Open thread for night owls: Earth Day lessons
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Umair Irfan at Vox writes—7 things we’ve learned about Earth since the last Earth Day: 1) Kids today face a truly frightening climate future — and they’re mad as hell at adults for neglecting the problem Many people under the age of 18 right now maOpen thread for night owls: Earth Day lessons
Umair Irfan at Vox writes—7 things we’ve learned about Earth since the last Earth Day: 1) Kids today face a truly frightening climate future — and they’re mad as hell at adults for neglecting the problem Many people under the age of 18 right now may be around to see the end of the century. And a growing number of them are not pleased with the climate they’re inheriting. Our current trajectory puts the planet on course to warm by 4 degrees Celsius by 2100, creating a world that will be devastated by disasters, droughts, disease, and food shortages. In March of this year, students in more than 120 countries went on strike from school to demand action on climate change. These climate strikes are part of a youth-led climate activism movement, with another global strike planned for May 24. Here’s Irene Kananura of Kampala, Uganda who was striking this past Friday in the heat: xI can bare the hot sunshine on a roadside every friday as i strike to fight for my future. climate change is real, we need action NOW. @GretaThunberg@Fridays4future@Fridays4FutureU pic.twitter.com/COCeyPapIz— Irene Kananura (@IreneKananura) April 19, 2019 Indivisible’s list of Resistance Events & Groups TOP COMMENTS • HIGH IMPACT STORIES QUOTATION “Strategy without tactics is the slowest route to victory. Tactics without strategy is the noise before defeat.” ~~Sun Tzu, The Art of War (scholars differ, but probably 500-400 BC) TWEET OF THE DAY xPictured is a caravan of nomadic white people in 1889 invading the northern border of the Cherokee Nation in a frenzy to be the first to get his hands on the free government handouts. The Americans call this theft of Oklahoma a âÂÂLand Runâ and it happened on this day 130 years ago pic.twitter.com/HBab7aou7n— Brett A. Chapman (@brettachapman) April 22, 2019 BLAST FROM THE PAST On this date at Daily Kos in 2011—Idaho Gov. Butch Otter signs budget suicide order: The crazy spreads. If an executive order from Republican Gov. Butch Otter forbidding state agencies in Idaho from accepting federal funds to implement the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act passes constitutional muster, the state would have to opt out of Medicaid in 2014. More than 220,000 of Idaho's citizens depend on Medicaid. Unless the governor and GOP-dominated Legislature choose to drop these folks off where the grizzly bears roam, they will have to come up with the money to treat them. That amounts to around $1 billion a year, 40 percent of the state's entire annual budget. One way to pay for it? Cut public school funding by 85 percent. Given their hatred for public education, maybe that approach would suit Idaho's elected Republicans just fine. Saying he opposes «the overreaching nature of the PPACA and its infringements on Idahoans and the authority of the States under the Tenth Amendment of the United States Constitution,» the governor stated in his order that «no executive branch department, agency, institution or employee of the state shall establish or amend any program or promulgate any rule to implement any provisions of the PPACA» without his consent. The Tenth Amendment is a favorite of right-wingers eager to nullify federal initiatives and take back the state sovereignty they believe has been dwindling ever since the presidency of...uh...Abraham Lincoln. On today’s Kagro in the Morning show: Seth Moulton is running for president, everybody! Greg Dworkin joined in a full 2 hour show on that exciting news, with a brief 119 minute detour into consideration of the censure, impeachment, and/or defeat of the current president. x Embedded Content RadioPublic|LibSyn|YouTube|Patreon|Square Cash (Share code: Send $5, get $5!) LINK TO DAILY KOS STORE Read more