Author: JohnJames

  • The John James Newsletter  258

    The John James Newsletter  258

    Why don’t the Americans get it? The terrorists are already in their midst, already in their homes: the mad gun-wielding members of the NRA.
    John James

    The drive towards personal excellence fuelled by the system of private enterprise has an embedded need for exponential growth and seems incapable of protecting key resources such as air quality, fertile soil and clean water
    Bruce Pascoe

    When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men in a society, over the course of time they create for themselves a legal system that authorises it and a moral code that glorifies it
    Frédéric Bastiat

    British Columbia’s southern resident killer whale population is down to only 76 animals because human fishers have displaced the orcas from their favoured food, Chinook salmon, as we simultaneously displace the salmon from their spawning streams through hydro dams, pollution and urbanization.
    William Rees

    It is always easier to fight for one’s principles than to live up to them
    Alfred Adler

    The biggest crime scene on the planet is on the planet
    Gavin Schmidt

    The bellicose actions of the Trump Administration against trade with Iran is forcing major countries into cooperation that ultimately could spell the demise of the dollar hegemony, a hegemony that has allowed a debt-bloated US Government to finance global tyranny
    Willian Engdahl

    The EU resents and fears the consequences of the Trump administration’s reckless and provocative offensive against Iran. They resent it because Washington’s scuttling of the nuclear deal has pulled the rug from European capital’s plans to capture a leading position in Iran’s domestic market and exploit Iranian offers of massive oil and natural gas concessions. They fear it, because the US confrontation with Iran threatens to ignite a war that would invariably set the entire Mideast ablaze, triggering a new refugee crisis, a massive spike in oil prices and, last but not least, a re-partition of the region when the European powers lack the military means to independently determine the outcome.
    Keith Jones

    The US is now an Oligarchy
    Economic elites and organised business interests have substantial independent impacts on US government policy, while average citizens and mass-based interest groups have little or no independent influence. “When the preferences of economic elites are catered for, the preferences of the average American have only a minuscule, near-zero, statistically non-significant impact upon public policy. Though Americans do enjoy many features central to democratic governance, such as regular elections, freedom of speech and association, and a widespread (if still contested) franchise, policymaking is dominated by powerful business organisations and a small number of affluent Americans. Therefore, America’s claims to being a democratic society are seriously threatened.”      Read more

    Trump’s $2.1 trillion deal with the devil has failed
    Ominous signs are already evident in sectors most sensitive to higher borrowing costs. The Freddie Mac rate for a 30-year fixed mortgage has risen 100 basis points to 4.83% over the last year. Home sales have dropped by 21%. Average house prices have slipped 3.5%. This is remarkable given that the fiscal pedal is pushed to floor. The federal budget deficit is nearing 5% of GDP, at a time when full employment should restore balance.      Read details

    Global warming is eroding the polar vortex that once insulated the frozen north.
    The north pole gets no sunlight until March, but an influx of warm air has pushed temperatures in Siberia 35C above averages. Greenland has already experienced 61 hours above freezing in 2018 – more than three times as in any previous year. “This is an anomaly among anomalies. It is far enough outside the historical range that suggests there are further surprises in store as we continue to poke the angry beast that is our climate,” said Michael Mann. “The Arctic has always been regarded as a bellwether because of the vicious circle that amplify human-caused warming in that particular region. And it is sending out a clear warning.” This is a displacement of what ought to be happening farther north. Some recent temperatures have been warmer than London and Zurich, which are thousands of miles to the south.      Read more

    Summer weather is getting ‘stuck’ due to Arctic warming
    Rising Arctic temperatures mean we face a future of ‘extreme extremes’ where sunny days become heatwaves and rain becomes floods, leading to “very extreme extremes”, which occur when abnormally high temperatures linger for an unusually prolonged period, turning sunny days into heat waves, tinder-dry conditions into wildfires, and rains into floods.      Read more

    Comma tips.  See here

    2085934.pngEfforts to Fight Climate Change Had a Tough Election Day
    On Election Day, the House went to the Democrats, the Senate to the Republicans, and only two of seven climate-related measures on ballots across the country went in the planet’s favour. In Washington State, oil companies—led by BP America—spent more than thirty million dollars to defeat Initiative 1631, which would have established the country’s first-ever carbon fee. The proceeds that the state collected from its worst carbon polluters would have been put back into clean-energy infrastructure and other investments to adapt to the effects of climate change. Nevertheless the Democrats say “We will look to restore the environmental protections that have been gutted over the last two years.”      Read thisEarth Endangered by New Strain of Fact-Resistant Humans
    A virulent strain of humans who are virtually immune to any form of verifiable knowledge, are leaving scientists at a loss as to how to combat them. “These humans appear to have all the faculties necessary to receive and process information, and yet, somehow, they have developed defences that, for all intents and purposes, have rendered those faculties totally inactive. More worryingly, as facts have multiplied, their defences against those facts have only grown more powerful. Our research shows it’s possible that they will become more receptive to facts once they are in an environment without food, water, or oxygen.”      Humerous or true?China’s ‘extraordinary’ ambitions: the futuristic city being built on reclaimed land
    Colombo Port City is a project local politicians hope will spearhead the city’s bid to become a new Singapore-like economic hub in the Indian Ocean. China’s role in the project has also raised concerns in India, which is suspicious of Beijing’s intentions in the region. The project has strategic “implications, for by increasing Chinese leverage over Sri Lanka through debt-trap diplomacy, it promises to give China a strategic foothold in the Sri Lankan capital. Chinese projects can quickly acquire a strategic dimension.”      Read moreEurope and America clash over Washington’s economic war on Iran
    Washington’s imposition of sweeping new sanctions on Iran—aimed at strangling its economy and precipitating “regime change” in Tehran—is roiling world politics. The US is embargoing all Iranian energy exports and freezing Iran out of the US-dominated world financial system to cripple the remainder of its trade and deny it access to machinery, spare parts and even basic foodstuffs and medicine. American imperialism is once again acting as a law unto itself. The sanctions are illegal under international law. It is tantamount to a declaration of war.    Read more

    2085933.jpgPutin to Trump: Thanks for Helping Make Russia Great Again!
    I am writing to thank you, Donald the Great, for helping me make Russia great again. What you have done by unilaterally withdrawing from Iran nuclear deal and by re-imposing and adding more sanctions on Iran on November 5 was a blessing for us and I love it! And here is why. The resource-rich Iran still needs to feed and take care of its more than 80 million people. And I am there for them, right up the road on the Caspian Sea, that technically and for all practical purpose makes us neighbors. BTW & FYI, at my behest, we just signed a major agreement divvying it up with Iran and three other littoral states. Donald, I cannot thank you enough for pushing Iran deeper into my lap, which in the near future will become entirely a “client state” of Russia. Pretty soon I will be their largest supplier, trading partner, freight forwarder, middleman, salesman, banker, capital projects builder, and agent, all combined! But wait a minute: I have to be careful of your trade menace, the sneaky Xi Jinping who is my menace too! He undoubtedly will try to compete with me, as he dreams to corner Iran’s market by bartering for their discounted oil and selling them all sort of Chinese goods and services, as well as pushing for his new global initiative of building more “belts and roads”!      Read moreOcean shock
    Reuters reveals the climate crisis beneath the waves. Driven by warming waters, marine life is on the move — and life on land is forever changed. Fish and other sea life are fleeing for their lives, seeking the even temperatures they need to breed and thrive.      Read here

    El Nino alert with 70pc chance of hot and dry conditions
    The Met has just upped the chance of an El Nino this year, meaning there is now three times the normal risk of the climate being hotter and dryer this year. It had been a slow boil.”This is absolutely not the outlook many people hoped to hear.”      Read more

    David Attenborough has betrayed the living world he loves
    It is not proselytising or alarmist to tell us the raw truth about what is happening to the world, however much it might discomfit us. For many years, wildlife film-making has presented a pristine living world. It has created an impression of security and abundance, even in places afflicted by cascading ecological collapse. The cameras reassure us that there are vast tracts of wilderness in which wildlife continues to thrive. They cultivate complacency, not action. You cannot do such a thing passively. Wildlife film-makers I know tell me that the effort to portray what looks like an untouched ecosystem becomes harder every year. They have to choose their camera angles ever more carefully to exclude the evidence of destruction, travel further to find the Edens they depict. They know – and many feel deeply uncomfortable about it – that they are telling a false story, creating a fairytale world that persuades us all is well, in the midst of an existential crisis.      Read the whole argumentWorld Bank ends its support for coal worldwide
    The World Bank has abandoned the last coal project on its books, with its president publicly dumping the Kosovo e Re plant on Wednesday. “We are required by our by-laws to go with the lowest cost option and renewables have now come below the cost of coal. So without question, we are not going to [support the plant].     Read more

    Spain to close most coalmines in €250m transition deal
    By the end of the year after government and unions struck a deal that will mean €250m will be invested in mining regions over the next decade. Unions hailed the mining deal – which covers Spain’s privately owned pits – as a model agreement. It mixes early retirement schemes for miners over 48, with environmental restoration work in pit communities and re-skilling schemes for cutting-edge green industries.      Read more

    A Day in Pompeii – Full-length animation
    Fascinating.          Watch this

    2085935.pngThe psychosocial dimension of power: An emotional analysis of the Davos elite’s discourse on globalization
    The central feature of the Davos elite culture of globalisation that emerged from this analysis is the lack of democracy in the decision-making processes, both at relational and organisational level. To change this entails recovering the sense of public good, conceived as pertaining to the collectivity, in contrast to the private good, referring to an exclusive possession, that deprives someone of something.      Read moreArctic Methane Catastrophe
    55 million years ago it took less than 200 years for global temperature to rise about 10C. There was a critical level of C02, beyond which rapid and unstoppable temperature rise occurred.    Video worth warching

    2085998.pngChina’s ‘extraordinary’ ambitions: the futuristic city being built on reclaimed land
    C
    olombo Port City, a project local politicians hope will spearhead the city’s bid to become a new Singapore-like economic hub in the Indian Ocean. China’s role in the project has also raised concerns in India, which is suspicious of Beijing’s intentions in the region. The project has strategic “implications, for by increasing Chinese leverage over Sri Lanka through debt-trap diplomacy, it promises to give China a strategic foothold in the Sri Lankan capital. Chinese projects can quickly acquire a strategic dimension.”     Read more

    $2.7 billion deal opening Madagascar to Chinese fishing
    Life on the coast of Madagascar is increasingly precarious. In recent decades, the overexploitation of marine life has made it difficult for hundreds of thousands of small-scale fishers to make a living. Two months ago, a little-known private Malagasy association signed a 10-year, $2.7 billion fishing deal — the largest in the country’s history — with a group of Chinese companies that plans to send 330 fishing vessels to Madagascar. The country’s fisheries minister said he learned about it in the newspaper. Local fishers are already struggling with foreign competition for Madagascar’s dwindling marine stocks. No draft of the deal has been made public and the association that signed it did not conduct an environmental impact assessment or any public consultation.      Not pleasant reading

    A Theory of Human Thinking
    “By connecting all these previous discoveries, we came to the assumption that the brain stores a mental map, regardless of whether we are thinking about a real space or the space between dimensions of our thoughts. Our train of thought can be considered a path though the spaces of our thoughts, along different mental dimensions. These processes are especially useful for making inferences about new objects or situations, even if we have never experienced them,” the neuroscientist continues. Using existing maps of cognitive spaces humans can anticipate how similar something new is to something they already know by putting it in relation to existing dimensions. If they’ve already experienced tigers, lions, or panthers, but have never seen a leopard, we would place the leopard in a similar position as the other big cats in our cognitive space. Based on our knowledge about the concept ‘big cat’, already stored in a mental map, we can adequately react to the encounter with the leopard. We can generalise to novel situations, which we constantly face, and infer how we should behave.”    This is my experience, too

    “The abuse of buying and selling votes crept in and money began to play an important part in determining elections. Later on, this process of corruption spread to the law courts. And then to the army, and finally the Republic was subjected to the rule of emperors”     
    Plutarch

    The past two years Trump has abandoned or threatened the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the Paris Climate Accord, the JCPOA with Iran, the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, the International Criminal Court, the Postal Union Treaty, and the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces Treaty. The liberal world order is under threat from its principal architect, the UDS.
    Matthew Shannon

    The cut in corporate tax rates from 35% to 21% has fed stock buybacks by US companies. Why would they invest into an ageing boom, in the midst of a global trade war? The mechanical consequence of a US consumption boom and a soaring dollar is to suck in imports, painting the current account deficit in Gothic colours.
          Ambrose Evans-Pritchard

    Climate change is impacting the Caribbean, with millions facing increasing food insecurity and decreasing freshwater availability as droughts become more likely across the region
    Blaine Friedlander

    Russia & China Invest in Infrastructure; US Spends on Military
    China’s “Belt and Road Initiative” is famous as an extension of their domestic infrastructure investments, but Russia is also investing heavily in infrastructure. Both countries need to do it in order to improve the future for their respective populations, and both Governments have avoided the Western development model of going heavily into debt in order to pay for creating and maintaining infrastructure. Both are, in fact, exceptionally low-debt Governments. China has a public debt/GDP of 17.7%, and Russia’s is 8.0%. For comparison, America’s is 93.6%. (Others are: Germany 85.8%, Spain 91.2%, Italy 122.6%, Greece 147.1%, India 54.2%, Pakistan 47.0%, and Brazil 55.0%.) The US isn’t going into public debt in order to finance building or maintenance of infrastructure, but instead to finance expansions of its military, which is already (and by far) the world’s largest (in terms of its costs, but not of its numbers of troops). A nation that spends over a trillion dollars a year on ‘national defence’ can’t have much left over to spend on things that ‘can wait’ — such as repairing its bridges, roads, etc. — and so those repairs do wait, while even more money, than before, becomes devoted to purchases of new weaponry.   Read more

    Russia, India & Iran want to create alternative trade route to Suez Canal
    The new shipment passage, North-South Transport Corridor, to connect the Indian Ocean with the Persian Gulf through Iran to Russia and Europe. The 7,200-kilometers long corridor will combine sea and rail routes.Currently, Indian logistics companies have to route shipments through China, Europe or Iran to get an access to Central Asian markets – long, time-consuming and inevitably expensive: with the Iranian route seen as the most viable.     Read the details

    2085990.pngApocalyptic Climate Reporting Completely Misses the Point
    Reporting on the IPCC, and climate change more broadly, is unbalanced. It’s fixated on the predictions of climate science and the opinions of climate scientists, with cursory gestures to the social, economic, and political causes of the problem. Yet analysis of these causes is as important to climate scholarship as modelling ice-sheet dynamics and sea-level rise. Reductionist climate reporting misses this. Many references to policy are framed in terms of carbon pricing. This endorses the prevailing contempt in establishment circles for people’s capacity to govern themselves beyond the restrictions of market rule. Meanwhile, the IPCC report is overflowing with analyses showing that we can avoid runaway climate change, improve most people’s lives, and prioritise equality through a broad set of interventions.      Read morePopulation: The Multiplier of Everything Else
    Conservative demographic projections show the world’s population growing by 2.5 billion people over the next four decades – a 40% increase. Many people are simply not aware of the scale and speed at which world population is expected to continue growing – by about 80 million annually. This is like adding a new Egypt every year. The total population is approaching 7 billion, seven times what it was in 1800. The cost in human suffering from unplanned and excessive childbearing is staggering: 500,000 women and girls die worldwide every year from pregnancy and childbirth. Most of the women who die are in their teens and early twenties, forced by their societies into bearing children too young and far too frequently. The lives of billions are being rendered increasingly desperate by being denied access to family-planning. The surge is not the result of rising birth rates, which have dropped since 1970, but primarily from declining death rates —the result of widespread vaccination, etc.      Read moreBlack-starting the grid after a power outage
    Large blackouts can be quite devastating and it isn’t easy to restart the electric grid again. This is typically done by designated black start units of natural gas, coal, hydro, or nuclear power plants that can restart themselves using their own power with no help from the rest of the electrical grid.         Read more“It is easier to imagine the end of the world than the end of capitalism.”         Blog source

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  • The John James Newsletter  253

    View Email Online                          Subscribe to NewsletterForward this message to a friend so they can use the Subscribe to Newsletter link at the top of the message to receive future emailsImageThe recent IPCC report says we could, but will we?
    It tells us we can limit planetary destruction if we act now, but we know from the world’s response to that report that we won’t act, not now and probably not ever. Since the Paris agreement, the mining of fossil fuels has increased, and we are still constructing coal powered plants, and planning more oil extraction. No country has instituted a carbon tax, no country has passed mandatory energy efficiency measures, no country has reduced car emissions or the production of cement, or plastics, or weapons of war. There has been not one agricultural reform to reduce methane emissions. Not one country has started to do anything commensurate with the risk, not one!
    And we know the weather is being destabilised, the world is getting too hot for life, cereal production is threatened and the permafrost is melting and releasing more methane – something this report, like its predecessors, does not mention.
    And what of population growth around the tropics that further stretch the earth’s capacity for food, goods, energy, homes and water.
    The IPCC state that a condition for success is that we withdraw much of the carbon we have put into the air. Not only do we not have the technology, but every calculation shows there would be little net gain as the environmental cost would be too high.
    What the report does not say is that it would be better to reduce our wealth and comfort to safeguard our future; better to end all fossil fuel use right now; better to shut down all operating coal plants and cancel any under construction; better to impose a stiff carbon tax; better to end the use of plastics; better to develop a recycling economy at all levels; better to stop fighting.
    This latest report offers hope that something could be still be done in spite of history. The report warns our leaders, but is it likely they will lead? Do you reckon??? Read it here.
    As long as our current political and economic system remains we cannot avoid paying the extreme penalty for what we have inflicted on our planet, our only home.
    John James

    The scariest thing about the IPCC Report is that it’s the watered down, consensus version. The latest science is much, much, much more terrifying
    Jamie Henn

    The IPCC understates a key risk: that self-reinforcing feedback loops could push the climate system into chaos before we have time to tame our energy system, and the other sources of climate pollution
    Mario Molina

    Capitalism cannot save nature because it sees nature only as another collection of commodities, the long-term persistence of which comes second to immediate profit concerns
    Jeffrey Hollander

    Politics is the not-so-gentle art of getting votes from the poor and campaign funds from the rich, by promising to protect each from the other
    Oscar Ameringer

    You have no idea of how much the people must be misled if the support of the masses is required
    Mien Kampf

    From 1952 to 1985, the western edge of the Vavilov ice cap, 1,820 square kilometres in area and between 300 metres and 600 metres in thickness, shifted at about 12 metres a year. By 2011 it had stepped up the pace to 75 metres a year. By 2015, the ice front had broken into tongues that moved at more than 1,000 metres a year. And within a year the leading edge had started racing into the Kara Sea at 5,000 metres a year. By the way, it is also thinning at the rate of a third of a metre a day,
    Michael Willis

    Nations have lost control of their own economies: it doesn’t matter what people want as there is no way to vote against the global interests of Goldman Sachs or ExxonMobil. This is the core of today’s political crises. The global result is movements of resistance, of which Trump is just a part.
    Chris Hedges

    The problem with carbon capture is that it is energy-intensive and expensive. The process uses chemicals to absorb carbon dioxide from exhaust gas. Then they have to be separated so that they can be reused and the carbon dioxide can be buried. All of this consumes energy. Power plants equipped with carbon capture systems generally use up to 30 percent of the electricity they generate just to power the capture, release, and storage of carbon dioxide.
    Prachi Patel   

    Our climate’s natural variability is now on steroids
    Joelle Gergis

    At this point both 1.5 and 2C climate goals goals are starting to look wildly out of reach
    New York Times

    Today, 2 degrees is aspirational and 1.5 degrees is ridiculously aspirational. We need to face the fact that we might not stop at either, and start thinking seriously about what a 2.5 degree or 3 degree world might look like
    Gary Yohe

    Planet has only until 2030 to stem catastrophic climate change
    The IPCC report warns that the planet will reach the crucial threshold of 1.5 C by 2030, precipitating the risk of extreme drought, wildfires, floods and food shortages for hundreds of millions of people. The date falls well within the lifetime of most people alive today. It is based on current levels of greenhouse gas emissions. The window on keeping global warming below 1.5 C is closing rapidly and the current emissions pledges made by signatories to the Paris Agreement do not add up to us achieving that goalTo limit global warming to 1.5 degree C is “possible within the laws of chemistry and physics.” But doing so would require unprecedented changes.    Read more

    Lets ponder those changes. Reduce coal and gas production and (and!) use by 10% each year, so phased out by 2030. Compensation? Share market losses? Massive equipment junked? Enforcement? Silence the barons? If we haven’t begun this process so far, what makes you believe its going to be any different from here?     The report is our obituary, premature but timely.

    Sketch shows that even were we to stop now there would still be overshoot. This, like all studies, does not take methane into account, nor the almost 1C increase that would occur as the pollution falls out of the atmosphere, our blanket of filth that has been keeping the temperature lower.
    2054844.jpgWhat’s Not in the Latest Terrifying IPCC Report?
    “The scariest thing about the report is that it’s the watered down, consensus version. The latest science is much, much, much more terrifying” because it does not cover the threat from methane and the threatened tipping points when self-reinforcing feedback loops push the climate system into chaos before we have time to tame our capitalist energy system. The world has less than twelve years to drastically alter course to avoid the worst impacts of human-caused global warming and that nothing less than keeping all fossil fuels in the ground is the solution to avoid future calamities. Experts responding to the report have a potentially unwelcome message for your already over-burdened hearts and minds: It’s very likely much worse than you’re being told.    Read moreVast costs of Arctic change
    The costs of a melting Arctic will be huge, because the region is pivotal to the functioning of Earth systems of oceans and climate. The release of methane from thawing permafrost beneath the East Siberian Sea, off northern Russia, would cost $60 trillion in the absence of mitigating action — a figure comparable to the size of the world economy in 2012. A 50-gigatonne reservoir of methane, stored in the form of hydrates, exists on the East Siberian Arctic Shelf. It is likely to be emitted as the seabed warms, either steadily over 50 years – or suddenly. The total cost of Arctic change will be much higher, mostly borne by developing countries, which will face extreme weather, poorer  health and lower agricultural production.     Read moreReactions of the Least Developed Countries to the IPCC Report    Read more‘There’s nowhere to hide’: companies warned on climate risks
    When it comes to corporate Australia and climate change, 2018 is shaping up as a perfect storm. Investors and lawyers are all circling, ramping up their scrutiny on how companies are planning for climate change, how they are trying to tackle it, and what information they are releasing about the risks it poses to their operations. More than 200 institutional investors with $26 trillion in assets under management said they would step up pressure on the world’s biggest corporate greenhouse gas emitters to combat climate change.    Read moreFinal warning
    These projections underestimate what is happening in the atmosphere-ocean-land system since, due to amplifying feedbacks from desiccating land, warming oceans, melting ice, methane release and fires, no temperature limit can be specified for global warming. The Paris agreement, which focuses on limits to emissions, hardly acknowledges the essential need to down-draw atmospheric carbon which has already reached >450 ppm CO2 including methane. The report takes little account of the non-linear to abrupt behaviour of atmospheric conditions, no of aerosol blanketing. Together these mean global temperatures are tracking closer 2 degrees. The “Paris target” of 1.5oC is meaningless since: (1) no mechanism is known to arrest amplifying feedbacks rom rising above this limit, and (2) no plans for draw-down of atmospheric CO2 appear to be at hand, the $trillions required for such endeavor being spent on the military and wars.    Read more

    Climate Change Kills More People Than Terrorism
    Twenty governments commissioned a study of the human and economic costs of climate change. It linked 400,000 deaths worldwide to climate change each year, projecting deaths to increase to over 600,000 per year by 2030. When scientists attribute deaths to climate change, they don’t just mean succumbing to a heat wave. Heat waves devastate food security, nutrition, and water safety, increase malaria and dengue and floods contaminate drinking water with bacteria and pollution.  MAP of the most vulnerable countries.   Read this

    2054845.pngDutch Court orders Government to Move Faster on Emission Cuts
    The government of the Netherlands, said the court, “has done too little to prevent the dangers of climate change and is doing too little to catch up.” Dennis van Berkel, the legal counsel for Urgenda, added that the move “has consequences for all governments. They should look at this closely and realise that they are not acting in the interests of their own people. By delaying [climate] actions and not increasing them to the highest possible level—they are violating the rights of their people.”      Read moreHow to protect your private data when you travel to the United States
    First, use a cloud-based service such as Dropbox, Google Drive, OneDrive or Box.com to backup all of your data. Use another service like Boxcryptor, Cryptomator or Sookasa to protect your data such that neither the storage provider nor government agencies can read it. Next, cross the border with no or clean devices. If a border agent asks you to unlock your device, simply do so and hand it over. There should be nothing for them to find. You can access your data from the cloud at your destination. However, border agents do not need your device to access your online accounts. What happens if they simply demand your login credentials? Protecting your cloud data requires a more sophisticated strategy.     Read moreBaulking at the Chinese – wisdom at last
    Pakistan, following in the footsteps of Malaysia and Myanmar, is the latest country to baulk at the infrastructure focus of Beijing’s Belt and Road-related investments. They require it shifts to agriculture, job creation and foreign investment. Various Asian and African countries worry that Belt and Road-related investments in infrastructure risk trapping them in debt and forcing them to surrender control of critical national infrastructure, and in some cases media assets. Malaysia has suspended or cancelled $26 billion in Chinese-funded projects while Myanmar is negotiating a significant scaling back of a Chinese-funded port project on the Bay of Bengal in a bid to avoid shouldering an unsustainable debt.      Read more
    India alarmed at Saudi oil refinery project in strategic Gawadar port.  Read hereStephen Hawking’s final scientific paper
    Black Hole Entropy and Soft Hair was completed in the days before the physicist’s death in March. It may have been the last scientific exchange Hawking had. “It was very difficult for Stephen to communicate and I was put on a loudspeaker to explain where we had got to. When I explained it, he simply produced an enormous smile. I told him we’d got somewhere. He knew the final result.”     Read moreCerrado towns terrorized to provide toilet paper for the world
    Global consumers who buy brand name toilet paper and tissues may unwittingly be fuelling land conflicts, environmental crimes and the loss of native vegetation in Brazil. Residents of Forquilha, a traditional community in Maranhão state, allege that an agricultural entrepreneur used armed gunmen to try and force them out in 2014. The businessman took land claimed by the community and converted it to eucalyptus plantations, intending to sell the trees to Suzano, Brazil’s biggest pulp provider. Kimberly-Clark confirmed that it sources a significant amount of eucalyptus in Brazil from Suzano and Fibria, with pulp used to make “tissue and towel products like Scott, Cottonelle, Kleenex and Andrex.”      Read moreLonger and more frequent marine heatwaves over the past century
    We identify significant increases in marine heatwaves over the past century. From 1925 to 2016, global average marine heatwave frequency increased by 34%, resulting in a 54% increase in annual marine heatwave days globally. These trends can largely be explained by increases in mean ocean temperatures, suggesting that we can expect further increases in marine heatwave days under continued global warming.     Read this

    What Does Runaway Warming Look Like?
    The forcing caused by the rapid rise in the levels of greenhouse gases is far out of line with current temperatures. A 10°C higher temperature is more in line with these levels, as illustrated by the image below. Carbon dioxide levels have been above 400 ppm for years. Methane levels above 1900 ppb were recorded in September 2018. Such high levels are more in line with a 10°C higher temperature based on 420,000 years of ice core data from Vostok, Antarctica, research station.     Read moreUS Women Earned More PhDs Than Men Last Year    Read more
    2054848.jpg
    A mature response to the inevitable – at last!
    Governor Baker Signs Legislation Directing $2.4 Billion to Climate Change Adaptation, Environmental Protection, and Community Investments.    Read moreThe power of a hug
    Being hugged leads to release of the hormone oxytocin, setting off a range of downstream outcomes that could explain the benefits of hugging. Oxytocin is involved in a complex range of social processes, but has been implicated romantic bonding and trust. The benefits of hugs and affectionate touch more generally rest within the cardiovascular system. One study found lower systolic blood pressure in the husbands of couples asked to increase the frequency of affectionate touch with one another. Other research documents lowered blood pressure and heart rate among women who receive frequent hugs. We hug to convey that we care, that we’re grateful for a benefit received, that we share in an achievement.     Read moreWhy the American empire has lost control
    The dollar as the world’s reserve currency is running on fumes. The moment that’s over, American financial supremacy is instantly finished. It will be very similar to the aftermath of the Suez disaster—something like that is a characteristic of late empire. And the fragility of an empire means that when collapse comes it’s almost instantaneous. You look back at the rapid fall of the old Soviet Union. A failing empire is like a house of cards that just comes down—it’s not a slow descent. We know from history what happens. It’s not a mystery.     Read more

    ‘There’s no plan B’: Chris Hedges on the collapse of America
    We’re on the cusp of disintegration and I’m also clear that this has been a long process in which this is the culmination of a political, economic, and cultural deterioration.     Read moreGot a political problem? Commission a report
    Reports are the tried and true method to look like your doing something – without burning any political capital. In Australia we have had eight or more reports on climate change and energy policy. Let’s survey the field, charred as it is with the remains of ashed reviews and inquiries.
    1. In 2006 we had the Switkowski report into nuclear power.
    2. The Garnaut climate change review was released in 2008,
    3. then updated in 2011, after the release of eight interim papers. It recommended, of course, a carbon tax, an idea that now seems laughably utopian.
    4. The Finkel report in 2017 was supposed to form the basis for a credible, coming-together policy on energy and emissions reductions. Its chief recommendation – the creation of a clean energy target – was ignored.
    5. In the last year the Climate Change Authority has done three reviews – into the Emissions Reductions Fund, The National Wind Farm Commissioner and the National Greenhouse and Energy Reporting legislation.
    Yet climate policy in this country remains constipated. It is a boom time for reports, if not for their recommendations.     Read moreFacebook deletes alternative health pages as the war on free news escalates
    False health information can be disastrous, but “alternative” doesn’t always mean illegitimate. Can Facebook tell the difference? Facebook has deleted dozens of pages dedicated to fringe or holistic medicine in an apparent crackdown on pseudoscience. The Global Freedom Movement, an alternative media site, reported that the social platform purged over 80 accounts and that “no reason was provided. No responses to inquiries have been forthcoming.” This includes rather large accounts focused on health, natural remedies, and organic living, such as Just Natural Medicine (1 million followers), Natural Cures Not Medicine (2.3 million followers), and People’s Awakening (3.6 million followers). Small accounts with under 15,000 followers were also hit. Jake Passi spent six years building his Collectively Conscious page, which covered alternative health, spirituality, science, and “information that isn’t covered on mainstream media networks” and laments that his Facebook community was suddenly erased without warning. It had 915,000 followers.     Read moreThe Pentagon’s Insect Army
    Swarms of insects, transporting genetically modified infectious viruses, attack the agricultural crops of a country and destroy its food production – this is not a science-fiction scenario, but a plan that is actually being prepared by DARPA, the Pentagon’s Defence Advanced Research Projects Agency. This scenario of an attack on agricultural cultures in Russia, China and other countries, led by the Pentagon with swarms of insects transporting the virus, is not a science-fiction fable. DARPA’s programme is not the only one to use insects as a weapon of war. The US Office of Naval Research has asked for research from Washington University in St Louis in order to transform locusts into biological drones.     Read more

    2054843.jpgFarmers’ climate denial begins to wane as reality bites
    Australia has been described as the “front line of the battle for climate change adaptation”, and our farmers are the ones who have to lead the charge. Farmers will have to cope, among other pressures, with longer droughts, more erratic rainfall, higher temperatures, and changes to the timing of seasons. Yet, puzzlingly enough to many commentators, climate denial has been widespread among farmers and in the ranks of the National Party, which purports to represent their interests. There are signs we may be on the brink of a wholesale shift in farmers’ attitudes towards climate change. For a farmer, accepting the science means facing up to the prospect of a harsher, more uncertain future.      Read moreSalmon Farmers Are Scanning Fish Faces to Fight Killer Lice
    New technology will use facial recognition to build individual medical records for millions of fish to prevent the spread of epidemics like sea lice that infect hundreds of millions of farmed fish and cost the global industry $1 billion each year. “We can build a medical record for each individual fish, like a revolution.” Also a facial-recognition system to monitor cows so farmers can adjust feeding regimens to enhance milk production. Scanners will allow them to track food and water intake and even detect when females are having fertile days.    Read moreHow can politicians lie about climate change after signing off on the truth?
    “Approval” means that the material has been subjected to detailed line by line discussion and agreement. “By endorsing the IPCC reports, governments acknowledge the authority of their scientific content.” So, both the US and the Australian governments – which means Republicans and Coalition members, for they are the government – know, but still promulgate denial. They lie for political reasons and for gain. PIC.    Read more

    2054847.jpgTo unsubscribe from any future messages, please click the unsubscribe link below.

  • The John James Newsletter No.

    The John James Newsletter No. <212>

    The John James Newsletter 212

    20 January 2018

    DURING THE BREAK I HAVE BECOME AWARE 

    that over the past four years the small changes I have recorded each week

    have been accumulating into a maelstrom.

    The speed and scale of change beggars belief.

    I have listed a few to press home the point, and the conclusion that

    we really do not have much time – not any more.

    You ask where is the good news, and there is so little compared to

    our collective, seemingly unstoppable, obscene rush to self-extinction.

    Yet I believe we do still need to be informed.

    As I die I want to know why.

    Most people don’t know what’s happening and they don’t even know that they don’t know

    Noam Chomsky

    We are destroying the life support system of this planet 

    Andrew Glikson

    Many born now will come to live in the terrifying conditions we are creating for them, where it will be impossible to feed everyone, water wars will be ongoing, major coastal cities will have long since flooded, and droughts and wildfires and megastorms will have become year-round events

    Dahr Jamail

    THE LIST THAT HAS NO END

    The Doomsday Clock has just been moved 30 seconds closer to midnight, the closest to the point of global extinction since 1953

    Methane levels as high as 2764 ppb were recorded in the Arctic, from a destabilised seafloor.

    All over the world, habitats and species are collapsing before our eyes. The world population of wild vertebrates – animals with backbones – has fallen by 60% since 1970.

    Animals that until recently seemed safe – ranging from lions to house sparrows – are now in danger.

    Insect populations are collapsing, with untold implications for both humanity and the rest of the food chain.

    If you’re under 40, you’ve never experienced a single year of below-average temperatures.

    This week, the Australian Open has been hit with on-court temperatures rocketing to 69 degrees

    AI-piloted drone ships are wiping out most of the last global fish stocks

    We have destabilised the jet stream over our heads and the Gulf Stream under the water.

    Simultaneous breadbasket failures threaten the sufficiency of global food supply

    Despite fewer wars number of dead has trebled in ten years, from the intensification of violence

    Soil is being stripped from the land, so that at current rates, the world has just 60 years of harvests left.

    Ground water is being drained so rapidly that the world’s most important aquifers could disappear within a generation.

    Extreme weather events cost the US $306 billion, which is more than the combined spending on transport, housing and community, international affairs, energy, the environment and science

    Three men – Gates, Bezos and Buffet – own as much as half of the entire American people.

    Resistance to the strongest antibiotics continues to spread with nothing new in sight

    90% of the world’s population lives with polluted air

    And here are three of the major causes

    Watch population increase minute by minute.

    http://www.poodwaddle.com/worldclock/

    and this

    real-time estimate of the global atmospheric CO2 level.

    https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/carbon-clock/

    and

    the US Debt Clock

    http://www.usdebtclock.org/

    Seeking something happy

    This is the best I came up with, and it was filmed thirty years ago when we still had hope that the rich would support change.

    https://www.youtube.com/embed/n6mbW-jMtrY?rel=0

    2017 Shatters Records With $306 Billion In Damages From Climate-Linked Disasters

    Sixteen $1 billion-plus weather- and climate-related events killed some 362 people.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com.au/entry/2017-natural-disasters_us_5a53b1aee4b01e1a4b183b9d

    Wealth buys silence

    On average, the 38 US Senate deniers have each received $732,788 from fossil fuel interests while science-believing senators each got only $182,902. On average, each House denier has received $272,536 from the fossil corporations while science-believing members each got only $80,095.

    https://thinkprogress.org/the-anti-science-climate-denier-caucus-114th-congress-edition-c76c3f8bfedd/#.231g4hemd

    The Global Risks Report 2018 prepared for the coming World Economic Forum in Davos

    Shows in graphs the increasing risk from global warming, but hardly mentions it in the report itself. The extremely rich who pay $us55,000 to hob nob with each other are as badly starved of information as we are, it seems.

    http://www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_GRR18_Report.pdf

    IF YOU. HAVE READ THIS FAR, GO BACK

    AND READ THE LIST AGAIN, CAREFULLY,

    AND

    PONDER THE CONSEQUENCES OF EACH ONE,

    ESPECIALLY FOR YOUR CHILDREN.

  • The John James Newsletter No.

    The John James Newsletter No. <211>

    The John James Newsletter 211

    22 December 2017

    I AM TAKING A BREAK. 

    ENJOY YOUR HOLIDAYS, YOUR FAMILIES AND YOUR FRIENDS 

    AND I WILL BE BACK NEXT YEAR.

    We use 1.4 billion plastic bottles every single day, and only a fraction will ever be recycled, and once they get into the environment they take up to 1000 years to break down 

    Avaaz

    Most of the important things in the world have been accomplished by people who have kept on trying when there seemed to be no hope at all 

    Dale Carnegie

    Welcome To The New Arctic: The Region “We Once Knew Is No More”

    Despite relatively cool summer temperatures, the region has reached a “new normal, characterised by long-term losses in the extent and thickness of the sea ice cover, the extent and duration of the winter snow cover and the mass of ice in the Greenland Ice Sheet and Arctic glaciers, and warming sea surface and permafrost temperature. This is not good news. The environment is changing so quickly in such a short amount of time that we can’t quite get a handle on what this new state is going to look like.

    http://www.countercurrents.org/2017/12/20/welcome-to-the-new-arctic-the-region-as-we-once-knew-it-is-no-more/

    Indigenous groups unite to make Chevron pay

    The 25-year struggle of indigenous communities in Ecuador to get justice from Chevron for oil pollution have already won a $9.5 billion judgement in the Ecuadorean courts, but Chevron has refused to pay. The communities are now trying to collect in Canada, in a case that dates back to between 1964 and 1992 when Texaco, later acquired by Chevron, dumped at least 16 billion gallons of toxic wastewater into the rivers and streams of Ecuador’s Amazon basin and abandoned some 900 toxic waste pits in the rainforest. Indigenous communities were left with poisoned land and drinking water, suffered a cancer epidemic and birth defects throughout a 20,000- hectare zone that locals call the “Amazon Chernobyl.”

    https://www.nationalobserver.com/2017/12/11/news/indigenous-groups-unite-make-chevron-pay

    How to kill fruit flies

    Fruit flies are annoying. So here’s how we get rid of them in my lab: We build a trap. It’s not perfect, but it’s OK.

    https://theconversation.com/how-to-kill-fruit-flies-according-to-a-scientist-81740

    November temperature was +1.15°C relative to 1880-1920

    http://www.columbia.edu/~mhs119/Temperature/

    AI can figure out a place’s politics by analysing cars on Google Street View

    More pickups trucks or sedans in a given city. With a greater number of pickup trucks, the urban area had an 82 percent chance of voting Republican, and with more sedans, there was an 88 percent chance it voted Democrat.

    http://www.popsci.com.au/tech/computing/ai-can-figure-out-a-places-politics-by-analyzing-cars-on-google-street-view,478937

    Weak energy target threatens 27GW of renewable projects 

    27GW of large-scale renewable projects proposed, combined with the expected growth in rooftop solar, would mean just over half of Australia’s electricity supply could be met with renewables by 2030. Most of these projects will remain dormant until the government puts its long-term Paris agreement commitments into a legally enforceable policy.

    https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2017/dec/21/weak-energy-target-threatens-27gw-of-renewable-projects

    Snowy Hydro 2.0 is viable but will cost billions more than predicted 

    The current estimate for the project is between $3.8bn and $4.5bn, more than the $2bn estimated by Turnbull when he promoted Snowy Hydro 2.0. It involves boring 27km of tunnels linking the Talbingo dam, at an elevation of 552 metres, to the Tantangara reservoir, at 1,233 metres, so energy can be generated by pumping water uphill to the higher reservoir when energy is cheap (say, in the middle of the night) and releasing it back downhill when energy is in high demand and prices are higher.

    https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2017/dec/21/snowy-hydro-2-viable-government-backed-study

    Tesla big battery outsmarts lumbering coal units 

    The Tesla big battery is having a big impact on Australia’s electricity market, far beyond the South Australia grid where it was expected to time shift a small amount of wind energy and provide network services and emergency back-up in case of a major problem. Last Thursday, one of the biggest coal units in Australia, Loy Yang A 3, tripped without warning at 1.59am, with the sudden loss of 560MW and causing a slump in frequency on the network. What happened next has stunned electricity industry insiders

    http://reneweconomy.com.au/tesla-big-battery-outsmarts-lumbering-coal-units-after-loy-yang-trips-70003/ C

    Things Cruise Lines Never Tell You

    Despite how the cruise pundits like to spin things, there are environmental costs to this controversial industry. The 16 major cruise lines generated over 1 billion gallons of sewage in 2014, much of it raw or poorly treated. One cruise ship can produce 13 million cars worth of CO2 in one day. Lax laws mean ships can dump sewage into international waters three miles offshore from the hot spots they promote as vacation destinations. These behemoth vessels often overwhelm small ports and undermine the very natural beauty and culture they’re trying to sell.

    https://www.destinationtips.com/cruises/16-things-cruise-lines-never-tell-you/10/

    Guardian to fight legal action over Paradise Papers

    Offshore firm at heart of story, Appleby, is seeking damages and has demanded Guardian and BBC hand over documents. Appleby has also demanded that the Guardian and the BBC disclose any of the 6m Appleby documents that informed their reporting for a project that provoked worldwide anger and debate over the tax dodges used by individuals and multinational companies.

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2017/dec/18/guardian-bbc-legal-action-paradise-papers

    What lies beneath the sea is very bizarre

    From leafy sea dragons to monstrous worms, the world’s strangest sea creatures revealed. Many of these ocean-dwelling species have rarely been seen in the flesh by humans.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/travel_news/article-5065469/The-world-s-strangest-sea-creatures-revealed.html

    BHP Billiton, acknowledges climate change and quits Coal Group

    It represents the latest example of a business that is largely built around traditional fossil fuels responding to investor and government concern over climate change – and it would spend $200 million to acquire a large stake in a solar power developer.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2017/12/19/business/energy-environment/australia-mining-company-climate-change.html

    With enough cameras we can know who you are and who you spend time with 

    China has been building the world’s biggest camera surveillance network. 170 million CCTV cameras are already in place and an estimated 400 million new ones will be installed in the next three years. Many of the cameras are fitted with artificial intelligence, including facial recognition technology. The BBC’s John Sudworth has been given rare access to one of the new hi-tech police control rooms.

    http://www.bbc.com/news/av/world-asia-china-42248056/in-your-face-china-s-all-seeing-state

    Ancient fossil microorganisms indicate that life in the universe is widespread

    The microorganisms, from Western Australia, are 3.465 billion years old. Two of the species appear to have performed a primitive form of photosynthesis, another apparently produced methane gas, and two others appear to have consumed methane and used it to build their cell walls.

    https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/12/171218154925.htm

     

    10 Indications the US is a dictatorship 

    Today we are entering a nebulous world where our “enemy” cannot be defined, has no particular allegiance to one country, and is able to adopt new leaders at will.  Rather than encourage a sense of resilience and independence in its citizens, America has chosen to amplify the terror threat in order to concentrate power in the hands of the State.  The very first signpost on this historically familiar road to tyranny is an atmosphere of hate, suspicion, and vindictiveness.  It first begins as an outwardly directed aggression and then rather abruptly turns inward upon itself.

    https://www.activistpost.com/2011/05/10-indications-united-states-is.html

    From the Sierra Club

    America is being turned into a third-world country. Poverty is everywhere, poverty of people and of the earth itself, of its plants and animals. And the rich are moving out, assuming that money will save them from the dragon their greed has unleashed.

    https://newslettercollector.nl/newsletter/60-things(3)/

  • The John James Newsletter No.

    The John James Newsletter No. <210>

    The John James Newsletter 210

    16 December 2017

    Nuclear annihilation is ‘one impulsive tantrum away’

    Beatrice Fihn

    When the nobility see that they are unable to resist the people, they unite in exalting one of their number and creating him prince, so as to be able to carry out their own designs under the shadow of his authority

    Nicolas Machiavelli

    We did not quit basic treaties that are cornerstones of the global security, we did not exit from the ABM Treaty or START: The US did it, unilaterally

    Vladimir Putin

    Stocks look blatantly overvalued. Bonds look even more so. Art has never fetched such big prices. The bitcoin is only an absurd appendage to what is already a bubble in everything

    Financial Times

    Commercial ships carrying oil, consumables and equipment emit more C02 than the whole of the UK from all sources

    UK World Fleet Register

    Remove life and planet earth is just an inconsequential wet rock with a poisonous atmosphere revolving pointlessly around an ordinary star on the outer fringes of an undistinguished galaxy

    William Rees

    Some people with less than 5 hectares own 30% of the farmland but produce 70% of the food. The tragedy is that global demand for crops could double over a generation or two, but the land to grow them will not exist.

    George Monbiot

    Bitcoin is a potentially catastrophic energy guzzler

    The recent upsurge in the price of Bitcoin seems to have finally awakened the world to the massively destructive environmental consequences of this bubble. the most widely used estimate of the energy required to “mine” Bitcoins is comparable to the electricity usage of Denmark, but this is probably an underestimate

    https://theconversation.com/the-utopian-currency-bitcoin-is-a-potentially-catastrophic-energy-guzzler-88871 

    Bitcoin Energy Consumption Index

    Ever since its inception Bitcoin’s trust-minimizing consensus has been enabled by its proof-of-work algorithm. The machines performing the “work” are consuming huge amounts of energy while doing so.

    https://digiconomist.net/bitcoin-energy-consumption 

    Bitcoin Frenzy: The Fever Chart Of A Deepening Crisis

    The bitcoin mania forms part of a much broader development in the global financial system since the financial crisis of 2008-2009. One of the main factors in sustaining the bubble has been the promise of major corporate and income tax cuts for the for the ultra-wealthy

    http://www.countercurrents.org/2017/12/13/bitcoin-frenzy-the-fever-chart-of-a-deepening-crisis

    US refused N Korea offer to freeze nukes

    Earlier this year, North Korea said it would freeze its nuclear weapons program in exchange for an end to US and South Korean war games, an overture rejected by the Trump administration.

    https://www.cbsnews.com/news/north-korea-offers-nuke-freeze

    Daniel Ellsberg Warns of Nuclear Winter and Global Starvation 

    The inside story of the Cuban missile crisis and the 600 million deaths both leaders were prepared to risk for the sake of pride.

    http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/42826-daniel-ellsberg-reveals-he-was-a-nuclear-war-planner-warns-of-nuclear-winter-and-global-starvation 

    Tillerson’s new North Korea strategy praised by China and Russia — but undermined by Trump

    Trump has sought to pressure Pyongyang to surrender its nuclear capabilities. Tillerson’s approach would allow the US and North Korea to begin peace talks without the prospect of denuclearising.

    https://www.businessinsider.com.au/tillersons-new-north-korea-strategy-praised-china-russia-but-undercut-by-trump-2017-12 

    The Big Melt

    From 1960 the Alpine snow season has shortened by 38 days—starting an average of 12 days later and ending 26 days earlier. Europe experienced its warmest-ever winter in the 2015–16 season, with snow cover in the southern French Alps just 20% of its typical depth. Last December was the driest in 150 years of record keeping, and the flakes that did manage to fall didn’t stay around long. In the Dolomites, it takes 4,700 snow-blowers to keep trails covered.

    http://time.com/italy-alps-climate-change/?xid=homepage 

    Switzerland Just Had the Worst Month for Skiing in 100 Years

    The ski season is a month shorter than it was four decades ago. The Jungfrau ski region, around the resort villages of Wengen and Grindelwald, suffered a 25 percent drop in visits

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-01-10/how-much-snow-is-there-in-the-alps-this-year-for-skiing 

    Are we truly this stupid – its the new normal.

    Shrinking Bee Populations

    Heavy pesticide use on fruit trees caused a severe decline in wild bee populations, and trees are now pollinated by hand.

    http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/humans-bees-china_us_570404b3e4b083f5c6092ba9 

    We Can’t Keep Eating Like This

    Brexit; the crushing of democracy by billionaires; the next financial crash; a rogue US president: none of them keeps me awake at night. This is not because I don’t care – I care very much. It’s only because I have a bigger question on my mind. Where is our food going to come from?

    http://www.monbiot.com/2017/12/13/we-cant-keep-eating-like-this

     

    UK to bring back beavers in first government flood reduction scheme of its kind

    Beaver family will be released in the Forest of Dean to stop a village from flooding. The government may support other schemes to restore the beaver four centuries after it was driven to extinction in England and Wales.

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/dec/12/uk-to-bring-back-beavers-in-first-government-flood-reduction-scheme-of-its-kind 

    Macron summit touts green finance progress – despite Trump 

    In the private sector, 225 investors launched Climate Action 100+, a campaign to bring the world’s 100 biggest corporate climate polluters in line with the Paris goals. The announcement followed a day after Exxon Mobil bowed to shareholder pressure and agreed to publish analysis of how its oil and gas assets will fare in a 2C world.

    http://www.climatechangenews.com/2017/12/13/macron-summit-touts-green-finance-progress-despite-trump

    Mapping The Stunning Complexity Of The World’s Shipping Routes

    You can watch hundreds of millions of individual ships from represented by multi-colored dots float across the world’s oceans over the course of 2012

    https://www.fastcodesign.com/3059346/mapping-the-stunning-complexity-of-the-worlds-shipping-routes 

    Welcome to the Age of Digital Warfare

    The internet has made acquiring information near-instantaneous. If a hacker knows where to look for the databases, can break through digital security measures, and can make sense of the data, he or she can acquire years’ worth of intel in just a few minutes. The enemy state could start using the sensitive information before anyone realises that something’s amiss. That kind of efficiency makes James Bond look like a slob.

    https://futurism.com/welcome-age-digital-warfare

     How Trump Manipulated Mass Consciousness

    This explains why people who would never ordinarily have voted for Trump cast their ballots for him anyway. He is not a moron, and he’s certainly not crazy.

    https://thetyee.ca/Opinion/2017/12/08/Trumps-Manipulation-Of-Mass-Consciousness

    Global Plug-in Deliveries

    As one can see from the graph, the major volume driver for PEV expansion has been China, with this country being responsible for almost half of sales this year.

    http://www.ev-volumes.com/

    Leave Syria Or Else! ; Iranian General To The US

    When the battle against ISIS will end, no American soldier will be tolerated in Syria or they will be considered as forces of occupation. Russia conveyed to the US that Iran will stay in Syria as long as President Assad decides.

    https://elijahjm.wordpress.com/2017/12/09/qassem-soleimanis-letter-to-the-us-leave-syria-or-else-could-al-hasaka-2018-become-beirut-1983

    In Syria ISIS Is Defeated – The US Is Next In Line

    The UN resolution which allowed other countries to fight ISIS within Syria and Iraq no longer applies. But the U.S. military, despite the lack of any legal basis, wants to continue its occupation of Syria’s north-east. The attempt to do so will fail. Its Kurdish allies in the area are already moving away from it and now prefer Russian protection. Guerrilla forces to fight the U.S. “presence” are being formed.

    http://www.moonofalabama.org/2017/12/syria-isis-is-defeated-the-us-is-next-in-line.html 

    US to Remain in Syria Indefinitely, Pentagon Says 

    https://www.wsj.com/articles/u-s-to-remain-in-syria-indefinitely-pentagon-officials-say-1512752450 

    Jared Kushner is wreaking havoc in the Middle East

    The entire Middle East, from Palestine to Yemen, appears set to burst into flames after this week. The region was already teetering on the edge, but recent events have only made things worse. And while the mayhem should be apparent to any casual observer, what’s less obvious is Jared Kushner’s role in the chaos.

    http://johnmenadue.com/jared-kushner-is-wreaking-havoc-in-the-middle-east

    Congo displacement crisis ‘worse than Middle East’

    Conflict has forced 1.7 million people to flee their homes in the Democratic Republic of Congo this year.  It’s a mega-crisis. The scale of people fleeing violence is off the charts, outpacing Syria, Yemen and Iraq.

    http://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-42250230 

    Gene Extinction Weapon Developed By US Military Can Wipe Out Specific Races

    $100 million dollars has already been invested into the “gene drive” research in an attempt to “tweak” the ability to wipe out certain races based on their genetic makeup. If the threat of thermonuclear war with Russia wasn’t harrowing enough, another potentially apocalyptic technology is being weaponized to kill vast swathes of the human population.

    http://www.neonnettle.com/news/3338–gene-extinction-weapon-developed-by-us-military-can-wipe-out-specific-races– 

    US Air Force Admits To Harvesting Russian Tissue 

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-11-01/us-air-force-admits-harvesting-russian-tissue 

    Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions highest on record 

    Despite massive jumps in wind-generated electricity emissions from transport were at record levels. Carbon emissions are not going to drop until proper climate policy is in place. “If you don’t foster renewable energy, it’s only going to get worse,”

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/dec/11/australias-transport-emissions-in-past-year-the-highest-on-record 

    Women Who Have Accused Trump of Groping Speak Out

    Women who have accused Trump of sexual harassment and assault came together in New York City on Monday to share “their firsthand accounts of President Trump groping, fondling, forcibly kissing, humiliating, and harassing women” and demand that Congress launch an investigation into their allegations.

    https://www.commondreams.org/news/2017/12/11/watch-women-who-have-accused-trump-groping-fondling-forcibly-kissing-humiliating-and 

    What is the true cost of owning a Tesla Model 3?

    We compare to the Honda Civic & BMW 3 Series

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XR_ub5eL9n0 

    What the study of whales and dolphins can reveal about the basis of human intelligence

    The relationship between social structure and brain size is partly driven by increasing social-behavioural flexibility It is not merely group size, but the quality of social interactions that correlate with brain size. Culture, behavioral richness and cognition are intertwined and can create a positive feedback loop: larger brains can support a larger social repertoire and a larger repertoire can support a greater carrying capacity, potentially offering learners greater opportunity and variety for learning.

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2017/12/12/ceta-d12.html 

    Air Pollution Has a Massive Impact on Early Brain Development

    The most crucial stage of the brain’s growth comes during the first 1,000 days of a child’s life. Air pollution has been found to damage the blood-brain barrier, which can lead to conditions like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease in later life. exposure to air pollution can be linked to weaker verbal and nonverbal IQ and memory, reduced test scores, and various other neurological behavioural issues.

    https://futurism.com/air-pollution-massive-impact-early-brain-development

    Environment funding slashed by third since Coalition took office 

    The programs hardest hit by funding cuts are those designed to maintain biodiversity by protecting ecosystems and shrinking animal and plant populations with deeper cuts promised into next decade.While the federal budget has expanded by $36bn since Tony Abbott took office, funding for the environment has been cut by nearly half a billion dollars so far, an analysis by two conservation groups found.

    https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2017/dec/13/environment-funding-slashed-by-third-since-coalition-took-office 

    Parliament and the media cover up the looming climate crisis

    There is not one climate scientist in the Australian Parliament. The world’s leading climate research organisations (NASA, NOAA, NSIDC, Berkeley Earth, Potsdam Climate Impacts, Hadley-Met, Tindale, CSIRO, BOM) have confirmed current trends toward a world of +2 degrees Celsius and +4 degrees Celsius above mean pre-industrial temperatures.

    http://johnmenadue.com/andrew-glikson-parliament-and-the-media-cover-up-the-looming-climate-crisis

    Burn-offs have almost no effect on bushfire risks

    Burn-offs are a routine part of preparations for bushfire season, but modelling suggests fire authorities need to target 30% of land to have any meaningful effect on taming future wildfires. We need to introduce on the outskirts of towns and cities clever landscape designs that included irrigation and green fire breaks in the form of parklands, that could work in conjunction with burn-offs.

    https://www.theguardian.com/australia-news/2017/dec/15/burn-offs-bushfire-risks-australia-tasmania 

    Too big to jail

    Criminal money laundering not a crime – if you are big enough. A report on the powers used  by a handful of bank intentionally  to coerce governments.

    https://www.brasscheck.com/video/too-big-to-jail/ 

    Land use per gram of protein, by food type

    Average land use area needed to produce one unit of protein by food type, measured in metres squared per gram of protein over a crop’s annual cycle or the average animal’s lifetime. Values are based on a meta-analysis of studies across 742 agricultural systems and over 90 unique foods.

    https://ourworldindata.org/grapher/land-use-per-gram-of-protein-by-food-type 

  • The John James Newsletter No.

    The John James Newsletter No. <209>

    The John James Newsletter 209

    9 December 2017

    The level of atmospheric carbon dioxide we observe today is the minimum level we’ll see for at least the next 1000 years 

    Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences,

    Global warming has passed a “tipping point” and that habitat loss associated with the warming of the planet will condemn the human species to extinction within 20 years

    Guy McPherson

    Today the tyrant rules not by club or fist, but disguised as a market analyst who shepherds his flocks in the ways that suit him

    Marshall McLuhan

    Free enterprise is a system of public subsidy and private profit, with government intervention to maintain a welfare state for the rich 

    Noam Chomsky

    You do not have to be apolitical pundit to realise that the new axis of evil – the US, Israel and Saudi Arabia – are preparing joint military actions against Iran and Hezbollah

    Dan Lieberman

    The orchestrated hostility toward Russia, China, Iran, and North Korea protects the $1,000 billion annual budget of the military/security complex 

    Paul Roberts

    The most dire turn out to be the most accurate

    The most extreme estimates of the effects of global warming are likelier than more optimistic predictions. With the current level of greenhouse gas emissions remaining steady, researchers say, there is a 93% chance that the planet will be more than 4C warmer. Earlier estimates held that there was only a 62% chance of this level of warming.

    https://www.commondreams.org/news/2017/12/07/most-dire-climate-change-predictions-warns-new-study-are-also-most-accurate 

    An Open Secret: Washington was Behind India’s Brutal Experiment Of Abolishing Cash

    Without warning, the Indian government declared the two largest denomination bills invalid, abolishing over 80% of circulating cash. Amidst all the commotion and outrage this caused, nobody seems to have taken note of the decisive role that Washington played in this.

    http://www.countercurrents.org/2017/12/08/a-well-kept-open-secret-washington-is-behind-indias-brutal-experiment-of-abolishing-most-cash/

    Private military companies: Moscow’s other army in Syria

    The weakness of Syrian security forces, combined with Russia’s need to downsize its overtasked military in Syria, has left security gaps in the fragile country. Filling these gaps with PMCs is a plausibly deniable, economically feasible, politically viable, sustainable and flexible option for Moscow.

    https://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2017/11/turkey-russia-private-army-in-syria.html 

    Why the Democrats Will Run Michele Obama in 2020

    Michelle already knows the drill,  that’s what makes her the perfect candidate. She knows the president is a meaningless figurehead. She knows the whole thing is a charade. She knows that the rich will get richer while working people get stomped on. And now its her turn to shine, her turn to take center-stage and lead the conferences, and meet the foreign dignitaries, and spar with the press, and hold meetings in the Rose Garden, and languish in the big leather chair in the Oval Office. Michelle’s day is coming, and the party leaders are already licking their chops.

    http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/48324.htm 

    Chickens are helping the elderly tackle loneliness

    A scheme to introduce hen keeping to the elderly is turning out to have a miraculous effect on their wellbeing by reducing isolation and depression  The idea came in early 2012, when a man at a dementia care centre nearby kept telling staff he missed his ‘girls’.

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/health/11198410/Chickens-helping-the-elderly-tackle-loneliness.html

    Power of community – The Blackheath Alliance

    In an era that is being defined by adversarial politics and short term thinking, the Blackheath community is demonstrating another approach –and one that’s proving to be extraordinarily effective. By working collaboratively, with the long game in mind, they’re proving that their strategy is clearly worth emulating.

    http://thebigfix.org/291-local-government/blue-mountains/blue-mountains-towns/blackheath/407-the-blackheath-alliance 

    Climate change starts to take its toll on housing market

    “Disaster on the horizon: The price effect of sea level rise” – the conclusion is that homes exposed to sea level rise sell at a 7%t discount relative to observable equivalent unexposed properties equidistant from the beach. This discount has grown over time.

    http://reneweconomy.com.au/climate-change-starts-take-toll-housing-market-46485

    Killing the Biosphere to Fast-track Human Extinction

    The sixth mass extinction event in Earth’s history is now accelerating at an unprecedented rate with 200 species of plants, birds, animals, fish, amphibians, insects and reptiles being driven to extinction DAILY. For a taste of the vast literature on this subject.

    http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/48334.htm 

    Did American Missile Defense Fail in Saudi Arabia?

    It’s hugely significant that the Saudis fired five times at the incoming missile and missed. An analysis suggests the missile’s warhead flew unimpeded over Saudi defenses and nearly hit Riyadh’s airport. The warhead detonated so close to the domestic terminal that customers jumped out of their seats. The Iranian-backed Houthis, once a ragtag group of rebels, have grown powerful enough to strike major targets. And they underscore longstanding doubts about missile defense technology, a centrepiece of American strategies.

    https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2017/12/04/world/middleeast/saudi-missile-defense.html?smid=tw-share 

    The disappointing truth about US plans to shoot down North Korean nuclear weapons

    The premise is simple: Once the US detects a missile launch with a variety of radar systems, it will shoot its own interceptor into the sky. After the enemy warhead separates from its rocket booster, a defensive interceptor, or “kill vehicle,” separates from its own booster and attempts to crash into the warhead. Executing this manoeuvre during a roughly twenty minute window against a warhead moving faster than the speed of sound is extremely difficult – the Saudi experience suggests far less than 1 in 4.

    http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/48345.htm  

    151 UN states vote to disavow Israeli annexation of Jerusalem 

    The resolution stated that “any actions taken by Israel, the occupying Power, to impose its laws, jurisdiction and administration on the Holy City of Jerusalem are illegal and therefore null and void and have no validity whatsoever.”

    http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/UN-disavows-Israeli-ties-to-Jerusalem-515730   

    Global supertanker to fight Wildfires

    https://futurism.com/videos/specialized-airplane-fights-wildfires-from-skies

    The secret world of Australian energy contract prices

    We know that the cost of solar is plunging across the world. The publicly released results of solar auctions in Asia, the Middle East, Europe and north and Latin America tell us this. The wholesale market – worth $16 billion – is almost completely opaque. Regulators and private analysts can barely make head or tail out of the retail market. It is a perfect cover for the big utilities to profit from ignorance and confusion.

    http://reneweconomy.com.au/the-secret-world-of-australias-solar-and-energy-contract-prices-46139

    Energy regulator smashes illusion of “cheap” coal power in NSW

    Last summer the state very nearly lost its grip on supply as two big coal units and the two biggest gas units failed in the heat wave – nearly causing the lights to go out were it not for the presence of vast quantities of solar, and some voluntary and not-so voluntary load shedding.

    http://reneweconomy.com.au/energy-regulator-smashes-illusion-of-cheap-coal-power-in-nsw-83167

    States and cities sign up for electric vehicle fleets

    To develop a plan to increase the share of EVs in their fleets and to consider how to use their combined market power to promote the public uptake of electric vehicles. They agreed to coordinate the strategic planning and construction of infrastructure for EVs and to seek to align states’ standards and incentives.

    https://www.governmentnews.com.au/2017/12/states-cities-sign-electric-vehicle-fleets

    Genetic feedback and  Human  Population  Regulation

    Population growth is a primary cause of ecological destruction and, if  left  unchecked, will threaten human survival.  It  has  been  demonstrated  that  genetic feedback  is  the  mechanism  by  which  species  achieve ecological balance. The analysis shows  the  applicability of this mechanism to human population regulation.

    https://www.researchgate.net/publication/225581823_Genetic_Feedback_and_Human_Population_Regulation 

    China’s growing footprint on the globe threatens to trample the natural world 

    President Xi Linping promises that the Belt and Road initiative will be “green, low-carbon, circular and sustainable”, but such a claim is profoundly divorced from reality. China’s infrastructure tsunami will open a Pandora’s box of environmental crises, including large-scale deforestation, habitat fragmentation, wildlife poaching, water pollution and greenhouse gas emissions. China is the most aggressive consumer of minerals on the planet, and the biggest driver of tropical deforestation.

    https://theconversation.com/chinas-growing-footprint-on-the-globe-threatens-to-trample-the-natural-world-88312 

    China Has Launched the World’s First All-Electric Cargo Ship

    China is now the proud owner of the world’s first all-electric cargo ship and has already put the vehicle to use. The 2,000-metric-ton ship was launched in the city of Guangzhou last month and runs in the inland section of the Pearl River. It can travel 80 kilometres after being charged for 2 hours, which is roughly the time to unload the ship’s cargo.

    https://futurism.com/china-launched-worlds-first-all-electric-cargo-ship

    Traffic fumes in city streets largely wipe out exercise benefits for the over-60s

    The air pollution  on a high street in London removes any health protection produced by exercise outdoors. Pollution, in large part related to traffic emissions, has an immediate adverse effect on those with chronic diseases

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2017/dec/05/traffic-fumes-in-city-streets-largely-wipe-out-exercise-benefits-for-over-60s 

    America’s own climate refugees 

    Trumps inadequate relief efforts after Hurricane Maria force Puerto Rico exodus

    Maria downed trees, homes and power lines in a 12-hour rampage with winds of up to 247 kph. Much of Puerto Rico remains without power and 15% has no running water more than a month later. It is the longest blackout in US history, and the overall hurricane damage could range from $45 billion to $95 billion on an island already mired in an 11-year-long recession. No wonder they are emigrating.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2017/11/09/hurricane-maria-puerto-rico-debate/850820001

    Trump slashes national monuments in Utah: “I’m a real estate developer”

    The gutting of the national monuments, unprecedented in more than a century, amounts to the initial stages of a land-grab by the oil, gas and mining industries.

    http://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2017/12/07/monu-d07.html 

    The Uzbekistan story

    Putin said two years ago, the sanctions were the best thing that ever happened to Russia since the collapse of the Soviet Union. They forced Russia to develop their agriculture again and bring her defunct industrial apparatus with science and research up to cutting edge technology, at par or above that of the west.

    http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/48359.htm 

    World’s scientists turn to Asia and Australia to rewrite human history 

    it appears that the long sought after answers to some of the central questions in human evolution studies may finally be answered here.

    https://theconversation.com/worlds-scientists-turn-to-asia-and-australia-to-rewrite-human-history-88697 

    Meet The Israeli Paid Millions To Hack Our Phones

    The Pegasus software suite uses similar techniques to the CIA for hacking an iPhone: Anything you can do on the phone, Pegasus can do on your phone. Turning on the camera and watching somebody in the room, turning on the microphone and listening to somebody. It can even do some things that you can’t, like put files on the phone and take files off, to manipulate data.

    http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-12-05/meet-israeli-cyber-weapons-dealer-paid-millions-governments-hack-our-phones 

    The Art of Keeping Guantánamo Open

    What the paintings by Its Prisoners Tell Us About Our Humanity and Theirs. The man whose painting I saw has been held for nearly 15 years without trial, without even having charges filed against him.

    http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/176358/tomgram%3A_erin_thompson%2C_curating_guantanamo

    The exhibit “Ode to the Sea: Art from Guantánamo” is on display in New York City 

    They paint the sea again and again although they cannot reach it.

    https://www.artfromguantanamo.com