Sunday, April 11, 2010

DID SOMEONE SAY PATRIARCHY?


new york tmes
OP-ED COLUMNIST

Worlds Without Women

Published: April 10, 2010
WASHINGTON
Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times
Maureen Dowd

Related

Times Topics: Roman Catholic Church

Readers' Comments

Readers shared their thoughts on this article.
When I was in Saudi Arabia, I had tea and sweets with a group of educated and sophisticated young professional women.
I asked why they were not more upset about living in a country where women’s rights were strangled, an inbred and autocratic state more like an archaic men’s club than a modern nation. They told me, somewhat defensively, that the kingdom was moving at its own pace, glacial as that seemed to outsiders.
How could such spirited women, smart and successful on every other level, acquiesce in their own subordination?
I was puzzling over that one when it hit me: As a Catholic woman, I was doing the same thing.
I, too, belonged to an inbred and wealthy men’s club cloistered behind walls and disdaining modernity.
I, too, remained part of an autocratic society that repressed women and ignored their progress in the secular world.
I, too, rationalized as men in dresses allowed our religious kingdom to decay and to cling to outdated misogynistic rituals, blind to the benefits of welcoming women’s brains, talents and hearts into their ancient fraternity.
To circumscribe women, Saudi Arabia took Islam’s moral codes and orthodoxy to extremes not outlined by Muhammad; the Catholic Church took its moral codes and orthodoxy to extremes not outlined by Jesus. In the New Testament, Jesus is surrounded by strong women and never advocates that any woman — whether she’s his mother or a prostitute — be treated as a second-class citizen.
Negating women is at the heart of the church’s hideous — and criminal — indifference to the welfare of boys and girls in its priests’ care. Lisa Miller writes in Newsweek’s cover story about the danger of continuing to marginalize women in a disgraced church that has Mary at the center of its founding story:
“In the Roman Catholic corporation, the senior executives live and work, as they have for a thousand years, eschewing not just marriage, but intimacy with women ... not to mention any chance to familiarize themselves with the earthy, primal messiness of families and children.” No wonder that, having closed themselves off from women and everything maternal, they treated children as collateral damage, a necessary sacrifice to save face for Mother Church.
And the sins of the fathers just keep coming. On Friday, The Associated Press broke the latest story pointing the finger of blame directly at Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, quoting from a letter written in Latin in which he resisted pleas to defrock a California priest who had sexually molested children.
As the longtime Vatican enforcer, the archconservative Ratzinger — now Pope Benedict XVI — moved avidly to persecute dissenters. But with molesters, he was plodding and even merciful.
As the A.P. reported, the Oakland diocese recommended defrocking Father Stephen Kiesle in 1981. The priest had pleaded no contest and was sentenced to three years’ probation in 1978 in a case in which he was accused of tying up and molesting two boys in a church rectory.
In 1982, the Oakland diocese got what it termed a “rather curt” response from the Vatican. It wasn’t until 1985 that “God’s Rottweiler” finally got around to addressing the California bishop’s concern. He sent his letter urging the diocese to give the 38-year-old pedophile “as much paternal care as possible” and to consider “his young age.” Ratzinger should have been more alarmed by the young age of the priest’s victims; that’s what maternal care would have entailed.
As in so many other cases, the primary concern seemed to be shielding the church from scandal. Chillingly, outrageously, the future pope told the Oakland bishop to consider the “good of the universal church” before granting the priest’s own request to give up the collar — even though the bishop had advised Rome that the scandal would likely be greater if the priest were not punished.
While the Vatican sat on the case — asking the diocese to resubmit the files, saying they might have been lost — Kiesle volunteered as a youth minister at a church north of Oakland. The A.P. also reported that even after the priest was finally defrocked in 1987, he continued to volunteer with children in the Oakland diocese; repeated warnings to church officials were ignored.
The Vatican must realize that the church’s belligerent, resentful and paranoid response to the global scandal is not working because it now says it will cooperate with secular justice systems and that the pope will have more meetings with victims. It is too little, too late.
The church that through the ages taught me and other children right from wrong did not know right from wrong when it came to children. Crimes were swept under the rectory rug, and molesters were protected to molest again for the “good of the universal church.” And that is bad, very bad — a mortal sin.
The church has had theological schisms. This is an emotional schism. The pope is morally compromised. Take it from a sister.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

EXAMPLES OF THE SOCIOPATHY OF SOME of THE LEFT BRAIN/ PATRIARCHAL POWERS THAT BE


Daily links to top stories in the news about environmental health.
Up to 250,000 Gulf War veterans have 'unexplained medical symptoms'. As many as 250,000 veterans of the first Gulf War "have persistent unexplained medical symptoms" whose cause may never be found, although genetic testing and functional brain imaging may eventually shed some light on the problem. Washington Post [Registration Required] 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/09/AR2010040904712.html

Helena Chemical Co. wins suit against community activist. On Wednesday, a jury found a southern New Mexico activist guilty of defamation and harassment against a chemical company that he and 22 community members had sued, alleging that the company’s emissions were sickening local children. New Mexico Independent, New Mexico.
http://newmexicoindependent.com/51155/helena-chemical-company-wins-case-against-community-activist

Last four Upper Big Branch miners found dead. Four miners unaccounted for since a massive underground explosion Monday were found dead early this morning, pushing the death toll at Massey Energy's Upper Big Branch Mine to 29 and making it the worst U.S. coal-mining disaster in 40 years. Charleston Gazette, West Virginia.
http://sundaygazettemail.com/News/201004090857

Massey ignored ventilation citations in months before blast. In the months before the deadly explosion at Massey Energy's Upper Big Branch Mine, company officials were engaged in major disputes with state and federal regulators over serious ventilation problems at the sprawling underground mine. Charleston Gazette, West Virginia.
http://wvgazette.com/News/201004090772

Mines avoid crackdowns by challenging safety citations. A surge in the number of challenges to mine safety citations has clogged a federal appeals process, allowing 32 coal mines to avoid tougher enforcement measures last year, government safety officials said Friday. Washington Post [Registration Required] 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/04/09/AR2010040905653.html

Massey’s Blankenship fought regulators, town, maid. Don Blankenship, chief executive officer of Massey Energy Co., has fought with mine regulators, unions, residents of his town and even his personal maid. He has personally gone into mines to persuade workers to abandon union organizing efforts. Bloomberg News
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601108&sid=aSOuh0fn.YnU

WALL STREET TAKES THE CAKE


MOTHER JONES
April 9, 2010


THIS WEEK IN THE BLOGOSPHERE
Back Already, Wall Street? That Was Quick.
Guess what? Wall Street is back on top!
Over the past year public attention has mostly focused on CEO pay in the financial sector, but a few days ago the Wall Street Journal reported that this was, in essence, just a feint. The top guys may have taken very public pay cuts, but they can afford to take one for the team now and again. Underneath all the PR, though, it was a banner year:
Leading firms paid out $140 billion in compensation and benefits, the highest number in history, based on a final tally of the pay disclosures at 38 financial-services firms. That figure […] represented an increase from $123 billion earned by financial professionals in 2008 and $137 billion in 2007.
You might well wonder, what with the rest of the country mired in a historic recession, why Wall Street is doing so well. The answer is pretty simple: The government bailed them out and they're now back to their usual tricks: making huge profits based on highly leveraged investments. Except now it's even easier. Interest rates are so low that even an incompetent banker could hardly help but make money these days.
In one sense, this was inevitable. We didn't have much choice but to rescue the banking sector, after all. Like water or gas or electricity, it's just too vital to the rest of the economy to allow it to fail. And if you want to make banks more solvent, that means letting them earn a lot of money.
But make no mistake: That money is the result of deliberate government policy, and without it Wall Street would still be on its knees gasping for breath. It's one thing to decide that this is in no one's best interest and we need to nurse them back to health via robust earnings. It's quite another to see those earnings used not to build up bigger capital cushions, but to provide huge paydays for the industry that caused the recession in the first place.

Friday, March 26, 2010

A WORLD WITHOUT CORAL REEFS IS UNIMAGINABLE

Death of Coral Reefs Could Devastate Nations

The disappearance of coral reefs could mean more hunger, poverty, political instability

By BRIAN SKOLOFF

The Associated Press

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.


Coral reefs are dying, and scientists and governments around the world are contemplating what will happen if they disappear altogether.
The idea positively scares them.
Coral reefs are part of the foundation of the ocean food chain. Nearly half the fish the world eats make their homes around them. Hundreds of millions of people worldwide — by some estimates, 1 billion across Asia alone — depend on them for their food and their livelihoods.
If the reefs vanished, experts say, hunger, poverty and political instability could ensue.
"Whole nations will be threatened in terms of their existence," said Carl Gustaf Lundin of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature.
Numerous studies predict coral reefs are headed for extinction worldwide, largely because of global warming, pollution and coastal development, but also because of damage from bottom-dragging fishing boats and the international trade in jewelry and souvenirs made of coral.
At least 19 percent of the world's coral reefs are already gone, including some 50 percent of those in the Caribbean. An additional 15 percent could be dead within 20 years, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Old Dominion University professor Kent Carpenter, director of a worldwide census of marine species, warned that if global warming continues unchecked, all corals could be extinct within 100 years.
"You could argue that a complete collapse of the marine ecosystem would be one of the consequences of losing corals," Carpenter said. "You're going to have a tremendous cascade effect for all life in the oceans."
Exotic and colorful, coral reefs aren't lifeless rocks; they are made up of living creatures that excrete a hard calcium carbonate exoskeleton. Once the animals die, the rocky structures erode, depriving fish of vital spawning and feeding grounds.
Experts say cutting back on carbon emissions to arrest rising sea temperatures and acidification of the water, declaring some reefs off limits to fishing and diving, and controlling coastal development and pollution could help reverse, or at least stall, the tide.
Florida, for instance, has the largest unbroken "no-take" zone in the continental U.S. — about 140 square miles off limits to fishing in and around Dry Tortugas National Park, a cluster of islands and reefs teeming with marine life about 70 miles off Key West.
Many fishermen oppose such restrictions. And other environmental measures have run into resistance at the state, local, national and international level. On Sunday, during a gathering of the Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora, restrictions proposed by the U.S. and Sweden on the trade of some coral species were rejected.
If reefs were to disappear, commonly consumed species of grouper and snapper could become just memories. Oysters, clams and other creatures that are vital to many people's diets would also suffer. And experts say commercial fisheries would fail miserably at meeting demand for seafood.
"Fish will become a luxury good," said Cassandra deYoung of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. "You already have a billion people who are facing hunger, and this is just going to aggravate the situation," she added. "We will not be able to maintain food security around the world."
The economic damage could be enormous. Ocean fisheries provide direct employment to at least 38 million people worldwide, with an additional 162 million people indirectly involved in the industry, according to the U.N.
Coral reefs draw scuba divers, snorkelers and other tourists to seaside resorts in Florida, Hawaii, Southeast Asia and the Caribbean and help maintain some of the world's finest sandy beaches by absorbing energy from waves. Without the reefs, hotels, restaurants and other businesses that cater to tourists could suffer financially.
Many Caribbean countries get nearly half their gross national product from visitors seeking tropical underwater experiences.
People all over the world could pay the price if reefs were to disappear, since some types of coral and marine species that rely on reefs are being used by the pharmaceutical industry to develop possible cures for cancer, arthritis and viruses.
"A world without coral reefs is unimaginable," said Jane Lubchenco, a marine biologist who heads NOAA. "Reefs are precious sources of food, medicine and livelihoods for hundreds of thousands around the world. They are also special places of renewal and recreation for thousands more. Their exotic beauty and diverse bounty are global treasures."
———
Associated Press Science Writer Seth Borenstein contributed to this report from Washington.

Saturday, March 6, 2010

WATER, WATER ......from ABOVE THE FOLD, today


Vietnam feels the heat of a 100-year drought. Water levels in the nation's rice bowl have fallen to their lowest points in nearly 20 years, threatening the livelihoods of tens of millions of people who depend on the river basin for farming, fishing and transportation. The biggest problem, however, is not the water. It's the salt. Time Magazine
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1969630,00.html







Groundwater depleting at alarming rate: Report. If current trends of acute groundwater use continue, 60% of all acquifers in India could run dry in 20 years or will be in a critical condition, a World Bank report launched on Friday said. Bombay Economic Times, India.
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/economy/indicators/Groundwater-depleting-at-alarming-rate-Report/articleshow/5649017.cms


Friday, March 5, 2010

THE FINANCIAL TIMES - CLIMATE? WORSE THAN THE IPCC REPORTS

Financial Times FT.com

Review says global warming is man-made

By Clive Cookson in London
Published: March 4 2010 22:16 | Last updated: March 4 2010 22:16
The case for man-made global warming is even stronger than the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change maintained in its official assessments, according to the first scientific review published since December’s Copenhagen conference and subsequent attacks on the IPCC’s credibility.
An international research team led by the UK Met Office spent the past year analysing more than 100 recent scientific papers to update the last IPCC assessment, released in 2007.
Although the review itself preceded the sceptics’ assault on climate science over the past three months, its launch in London on Thursday marks a resumption of the campaign by mainstream scientists to show that man-made releases of greenhouse gases are causing potentially dangerous global warming.
“The fingerprint of human influence has been detected in many different aspects of observed climate changes,” said Peter Stott, head of climate monitoring at the Met Office Hadley Centre for Climate Research. “Natural variability, from the sun, volcanic eruptions or natural cycles, cannot explain recent warming.”
The review, published in the journal Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, found several “fingerprints” of warming that had not been established by the time of the last IPCC assessment but were now unambiguously present.
One is human-induced climate in the Antarctic, the last continent where regional warming has been demonstrated.
There is also new evidence of warming in the oceans, which is having several effects. The subtropical Atlantic is becoming saltier; the extra salinity could in turn alter ocean currents.
Another effect of ocean warming is increasing evaporation, leading to more humidity in the atmosphere and changing rainfall patterns.
“The whole water cycle is changing,” said Mr Stott. “The wet regions are tending to get wetter and the dry regions are getting dryer.”
Globally, this means less rainfall in the tropics and more at higher latitudes, although Mr Stott said there was much regional variation in the pattern, which scientists were still working to make sense of.
The review is based on a forensic comparison of the pattern of changes expected from man-made warming with those that would result from other factors such as changing solar radiation and purely natural variations.
A separate study by Russian and US scientists, published today in the journal Science, shows that methane, a powerful greenhouse gas, is escaping from the seafloor of the warming Arctic Ocean more rapidly than had been suspected.

WHAT DOES THIS SAY ABOUT OUR BRAINS THAT ARE US?


MOTHER JONES
March 5, 2010


THIS WEEK IN THE BLOGOSPHERE
Our Nihilistic Senate
Earlier this week, Barbara Keenan was approved by the Senate as a judge on the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals. The vote was 99-0, but it came only after her floor vote had been delayed 124 days due an anonymous hold. Whose hold was it? After all, every single senator voted to confirm her. No one knows.

This came at the same time that Kentucky Sen. Jim Bunning (R) managed to hold up an emergency extension of unemployment benefits for over a week by—well, let's not mince words. He did it by throwing a temper tantrum. When the bill finally made it to the floor, it passed 78-19.

Then there was last year's unemployment bill, which Republicans filibustered three separate times, forcing the Senate to take five weeks to pass it. On the fourth and final vote, it passed 98-0.

Filibusters and holds, once occasional tools used only against major legislation or especially noxious nominees, have become routine during Barack Obama's presidency. Republicans filibuster virtually every bill, no matter how small, and hold up nearly every nominee, often for the pettiest of reasons. There was, for example, no surgeon general in place during the H1N1 pandemic because of a Republican hold. Chuck Grassley, the senator from the corn state of Iowa, put a hold on Obama's ambassador to Brazil, because he was annoyed over a comment about tariffs on sugar-based ethanol. Richard Shelby of Alabama put a blanket hold on all Obama nominees in a fit of pique over the handling of a couple of federal contracts in his state. He eventually relented, but then Bunning did the same thing during the fight over unemployment benefits.

In an Atlantic article about America's future, written after he had spent three years in China, James Fallows concluded that we are, to a large extent, still the envy of the world. With one exception: "One thing I've never heard in my time overseas is 'I wish we had a Senate like yours.'" And it's no wonder. It's not just that passing health care reform is next to impossible; that was always to be expected. But we also can't make progress on climate change. We can't pass financial reform—even after an economic meltdown unrivaled since the Great Depression. And we were only barely able to pass a small, watered-down stimulus bill last year, even as unemployment was rising toward 10 percent.

The plain fact is that the US Senate is broken. A small minority can—and does—obstruct every single bill introduced. A single person can—and does—prevent entire cabinet departments from being staffed. And even in the rare cases when something is allowed to pass, it takes weeks or months, thanks to these now-routine delaying tactics. The Republican Party has decided to raze Congress and then tap into populist rage over the fact that Congress can't get anything done. It's a cynical, almost nihilistic strategy, and not one that a great nation should allow.

The Senate needs to be reformed. It needs to work again. The only question is: how?

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Jeffrey Sachs in the UK's Guardian


 

Climate sceptics are recycled critics of controls on tobacco and acid rain

We must not be distracted from science's urgent message: we are fuelling dangerous changes in Earth's climate

• Climate sceptics give "scepticism" a bad name
• Climate scientists retract sea level paper
Planet Earth
Critics of climate change science are few in number but their attacks are aggressive. Photograph: Corbis
In the weeks before and after the Copenhagen climate change conference last December, the science of climate change came under harsh attack by critics who contend that climate scientists have deliberately suppressed evidence — and that the science itself is severely flawed. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change(IPCC), the global group of experts charged with assessing the state of climate science, has been accused of bias.
The global public is disconcerted by these attacks. If experts cannot agree that there is a climate crisis, why should governments spend billions of dollars to address it?
The fact is that the critics — who are few in number but aggressive in their attacks — are deploying tactics that they have honed for more than 25 years. During their long campaign, they have greatly exaggerated scientific disagreements in order to stop action on climate change, with special interests like Exxon Mobil footing the bill.
Many books have recently documented the games played by the climate-change deniers. Merchants of Doubt, a new book by Naomi Oreskes and Erik Conway set for release in mid-2010, will be an authoritative account of their misbehaviour. The authors show that the same group of mischief-makers, given a platform by the free-market ideologues of The Wall Street Journal's editorial page, has consistently tried to confuse the public and discredit the scientists whose insights are helping to save the world from unintended environmental harm.
Today's campaigners against action on climate change are in many cases backed by the same lobbies, individuals, and organisations that sided with the tobacco industry to discredit the science linking smoking and lung cancer. Later, they fought the scientific evidence that sulphur oxides from coal-fired power plants were causing "acid rain." Then, when it was discovered that certain chemicals called chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) were causing the depletion of ozone in the atmosphere, the same groups launched a nasty campaign to discredit that science, too.
Later still, the group defended the tobacco giants against charges that second-hand smoke causes cancer and other diseases. And then, starting mainly in the 1980s, this same group took on the battle against climate change.
What is amazing is that, although these attacks on science have been wrong for 30 years, they still sow doubts about established facts. The truth is that there is big money backing the climate-change deniers, whether it is companies that don't want to pay the extra costs of regulation, or free-market ideologues opposed to any government controls.
The latest round of attacks involves two episodes. The first was the hacking of a climate-change research centre in England. The emails that were stolen suggested a lack of forthrightness in the presentation of some climate data. Whatever the details of this specific case, the studies in question represent a tiny fraction of the overwhelming scientific evidence that points to the reality and urgency of man-made climate change.
The second issue was a blatant error concerning glaciers that appeared in a major IPCC report. Here it should be understood that the IPCC issues thousands of pages of text. There are, no doubt, errors in those pages. But errors in the midst of a vast and complex report by the IPCC point to the inevitability of human shortcomings, not to any fundamental flaws in climate science.
When the emails and the IPCC error were brought to light, editorial writers at The Wall Street Journal launched a vicious campaign describing climate science as a hoax and a conspiracy. They claimed that scientists were fabricating evidence in order to obtain government research grants — a ludicrous accusation, I thought at the time, given that the scientists under attack have devoted their lives to finding the truth, and have certainly not become rich relative to their peers in finance and business.
But then I recalled that this line of attack — charging a scientific conspiracy to drum up "business" for science — was almost identical to that used by The Wall Street Journal and others in the past, when they fought controls on tobacco, acid rain, ozone depletion, second-hand smoke, and other dangerous pollutants. In other words, their arguments were systematic and contrived, not at all original to the circumstances.
We are witnessing a predictable process by ideologues and right-wing think tanks and publications to discredit the scientific process. Their arguments have been repeatedly disproved for 30 years — time after time — but their aggressive methods of public propaganda succeed in causing delay and confusion.
Climate change science is a wondrous intellectual activity. Great scientific minds have learned over the course of many decades to "read" the Earth's history, in order to understand how the climate system works. They have deployed brilliant physics, biology, and instrumentation (such as satellites reading detailed features of the Earth's systems) in order to advance our understanding.
And the message is clear: large-scale use of oil, coal, and gas is threatening the biology and chemistry of the planet. We are fuelling dangerous changes in Earth's climate and ocean chemistry, giving rise to extreme storms, droughts, and other hazards that will damage the food supply and the quality of life of the planet.
The IPCC and the climate scientists are telling us a crucial message. We need urgently to transform our energy, transport, food, industrial, and construction systems to reduce the dangerous human impact on the climate. It is our responsibility to listen, to understand the message, and then to act.
Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2010

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Huffington's Headline -- Unemployment 31% for the bottom 10%


Arianna Huffington: Band-Aids, Bipartisanship and Baby-Steps: How Not to Deal With a Jobs Crisis

2010-02-18-obamajobs.jpg
AP

Arianna Huffington: A stunning new study found that while the unemployment rate among those making over $150,000 was only 3 percent, the rate for those in the bottom 10 percent of income was a staggering 31 percent. Does anyone believe that we would be facing the same lack of urgency about the jobs crisis in Washington if it were the unemployment rate among the top 10 percent that was 31 percent? If one-third of television news producers, pundits, bankers, and lobbyists were unemployed, would the measures being proposed by the White House and Congress still be as pathetic as the ones we're seeing now? Of course not -- the sense of national emergency would be so great you'd practically be hearing air raid sirens howling. Instead we get baby steps, bipartisanship, and band-aids. Click here to read more.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Skeptical about Climate Change? -- Not So Fast -- Check out the stark evidence here

Take a few moments to look at the Extreme Ice Project:
http://www.extremeicesurvey.org/


or take time to watch the Nova program online:


http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/extremeice/

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

FROM THE UNION OF CONCERNED SCIENTISTS

Help UCS defend science

Dear jude,

Corporations, front groups, and climate deniers who oppose critical efforts to curb global warming are misleading the public and attacking climate science.
Rush Limbaugh:
"When I talk to people who believe in this global warming crap… it's fake science. They may have educations and degrees that say they are scientists, but they're not. They're political hacks and leftists."
        —December 11, 2009

UCS Factcheck:
The overwhelming consensus of more than 1,250 authors and 2,000 scientific expert reviewers from the Nobel Prize-winning Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, as well as 18 American scientific associations, is that global warming is observably happening and a growing threat to our world.

You can help UCS expose and challenge attacks on science—become a member today.
Click here to donate today.
The worst part is, they could win if we don't stop them. A recent poll found that almost 10 percent fewer Americans believe global warming is happening than just a year ago!

The Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) needs your help to expose and challenge these attacks on science. Please become a member of UCS today.
This all-out war on science is being waged by the oil and coal industry, vocal media pundits like Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck, and the media outlets who allow their fraudulent claims to go unchecked.

But we have two things our opponents don't—scientific facts and dedicated supporters like you!Please become a member of UCS today.
With your support, UCS is organizing scientists from around the country to beat back propaganda and educate decision makers and the public about the real facts on global warming.

But as you know, we don't have much time.Unchecked climate change could saddle taxpayers with hundreds of billions of dollars in damages—from flooding and storm damage to health care costs and agricultural losses.

We must act now to stand up to vocal global warming deniers and advance science-based solutions that can rein in global warming pollution. Please become a member of UCS today. 

With your membership donation, UCS will work to reduce U.S. global warming pollution by:

  • Increasing the nation's use of clean, renewable energy and decreasing its use of dirty coal.
     
  • Ensuring automakers meet new emission reduction and fuel economy standards while providing consumers with cleaner car options.
     
  • Advocating for sustainable agricultural practices that protect our air, water, and soil, and help reduce global warming emissions.
Thank you for your support of UCS and our work for a healthy environment and a safer world. Please become a member today.
  
Sincerely,
Kevin Knobloch
Kevin Knobloch
President
 

    P.S. When you become a member of UCS you join more than 75,000 people who know that global warming isn’t a matter of "belief." It's a fact based on scientific evidence.Help us defend science by becoming a member today.

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