Saturday, May 16, 2020

TRUMP DEATH CLOCK

RSN: 2020: The "Darkest Winter in Modern History."










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16 May 20

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2020: The "Darkest Winter in Modern History."
Rick Bright. (photo: Shawn Thew/AFP/Getty Images)
Brian Naylor, NPR
Naylor writes: "Rick Bright, a career government scientist-turned-whistleblower, told a congressional panel Thursday that without a stronger federal response, the coronavirus threatens to make 2020 the 'darkest winter in modern history.'"









U.S. State Department Inspector General Steve Linick leaves after holding a briefing with lawmakers on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., October 2, 2019. (photo: Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images)
U.S. State Department Inspector General Steve Linick leaves after holding a briefing with lawmakers on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., October 2, 2019. (photo: Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images)



State Department Inspector General Becomes the Latest Watchdog Fired by Trump
Zachary Cohen, Manu Raju, Jennifer Hansler, Veronica Stracqualursi, Kylie Atwood and Vivian Salama, CNN
Excerpt: "President Donald Trump on Friday fired State Department Inspector General Steve Linick, the latest in a series of dismissals of independent government watchdogs that have come in the wake of the President's acquittal on articles of impeachment earlier this year."
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House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-CA, walks past the Statuary Hall ahead of floor debate on a record $3 trillion coronavirus response package Friday to fund the fight against the pandemic and provide emergency payments to millions of Americans. (photo: Olivier Douliery/AFP/Getty Images)
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-CA, walks past the Statuary Hall ahead of floor debate on a record $3 trillion coronavirus response package Friday to fund the fight against the pandemic and provide emergency payments to millions of Americans. (photo: Olivier Douliery/AFP/Getty Images)


House Approves $3 Trillion Proposal for New Coronavirus Aid
Claudia Grisales, Kelsey Snell and Susan Davis, NPR
Excerpt: "House lawmakers on Friday approved a Democratic proposal to provide $3 trillion in coronavirus relief which would include a new wave of help for state and local governments, workers and families."
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Immigrant children in a detention center. (photo: Ross D. Franklin)
Immigrant children in a detention center. (photo: Ross D. Franklin)


Indefinite Detention or Family Separation? US Forced Immigrants to Choose, Lawyers Say
Amanda Holpuch, Guardian UK
Holpuch writes: "US officials gave dozens of detained immigrant parents an ultimatum - allow your children to be released from detention without you or face indefinite detention together, according to legal representatives from the country's three family detention centers."
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House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-CA, speaks on proxy voting and the House COVID-19 stimulus bill, during a social-distanced press conference at the U.S. Capitol on Friday. (photo: Kevin Dietsch/UPI)
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-CA, speaks on proxy voting and the House COVID-19 stimulus bill, during a social-distanced press conference at the U.S. Capitol on Friday. (photo: Kevin Dietsch/UPI)


With Move to Remote Voting, House Alters What It Means for Congress to Meet
Nicholas Fandos, The New York Times
Fandos writes: "The House of Representatives acted on Friday to allow remote voting and virtual hearings. The vote untethered Congress from its mandate to come together physically."
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An undated picture, likely taken in the 1930s, shows the Old City of Jerusalem. (photo: AFP)
An undated picture, likely taken in the 1930s, shows the Old City of Jerusalem. (photo: AFP)


Nakba: The Forgotten 19th Century Origins of the Palestinian Catastrophe
Joseph Massad, Middle East Eye
Massad writes: "The Nakba, Palestinians' loss of their lands and homes, arguably began in the 1880s with the arrival of the first Zionist Jewish colonists, who evicted Palestinians from land the colonists had purchased from absentee landlords."
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Pollution from a factory. (photo: Science Focus)
Pollution from a factory. (photo: Science Focus)


States Sue Trump EPA for Suspending Environmental Regulations During Pandemic
Tiffany Duong, EcoWatch
Duong writes: "On Wednesday, nine states sued the Trump administration over the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) decision to temporarily relax various environmental regulations during the coronavirus pandemic."


The move has been called an implicit "license to pollute," according to The Hill, and allegedly violates numerous federal pollution laws as well as the EPA's duty to protect the environment.
The states' complaint challenges a March 26 EPA memo in which the agency put forth a new, relaxed policy. Polluters are allowed, at their sole discretion, to stop monitoring and reporting air emissions and water pollution levels during the outbreak.
The memo was produced by the EPA's compliance director, Susan Parker Bodine, three days after she received a request from the American Petroleum Institute to halt pollution enforcement, reported the San Francisco Chronicle.
In the memo, Bodine announced that the new, relaxed policies would be retroactive to March 13, when President Trump declared a state of emergency regarding COVID-19. Due to outbreak-related "potential worker shortages" and "travel and social distancing restrictions," companies could decide for themselves when it would no longer be practical to monitor pollution and report it to federal, state and local agencies, the San Francisco Chronicle reported.
Bodine said businesses should try to follow reporting and monitoring regulations but that noncompliance would not be penalized if caused by coronavirus, reported the San Francisco Chronicle. She did not indicate how the EPA could learn of any violations or dangerous emissions if reporting isn't required, the news report added.
Similarly, the regulation change is "temporary," but no end date is indicated in the memo. And, while companies are required to document their noncompliance, critics fear the environmental damage will already be done, reported The Hill.
EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler said that the EPA recognized that challenges created by COVID-19 "may directly impact the ability of regulated facilities to meet all federal regulatory requirements," reported the San Francisco Chronicle.
Wheeler also said the agency would still "expect facilities to comply with their obligations under the law" unless, of course, Covid-19 made it "impracticable," reported Bloomberg Law.
The states' lawsuit, filed in New York federal court, alleges that the EPA lacks the legal authority to "effectively waive critical monitoring and reporting obligations" that alert the public to environmental and health hazards, reported Bloomberg Law. It also argues that the EPA failed to properly weigh the public health impacts the relaxed policy will have amid the coronavirus pandemic, reported Reuters.
"Rather than exercising enforcement discretion as authorized by law, EPA issued a broad, open-ended policy that gives regulated parties free rein to self-determine when compliance with federal environmental laws is not practical because of Covid-19," the complaint stated.
The enforcement suspensions will lead to more chemical spills and "likely will result in increased air and water pollution," endangering residents who live nearby, downwind or downstream, the suit added, reported the San Francisco Chronicle.
The states also argued that the EPA failed to demonstrate both the need for the drastic change and any rationale for bypassing the traditional notice and comment period required for new rules, reported The Hill. The Clean Air Act and Clean Water Act both require companies to monitor and report emissions to the EPA, and the agency has therefore exceeded its authorities under both regulations, the complaint says, reported The Hill.
"The Trump Administration cannot give industries the green light to ignore critical environmental and public health laws, especially during a public health crisis," said New York Attorney General Letitia James, reported Bloomberg Law.
California Attorney General Xavier Becerra said, "The Trump Administration is trying to use the current public health crisis to sweep environmental violations under the rug," reported The Hill.
"What's worse, the Administration is doing so even as evidence grows that communities exposed to air pollution are at increased risk from coronavirus," he added, reported The Hill.
The EPA would not comment on the litigation, but told The Hill that "the EPA temporary policy is a lawful and proper exercise of the Agency's authority under extraordinary circumstances." In the same statement, the EPA noted, "This is not a nationwide waiver of environmental rules."
The EPA was also sued on April 16 by environmental groups seeking to require the agency to determine when companies stopped complying with environmental laws and to immediately notify the public, reported the San Francisco Chronicle.
The nine states filing the complaint are California, Illinois, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Oregon, Vermont and Virginia. The suit alleges that the regulation rollback, if allowed to persist, will force states to try to "fill EPA's enforcement shoes at a time when they are increasingly strapped for resources, or risk the health of our residents," reported the San Francisco Chronicle.


















What I'm telling my graduating students

WE WILL SURVIVE & PREVAIL IF WE PARTICIPATE! What I'm telling my graduating students ROBERT REICH MAY 5 Friends, My students are gra...