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  • Snow says Bush has made climate a priority. Yeah, right.

    "[T]he President has made dealing with climate change a priority for this administration," said White House Press Secretary Tony Snow at yesterday's briefing.

    Meanwhile, a German group has ranked 56 nations according to their efforts to fight climate change. Yes, look way down the list [PDF]:  

  • Sea bass smuggler cops a plea in Miami

    In September 2005, U.S. prosecutors brought criminal charges against Antonio Vidal Pego and the Uruguayan company Fadilur for trying to bring Chilean sea bass into Miami without proper documentation.

    Although this case may have lacked the pizazz necessary to inspire a Law & Order episode, it was, in fact, a very big deal. This indictment was the first ever for the illegal importation and sale of Chilean sea bass. Yesterday was another groundbreaker, with the first ever guilty pleas for pirate fishing (coming from Vidal and Fadilur).

  • Public transit that would work in Houston

    No, mass transit is not just for cities like Boston, New York, and Washington D.C. CyberTran[1] is a form of mass transit suitable for most parts of the nation, from suburbs to the densest parts of Manhattan. It is not so much a new system as an overlooked one. The advantages:

    • It offers 24-hour availability.
    • Your journey time is about the same as in a car.
    • Your rail-car is ready when you are.
    • You never need to stand.
    • Stops are near your home and your final destination.
    • You can read the paper during your trip.

    No magic is involved.

  • Greens get giddy over election results, and more

    Read the articles mentioned at the end of the podcast: A Green Party Still Giddy After All These Hours Heart of a Howard In Toilets Is the Preservation of the World Now Utah-kin Read the articles mentioned at the end of the podcast: Show Time Snob Appeal To Tell the Truth Being Julian Chilly Screens […]

  • City passes municipal carbon tax

    Have you been on the edge of your seat wondering whether Boulder, Colo.'s carbon tax passed?

    It did, with about 58 percent of the vote, making the city the first in the nation to pass a municipal tax charging residents and businesses for the energy they use.

  • Mixed reports

    Today in E&E Daily (sub. only), there's a chipper piece from Darren Samuelsohn about the prospects for action on climate change in the 110th Congress. Look, how exciting!

    The 2006 election outcome may be less than a week old, but the pieces have started coming together for how the next Congress will tackle the global warming issue.

    "Clearly, it's a sea change," said Emily Figdor of U.S. PIRG. "For the first time in a long time, Congress can finally get down to the business of what's happening."

    Incoming Senate EPW Committee Chairwoman Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.) said last week she would take a lead role for the Democrats. Speaking with reporters, Boxer said she plans to use California's new global warming law -- requiring a statewide cut of emissions of 25 percent by 2020 -- as a model in the drafting of federal climate legislation.

    Wo0t! Right?

    But a few paragraphs later:

  • He would have us accept disaster

    Robert Samuelson is fixated on pushing a simple point about global warming: we can't do anything about it.

    Like so many pundits pushing right-wing talking points around economics, he pitches this stance as a kind of brave, hard-headed realism, in contrast to all those other deluded fools who think we can solve problems. Why anyone would want to spend his time on this planet explicitly and openly fighting progress on the biggest challenge humanity faces is beyond me, I'll confess. But to each his own.

    I wrote about his defeatism in an earlier column, and now he's at it again. After some unsubstantiated bashing of the Stern report, he lists three reasons why the problem is hopeless.

    With today's technologies, we don't know how to cut greenhouse gases in politically and economically acceptable ways.

    This is ... what's the word? ... bullshit.

  • Shark finning divisive issue

    A few days ago I came across this post by Doctor Mark Hyman touting the medicinal properties of food. During his recent trip to China, the doctor was "treated" to the "delicacy" of shark fin soup, which he claims can help ease arthritis and possibly fight cancer.

  • Final count in Ohio may take a while

    Also on the "to be determined" front, Ohio's 15th district race between Republican incumbent Deborah Pryce (an LCV Dirty Dozener) and Democrat Mary Jo Kilroy. From AP: