http://select.nytimes.com/2006/08/03/opinion/03herbert.html?th&emc=th

Hot Enough Yet?

By BOB HERBERT
NY Times Op-Ed: August 3, 2006

The heat wave burned its way east from California, where it killed more than
100 people. It moved relentlessly across the nation's midsection, sparking
record-high temperatures in state after state, mimicking a heat wave that
killed more than 700 people in the Midwest in 1995.

For the past couple of days it has tormented the East Coast, draining power
systems and creating a hellish environment for the frail and infirm, and
especially for the elderly poor struggling to survive without the blessings
of air-conditioning.

You can't blame any single weather event on global warming. But with polar
bears drowning because they can't swim far enough to make it from one ice
floe to another; with the once-glorious snows of Kilimanjaro about to bring
down the final curtain on their long, long run; with the virtual
disappearance of Lake Chad in Africa, which was once the size of Lake Erie,
it may be time to get serious about trying to slow this catastrophic trend.

(It's also time to aggressively counter the dangerous nonsense of people
like Senator James Inhofe, the Oklahoma Republican who has been openly
contemptuous of the idea that human activity has contributed to global
warming, and Senator Conrad Burns, a Montana Republican whose head has
always had the habit of migrating to extremely peculiar places, in this
instance into the very hot sand.

(Senator Inhofe has said that "man-made global warming is the greatest hoax
ever perpetrated on the American people." Senator Burns, according to a
publication called "Environment and Energy Daily," shrugged the matter off
completely, saying: "You remember the ice age? It's been warming ever since,
and there ain't nothing we can do to stop it.")

As I'm writing this, the lights have been dimmed in much of The New York
Times Building, in accordance with the request of Mayor Michael Bloomberg
that New Yorkers conserve as much energy as possible. The temperature in the
city is right around 100 degrees.

It's certainly true that heat waves in July and August are not unusual. But
we need to keep in mind that the first six months of this year were the
warmest ever recorded in the United States. And that this summer, according
to the National Climatic Data Center, more than 50 cities in the continental
U.S. have set records for high temperature.

We should keep in mind, as Al Gore has pointed out, that of the 21 hottest
years ever measured, 20 have occurred within the last 25 years. And the
hottest year of this recent hottest wave was last year.

Those who are familiar with the cold and fog of the Bay Area in northern
California should consider the following summation of the latest heat wave
from Sunday's San Francisco Chronicle: "In northern California, it was
hotter for longer than ever on record, hitting 110 degrees four consecutive
days in the nine-county Bay Area."

There's more. Seth Borenstein, the science writer for The Associated Press,
reported yesterday that in recent years, the U.S. has had more than three
times its normal share of extremely hot summer nights. "That is a
particularly dangerous trend," Mr. Borenstein wrote. "During heat waves,
like the one that now has a grip on much of the East, one of the major
causes of heat deaths is the lack of night cooling that would normally allow
a stressed body to recover."

Referring to the spike in nighttime temperatures, Richard Heim, a research
meteorologist at the climate center, said in the article: "This is
unbelievable. Something strange has happened in the last 10 to 15 years."

Unlike Senator Burns, there are people who understand that there are things
we can do to mitigate the worst effects of global warming. We'd better do
something fast. We're no longer waiting for the tragedies predicted to
result from extremely high temperatures, extreme weather events, storm
surges and so forth. We're already enduring them.

Remember New Orleans? And the thousands who died from the heat in Chicago
and elsewhere in the Midwest in 1995? And, as incredible as it still seems,
the 35,000 killed by a monster heat wave in Europe in 2003?

I think the single most effective thing most ordinary Americans could do to
become more informed about global warming - and the steps we need to take to
fight it - is to go see Al Gore's movie, "An Inconvenient Truth," and read
his book of the same title.

It would be a shame if it turns out that Americans have been so deprived of
leadership for so long that they fail to recognize it when it's offered to
them.

***

The Shame of Not Being Mexican

By David Swanson

Velvet Revolution's Camp Democracy

Stop the Wars at Home and Abroad
Bring Democracy to DC Beginning Sept. 5, 2006
http://campdemocracy.org/node/73

I'll grant you that in the United States our two big
political parties never nominate a candidate of, by, or
for poor people. Nonetheless, we have now established a
pattern of stolen elections, and we have NOT taken over
our nation's capital to demand justice. This fact alone
would make me ashamed right now not to be a Mexican.
The Mexicans are doing the only sensible thing they
can, the only thing that can prevent a slide into far
more serious dangers.

Here in the United States, however, we don't just have
stolen elections. Our nation's capital is home to a
White House that has eliminated the Congress and the
Supreme Court from any serious role in our government,
not to mention a Congress that has rolled over and
refused to resist. Our unelected president has reversed
800 acts of Congress, torn up half the Bill of Rights,
launched an illegal war based on lies, facilitated
another one, locked people up without charge or trial
and tortured them, and launched massive spying
operations outside the rule of law. And, yet, we do not
fill the streets.

This Sunday, the truly dedicated will take up residence
anew at Camp Casey in Crawford, Texas. On September 5,
Camp Casey will move to the National Mall in
Washington, D.C., and expand into Camp Democracy--an
attempt to force fundamental change. One of the groups
that will play a lead role in Camp Democracy is
immigrants and activists for immigrants' rights. Some
immigrants' rights groups will also hold a rally and
march in DC on September 7. In recent months, the
ability of immigrants to turn out and march in the
United States has shamed all native-born agitators for
justice.

Not only do we all need to learn from the immigrants'
rights movement. We all need to get behind it and
support it. The anti-war movement, in particular,
should be backing the cause of immigrants' rights with
everything we've got. And when non-immigrants lobby
their elected representatives on any other issue, they
should always raise the cause of immigrants' rights as
well. Because their cause is our cause. Americans'
willingness to abuse Iraqis is not separate from our
willingness to discriminate against Muslim Americans
and Americans of Arab or Mexican descent. This time
it's not "first they came for the communists, then they
came for the Jews." This time, it's "first they came
for the immigrants."

And that is the point at which to stop it.

Halliburton is building detention camps for
"immigration emergencies." But what are those? An
expansion of NAFTA? A surge in global warming? Or are
they the sort of emergencies in which segments of our
population become guilty until proven innocent?

My Congressman, Republican Bush-follower Virgil Goode,
recently put out a statement arguing for allowing the
minimum wage to continue to decrease because restoring
any of its value would attract immigrants to this
country. Goode can't seriously imagine that anyone
doesn't realize that non-immigrants, too, are affected
by the minimum wage. It's just that we've reached the
point at which fear of immigrants is expected to
persuade us to abuse ourselves, to pick up the chains
and voluntarily slip them on. Bush's new proposal for
detaining people without charge or probable cause or
access to an attorney targets citizens, not just
immigrants. We are all in this together, including the
Iraqis and the Lebanese and the Palestinians. Only a
people that has been trained to fear and abuse others
could tolerate what our government is doing to those
peoples. Recent immigrants know this better than the
rest of us, and we should be recruiting them into the
peace movement.

(And, by the way, has anyone nationally noticed that
progressive pro-peace Democratic candidate Al Weed is
rapidly closing in on Goode in the polls?)

Last week an angry Muslim attacked a Jewish institution
in Seattle. The Council on American Islamic Relations
released a statement urging us not to bring the war
home. But the war is, from the start, home. The war is
in the heart of every American not camped out in our
nation's capital demanding an end to the insanity and a
restoration of the rule of law.

Did you know that many immigrants join the U.S.
military as a step toward citizenship (or death)? Did
you know that when people become citizens, they must
answer whether they've ever been a communist or a
homosexual? Did you know that they still can never
become president--because then we would have needed to
ask whether they'd ever slaughtered hundreds of
thousands of Arabs or lied to Congress or tortured
innocent prisoners.

Did you know that this nation is almost entirely one of
immigrants and the descendants of slaves, that recent
immigrants do not drain our economy -- the war does;
that the criminals are in DC, not on the border; and
that the "Immigration Problem" is a problem of
discrimination and fear mongering, not criminality. If
we didn't want Mexicans to come north, why did we NAFTA
them? Even Ross Perot has to have understood that giant
sucking sounds are heard on both sides of a border
erased by corporate greed, even if rebuilt by the
corporate military.

As my friend Travis Morales points out, the current
debate in Congress and the media is over how to make
things worse. The polls focus on how sad we should be
if no immigration bill is passed during this Congress.
But, as long as all the bills take us back to a formal
system of apartheid, to a legalized second-class
status, should we be sorry not to see them pass?

If we are going to change the debate, we are going to
have to join forces and recognize that this is all one
movement. Immigrants should not be afraid of opposing
the war--opposing the war is majority opinion, and the
stronger it grows, the more minds are moved away from
xenophobia and racism. Peace activists should not be
afraid of immigrants' rights, and should never expect
to win respect for distant unseen Iraqis if we cannot
win it for present refugees from NAFTA.

Nor should any of us back away from "raising" the
minimum wage, which CBS says has 85% support. That's
the same percentage of Americans who back single-payer
health care, the solution still feared by the man who
had his election stolen in 2004.

Halting global warming, reforming elections and the
media, restoring the right to organize a union,
beginning impeachment investigations--these are all
majority positions led by campaigns that sometimes fail
to take on each other's causes for fear of alienating
supporters. This fear is self-defeating.

It is all one movement and will succeed as one movement
at www.campdemocracy.org

***

L.A. Times Music section, Thursday, August 3rd, 2006,
with photograph, page E-34, headlined He's still got plenty to say.

Ramblin' Jack Elliott comes to Tangier and Largo (edited by EP)

Jack Elliott was Woody Guthrie's young protege and the early
role model for Bob Dylan, who was then known as Jack Jr.
He lives up to his nickname with fascinating, extensive discource
between numbers.  Not much has changed for Jack, whose new
album is on the hip Anti-Records label and features some rock
whippersnappers.  It's still all about Elliott's undimmed personality
and way with a story.

I'd add 'A wonderful singer of great songs, who makes you proud to be
an American.'  -Ed    (or USAnian)

Tangier, 2138 Hillhurst ave., L.A.
9 p.m. Friday $25  323-666-8666

Largo, 432 N. Fairfax Ave., L.A.
8 p.m. Saturday, 323-852-1073







---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to