Saturday, March 14, 2020

Garrison Keillor | The Need to Replace Bad Tenants With Better






Reader Supported News
14 March 20



I truly don't believe enough have quite figured-out HOW much they need RSN … if they hope to see past the brain-washing of an a-moral, corporate-owned media oligopoly.

Maybe I should just speak for myself, and say I need RSN in a major way. Seems like even our formerly-quite progressive NPR-affiliate has now "gone lame" on us.

By the way, the post-article "comments" becoming ever-more important to me, in recent months. They're often-times superb!

Continue chiding us to contribute. I'm sure it's vitally necessary -- if not much fun.

Thanks so much ...

Robert in SEA







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Reader Supported News
13 March 20

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Garrison Keillor | The Need to Replace Bad Tenants With Better
Garrison Keillor. (photo: MPR)
Garrison Keillor, Garrison Keillor's Website
Keillor writes: "Politics is all about optics."
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A woman sets up Colorado's first community testing center for coronavirus in Denver on March 11, 2020. (photo: RJ Sangosti/Getty)
A woman sets up Colorado's first community testing center for coronavirus in Denver on March 11, 2020. (photo: RJ Sangosti/Getty)




Trump Reportedly Rejected Aggressive Coronavirus Testing in Hopes It Would Help His Re-Election
Peter Weber, The Week
Excerpt: "The U.S. government's response to the COVID-19 coronavirus outbreak has been 'much, much worse than almost any other country that's been affected,' Ashish Jha, who runs the Harvard Global Health Institute."
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Students wait in line to vote in the Democratic primary election on Mar. 3, 2020, at the Flawn Academic Center. (photo: Nabil K. Mark/Landov)
Students wait in line to vote in the Democratic primary election on Mar. 3, 2020, at the Flawn Academic Center. (photo: Nabil K. Mark/Landov)


Young People Aren't Apathetic. They're Facing Major Voting Obstacles
Clio Chang, VICE
Chang writes: "The backlog of would-be voters at the clerk office in East Lansing, Michigan, on Tuesday consisted mostly of college students - some of whom waited more than three hours to vote."
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Rep. Matt Gaetz during a press briefing in Washington, D.C., on Dec. 13, 2019. (photo: Astrid Riecken/Getty)
Rep. Matt Gaetz during a press briefing in Washington, D.C., on Dec. 13, 2019. (photo: Astrid Riecken/Getty)


GOP Lawmaker Who Voted Against Paid Sick Leave in Florida Takes Paid Sick Leave From Congress
Lee Fang, The Intercept
Fang writes: "Matt Gaetz's decision to take time away from his job at Congress without the fear of losing pay or being fired is a right few Americans share."
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U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's fugitive operations team arrest a Mexican national in Paramount, California, on 1 March 2020. (photo: Lucy Nicholson/Reuters)
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement's fugitive operations team arrest a Mexican national in Paramount, California, on 1 March 2020. (photo: Lucy Nicholson/Reuters)


'Courts Must Be Safe Spaces': ICE Arrests Undo Long-Held Migrant Protections, Lawyers Warn
Abené Clayton, Guardian UK
Clayton writes: "Immigration attorneys and activists have condemned the recent arrests of Latino immigrants outside courthouses in northern California."
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Members of Iraqi security forces inspect the damage at the airport hit by U.S. air strikes in Karbala. (photo: Alaa al-Marjani)
Members of Iraqi security forces inspect the damage at the airport hit by U.S. air strikes in Karbala. (photo: Alaa al-Marjani)


Report: Civilian Among Six Dead in US Strikes Against Iran-Backed Militia in Iraq
Middle East Eye
Excerpt: "Air strikes launched by the United States targeting pro-Iranian military factions in Iraq early on Friday killed one civilian and five security personnel, the Iraqi military has said."
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A French farmer sprays glyphosate herbicide on a cornfield on March 21, 2019. (photo: Jean Francois Monier/Getty)
A French farmer sprays glyphosate herbicide on a cornfield on March 21, 2019. (photo: Jean Francois Monier/Getty)


Monsanto Secretly Funded Glyphosate Studies, Watchdog Finds
Jordan Davidson, EcoWatch
Davidson writes: "A new investigation revealed that Monsanto funneled money to secretly fund academic studies that warned of catastrophic consequences to farmers if glyphosate was banned in the UK, according to research from the German watchdog LobbyControl."

new investigation revealed that Monsanto funneled money to secretly fund academic studies that warned of catastrophic consequences to farmers if glyphosate was banned in the UK, according to research from the German watchdog LobbyControl, as The Guardian reported.
The two studies in question come from 2010 and 2014, which was before the German chemical and pharmaceutical giant Bayer bought Monsanto in 2018. Upon learning of the secret funding, Bayer said the failure to disclose it violated the company's principles, according to The Guardian.
"This is an unacceptable form of opaque lobbying," said Ulrich Müller at LobbyControl, as The Guardian reported. "Citizens, media and decision-makers should know who pays for studies on subjects of public interest. The studies also used very high figures for the benefits of glyphosate and for possible losses in case of a ban. These extreme figures were then used to spin the debate."
However, the authors of the two studies said that the funding did not influence their findings. The 2010 study, called How Valuable is Glyphosate to UK Agriculture and the Environment? touted glyphosate for "a wide range of benefits to users." It said that glyphosate binds to soil and rarely leaches into groundwater. It does mention that glyphosate is sometimes found in surface water, but far below levels that would register as toxic. It then goes on to discuss how a ban of glyphosate would upend UK farming and gardening.
The 2014 study followed a similar line of reasoning. The study, titled Glyphosate Use on Combinable Crops in Europe: Implications for Agriculture and the Environment, also mentioned that glyphosate is highly water soluble and does not readily leach into soil or water and is found in less than 1 percent of water samples. It then goes on to assess "the value of glyphosate use across wheat, winter barley and oilseed rape in Europe."
And yet, one of the lead researchers Sarah Wynn said the funding did not influence her research. She told The Guardian, "As with other companies in our field, it is entirely normal for external organizations to fund research studies. However, it has always been our core principle that our research is never influenced in any way by those that fund us."
Wynn and her colleagues, unsurprisingly, came down in favor of continued glyphosate use. The research concluded, "the loss of glyphosate would cause very severe impacts on UK agriculture and the environment," as The Guardian reported. In the 2014 study they concluded that Europe would see a 20 percent fall in wheat and rapeseed production if glyphosate were banned.
Other researchers came to a different conclusion, noting that farming practices would change. The Andersons Centre at Oxford Economics challenged the conclusion of the Monsanto-funded studies.
In its report on a glyphosate ban in the UK, it said, "The Andersons Centre believe that this may be rather high given the mitigation efforts and the rotational changes discussed elsewhere. A similar process has been undertaken for all the major crops grown in the UK, using the best available data and knowledge of industry experts."
The 2010 and 2014 studies were instrumental in the lobbying efforts of the National Farmers Union and others to successfully campaign against a European ban of glyphosate in 2017, as The Guardian reported. The new revelations have spurred the National Farmers Union to note the source of the funding on its glyphosate information.
The National Farmers Union was not alone in using the research. Industry lobbyings groups the Glyphosate Task Force (now renamed the Glyphosate Renewal Group), also used the research, as did the Crop Protection Association, according to The Guardian.
















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