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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/17/2013 10:01:02 PM

Foliage Season Under Fire from Climate Change




Clocks aren’t the only things falling back at this time of year. The start to foliage season is also on the move, with the season starting later and later in the U.S. since 1982. Other threats from climate change could also cost states that rely on the billions from leaf peepers in lost tourism revenues and have ecological impacts that extend well beyond the season.

The U.S. Forest Service estimates that fiery foliage in the Berkshires and Green and White Mountains generates $8 billion in tourism revenue annually for New England alone. Foliage season is so important to Vermont that the state employs a leaf forecaster. States in other parts of the country also depend on foliage season to bring in tourism dollars, though specific numbers are harder to come by.

Warmer weather is contributing to a later ending to the growing season in the U.S. according to research from Seoul National University. The end of the season is marked by the point when satellites see the overall greenness of foliage start to decline, was over two weeks later in 2008 compared to 1982.

The end of the growing season in the continental U.S. has become roughly two weeks later from 1982-2008.
Click image to enlarge.

A later onset to fall isn’t the only issue affecting foliage season, though. The financial benefits of leaf tourism are reaped in the fall, but they’re sown in spring and mature through summer. The climate during all three seasons affects how vibrant foliage actually is. A warm, wet spring followed by a Goldilocks summer followed by a fall with warm days and cool nights create the most ideal conditions for eye-catching colors.

Climate change is causing warming across all seasons, and while that might be a boon in spring, warmer and more extreme heat during the summer could negate those benefits. The stress from warm weather can knock leaves off the trees before they’ve even had a chance to change.

Nighttime temperatures are also generally rising faster than daytime highs, which means cool fall nights are likely to become shorter in supply. All these shifts could work to reduce the brilliance of fall foliage over time, but they also create openings for other threats to trees and their leafy assets.

“A lengthening growing season could open up the door for invasive species, particularly invasives that are adaptable to different climates,” said Carolyn Enquist, science coordinator for the National Phenology Network. “We could see more invasives or invasives (that) are more active in the fall.”

Enquist cited gypsy moths, which are an invasive species. Though they were introduced in New England in the 1860s, gypsy moths have spread far and wide across the U.S. in the past 40 years. One gypsy moth can lay up to 1,000 eggs, which in turn become very hungry caterpillars that are partial to oak, birch, aspens, and other deciduous trees. Some research suggests a warming world will favor the growth of gypsy moth populations from Virginia to Utah.

Enquist cautioned that more research needs to be done on many levels to understand not just how foliage is likely to change but fall in general.

“Autumn hasn’t been quite as well studied and is a lot more complex in terms of figuring out what drives fall phenology,” she said. “Temperatures are a big thing, but there’s sun and moisture, etc. It’s very complex and people are started to get more interested.”

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"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/18/2013 10:42:20 AM

Obama blasts opponents as government re-opens

Obama blasts Republican opponents as government re-opens, cites damage to US credibility



WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Barack Obama on Thursday blasted Republican opponents who he said had damaged America's economy and credibility, issuing a stern rebuke from the White House after a prolonged standoff that forced a government shutdown and threatened default.

As Congress reopened the U.S. government Thursday and signed off on more borrowing so America could pay its bills, the president warned that the deal reached at the last minute on Wednesday had quelled but not ended the deep political and fiscal crisis. The administration and its Republican opponents know the deal only pushed the unsolved and bitter ideological battle a few months into the future. Obama warned against repeating the same damaging cycle again.

"The American people are completely fed up with Washington," Obama said in a forceful tone.

"Probably nothing has done more damage to America's credibility in the world than the spectacle we've seen these past few weeks," the president said in an impassioned White House appearance.

And Obama chastised opponents who had forced the 16-day partial government shutdown and threatened the United States with default to remember that "disagreement cannot mean dysfunction."

Hundreds of thousands of federal staff began returning to work Thursday after the legislation passed both houses of Congress late Wednesday and was signed into law by Obama just after midnight. The deal was welcomed around the world, but anxiety persisted about America's long-term stability. The fiscal feud could resume as new deadlines in January and February near, though some political experts suggested Republicans might not be so eager for another fight after seeing the party's approval plummet to record lows.

The impasse, fought over government spending in general and Obama's new health care program in particular, had shuttered national parks and monuments, and mostly closed down agencies such as NASA and the Environmental Protection Agency. Critical functions of government went on as usual, but the closure and potential default weighed on the economy and spooked the financial markets. Standard & Poor's estimated the shutdown has taken $24 billion out of the economy.

Republican House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner said: "We fought the good fight. We just didn't win."

As the deal came together earlier Wednesday, the stock market surged on the prospect of an end to the crisis that had threatened to shake confidence in the U.S. economy both at home and abroad.

IMF managing director Christine Lagarde welcomed the deal but said the shaky American economy needs more stable long-term finances.

"It will be essential to reduce uncertainty surrounding the conduct of fiscal policy by raising the debt limit in a more durable manner," Lagarde said in a statement.

The Republican-controlled House of Representatives voted 285-144 in favor of the bill, even though most Republicans voted against it. In the Democrat-controlled Senate, approval was even more lopsided, 81-18.

House Republicans sparked the crisis on Oct. 1 when they refused to fund the government unless Obama agreed to defund or delay his health care law, known as "Obamacare." The government shutdown was soon overshadowed when House Republicans also refused to up the government's borrowing authority so the U.S. could pay its bills, raising the specter of a catastrophic default. Obama refused to budge, proclaiming repeatedly that he would not to pay a "ransom" in order to get Congress to pass normally routine legislation.

Conservative Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas championed the Republican strategy of using both deadlines as weapons that could be used to gut Obama's Affordable Care Act, which launched its online exchanges for millions of uninsured Americans on Oct 1. The Democrats fended off every challenge to Obamacare, while Republicans in the House failed to collect enough votes to pass their own plan to end the bitter standoff.

Boehner, in a bold move, ended up putting the compromise bill to a vote in the House knowing most Republicans didn't support it. Undaunted, he vowed Republicans were not giving up on the fight to bring down U.S. debt and cripple Obamacare.

The agreement gives the parties some time to cool off and negotiate a broader spending plan. The government will remain open through Jan. 15 and the deadline for default on debts is now Feb. 7.

"There was no economic rationale for any of this," Vice President Joe Biden said as he greeted workers returning to the Environmental Protection Agency with hugs, handshakes and muffins. "I hope everybody walks away with a lesson that this is unnecessary and I hope we can regain the trust of the American people."

The agreement doesn't resolve partisan disputes over Washington's budget but funds the government temporarily while lawmakers try to work out a broader deal to cut deficits and ease across-the-board spending cuts. That leaves the possibility of another stalemate in coming weeks.

"I hope this is the end of this," Biden told reporters. But he acknowledged, "There's no guarantee of anything."

Some members of Congress were already bracing for another battle.

"All this does is delay this fight four months," Republican Congressman Mo Brooks said. "We need to get to the underlying cause of the problem, which is our out-of-control spending and deficits, and fix it before it's too late and we go down the toilet to bankruptcy because that's where America is headed."

Several polls showed a steep decline in public approval for Republicans. Republican Sen. John McCain said the American people clearly disapprove of how Republicans, and also Democrats and the president, handled the budget gridlock.

"Hopefully, the lesson is to stop this foolish childishness," McCain said Thursday on CNN.

After Obama signed the bill, Sylvia Mathews Burwell, director of the Office of Management and Budget, issued a memorandum ordering department heads to "open offices in a prompt and orderly manner." They will be paid for the time they were forced off the job.

Washington's Smithsonian Institution declared on Twitter that it was back in business, announcing that its 19 museums would reopen Thursday. The National Zoo was set to reopen Friday.

__

Associated Press writers David Espo, Alan Fram, Andrew Taylor, Charles Babington, Stephen Ohlemacher, Henry C. Jackson and Donna Cassata contributed to this report.


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/18/2013 10:46:44 AM

TV networks blame GOP for shutdown, conservative study finds


U.S. President Barack Obama delivers remarks on the end of the U.S. government shutdown in the State Dining Room of the White House in Washington, October 17, 2013. The U.S. Congress on Wednesday approved an 11th-hour deal to end a partial government shutdown and pull the world's biggest economy back from the brink of a historic debt default that could have threatened financial calamity. REUTERS/Jason Reed

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"Let's be clear," President Barack Obama said on Thursday, a day after the Republican-led House voted to approve a Democratic-led Senate bill to end the partial government shutdown. "There are no winners here."

But according to a study conducted by the conservative Media Research Center, there was a clear loser presented to the more than 20 million viewers who tuned in to the evening newscasts of the three major television networks during the shutdown: the GOP.

"What those viewers heard," according to the MRC analysis, "was a version of the shutdown story that could easily have emanated from Barack Obama’s own White House."

“This current government shutdown traces its history back to a determined core of GOP House members who are vehemently against Obamacare and were willing to shut down the government because of it,” Brian Williams said on the Oct. 14 broadcast of "NBC Nightly News," MRC's Rich Noyes noted in a blog post announcing the study.

Of the 124 stories broadcast on the ABC, NBC and CBS nightly newscasts about the shutdown from Oct. 1 through Oct. 15, the study found 41 blamed Republicans or conservatives for the impasse, 17 blamed both sides and none specifically blamed Democrats.

In the two weeks leading up to the shutdown, the MRC said, the same networks ran 21 stories blaming Republicans, four blaming both sides and none blaming Democrats.

That's 62 blaming Republicans and none blaming Democrats for those of you keeping score at home.

But those numbers mirror polls conducted before and during the shutdown, which found most Americans blamed the GOP for the shutdown. In one, 62 percent of respondents blamed Republicans for the shutdown, while less than half blamed Obama or the Democrats in Congress.

According to TruthRevolt.org, another conservative site, the slant against the GOP was equally evident in print. The Washington Post and New York Times, the site said, "covered victims of the government shutdown over victims of Obamacare by a margin of 100 to 1."

Media Matters, the progressive research center that monitors conservative media, has yet to publish a similar study on the shutdown coverage.

The MRC study did not include cable news, which had mostly wall-to-wall coverage of the shutdown since it began on Oct. 1. CNN, for example, ran on-screen shutdown and debt ceiling deadline clocks for virtually the entire impasse and consistently featured interviews with moderate Republicans who disagreed with the tea party's tactic.

"I know you have the counter on your screen right now that talks about how many hours we've been in the shutdown," Republican Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, a tea party conservative, said on CNN on Oct. 10. "I would suggest that CNN also put up a counter of the debt clock, about how quickly we're accumulating debt. It's frightening when people see how fast that's accumulating."

Fox News' approach to covering the shutdown, on the other hand, was to pretend it wasn't a shutdown at all. According to the cable news network, it was more of a "slimdown."

The MRC study also did not look at Sunday morning talk shows, which have featured a parade of congressional lawmakers arguing for and against the shutdown in recent weeks.

On CBS on Thursday morning, “Face the Nation” anchor Bob Schieffer declared Obama the clear winner in the shutdown.

“The president won this thing,” Schieffer said.



"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/19/2013 12:09:39 AM

Al Gore: “Carbon Bubble” Is Going to Burst – Avoid Oil Stocks

By | Daily Ticker7 hours ago



It’s no surprise that former Vice President Al Gore isn’t a fan of big oil. Gore received the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize for "informing the world of the dangers posed by climate change" and currently is chairman of The Climate Reality Project, a non-profit devoted to solving the climate crisis.

But Gore is also an investor – he’s co-founder and chairman of Generation Investment Management and a senior partner at Kleiner Perkins – and believes fossil fuels are almost as bad for your portfolio as they are for the planet.

“We have a carbon bubble,” Gore tells me in the accompanying video. “Bubbles by definition involve a lot of asset owners and investors who don’t see what in retrospect becomes blindingly obvious. And this carbon bubble is going to burst.”

Related: Energy Independence Is A Dumb Idea: Berkshire Hathaway Vice-Chair

Specifically, Gore cites the estimated $7 trillion in carbon assets on the books of multinational energy companies. “The valuation of those companies and their assets is now based on the assumption that all of those carbon assets will be sold and burned,” he says. “They are not going to be burned. They cannot be burned and will not be burned. No more than one-third can ever possibly be burned without destroying the future.”

By 'carbon assets', Gore refers to the oil and gas reserves controlled by publicly traded energy companies; all these fossil fuels have carbon as their primary element. He didn't specify, but it appears Gore got the $7 trillion valuation on those assets from this report from Carbon Tracker, a non-profit focused on climate change policy.

According to Gore, these carbon assets are today’s equivalent of subprime mortgages, featuring “absurd valuations” based on a “self-serving allusion” that the carbon-based energy sector is sustainable in the long-term.

Related: As Syria Turmoil Escalates, Where's Worry of $200 Oil?

“People can make short-term profits playing the psychology of the markets,” he continues. “But if you’re a long-term investor and you do not take into account the stranded-assets potential for carbon-based equities and debt instruments, in my view you’re making a mistake.”

Think what you want about Gore (or global warming) but he’s been incredibly successful in business since leaving public office: Gore’s net worth tops $200 million, according to Bloomberg, nearly as much as 2012 GOP Presidential candidate Mitt Romney.

Go to Yahoo Screen to see The Daily Ticker's full interview with Al Gore.

Aaron Task is the host of The Daily Ticker and Editor-in-Chief of Yahoo! Finance. You can follow him on Twitter at @aarontask or email him at altask@yahoo.com

More from The Daily Ticker

Income Inequality Is the Enemy of Economic Growth: Robert Reich





The former vice president says one sector's $7 trillion worth is based on faulty assumptions. Equivalent to subprime mortgages




"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/19/2013 10:06:57 AM

Prominent British Muslims warned over 'Shebab' video

AFP

London-based imam and journalist Ajmal Masroor, shown in a file picture speaking to the media in Harrow, west London, wrote on his Facebook page that police had told him "to be more vigilant" (AFP Photo/Leon Neal)

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London (AFP) - Several prominent British Muslims said police have warned they may be in danger, after they were named as enemies of Islam in a video purportedly made by extremists linked to Somalia's Shebab militants.

London's Metropolitan Police said it was investigating the hour-long film, which was posted on YouTube on Wednesday but has since been removed.

"We're aware of the video reportedly released by al-Shebab," a Scotland Yard spokesman told AFP.

"We are currently assessing its content. A number of individuals have been spoken to following the release of the video."

At least four Muslim commentators -- all of whom have spoken out against extremism -- said they had been visited by police after being named in the film.

The US-based monitor SITE Intelligence Group had identified the video as having been produced by the Shebab, the Somali group that claimed responsibility for a bloody attack at a Nairobi shopping mall last month.

Reportedly narrated by a man with a British accent, it singled out the commentators as having "mutilated the teachings of Islam", according to the Guardian newspaper.

Ajmal Masroor, a London-based imam and journalist, wrote on his Facebook page that police had told him "to be more vigilant".

"The basic message... was that my life was in imminent danger from the terrorists," he wrote.

He added: "I shall speak out loud and clearly against extremism and terrorism no matter how many threats I receive."

Mohammed Ansar, a filmmaker and journalist, said police were now regularly patrolling outside his home.

"In between locksmiths, security people and interviews," he wrote on his Twitter page.

"It is quite a thing to have your faith and values truly put to the test. To have your life and those you love, at risk. Quite a thing."

Commentator Mohammed Shafiq and Usama Hasan, a senior researcher for the anti-extremist think-tank Quilliam, also said they had received visits from the police.

The video was titled "The Woolwich Attack: It's an Eye for an Eye" in reference to the British soldier who was hacked to death in Woolwich, southeast London, on May 22.

Two Muslim converts are due to stand trial for the murder next month.

The video encouraged Muslims to carry out attacks on British soil, according to reports, as well as identifying 11 Britons who it said had died fighting for the Shebab.


Influential UK Muslims warned over video


Officials say the threatening video was purportedly made by extremists tied to Shebab militants.
Journalist urged 'to be more vigilant'


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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