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The Scary Mystery of Angela Merkel Is….Still a Mystery

Mother Jones

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Last night I got around to reading George Packer’s long New Yorker profile of German chancellor Angela Merkel, and it turned out to be a surprisingly absorbing piece. Unfortunately, that’s due more to Packer’s skill as a writer than to anything he ends up revealing about Merkel. In fact, the truly astonishing thing is that he manages to write 15,000 words about Merkel without really enlightening us in any serious way about what makes her tick. Apparently she’s really that enigmatic. Here, for example, is what he says about why a sober-minded East German chemist, who had never before displayed any political ambitions, suddenly decided to visit a political group that had formed after the Berlin Wall fell to ask if she could help out with anything:

Merkel’s decision to enter politics is the central mystery of an opaque life. She rarely speaks publicly about herself and has never explained her decision. It wasn’t a long-term career plan—like most Germans, she didn’t foresee the abrupt collapse of Communism and the opportunities it created. But when the moment came, and Merkel found herself single and childless in her mid-thirties—and laboring in an East German institution with no future—a woman of her ambition must have grasped that politics would be the most dynamic realm of the new Germany.

Well, OK then. Packer reports that Merkel is smart, methodical, genuinely unpretentious, and “as lively and funny in private as she is publicly soporific.” But her political views? Apparently she barely has any:

Throughout her Chancellorship, Merkel has stayed as close as possible to German public opinion….“The Chancellor’s long-term view is about two weeks,” a Merkel adviser says. The pejorative most often used against her is “opportunist.” When I asked Katrin Göring-Eckardt, the Green leader, whether Merkel had any principles, she paused, then said, “She has a strong value of freedom, and everything else is negotiable.”

….“People say there’s no project, there’s no idea,” the senior official told me. “It’s just a zigzag of smart moves for nine years.” But, he added, “She would say that the times are not conducive to great visions.”

….The most daunting challenge of Merkel’s time in office has been the euro-zone crisis, which threatened to bring down economies across southern Europe and jeopardized the integrity of the euro….Merkel’s decisions during the crisis reflect the calculations of a politician more mindful of her constituency than of her place in history. When Greek debt was revealed to be at critical levels, she was slow to commit German taxpayers’ money to a bailout fund, and in 2011 she blocked a French and American proposal for coördinated European action.

….Throughout the crisis, Merkel buried herself in the economic details and refused to get out in front of what German voters—who tended to regard the Greeks as spendthrift and lazy—would accept, even if delaying prolonged the ordeal and, at key moments from late 2011 through the summer of 2012, threatened the euro itself. The novelist and journalist Peter Schneider compared her to a driver in foggy weather: “You only see five metres, not one hundred metres, so it’s better you are very careful, you don’t say too much, you act from step to step. No vision at all.”

It’s kind of scary, but all wrapped up in a hazy ball of pragmatism that’s hard to get a handle on. Take the eurozone crisis, for example. Over the past five years, Germany has seemed almost spitefully hellbent on destroying the European economy simply because Germans disapprove of the spendthrift southerners responsible for the mess—all the time self-righteously refusing to admit that they themselves played a role that was every bit as lucrative and self-serving in the whole debacle. Because of this, the European economy is now headed for its third recession since 2008.

Does Merkel share this view of things? Or does she recognize what needs to be done but simply doesn’t have either the will or the courage to challenge German public opinion? That’s never clear. And yes, I guess I find that a little scary. This is why I don’t quite get the comparison Packer makes between Merkel and Obama. Initially, he says, Merkel was put off by Obama’s lofty rhetoric:

As she got to know Obama better, though, she came to appreciate more the ways in which they were alike—analytical, cautious, dry-humored, remote. Benjamin Rhodes, Obama’s deputy national-security adviser, told me that “the President thinks there’s not another leader he’s worked closer with than her.” He added, “They’re so different publicly, but they’re actually quite similar.” (Ulrich joked, “Obama is Merkel in a better suit.”)

During the Ukraine crisis, the two have consulted frequently on the timing of announcements and been careful to keep the American and the European positions close. Obama is the antithesis of the swaggering leaders whom Merkel specializes in eating for breakfast. On a trip to Washington, she met with a number of senators, including the Republicans John McCain, of Arizona, and Jeff Sessions, of Alabama. She found them more preoccupied with the need to display toughness against America’s former Cold War adversary than with events in Ukraine themselves. (McCain called Merkel’s approach “milquetoast.”) To Merkel, Ukraine was a practical problem to be solved. This mirrored Obama’s view.

Personality-wise, perhaps, Obama and Merkel are similar. “No drama” could apply equally well to either of them. But politically? I don’t see it. Obama doesn’t strike me as someone with no vision who hews as close as possible to public opinion. It’s true that he can’t always get what he wants, and obviously he faces the same constraints as any politician in a democratic system—especially one who presides over a divided government. But certainly his broad political views are clear enough, as are his political sympathies. He hasn’t been able to change the course of American politics, but not because he wouldn’t like to. He just hasn’t been able to.

So: who is Angela Merkel? After 15,000 words, I still don’t feel like I know. Is she really just someone who’s skilled at keeping her political coalition together and doesn’t much care about anything more than that? It’s a little hard to believe. And yet, that sure seems to be the main takeaway from all this.

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The Scary Mystery of Angela Merkel Is….Still a Mystery

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Environmentalists Don’t Like Europe’s New Climate Plan. Can Obama Do Better?

Mother Jones

Environmental groups are warning that a new European agreement to slash greenhouse gas emissions by 40 percent by 2030 sets the bar far too low.

The pact—which was reached early Friday in Brussels—makes the European Union the first major bloc of countries to commit to emissions targets ahead of next year’s crucial climate change talks in Paris. At the Paris meeting, world leaders will attempt to hammer out a global agreement that will keep warming below 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit).

The Guardian reports that in addition to their commitment to cut greenhouse emissions by 40 percent, European leaders also agreed to increase the portion of the region’s energy that comes renewable sources to 27 percent by 2030. That provision is legally binding for the EU as a whole, but not on a national level, potentially opening the door to disagreements about how to get there. The third notable part of the pact is a plan to increase energy efficiency by 27 percent, but that target is not legally binding.

Oxfam—the global development NGO—slammed the deal as “insufficient,” saying the targets are too low and not enforceable enough. The group’s Deputy Director of Advocacy and Campaigns, Natalia Alonso, said in a statement: “Today’s deal must set the floor not the ceiling of European action, and they must arrive in Paris with a more serious offer.” Oxfam called for a much for aggressive policy: 55 percent cuts in emissions.

Greenpeace also criticized the deal, saying the EU leaders pulled the “handbrake on clean energy.”

“These targets are too low, slowing down efforts to boost renewable energy and keeping Europe hooked on polluting and expensive fuel,” the group said in a statement.

Greenpeace EU managing director Mahi Sideridou added, “The global fight against climate change needs radical shock treatment, but what the EU is offering is at best a whiff of smelling salts.”

Nevertheless, European leaders hailed the deal as a major breakthrough. “This package is very good news for our fight against climate change,” said Jose Manuel Barroso, the European Commission president.

Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, said the pact “will ensure that Europe will be an important player, will be an important party, in future binding commitments of an international climate agreement.”

World Resources Institute, a leading climate policy research group, struck a more conciliatory tone than other environmental groups, while also calling for more aggressive targets. “Despite facing a dismal recession and difficult internal debate, European leaders demonstrated their resolve by staying the course,” said the institute’s director of climate and energy programs, Jennifer Morgan, in a statement. “At the same time, it is clear that all of the targets could have been—and should have been—more ambitious.”

The deal raises the stakes for other countries to get serious about climate commitments ahead of Paris. According to the Guardian, it contains a clause that would trigger a review of the new targets—potentially torpedoing today’s agreement—if other countries don’t come to the table with comparable proposals next year.

It remains unclear precisely what the US government will seek at next year’s negotiations. Early indications suggest the Obama administration is considering a plan that would require countries to limit emissions according to a specific timetable but wouldn’t dictate to individual countries how deep those cuts would be.

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Environmentalists Don’t Like Europe’s New Climate Plan. Can Obama Do Better?

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Why Bother Going Out When the Show Comes Straight to Your Living Room?

Mother Jones

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Practically everything about the Washington, DC-based band Paperhaus is homemade: its recording studio, its music venue (the Paperhaus), its business, its songs, its sound—even its Chinese food: “Why order it when you can make it yourself?” Alex Tebeleff explains when I arrive at the band’s northwestern DC home and venue on a recent Monday evening.

As Tebeleff soaks his chicken in a deep fryer, a small black cat named Widget weaves around the amps and drum kits and guitars occupying the room. She arrived one night during a show and never left; Widget and Alex have lived here the longest. The décor is mixed, from a poster of a monkey skeleton to a flowered ceiling lamp—a distinctly homey vibe with a playful spirit. Over the past few years, thousands of fans, hundreds of bands, and countless underground music critics, have flocked here to listen, to enjoy, and make music.

The Paperhaus, arguably the most active and established of the several dozen home venues across DC proper, is a modern remnant of the DIY movement, wherein young artists and music fans, feeling shut out by the professional music industry set about making their own underground version based in people’s living rooms and basements. Home venues are “comforting,” Tebeleff says, in a way that clubs and bars and even converted warehouse spaces tend not to be.

This is hardly an only-in DC thing. Smithereens’s Pat DiNizio played a five month “Living Room Tour” in 2001, for instance. And Seattle Living Room Shows are hosted in secret locations to keep police from catching wind of the DIY venues and shutting them down, but DC hosts some 35 established home venues, tracked by a website called Homestage DC. WAMU, a local public radio station, describes what’s happening here as a local Renaissance—one that Alex and others would love to see spread nationwide.

Paperhaus’ adventures began on a soccer field 14 years ago, in Montgomery County, Maryland, when two middle schoolers met up and started chatting about music. The pair, Tebeleff and Eduardo Rivera, would become the “revolving center” of what is now the band Paperhaus—which shedded more than a few “terrible names” along the way.

Tebeleff, who has lived in the DC area his whole life, books the shows and produces them, and supplements that modest income by teaching guitar. He enjoys chatting about everything from German philosophy to pro football, and will endlessly describe his past and present inspirations: Fugazi, Radiohead, Scott Walker (the singer, not the politician), and Here We Go Magic, to name a few. Danny Bentley is the band’s drummer, and Xaq Rothman its bassist. Tebeleff describes his bandmates as very “family oriented,” especially Rivera, his longtime musical partner. This attitude is reflected in the way the group invites bands and guests into its own home, making them a part of the family. During our chat, at least four or five neighbors and friends pass through the space as though they, too, lived there.

theLAjohnson.com, Courtesy of Paperhaus Facebook

The typical show, Tebeleff says, draws 80 to 100 people into the band’s living room, although more often show up, cramming themselves between the staircase and the stage for the best view.

One of the more prominent live bands in town, Paperhaus also plays at popular bars and venues such the 9:30 Club and The Black Cat—and recently played the Kennedy Center, which usually hosts classical performances. The band has gone on several national tours, playing everything from a little record store in Mississippi on a Monday night to big venues in Atlanta, Georgia, and Raleigh, North Carolina.

So why bother playing their own living room? “When I moved to DC after college,” Tebeleff tells me, “the music scene was very closed off, very exclusive. It bothered me. Music is something that should build community and not isolate it.” The clubs were not only cliquey and hard to break into, they made it practically impossible for bands to rise up: “There’s no middle class for bands anymore,” he says.

What he means is that commercial venues often won’t take a chance on any band that hasn’t proved it can pack a room or merit a pricey ticket. “The reason I started Paperhaus,” Tebeleff says, “was to bring people really interested in music together in a safe space that was open and friendly.”

The band applied that philosophy to the recording of its upcoming album, which entailed long, intense hours together in the Paperhaus improvising riffs and phrases and melodies, and working together to write and compose full songs as a unit. It was “the hardest thing I’ve ever done,” Tebeleff says, and its challenges led to the departure of the band’s original bassist. The album is due out in January. Here’s “Cairo”:

Cairo by Paperhaus

The image Tebeleff hopes to project of Washington, DC, is a departure from the usual power-lunching lobbyists, punditry, and posturing associated with the nation’s capital. “People have a very negative perception of DC a lot of the time because of the politics,” he says. “We try to educate that there’s an entire other scene that couldn’t be more different. We’re not consciously trying to be the antithesis of the political world, though. We want to include them in this. You come to a Paperhaus show and you see punk kids and young professionals, artists and people coming straight from work. The whole spectrum of DC society is becoming aware of it.”

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Why Bother Going Out When the Show Comes Straight to Your Living Room?

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Karachi Journal: Fishermen Cross an Imperceptible Line Into Enemy Waters

Several thousand fishermen, both Pakistani and Indian, have been arrested at sea in recent years, accused of crossing a border they cannot see and whose exact location is in dispute. Source article: Karachi Journal: Fishermen Cross an Imperceptible Line Into Enemy Waters ; ;Related ArticlesDot Earth Blog: A Small Island Takes a Big Step on Ocean ConservationStrong Earthquake Shakes Bay Area in CaliforniaOpinion: The Climate Swerve ;

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Karachi Journal: Fishermen Cross an Imperceptible Line Into Enemy Waters

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By Degrees: In the Ocean, Clues to Change

To better understand climate swings, scientists are honing robots that can dive deeper and find out more about the temperature of the oceans. View article:   By Degrees: In the Ocean, Clues to Change ; ;Related ArticlesLook: Staking Out the Great White SharkA Texas County Sees Opportunity in Toxic WasteMatter: Cyanobacteria Are Far From Just Toledo’s Problem ;

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By Degrees: In the Ocean, Clues to Change

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World’s top PR companies rule out working with climate deniers

Ten firms say they will not represent clients that deny man-made climate change or seek to block emisson-reducing regulations Cienpies Design/Thinkstock Some of the world’s top PR companies have for the first time publicly ruled out working with climate change deniers, marking a fundamental shift in the multi-billion dollar industry that has grown up around the issue of global warming. Public relations firms have played a critical role over the years in framing the debate on climate change and its solutions – as well as the extensive disinformation campaigns launched to block those initiatives. Now a number of the top 25 global PR firms have told the Guardian they will not represent clients who deny man-made climate change, or take campaigns seeking to block regulations limiting carbon pollution. Companies include WPP, Waggener Edstrom (WE) Worldwide, Weber Shandwick, Text100, and Finn Partners. “We would not knowingly partner with a client who denies the existence of climate change,” said Rhian Rotz, spokesman for WE. Read the rest at the Guardian. Link: World’s top PR companies rule out working with climate deniers Related ArticlesWhy’s This Tea Party PAC Going After a Top Tea Partier?Watch Drought Take Over the Entire State of California in One GIFHow Many Hurricanes Will Hit Hawaii This Weekend?

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Group Earns Oil Income Despite Pledge on Drilling

The Nature Conservancy is earning money from an oil well on land it controls in Texas, despite pledging a decade ago not to permit new oil and gas drilling on land supposedly set aside for conservation. Continue at source –  Group Earns Oil Income Despite Pledge on Drilling ; ;Related ArticlesWhite House Pushes Financial Case for Carbon RuleEconomic View: Shattering Myths to Help the ClimateDot Earth Blog: Heading Down East for a Spell ;

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Group Earns Oil Income Despite Pledge on Drilling

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Dot Earth Blog: Heading Down East for a Spell

A blogging pause that refreshes. Excerpt from –  Dot Earth Blog: Heading Down East for a Spell ; ;Related ArticlesHeading Down East for a SpellWhite House Pushes Financial Case for Carbon RuleDot Earth Blog: Fresh Focus on Siberian Permafrost as Hole Count Rises ;

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Dot Earth Blog: Heading Down East for a Spell

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Dot Earth Blog: Fresh Focus on Siberian Permafrost as Hole Count Rises

A report of a second odd hole in the Siberian permafrost draws fresh attention to the warming Russian tundra. Link to article:  Dot Earth Blog: Fresh Focus on Siberian Permafrost as Hole Count Rises ; ;Related ArticlesDot Earth Blog: Fresh Focus on Siberian Permafrost as Second Hole is ReportedFresh Focus on Siberian Permafrost as Second Hole is ReportedWhite House Pushes Financial Case for Carbon Rule ;

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Dot Earth Blog: Fresh Focus on Siberian Permafrost as Hole Count Rises

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Dot Earth Blog: U.S. Coal Exports Eroding Domestic Greenhouse Gains

Continuing rise in U.S. exports of coal work against domestic reductions in CO2 emissions. Continue reading: Dot Earth Blog: U.S. Coal Exports Eroding Domestic Greenhouse Gains Related ArticlesU.S. Coal Exports Eroding Domestic Greenhouse GainsChina’s Plan to Limit Coal Use Could Spur Consumption for YearsDot Earth Blog: New Approach to Being There: ‘Fan-bots’ Will Cheer Korean Baseball Team

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Dot Earth Blog: U.S. Coal Exports Eroding Domestic Greenhouse Gains

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