in the form of plants that have died since the last ice age but remained frozen rather than decomposing.

    Now scientists are learning that the “perma” part of its name may no longer be accurate.

    As the Arctic heats up at a rate twice that of the rest of the globe and as sea ice and glaciers turn to water, the permafrost is also thawing. A recent review article in the journal Nature found that as the unfrozen organic matter decays, vast stores of carbon in the permafrost could be released into the atmosphere. This will trigger an irreversible feedback system and nullify existing calculations of just how much carbon humans can burn and keep the globe within a relatively safe degree of warming.

    Kevin Schaefer, a permafrost scientist with the National Snow and Ice Data Center at the University of Colorado in Boulder and an author of the article, calls the thawing of the permafrost a “true climatic tipping point.” Scientists are still trying to pinpoint when it will happen, but Schaefer said that a likely point is around the middle of this century, when the Arctic changes from a carbon sink to a carbon source. When that happens, it will trigger a centuries-long, unstoppable feedback system, in which warming will release carbon, which will trigger more warming, which will release more carbon.

    Click to enlarge

    The authors of the Nature article found that if humans continue on the current path of energy use, the permafrost could release 92 gigatons of carbon into the atmosphere by the end of this century. That represents nearly 18 percent of what the world has emitted since the start of the Industrial Revolution—or more than one third of what can be safely burned and still keep global warming within 2 degrees Celsius.

    And that’s only part of it. The authors reported that 59 percent of total permafrost emissions would occur after 2100.

    The scientific understanding of the permafrost is new—so new, in fact, that it wasn’t ready in time for the latest round of climate assessment reports from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the world’s largest scientific body on global warming.

    The 2014 IPCC report estimated that to hold global warming below 2 degrees Celsius, worldwide carbon dioxide emissions would have to be cut by 40 percent to 70 percent by 2050, and then drop to nearly zero by the end of the century. This is a tall order on its own, and it does not take into account additional emissions from permafrost thawing.

    “This is not a minor feedback,” Schaefer said. “It’s still small compared to fossil fuels, but it is not negligible either. If you don’t account for it, you’ll overshoot this 2 degree target.”

    See Also:

    Meltdown: Terror at the Top of the World

    The Arctic Sea Ice Meltdown in Maps

    Full Video – Documentary of ‘Meltdown: Terror at the Top of the World’

    The Melting Arctic: A Fragile Frontier of Riches and Risk Opens for Business

  • The emotion of the Western Front

    Your Life Choices Simplifying retirement

    Home
    Retirement
    Age Pension
    Super
    Money
    Travel
    Health
    Tech
    Food
    Lifestyle
    Community
    Fun

    Login
    Register

    Seniors Travel | Destinations | Europe > The emotion of the Western Front
    24th Apr 2015
    The emotion of the Western Front
    FONT SIZE: A+ A-
    EMAIL
    PRINT
    David Fallick

    A visit to Villers-Bretonneux on the Western Front is a moving an educational experience.

    Although it’s often overshadowed by Gallipoli, most Australians are aware of the participation of Australian forces on the Western Front in World War I. However, for many, the details are sketchy. So my wife and I journeyed to the Western Front, to see what it was like and the role that was played by the 1st AIF and other nations.

    Our arrival at Charles de Gaulle Airport was late, due to a French air-traffic controllers’ ‘dispute’, and our first drive in the rental car involved braving inclement weather and even more inclement peak-hour traffic. We reached our first base camp very late, in the pitch black of night, at a farm B&B at Aumont, just west of Amiens. We were now in the Somme – a name that, for me, had been evocative since my school days.

    Refreshed by our host’s luxurious lodgings and generous, late, but not so petit déjeuner, we travelled east for an hour to Villers-Bretonneux. This is a town of 4000, which we had read still holds a close attachment for Australians; Victorians in particular. I must confess to harbouring a healthy scepticism that, almost a century after the fighting had ceased, the locals would still retain this affinity. But we were not disappointed.

    Click NEXT to read more about David’s European experiences.

    Our first stop was the famous Victoria School and Museum, a veritable shrine to all things Antipodean. The museum is housed in an unassuming two-storey brick building, with the hall – a rarity in French schools – on the ground floor and the museum on the first floor. We were not prepared for such a detailed, professional and extensive display of photos, models, uniforms, insignia and personal effects – including letters and diaries.

    At the far end of the museum space, in a theatrette, we watched a one-hour flickering black-and-white documentary, which provided a crash-course introduction to World War I and the Western Front. So absorbing and informative is the museum that we could have spent all afternoon there; however, we had to leave after several hours and then collided with local parents who were collecting their offspring.

    School was over for the day! A quick walk around the compact town centre revealed numerous reminders of Australia; the Melbourne Bar, Robinvale Square – Villers-Bretonneux has been twinned with Robinvale in Victoria since 1984 – and many shops. The bakery has Australian road signs and kangaroos on display in their windows. Even the quintessential corner tabac, where we sat on high chrome stools for the very best coffee, had Australiana above the bar.

    It was at Villers-Bretonneux, on ANZAC Day 1918, that General Sir John Monash’s Australian forces halted the German advance west on Amiens. Three months later, the AIF broke through the enemy’s frontline at Le Hamel, north-east of Villers-Bretonneux, and in the next two months liberated a large area stretching east, beyond Peronne. The length of time taken for those operations illustrates just how intense and difficult the fighting must have been.

    Our next stop was the massive Australian National Memorial and cemetery, just north of Villers-Bretonneux on the road to Corbie. Despite having to walk the final kilometre, due to road works, the experience was well worth the effort. Situated on a slight rise in the otherwise flat Somme countryside, the site’s 360-degree panorama was very moving – especially late in the day with the soft misty light.

    Click NEXT to read more about David’s European experiences.

    We walked down manicured lawn aisles between seemingly endless, identical white granite headstones, pausing periodically to read an inscription. The most poignant was “A soldier of the Great War, known to God”. After about an hour, we climbed the 300 stairs in the white sandstone tower, which stands sentinel over the entire memorial. If possible, the view was even more breathtaking; but gazing out over the sea of immaculately maintained graves, mixed emotions competed in our heads and hearts.

    We reflected on the 11,000 names, inscribed on the walls below, representing Australians who fell in France and whose final resting places are unknown. It was impossible to drive back to Aumont without having been deeply affected by our experiences in Villers-Bretonneux.

    If you only have one day in the Somme, ensure that you don’t fail to visit the little rural town of Villers-Bretonneux, where the admonition, N’oublions jamais l’Australie – do not forget Australia – is strongly adhered to, still.

    More
    Les Chambres d’Aumont
    Address: Le Château 2 rue d’Hornoy, 80640, Aumont
    Phone: +33 3 22 90 67 16
    Email: stephanie@chambresdaumont.fr
    Website: www.chambresdaumont.fr

    Musée Franco-Australien
    Address: 9 rue de Victoria, 80800 Villers-Bretonneux
    Phone: +33 3 22 96 80 79
    Email: museeaustralien@neuf.fr
    Website: www.museeaustralien.com

    First published in Mufti magazine.
    SAVE on your Travel Insurance
    Get a FREE Travel Insurance Quote and a 10 per cent discount when you purchase online.
    You might also like
    Viruses and malware explained
    Viruses and malware explained
    Backing up your iPhone and iPad
    Backing up your iPhone and iPad
    Tiger teaches us how to fly
    Tiger teaches us how to fly
    Relief in sight for pensioners
    Relief in sight for pensioners
    Viruses and malware explained
    Backing up your iPhone and iPad
    Tiger teaches us how to fly
    Relief in sight for pensioners
    Recommended by

    # # # #

    COMMENTS
    To make a comment, please register or login
    Tags: seniors travel, western front, france, world war 2
    Join YOURLifeChoices, it’s free

    Receive our daily enewsletter
    Enter competitions
    Comment on articles