Author Archives: TheodoreT

We’re Still at War: Photo of the Day for October 4, 2013

Mother Jones

Marines with Marine Corps Special Operations Command conduct a Special Patrol Insertion/Extraction exercise on a CH-53E aboard Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, N.C., Sept. 13, 2013. This training has helped the MARSOC MPC program in developing what will become the standard operating procedures. US Marine Corps photo.

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We’re Still at War: Photo of the Day for October 4, 2013

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House GOPer on Government Shutdown Strategy: "I Don’t Know That There Is a Plan to Win"

Mother Jones

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As the nation began grappling with the effects of the first government shutdown in 17 years—lost nutrition assistance, padlocked research labs, and the shuttering of virtually the entire Environmental Protection Agency—House Republicans met behind closed doors on Monday afternoon to sort out their differences and chart a new path forward. They still have some work to do.

The House GOP members who stubbornly insisted on blocking the Affordable Care Act as a condition of any funding resolution “are not tea party, and they’re not conservatives,” lamented a visibly upset Rep. Devin Nunes (R-Calif.), launching into his now-standard riff about North American tundra hamsters. “They’re anything but that. I mean, if you’re a conservative, you’re actually trying to do something. These people are just flat-out lemmings. That’s all they are. It’s like the lemming caucus.”

A fifth-term legislator from the Central Valley who once remarked that the Affordable Care Act had been passed with “totalitarian tactics,” Nunes makes for an unlikely spokesman for a GOP cohort that has been described in the press as “moderate.” But he insists it is the extremists in the House GOP caucus who are betraying the conservative movement. “You guys really need to find the lemming leaders, but they’re hard to find, because they don’t come out and actually speak,” he told reporters before ducking into the meeting. “They sneak around. They hide. They hold private meetings. They hold private conference calls. These people are actually the description of what’s wrong with Washington. They’re really no different from Obama because their politics are the same—gutter politics.”

So what more could he tell us about these secret strategy huddles? Nunes had no details: “You gotta go lemming hunting.” (One obvious flaw with Nunes’ political-suicide metaphor: Lemmings don’t actually commit mass suicide by running off cliffs—that’s a Hollywood creation.)

As he left the Republican conference meeting, senior members with Potbelly sandwiches passing him by, Nunes seemed resigned to his party’s fate. He affirmed his support for the party’s leadership and the “Ted Cruz lemming strategy” it was adopting. But he couldn’t resist one last dig. “If you’re going to take these extreme measures, you better have a plan to win. And I don’t know that there is a plan to win.”

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House GOPer on Government Shutdown Strategy: "I Don’t Know That There Is a Plan to Win"

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Relocation of Alaska’s Sinking Newtok Village Halted

Mother Jones

This story first appeared on the Guardian website and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

An Alaskan village’s quest to move to higher ground and avoid being drowned by climate change has sputtered to a halt, the Guardian has learned.

Newtok, on the Bering Sea coast, is sinking and the highest point in the village—the school, which sits perched atop 20-foot pilings—could be underwater by 2017. But the village’s relocation effort broke down this summer because of an internal political conflict and a freeze on government funds.

The Guardian wrote about the strains placed on Newtok by the erosion which is tearing away at the land, and at the villagers’ efforts to move to a new site, known as Mertarvik, in an interactive series in May.

Those tensions fed a rebellion against the village leadership, the Newtok Traditional Council, which had run the village for seven years without facing an election, and the administrator overseeing the relocation effort, Stanley Tom. His critics said he had botched the move to Mertarvik, and neglected the existing village.

Since October, Newtok residents voted repeatedly to elect a new roster of candidates to the council. They also tried to remove Tom. But the council refused to recognize the results, and Tom refused to step aside.

In July, the Bureau of Indian Affairs took the unusual step of intervening in the internal dispute, and ruled the old council—which was working closely with Tom—no longer represented the villagers of Newtok. In a July 11 letter, Eufrona O’Neill, acting regional director of the BIA, noted the agency generally did not intervene in tribal political conflicts.

But she said the standoff put the village at risk: “The continuation of a leadership vacuum would be detrimental to the best interests of the tribe, particularly in the present circumstances, where the community is in the midst of trying to physically relocate to a new village site due to serious erosion occurring at the present site.”

O’Neill noted the confusion could freeze funds for the village, as government agencies withhold funds if there are doubts about lawful signing authority. She went on to determine that the BIA now recognized the new council, which had challenged Tom’s authority. Tom said in a telephone interview he would appeal the ruling—ensuring the political standoff continues.

The long stalemate has cost the village several months in its efforts to relocate, Tom said. “Everything is kind of frozen right now,” he said. “We’ve had a pretty big setback.” Other relocations efforts were also on hold for unrelated causes.

The internal dispute exposed the severe strain on native Alaskan villages—such as Newtok—in dealing with the effects of climate change. Some 186 native Alaskan villages—or 86 percent of all native communities in Alaska—are threatened by climate change, a federal government report found.

Many villages, like Newtok, are losing land to erosion. The Ninglick River, which encircles Newtok, is eating the land out from under the village. Others are sinking in the melting permafrost. A handful have started the process of relocation. But none had gone as far as Newtok in finding a new site and beginning the slow and laborious process of negotiating through the web of state agencies to find funds for their relocation.

Robin Bronen, a human rights lawyer in Anchorage, has argued extensively that the federal government’s failure to recognize slow-moving climate threats as disasters leaves such communities stranded, with no clear set of guidelines—or designated funds—to secure their communities in place, or plan a move.

Now even Newtok’s relocation effort is in trouble. Amid the funding delays and political crisis, Newtok did not take on any new building work—leaving the 350 residents with no place to go when the waters come in. It was the second year in a row the village was forced to cancel planned construction. In 2012, a barge laden with materials for a road project undertaken by the military ran aground—shutting down construction for the year.

Tom had said at the start of the year that he hoped 2013 would bring a burst of construction at the new site. He had initially hoped to use more than $4 million in Alaskan state government funds to bring in heavy equipment to quarry rock and to build housing for the villages. Tom also said he was hoping to complete a detailed planning survey.

There were plans also to complete the largest planned structure for the new village—an evacuation center designed to provide shelter to all of Newtok’s residents in the event of a severe storm. The evacuation center now consists of a simple concrete platform. But the funds were not released, and Tom’s determination to contest the BIA decision suggests the standoff could continue.

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Relocation of Alaska’s Sinking Newtok Village Halted

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4 Stunning Images of Freshwater Resources

Kay M.

on

The Benefits of Journaling

33 minutes ago

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4 Stunning Images of Freshwater Resources

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Blacks and Whites Use Pot At About the Same Rate, But Blacks Get Arrested for Pot Possession a Lot More

Mother Jones

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From a report by the ACLU:

In Morgan and Pike Counties, AL, Blacks make up just over 12% and 37% of the population, respectively, but account for 100% of the marijuana possession arrests.

Just a coincidence, I’m sure. But across the country, it turns out, African Americans are arrested for pot possession at far higher rates than whites even though usage rates are about the same. Keith Humphreys points out that this is partly because marijuana laws have been loosened primarily in whiter areas of the country. At a guess, some of this might also be due to the use of possession charges as a plea bargain from more serious charges. Nonetheless, this accounts for only a fraction of the difference. The rest is most likely racially motivated, as the chart on the right makes clear. Black arrest rates are higher than white arrest rates—usually a lot higher—in every single one of the 25 biggest counties in the country.

More here from the ACLU study. The full report is here.

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Blacks and Whites Use Pot At About the Same Rate, But Blacks Get Arrested for Pot Possession a Lot More

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