Archive for May, 2007

A Special Providence in the Poop of a Sparrow

May 25th, 2007
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Bush Takes It on the Sleeve

It was just a matter of time before the birds even dumped on the Imperial President Bush. A rebelious little bird snuck right overhead from a nearby magnolia tree in the White House Rose Garden Thursday during a live press conference and took a dump right on his suit.

Just as Bush answered a question about one of the many scandals facing his administration and the justice department, as he said, “I’ve got confidence in Al Gonzales doin’ the job,” a sparrow flew over and dumped a big blob of bird poop on his sleeve. He tried several times to wipe it off, to no avail.

You know what Shakespeare wrote in Hamlet about that.

“There’s a special providence in the fall of a sparrow.” Well, at least the poop of a sparrow…

Watch the video…

ABC’s Video

Guest Letter: Edwards Says Keep Fighting to End Iraq War

May 24th, 2007

About an hour ago, the Senate caved to President Bush and sent him another blank check to continue the war in Iraq.

This is a serious blow for all of us, but no one lost more today than the troops in the field who continue to sacrifice so nobly and their families still waiting back home.

It’s a hard moment, but you and I don’t have the luxury of getting discouraged. We must remember: This is not over. For those of us committed to change, it has only begun.

This weekend, thousands of us will take action in our communities to support the troops and end the war. We will speak out in public. We will send care packages to soldiers in Iraq. We will gather letters for Congress and the president. And on Memorial Day, we will remember and honor those who sacrificed everything for their nation.

For more info and to join the effort, got to SupportTheTroopsEndTheWar.Com.

After tonight, one thing is now perfectly clear: No one else is going to end this war for us. Bush will not listen. Congress will not fight. There’s no one left to lead the country now but we the people.

Each of us has a duty and a responsibility to our troops and to each other to do all that we can to end this war. Under the Constitution of the United States of America, we the people are the sovereign and the ultimate deciders–and by all that I know is right we will succeed in bringing our troops home.

Thank you for standing up.

John Edwards

Guest Editorial: Clinton, Obama Fail Eco Tests

May 24th, 2007

by Glenn Hurowitz

In their bids for the Democratic presidential nomination, Sens. Hillary Rodham Clinton (N.Y.) and Barack Obama (Ill.) have touted their environmental credentials. Yet despite compiling generally pro-environment voting records, at key moments each one has succumbed to pressure from powerful home-state polluters — casting doubt on how much they will fight for the planet when special interests stand in the way.

Clinton’s moment of truth came in 2005, when executives at the International Paper mill in upstate Ticonderoga, N.Y., were pressing to cut costs by burning old tires to provide power for their operations. Tires are one of the most toxic fuels known to man, and people downwind from the plant (including Republican Vermont Gov. Jim Douglas) were organizing a campaign to stop IP from poisoning their air with mercury, benzene and other deadly chemicals.

To counter this effort, IP launched an aggressive effort to woo New York politicians, including Clinton, in part by resorting to an old polluter trick: threatening to shut down the plant if it wasn’t allowed to burn the tires.

Seen from outside a political lens, it should have been an easy choice for Clinton: Tires are so toxic that even limited exposure can cause permanent health damage, especially to children, whose developing brains and immune systems are hypersensitive to the pollutants tires produce. Tire pollutants can cut years off a child’s life and impair mental development, according to the American Lung Association. For someone who had once been chairwoman of the Children’s Defense Fund and who had forged her political identity around protecting kids’ well-being, it would seem like a no-brainer.

But in 2005, Clinton had things on her mind in addition to children: She was determined to boost her margin of victory in upstate New York in her 2006 Senate reelection campaign - even if it meant sacrificing children’s health for, at most, a few hundred votes from people who bought into IP’s empty threats.

And so, despite the pollution concerns, Clinton went along with IP and lobbied to allow it to go ahead with a two-week test tire burn. Although that may not sound like a lot of time, tires are so toxic that the acrid cloud they produce can cause damage after even just a few hours of exposure.

The tires turned out to be so polluting that the emissions exceeded even IP’s extremely lax permit. The company was forced to suspend the incineration three days after it started. It didn’t go out of business, but Clinton had provided her critics with more evidence that political calculation was her real first priority.

I wish I could report that Obama was offering a more principled energy policy. Unfortunately, even a cursory glance at his record shows a politician at least as willing to sacrifice his lofty principles for political expedience.

Exhibit A is Obama’s enthusiastic support for “coal to liquid” technology, which allows auto fuel to be squeezed out of coal. Obama touts it as a way to free America from reliance on Saudi oil fields and to tackle global warming. However, coal-to-liquid technology produces twice the amount of greenhouse gases that regular old oil does; additionally, it’s so expensive that it’s unlikely to displace one drop of cheap Saudi oil anytime soon.

So why would he support it? What’s more, why did he vote for other anti-environment policies, such as President Bush’s 2005 energy bill, which funnels more than $27 billion in taxpayer subsidies to big polluters?

A huge factor in Obama’s decisions was his desire to support Illinois agribusiness (Bush’s energy bill contained massive ethanol subsidies) and the southern Illinois coal industry. His votes mean that he’s willing — sometimes, at least — to put these kinds of parochial interests ahead of the global environment and Americans’ health (pollution from coal-fired power plants kills more than 30,000 people every year, according to EPA consultants Abt Associates).

Obama has explained his positions by saying that sometimes you need to “trim your sails” — by which he means cutting back on goals to avoid becoming marginalized.

But it’s exactly that kind of political calculation - special interests versus doing what’s right - that Obama is promising to reject. Obama’s energy policy shows that so far he is at least as much a creature of establishment influence-peddling as Clinton is.

So is there any hope for the Democrats’ energy policy, or will it just be a liberal version of Bush’s polluter bonanza?

The environmental and energy platforms of former North Carolina Sen. John Edwards and New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson provide some reason for optimism. While both Democratic presidential candidates have in the past surrendered to big polluters on key issues, lately they’ve been showing real grit when it comes to defending the planet.

Edwards has called for a ban on construction of coal-fired power plants that don’t capture all their greenhouse gases. He also has released an ambitious plan to cut global warming pollution by 80 percent by 2050. Richardson has one-upped Edwards by proposing the same cuts by 2040 and speedier conversion to clean electricity sources and dramatic cuts in oil consumption.

Edwards and Richardson seem to have learned that at least when it comes to energy policy, courage can trump calculation. For their sake and the planet’s, let’s hope that Sens. Clinton and Obama can learn the same lessons before they face the voters.

Glenn Hurowitz is the president of www.DemocraticCourage.com DemocraticCourage.Com , an organization dedicated to promoting progressive values in the Democratic Party. He is the author of the forthcoming book Fear and Courage in the Democratic Party.

Code Red Air Quality Alert Issued for Birmingham

May 23rd, 2007

A Code Red air quality alert has been issued for Wednesday, May 23, for Central Alabama, in part due to smoke plumes from Georgia and Florida being carried into the Birmingham area by winds out of the southeast.

The result is an unhealthy air quality level at all air quality monitors throughout Jefferson County.

People with heart or lung disease, older adults and children should avoid prolonged or heavy exertion. Everyone else should reduce prolonged or heavy exertion.

For more updates, check the Alabama Department of Environmental Management’s Website for Alabama Air Quality Conditions for Birmingham.

Rare Snail Kite Spotted by Birder in South Carolina

May 22nd, 2007
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Bird watcher Lloyd Moon, 76, recently spotted the rare snail kite for the first time in South Carolina, sparking a debate among birders and scientists about what the bird was doing so far north.

The snail kite is an endangered species seldom seen north of central Florida, experts say, and is included on the endangered species list in part because of the shrinking habitat of its main food source, the apple snail.

Moon first spotted the bird last week at a crawfish farm near Rimini, about 35 miles southeast of Columbia.

The bird’s taste for crawfish surprised scientists, and it could lead to experiments with crawfish ponds in Florida.

The Associated Press picked up the story Tuesday.

But birders on the ALBIRDS listserv and other online communities have been talking about the rare sighting since last Friday.

The first fuzzy photographs were published on the Carolina Bird Club site here.

That was followed up by better photos from the Cape Romain Bird Observatory.