Thursday, November 30, 2023

Kissinger Has Departed the Building

Henry has left US.  For a man so influential in US politics, one would think there would be an effusion of eulogies.  But not.  It is very hard to ignore his prominent role in prolonging the Vietnam War, the killing of thousands of civilians in Cambodia and Laos, and the overthrow of an elected government in Chile.  According to a Pentagon report in 1973 Kissinger approved each of the 3,875 secret bombing raids of Cambodia in 169 and 70. [photo] 

He told CIA Director Helms in a phone call that, "We will not let Chile go down the drain", referring to the election of Marxist President Salvador Allende.  US covert operations led to the assignation of Chile's Commander in Chief Rene Schneider, and eventually to the assignation of President Allende in a coup. August Pinochet took power and killed hundreds of citizen in a repressive campaign of political violence conducted by the military and the security agency, DINA.  Kissinger also opposed the leftist rebels in Angola, aligning the US with the repressive dictator of Zaire, Mobutu Seese Seko, in that civil war. The rebels eventually won with help from Cuba.  But. the war lasted for years, killing perhaps half a million people. He was also on the wrong side of the black liberation of Rhodesia led by Robert Mugabe.  He also supported repressive regimes in Latin America.

Yes, he participated in the Paris peace process to finally end the Vietnam war, but at the cost of thousands

killed in the carpet bombing of the North. Yes, he facilitated the opening of diplomatic relations with China, but he did that while stepping on the bodies of millions. He won the Nobel Peace prize, but it is stained with blood. The Chilean government now wants to see a complete disclosure of what the Nixon administration did to bring about the tragic events in that country.  The reckoning for Henry has yet to come. [photo credit: Getty images]

Monday, November 27, 2023

A Rare Birth in Sumatra!

A new rhino baby has entered the world, a member of the critically endangered Sumatran rhinoceros subspecies( (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis) Only fifty animals are thought to survive in the wild. The male calf was born to  seven year old Delilah at Way Kambas Rhino Sanctuary on Sumatra.  The sire is Harapan, who was born at the Cincinnati Zoo. The unnamed fifty-five pound calf was ten days premature.  He was found by a keeper on Saturday morning next to his mother. He is now able to stand, walk and breast feed.

Most of the remaining Sumatran rhinos live on the island of Sumatra in the remnants of their forest homes. Several are in captive breeding programs. The new birth is the second in 2023 of a total of five born at Way Kambas.  The new calf's grandmother, Ratu, gave birth to a male named Andatu, the first rhino born in Indonesia in 124 years.  Sumatran rhinos typically have a life span of 35-40 years.  Good luck little guy!

Friday, November 24, 2023

Wild Turkeys in Decline

Now that you have stuffed your face with factory raised turkey meat, here is a story of wild turkeys.  Turkeys were a 20th Century conservation success story.  They were brought back from eradication and re-established to their home ranges with such success that several states brought back hunting seasons.  The bulky birds are still more common than they were several decades ago, showing up on roadsides, college campuses, yards and parks.  But the endemic bird, once considered for the national emblem, is in steep decline in the south and midwest.  Scientists have not yet been able to explain the steep drop in their numbers in these regions, while populations in the northeast and west are stable or growing.

Kansas was once a destination for turkey hunters.  Today the state has curtailed its hunting seasons
as the state's turkey population has declined by sixty percent since 2007.  Being a generalist and very adaptable to changing environments, their decline is a bit of a mystery.  Research is being done on the question, but there are no firm answers yet.  Conservationists point to several factors such as loss of habitat, climate change, disease, or pressure from predators.  The likely explanation is a combination of such factors.  Tracking turkeys is not easy work as researchers attempt to understand what is happening.  Wild turkeys  never do what you expect them to do.  One explanation of why they are still with us.  Gobble, gobble!.


Monday, November 20, 2023

Dominca Set to Protect Sperm Whales

The island nation of Dominica in the Caribbean announced the first marine reserve to protect sperm whales, Physeter macrocephalus, this month. It is a 304 square mile area on the island's west coast that protect the endangered whale's nursing and breeding grounds by limiting human activity.  The prime minister of Dominca called the resident sperm whales "prized citizens" of his nation, noting that they inhabited the waters before people inhabited the island.  Protecting them will enhance human health too, he added.  The new reserve increases by 70% the nation's total marine reserves.

a sperm whale family
The largest of the toothed whales. sperms are known for their deep diving, plunging to depths of  6,000 feet in search of their preferred prey, giant squid. They can hold their breath for 90 minutes. Besides being superb athletes, they are very social, forming tight knit family groups known as "clans".  The Dominican whales are part of the Eastern Caribbean Clan, thought to number fewer than 300.  The population has been declining by 3% annually since 2010 due to human pressures.  Members of the same clan have their own dialect of click patterns to identify each other. Newborns are often cared for communally by near relatives.  The whales encourage plankton growth by defecating at the surface between dives. The plankton absorbs carbon dioxide and release oxygen. [photo credit: B. Skerry]

Besides the beneficial ecological effects, Dominca's whales contribute to the nation's important tourist industry. Tourists will still be able to visit and even swim with the whales, but on a controlled basis.  An official monitor will be appointed to insure the rules are followed. Green Kudos go to Dominica!

Saturday, November 18, 2023

PGE Does Good For Salmon

Columbia basin salmon have it hard, facing several man-made barriers in their annual, arduous journey to upstream spawning grounds.  This situation is one reason for their precipitous decline in numbers in  modern times.   Millions of dollars have been spent attempting to increase populations, including resort to culling other protected species (sea lions). Pacific Gas and Electric, the local utility company for the Portland metro, is contributing to the efforts to save salmon by improving fish passages around dams and other obstructions. The company reported record returns for the third consecutive year of coho salmon, Oncorhynchus kisutch at their North Fork Dam on the Clackamus River since record keeping begn in 1958. The 17,000 adult coho have apparently learned a safe route through what must appear to be a bewildering maze of metal troughs and tanks. Salmon swim up a fish ladder into a trap and are sorted hands-free. Only wild salmon are allowed to proceed to their spawning grounds in the upper Clackamas basin. They are distinguishable from hatchery-raised salmon, which have their adipose fin clipped when young.

More juvenile cohos have also returned, as well as 4,770 wild chinook Oncorhynchus tshawytscha. PGE's bypass system allows fish to avoid three dams, contributing to a thriving river system where salmon and steelhead can safely breed.  Favorable conditions at sea have also contributed to the resurgence seen at North Fork. Fish have grown more robust and resilient, enabling them to withstand the stress of migration, perhaps due to reduced fishing pressure during the pandemic years. 

Thursday, November 16, 2023

TWIT: "Vermin"

credit R. Bolling

More: A Colorado judge has ruled that despite aiding and abetting an insurrection, the 14th Amendment disqualification provision does not apply to presidents. Judge Sarah Wallace concluded that, “Trump engaged in an insurrection on January 6, 2021 through incitement, and that the First Amendment does not protect Trump’s speech". Her decision makes three strikes against the proposition (Michigan, Minnesota), so it may be dead for practical purposes, but the issue could still make it to the US Supreme Court.  Judge Wallace's 102 page opinion does seem incongruous with the plain language of Section 3: No person...shall hold any office civil or military....who having previously taken an oath...as an officer of the United States..." [emphasis added]. In her analysis, she relied on a distinction in oaths between Congress and the President that does not make a material difference.* Perhaps the state judges concluded sub silencio that it would be more consistent with democratic principles for the people of the United States to decide the political fate of the sociopathic boy-king.  US Person has his doubts about the wisdom of that choice given the election results of 2016.  Hillary was bad, but not as bad as Don 'Legit', who successfully conned his way into office. He is not on Fifth Avenue now.

{16.11.2023}As the possibility of imprisonment draws nearer, the would-be American dictator let his Nazi flag fly on Veteran's Day when he promised to eradicate political opponents he called "vermin".  That terminology is straight out of Hitler.  Astute readers may recall that the Nazis produced propaganda in which Jews were called the "vermin of Europe". In trademark fashion he claimed the threat of domestic enemies to be greater than those from foreign adversaries.  Dismiss his ranting if you must to maintain your grip on sanity, but remember that upwards of 40% of the American people are sympathetic to this neo-Nazi; he is outpolling the current democratically elected president.  One expert on authoritarianism told a TV host, "we are sleepwalking towards authoritarianism."  It seems Don 'Legit" actually read the Hitler autobiography he kept by his bedside.  His supporters are already building an army of loyalists, pre-screened by AI, to fill positions in government should he take office in '24.  The only thing needed now are the armbands.

Big Bavovna in Fulton County! The profers made by the co-defendants in the Georgia trial made it to the press.  Predictably the leak was made by a co-defendant's attorney.  The attorney for Jenna Ellis told Judge McAfee that he leaked the deposition because he though it would help his client and that the public has a right to know.  DA Willis was not pleased with the leak and has asked the judge for a protective order.  Whether the leak helped his client is debatable; it did inform the public about the quality of evidence of the Boss' corrupt intent.  Dan Scavino, former top aide in the White House, told Ellis at a Christmas party that Trump was "not going to leave the White House under any circumstances", regardless of loosing sixty some legal cases on the fraud issue.  When Ellis told Scovino, "it doesn't quite work that way". Scavino replied, "We don't care." No wonder she got a sweet plea deal from the DA!

credit: M. Luckovich

* In the presidents oath he promises to "preserve, protect and defend the constitution of the United States", while Congress members vow to "support the Constitution of the United States".  Clearly the President has a higher duty that includes merely supporting it.  Wallace has created, perhaps unintentionally, an exception to disqualification for future insurrectionist presidents or former presidents.  The fact there is no established procedure for making a rogue candidate like Trump ineligible for election under the Fourteenth Amendment begs precedent be established now by courts of law in this country.  US Person encourages Colorado plaintiffs to take their case to the Colorado Supreme Court and the US Supreme Court, if necessary because Judge Wallace's opinion, while finding Trumpilini engaged in an insurrection as predicate, it is logically flawed at its conclusion.  This is not a "political question", but rather an issue of correct statutory interpretation of Section 3's plain language.  Trumpillini has already availed himself of the statutory federal officer liability exemption in the E. Jean Carrol defamation case.  He is probably collaterally estopped from using the argument that he is not one for the purposes of the 14th Amendment.



Monday, November 13, 2023

Idaho Extremists Plan to Kill Wolves

The name of the agency is enough to tell you what their policy is: Idaho Wolf Depredation Control Board.  These extreme radicals have no regard for the survival of a wild creature simply trying to survive. They plan to hire private contractors to kill wolves by trapping, snaring, and gunning from aircraft.  They took this decision without public input.  A brutal scofflaw from Elko, NV named Trevor C. Watch stands to benefit the most from three contracts worth over $100,000.  The Nevada chief game warden labeled his activities, "blatant illegal behavior".  He has left trapped animals to die slowly of dehydration and starvation 

The Board authorized unlimited removal of wolves in their core range despite successful efforts by the Wood River Project to teach ranchers and others to co-exist with wolves.  The field season this year resulted in zero losses to predation among 24,000 sheep in the project area.  The project regularly documents the lowest predation rates in the state. Yet Idaho legislature has voted to remove 90% of the states wolf population.  A livestock operator from Blaine County said that the extermination efforts will likely result in more predation as pack relations are destroyed, and inexperienced juveniles disperse to kill livestock in order to survive. He also pointed out that the cost of these vindictive pogroms usually exceeds the value of livestock killed statewide in Idaho.  These efforts to exterminate wolves also make a mockery of the considerable resources devoted to bringing back wolves from near extinction.

Non-lethal deterrents work, but that fact does not make any sense to Idaho authorities who are operating on a culture war agenda.  The Control Board only funds lethal actions; no money is allocated for non-lethal programs.  The Wood River wolf pack has lived alongside sheep and sheep hoarders for sixteen years peacefully.  Do they deserve elimination by man?  That question hardly needs to be asked in a sane world.  Sixty percent of the land in Idaho is public land, and the public elsewhere in America has made their decision to protect wolves very clear.  US Person thinks the federal government needs to step in and prevent this irrational slaughter from occurring by extending emergency protection to Idaho wolves under the Endangered Species Act.  Write to the US Secretary of Interior today!

Saturday, November 11, 2023

Nuclear Renaissance is a Myth

The so-called "nuclear power renaissance" is turning out to be non-existent.  The only approved small-scale, modular, nuclear reactor was cancelled Wednesday by its owner.  Research and development of smaller nuclear plants is funded by the national government. Both the Idaho National Environment and Engineering Laboratory and Oregon State University participated in development. Advocates argue that plants (SMRs) in the 50 to 100MW range that can be built on a modular basis are cheaper, safer and more efficient that the megaliths of 1000MW or more of the past.  These have proven extremely expensive and complicated to operate, as well as being vulnerable to natural disasters and terrorist attack.  The Biden Administration has made clear its commitment to a new generation of nuclear power.  His administration has provided $6 billion to keep America's aging reactors operating and added $100 million to the $600 million already spent on SMRs. [photro courtesy NuScale]

NuScale Power was founded on the technical research a quarter-century ago.  Its first SMR design was approved by the Nuclear Regulatory Agency in February. The company planned to build six 77MW modules by 2030, a delay of 2025 start date, as it ran into technical difficulties and the usual cost overruns that ballooned the cost estimate from $3 billion to $6.1 billion. Its first small reactor project was scuttled after NuScale's utility partner backed out when cost estimates escalated further to $9.3 billion.  Utilities that might have signed up to buy power also got cold feet, causing NuScale to admit,"it appears unlikely that the project will have enough subscription to continue toward deployment."

NuScale has turned its attention to SMRs in Eastern Europe. But the example of the massive Zaporizhzhia nuclear station in Ukraine has brought home to utilities and governments the dangers of a nuclear plant in a war zone.  That six reactor unit, the largest in Europe, has been shut down since shelling took place near it.  The potential for a toxic release of radiation due to battle damage is just too great to continue operation.  The same concerns occur in earthquake-prone regions--witness the Fukushima  station destroyed by an earthquake and tsunami in 2011.

The only new US reactors built recently, in Georgia, are seven years over schedule and cost $34 billion.  The original cost estimate was $14 billion. The cost overruns and delays led to the bankruptcy of Westinghouse Inc. a company founded in 1886.  Nevertheless, an SMR is planned for Ontario, Canada.  It is scheduled to begin operation in 2028--clearly and overly optimistic forecast.  SMRs, like their larger forerunners, are simply not economical without government subsidies compared to solar and wind installations that are much simpler in design and can be erected relatively quickly.  GE-Hitachi building the Ontario project says it can produce electricity at $60MW/hr.  Solar installation with storage capacity figures at $45MW/hr and wind at $30MW/hr. Nuclear has provided about 20% of the nation's energy production since the 1990s, but going forward it will be difficult to get investors and governments interested in new nuclear projects. US Person has no chip on his shoulder; nuclear power is still NOT too cheap to meter. 

Friday, November 10, 2023

Attenborough's Chimera

Readers of PNG know that US Person is a fan of Sir David Attenborough, the well-know naturalist and narrator of BBC's excellent nature programs. But he did not know that Attenborough also has the honor of an animal namesake. The long-beaked echinda of New Guinea (Zaglossus attenborougi) is named after him. But the species had not been seen in sixty years in its home of the Cyclops Mountains, that is until a trail camera captured video of one om the last day of a four week expedition led by an Oxford University scientist. James Kempton retrieve the image from the last memory card of eighty cameras scattered about the forest. He was elated at the discovery, since the shy, burrowing creature is notoriously difficult to find in the wild. His team survived an earthquake, malaria and even a leech attached to an eyeball! 

The echidna is truly a strange creature, a chimera of made up incongruous body parts: spines of hedgehog, snout of  anteater, and feet of mole. It is ancient, perhaps 220 million years old, a member of the Monotream order that includes another egg- laying strange-o, duckbill platypus. This echidna species has been recorded only once before in 1961 by a Dutch scientist. It is deeply embedded in native folklore. In one tradition a dispute could be settled by sending one party to the conflict into the forest to find an echidna and the other to the ocean to locate a marlin, which could take years, by which time the dispute would be forgotten.  A different Echidna species also occurs in Australia.  [photo credit: UK Guardian]

Thursday, November 09, 2023

TWIT: "That's a Problem"

Photogenic Ivanka Trump smiled her way through testifying in the NY civil fraud case. While smiling, she took a predictable path between further incriminating her old man and lying under oath by answering, "I don't recall" numerous times. Her selective memory did not improve after the prosecutor showed her several documents and emails indicating her involvment in deals--Doral Golf Club and the Old Post Office--that significantly over-stated her father's net worth. In one email she wrote to a Trump lawyer that a minimum net worth required by Deutsche Bank--$4.0 billion--to grant a favorable loan would be a "problem" for Trump. Her admission exposes the motive for inflating the numbers--receiving favorable treatment from counterparts--and establishes the materiality of Trump's persistent fraud.  As Letitia James put it to press after the days proceedings, "numbers don't lie."

Don Legit will get another bit at the apple as he will be called by his defense team as one of 127 potential witnesses.
credit: N. Anderson






COTW: The World in 2100

A lot of the Earth's problems in terms of pollution and destruction of natural habitat is driven by human population growth.  So you may ask when it [growth] end?  The chart this week shows the major population models with the UN's projection being the most widely referenced:

UN predicts that in 2100 the world's population will be around 10.5 billion people, with the peak arriving around 2086. Fortunately,US Person will not be around for that occurrence. Unless we solve the climate crisis, Earth will be a hellish place to live, and the starships full. The differences in the projections are due to projected fertility rates.  Both Asia and Africa are predicted to experience sharp declines in birth rates as countries there experience further economic development.  Sub-Saharan Africa, which has open of the highest fertility rates in the world, is not expected to reach replacement rate of 2 births per woman until 2070.  Birth rate changes in high fertility areas have a significant impact on when peak population will occurr.

Monday, November 06, 2023

Texaco's Toxic Legacy in Ecuador

Some of the sludge pools hidden in the jungle are over 6 meters deep, the legacy of decades of oil production and exploration by Texaco, now Chevron. Chevron faced a land mark and higly controversial lawsuit in which it was assessed $9.5 billion in damages and costs. A decade later the clean up has yet to materialize in the Sacha field, Orellana Province. Fruit trees will not in the contaminated soil covering the pools, or if they do struggle to survive they do not produce fruit. People living nearby are forced to use polluted water wells until they finally leave the area. There are an estimated 3,568 sites in Ecuador's Amazon that the government lists as sources of contanmination. Satelite imagery produced for litigation showed 990 waste pits scattered about the forest floor. Texaco was deemed responsible for 1,107. Rather than remediate the waste sites, the company covered them up, despite the fact that it signed a remediation plan. 

The Sacha field is now owned by Petroecuador, the state oil company. The country has been extracting oil from the rainforest since the 1960s, but there is little research and data on the health effects on local populations directly affected by extraction. So far Petroecuador has done very litle to clean-up the mess, recognized as one of the largest ecological disasters in the world. Over the years the waste oil buried by Texaco has seeped up to the surface in Orellana and neighboring Sucumbios province. [photo credits:A. Lara]

Despite international litigation and arbitration against Chevon, which acquired Texaco in 2001,  Ecuador has come out a looser probably due to incompetence-or perhaps coruption--of its former Attorney General, Ignio Salvador. Successive governments have become accustom to ignoring the disasterous pollution caused the dumping of 650,000 barrels of oil and billions of gallons of contaminated water. Petroecuador repeatedly claims that it has remediated 51 million cubic feet of soil and eliminated 1,127 sources of contamination. but the state company does not provide data to corroborate up its public claims, and people continue to die of cancer from toxic exposure. In a famous study of oil exploitation affects on rural health by physician Miguel San Sebastian, people living in San Carlos, Orellana face a cancer risk 2.3 times higher than residents of the capital, Quito. Undiagnosed diseases abound in the region. One resident told interviers, "This is not a spill. This was dumped here forty years ago, and they knew what they were doing."  

Friday, November 03, 2023

TWIT: "I pour concrete"

credit: M. Wuerker

Latest:  Judge Chutkin has set jury selection in the January 6th federal criminal case to begin February 9th. She reinstated her gag order against Don 'Legit' on Sunday after pausing it for briefing. Team Trump continues to find ways to delay all proceedings by filing motions unlikely to succeed.  

California lawyer John Eastman has been found culpable in a disciplinary trial lasting 32 days.  The proceedings now move to the punishment phase.  Possible penalties include disbarment. 

And Eric lies as well.  That was the top line from Eric Trump's testimony in the NewYork civil fraud case against him, his older brother and daddy.  Eric opened his testimony by disavowing any knowledge or involvement in his father's fraudulent statements of financial condition used by the Trump Org to obtain favorable loans, insurance and avoid taxes.   The prosecuting attorney promptly confronted him with emails and documents that showed him participating in preparation of the statements and signing off on documents as the trustee for his father's revocable trust established during his term in public office.  Eric was eventually forced to admit that it "appeared" he did have knowledge and participation in the persistent fraud for which he is being tried.  

Don 'Legit" is scheduled to testify beginning Monday and his daughter goes last on Wednesday. He already know that Trumpilini will dissemble in a maze of word salad. However, the order of the family witnesses is significant because it places Ivanka in a perjury vice. Ivanka was the principal point of contact with Deutsche Bank, that several large loans to the Trump Org. She has been cleared of wrongdoing by virtue of a statute of limitations, but she could still face legal jeopardy if she lies on the witness stand about the fraud already found to have taken place by Judge Engoron. Her last ditch effort to delay her appearance on grounds of school days for her children was rejected by the appellate court. Spin may work in the business and political worlds, but not on the witness stand under oath and cross examination. The family that crimes together, lies together.

Keeping you up to speed, the campaign to bar Trump from election ballots under the 14th Amendment is picking up steam in several states.  A trial in Denver, CO started Monday on the issue of whether Section 3 of the amendment applies to what Trump did or did not do on January 6th when his mob attacked the Capitol.  The section drafted to keep former Confederates from holding public office, prohibits anyone who takes an oath of office and participates in, or gives aid and comfort to an insurrection, from holding public office.  Two prominent conservative legal scholars have publicly supported the idea that its disqualification should be applied to Trumpilini. The issue is not clear cut since there is understandably very little legal precedent. Whatever a lower court decides will be appealed all the way to the Supreme Court by Trump's legal minions.

The case was brought by several registered Republican and a couple of unaffiliated voters.  People have written to their Secretaries of State demanding that Don 'Legit' be barred from appearing on state ballots in New Mexico, Florida, New Hampshire, Ohio and Wisconsin.  US Person has also made a similar request to the Oregon Secretary of State. Write your Secretary of State today!  Many legal challenges lay ahead for the efforts.  A court could decide that private citizens do not have standing to bring a lawsuit challenging the qualifications of candidate, or that the suit is not ripe for adjudication, since candidates have not yet formally filed for ballot access.

credit: R. Molina

 

Wednesday, November 01, 2023

Recovering the American Chestnut Tree

Once it was the dominant over story tree of the eastern American forest.  The species is fast growing and large, reaching heights of 80ft and three to four feet in diameter. [photo]  Its tree is prized for it wood that has straight grain and hardness.  Chestnuts were roasted over an open fire (at least according to Nat King Cole) and fed the hogs, which were released into the forest to feast on the burrs.  Wildlife likes chestnuts too.  The species was all but eliminated by a blight introduced through Japanese specimens beginning in New York in 1904, considered one of the largest ecological disasters in modern times.  A staggering four billion trees were killed in just forty years. A few wild chestnut trees have managed to survive, and stumps continue to produce shoots that succumb within a few years. So the pure genetic code is still available to us.

Efforts are underway to restore the chestnut tree to its place in American deciduous forests.  The American Chestnut Foundation is conducting research to develop blight resistant strains.  Asian chestnut trees are resistant to blight, so a back-cross breeding program is underway to find a suitable variety to reintroduce.  Breeders want to retain as much American genome as possible while obtaining blight resistance from Asian genes.  Asian trees look different and grow differently in the forest.

The blight fungus lives in the tree's cambium where it spreads and girds the tree killing it.  A resistant tree forms a canker which stops the fungus from spreading.  The University of Virginia has been conducting breeding research for fifty years and is working with the Foundation to establish a breeding colony from which seedlings can be planted in Virginia's forests.  This type of breeding program is important for other species such as ash and white pine, both of which are suffering from disease.