This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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“Irresponsible, greedy companies cannot be allowed to build a dangerous, climate-destroying deepwater disaster along our Texas Gulf Coast,” said one organizer.
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“The people of Pennsylvania deserve to know how Oz would vote on this bill if he were in the U.S. Senate.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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An open letter organized by CodePink calls on U.S. President Joe Biden to abandon the Trump administration’s hostile posture toward the Caribbean island.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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“If this contract is presented to our members in its current form, it will not pass,” said one union spokesperson. Workers want to be able “to take a sick day or vacation day without the fear of termination.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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Nearly one out of every 150 individuals on Earth was enslaved last year, including roughly 28 million in forced labor and 22 million in forced marriages.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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“Workers are more productive than ever, but their pay hasn’t kept pace while top 1% wages have skyrocketed,” says the Economic Policy Institute.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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“The planet is roasting in record heat, forest fires are raging, the Great Salt Lake is drying up, and yet the Forest Service is willing to make all these problems worse by paving the way for more oil production,” said one climate campaigner.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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“We really could be looking at a very substantial reduction in that horrendous burden of malaria,” said one of the researchers involved.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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“Republicans and their corporate interest backers have imposed state laws with only one goal: destroy unions and discourage workers from organizing,” said the Massachusetts Democrat.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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The former U.S. president’s authoritarian rhetoric generated alarm, with one historian noting that the term “iron fist” was favored by Italian dictator Benito Mussolini and used to describe Germany’s Nazi Party.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres endorsed the nuclear watchdog’s new report, warning that any damage “to Zaporizhzhia—or to any other nuclear facility in Ukraine—could spell catastrophe.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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“This special master opinion is so bad it’s hard to know where to begin,” said one legal scholar.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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“The response to a water crisis can’t be turning the city water supply into a for-profit industry.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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By claiming that Giorgia Meloni becoming prime minister would represent progress for women, “Hillary is half-endorsing the fascist takeover in Italy the rest of us are desperately working against,” said one filmmaker.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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The failure to provide updated guidance on the federal government’s onerous “undue hardship” standard is “a severe problem for many borrowers who are in or on the brink of bankruptcy.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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This story originally appeared in Common Dreams on Aug. 30, 2022. It is shared here under a Creative Commons license.
As many as 180,000 people in Jackson, Mississippi, will not have access to safe running water for the foreseeable future, state officials said Monday night—the latest manifestation of a longstanding crisis in which the city’s residents have been made to suffer the consequences of chronically underfunded infrastructure, compounded by a worsening climate emergency.
“Do not drink the water,” Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves said at a press conference. “In too many cases, it is raw water from the reservoir being pushed through the pipes. Be smart, protect yourself, protect your family, preserve water, look out for your fellow man, and look out for your neighbors.”
Reeves, a Republican who has refused to prioritize upgrading Jackson’s failing infrastructure throughout his two years in office, declared a state of emergency and announced, “We need to provide water for up to 180,000 people for an unknown period of time.”
Jackson—a majority-Black city where roughly a quarter of residents live below the poverty line—had already been “without clean, drinkable water” for weeks, Mississippi Free Press reported Monday, referring to the rolling precautionary boil-water notice issued by the state health department amid the ongoing winterization of the O.B. Curtis Water Treatment Plant.
“This is a very different situation from a boil-water notice,” Reeves continued. “Until it is fixed, we do not have reliable running water at scale. The city cannot produce enough water to fight fires, to flush toilets, and to meet other critical needs. The Mississippi Emergency Management Agency will take the state’s lead on distributing drinking water and non-drinking water to residents of the City of Jackson.”
Jackson—a majority-Black city where roughly a quarter of residents live below the poverty line—had already been “without clean, drinkable water” for weeks, Mississippi Free Press reported Monday, referring to the rolling precautionary boil-water notice issued by the state health department amid the ongoing winterization of the O.B. Curtis Water Treatment Plant.
Now, Mississippi’s capital has “mostly lost water pressure, with operational collapses at O.B. Curtis reducing the flow of water through the city’s distribution system to the degree that residences and businesses across the city have little or no water at all,” the nonprofit news outlet noted. Whatever water does come out is unsafe and must be boiled for a minimum of three minutes.
Jackson Mayor Chokwe Lumumba blamed the loss of water pressure on floodwaters, saying during a Monday briefing that the increased intake of water from the Ross Barnett Reservoir had caused failures at the treatment plant.
According to Mississippi Free Press, “A lack of visibility at O.B. Curtis has Mississippi State Department of Health leadership unable to answer how much water is currently flowing out of the plant and into Jackson’s pipes.”
On Saturday, Lumumba urged residents to “get out as soon as possible” after days of record-breaking rainfall caused the Pearl River to rise to dangerous heights. The river crested at nearly 36 feet on Monday—well above flood stage—inundating streets and at least one home in the city before starting to recede.
While the recent flooding—an example of the kind of event that scientists have long warned will become more common and intense due to planet-heating emissions—has made the situation worse, “we didn’t get to this total crisis point overnight,” journalist Ashton Pittman wrote Monday on social media.
“It’s been decades in the making,” he added. “This is the predictable result.”
This isn’t the first time that an extreme weather disaster has exacerbated Jackson’s water woes.
O.B. Curtis is undergoing a winterization process because last February and March, most of the city’s residents were forced to endure an entire month without clean running water—during the COVID-19 pandemic—after a historic freeze damaged systems that Lumumba said were never intended to withstand “days of ice storms and sub-zero temperatures.”
In an effort to improve its aging infrastructure, Jackson voters in 2014 approved a 1% sales tax increase, but that levy raises just $13 million in annual revenue—a small fraction of the $1 billion Lumumba says the city needs to fix its water system.
The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act signed into law by President Joe Biden last November provides $429 million to fund water system improvements for the entire state of Mississippi, leaving Jackson with more resources but still far from enough.
Sen. Roger Wicker was Mississippi’s only Republican member of Congress to join Rep. Bennie Thompson (D) in voting for the IIJA.
Last February, Reeves acknowledged that Jackson’s water problems can be attributed to “50 years of negligence and ignoring the challenges of the pipes and the system.”
“That 50 years of deferred maintenance is not something that we’re going to fix in the next six to eight hours,” he added.
But rather than doing everything in his power to push for the investments needed to ensure that Jackson’s residents have guaranteed access to clean drinking water, Reeves has advocated for completely eliminating the state income tax, signing a $524 million tax cut earlier this year.
“The Jackson water crisis never ended,” journalist Nick Judin tweeted Monday night. “When O.B. Curtis is back online and this new acute phase is past, the Jackson water crisis will not be over.”
This post was originally published on The Real News Network.
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“Comprehensive ownership information is essential for effective oversight and for families to decide where to place their loved ones,” said one researcher.
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“With many communities hit with 1,000-year floods, exceptional drought, and historic heat this year, it shows that the climate crisis is not a future threat but something we must address today.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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Right-wingers have relentlessly “sowed lies” about what Chile’s proposed constitution would do, says the former president of the constituent assembly that drafted it. In just four days, voters will decide whether to approve or reject it.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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“Our time for the bigger fires is coming up,” said one meteorologist based in Southern California.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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“You must choose a healthier, more equitable pandemic response,” the coalition wrote in a letter. “We all deserve better.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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“We didn’t get to this total crisis point overnight,” said one journalist. “It’s been decades in the making. This is the predictable result.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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If the world halted planet-heating pollution today, the ice sheet would lose more than 3% of its mass in the coming decades, scientists warn. To prevent even worse outcomes, immediate climate action is needed.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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“More than 4,000 of our members stood strong on the picket line, our community joined the fight, and we won victories” on multiple issues, said a Columbus Education Association spokesperson.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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This is a “climate-induced humanitarian disaster of epic proportions,” said the country’s climate change minister.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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“This report shows that communities have repeatedly been let down by a system geared towards protecting people in wealthy countries.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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U.S. Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart instructed the Justice Department to publish a redacted version of its affidavit by noon on Friday.
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This story originally appeared in Common Dreams on Aug. 24, 2022. It is shared here under a Creative Commons license.
Record-breaking extreme heat and historic droughts continued to wreak havoc in China and Europe on Wednesday, highlighting the life-threatening reverberations of the global climate emergency and underscoring the need to rapidly transition away from its primary driver: fossil fuels.
Chinese government officials recently declared a nationwide drought emergency for the first time in nearly a decade. An emergency notice issued Tuesday warned that the fall harvest is under “severe threat” and urged local authorities to ensure the careful use of “every unit of water.”
In addition to imperiling food production, a shortage of rain during China’s longest and most intense heatwave since record-keeping began in 1961 is exacerbating forest fires and causing rivers and lakes to dry up—reducing drinking water supplies, limiting hydropower-generated electricity, and disrupting shipping.
During what is usually flood season, “we have dry season water levels, or below typical dry season water levels,” Even Pay, an agricultural analyst at Trivium China, told The Guardian on Wednesday. “The conditions are very, very extreme and there’s no question that there will be some loss of crops.” Also, she added, “I think we’re going to start to see reports of livestock farmers getting hit.”
In addition to imperiling food production, a shortage of rain during China’s longest and most intense heatwave since record-keeping began in 1961 is exacerbating forest fires and causing rivers and lakes to dry up—reducing drinking water supplies, limiting hydropower-generated electricity, and disrupting shipping.
Large swaths of China have been baking since June 13. After more than 70 days of scorching temperatures, there is little relief on the horizon.
“China’s National Meteorological Center downgraded its national heat warning to ‘orange’ on Wednesday after 12 consecutive days of ‘red alerts,’” Reuters reported, “but temperatures are still expected to exceed 40°C (104°F) in Chongqing, Sichuan, and other parts of the Yangtze basin.”
Amid record-low precipitation in the basin and soaring temperatures that are increasing evaporation, the Yangtze River’s water levels have fallen to half of their historic average. Tributaries of the world’s third-largest river, which provides drinking water to 400 million people, have also been harmed by extreme heat and a monthslong decrease in rainfall throughout the basin.
With hydropower capacity sharply curtailed and demand for air conditioning surging, rolling blackouts have become common. Last week, factories in Sichuan, a province where 94 million people rely on hydropower to meet over 80% of their energy needs, reduced production or shut down completely after being ordered to ration electricity.
“Sichuan is a major manufacturing hub and the curbing of electricity to factories has had global impacts, affecting suppliers of Toyota, Volkswagen, Tesla, Intel, and Apple, as well as pesticide and solar panel manufacturers,” Grist reported Tuesday. “On Monday, companies were asked to continue rationing electricity until Thursday.”
As Bloomberg noted recently, “The extreme weather in China is worsening a global power crunch and squeezing commodity supplies at a time when nations are struggling to cope with the upheavals caused by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.”
Although the ongoing crisis underscores why swiftly eliminating the burning of fossil fuels and ramping up clean energy is necessary, it is poised to ironically lead to more greenhouse gas pollution as China looks to offset drought-induced cuts to hydropower by increasing coal production.
As for protecting its grain harvest, China is turning to geoengineering. Agriculture Minister Tang Renjian said last Friday that “authorities will ‘try to increase rain’ by seeding clouds with chemicals and spraying crops with a ‘water retaining agent’ to limit evaporation,” the Associated Press reported.
China is far from alone in experiencing dangerously hot and dry conditions this summer.
A study published Tuesday found that Europe is in the midst of its worst drought in at least 500 years. According to the latest report from the European Drought Observatory, 47% of the continent is under a warning for soil moisture deficits, and 17% is in a state of alert because vegetation is affected.
“The severe drought affecting many regions of Europe since the beginning of the year has been further expanding and worsening as of early August,” the report said, adding that abnormally hot and dry conditions are likely to keep pummeling parts of western Europe and the Mediterranean until November.
Weeks of extreme heat across much of Europe have sparked wildfires, damaged crops, and led to thousands of deaths. As in China and the United States, blistering temperatures have also intensified historic droughts, causing rivers and reservoirs to shrivel with adverse effects on electricity generation and shipping routes.
“People always thought that water is unlimited, but it really isn’t,” José Marengo, a climatologist at the Brazilian government’s disaster monitoring center, recently told Reuters.
According to Grist:
Hydropower is the largest source of clean energy in the world, but last year dry spells in places like the southwestern United States, China, and Brazil created significant disruptions in the supply, and the International Energy Agency predicts that global hydropower expansion will slow down this decade. Brazil, which in 2021 sourced 61% of its electricity from hydropower, had to cut water flows into hydroelectric dams to a 91-year low during its drought that year.
Drought-induced power shortages “could easily be used as an argument to build more coal plants,” warned Li Shuo, a climate campaigner with Greenpeace in Beijing. But a summer of extreme weather across the globe may also encourage more robust climate action, she added.
Preserving a habitable planet depends in large part on cooperation between the US and China—the world’s leading emitters of carbon dioxide.
The prospects for green collaboration, however, have dimmed in the weeks since US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s provocative trip to Taiwan, a breakaway province that China considers part of its territory.
In response to Pelosi’s visit, which was followed by a larger congressional delegation to Taiwan, Beijing canceled climate talks with Washington.
Mark Beeson, a professor at the University of Technology Sydney who studies global climate politics, told Reuters Wednesday that if the current manifestations of extreme weather in both countries “don’t focus minds, it’s hard to know what will.”
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“We are sad and angry,” said one campaigner. “Billions of people rely on healthy oceans, and world leaders have failed all of them.”
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.
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“Howard Schultz, the billionaire CEO of Starbucks, must end his war against his employees, recognize the union, and negotiate a first contract,” said the Vermont progressive.
This post was originally published on Common Dreams – Breaking News & Views for the Progressive Community.