HL Climate Change Thread: Fare the well old world

hashmander

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if you believe weather patterns are god's doing then when you die in one or lose your house in one you just take your L and keep moving because god can't be a terrorist or some other wrap yourself in a pretzel logic. i guess it's more outrageous if that same person dies in a terrorist attack or their home is destroyed in one, even though the odds of that happening where the faux news audience that laps up this nonsensical shyt is strongest (bumblefukk, usa) is pretty much nil.
 

Domingo Halliburton

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President Barack Obama had said that the media tends to overstate the threat of terrorism compared with the threat of climate change and disease “because that’s what folks watch, and it’s all about ratings.”

off topic but what's up with Obama saying "folks" all the time. Which consulting group got paid a few hundred thousand to advise him to say that?
 

Strapped

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Faux is a French word for "false". The adjective has been adopted into the English language to describe an imitation or ersatz good. When manufacturing faux objects .
 

88m3

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BY KATIE VALENTINE POSTED ON MARCH 8, 2015 AT 11:08 AM UPDATED: MARCH 8, 2015 AT 12:27 PM

AP243683673111-638x452.jpg

Florida Gov. Rick Scott gives his address after the swearing in for his second term as governor of Florida at the Florida state capitol in Tallahassee, Fla., Tuesday Jan. 6, 2015.

CREDIT: AP PHOTO/MARK WALLHEISER

Florida’s Department of Environmental Protection is tasked with protecting the state’s “air, water and land.” But there’s one environmental threat you won’t hear DEP officials talking about.

Officials at Florida’s DEP have banned the words “climate change” and “global warming” from all official communications, including reports and emails, according to aninvestigation published Sunday by the Florida Center for Investigative Reporting (FCIR).

Four former DEP employees told FCIR that they had been instructed not to use the terms during their time at the state’s DEP.

“We were told not to use the terms ‘climate change,’ ‘global warming’ or ‘sustainability,’” Christopher Byrd, who served as an attorney with the DEP’s Office of General Counsel from 2008 to 2013, told FCIR. “That message was communicated to me and my colleagues by our superiors in the Office of General Counsel.”

The DEP’s press secretary Tiffany Cowie disagreed with these reports, however, saying that her department “does not have a policy on this.” But according to the former employees’ accounts, the unofficial policy went into place after Gov. Rick Scott (R) took office in 2011 and appointed a new DEP director. Over the last year, Scott has skirtedanswering questions on his views on climate change. He said in 2010 that he had “not been convinced” that climate change was real, but during last year’s gubernatorial race, he refused to take a stand on the issue. In August, five Florida climate scientists sat downwith Scott in an attempt to explain the science behind climate change and the effects it’s having in Florida, but the scientists left the meeting feeling unsure that the governor had gotten the message.

The ban on using “climate change” and “global warming at the DEP manifested in a variety of ways, FCIR writes. One writer wanted to include climate change in a series of fact sheets he was writing on coral reefs for the state’s Coral Reef Conservation Program, but he said he was instructed not to by DEP employees. In addition, when volunteers attended a 2014 meeting the Coral Reef Conservation Program held to train volunteers to conduct presentations on coral reef health in Florida, two volunteers said they were told not to address climate change when talking about threats facing coral reefs.

“I told them the biggest problem I have was that there was absolutely no mention of climate change and the affect of climate change on coral reefs,” Doug Young, president of the South Florida Audubon Society and a member of the Broward County Climate Change Task Force who attended the meeting, told FCIR. “The two young women, really good people, said, ‘We are not allowed to show the words, or show any slides that depicted anything related to climate change.’”

An unwritten ban on mentioning “climate change” is concerning for an environmental agency in any state, but Florida in particular faces major threats from climate change and its impacts. The state has been called “ground zero” for sea level rise, an impact that’salready causing problems in parts of South Florida. The FCIR notes that the state doesn’t have any ban on talking about sea level rise, but it’s hard to address sea level rise without also addressing the broader problem of climate change. And on a federal level, Florida hasn’t been great at doing either: Scott announced last month that $106 million of his proposed budget would go towards ways to mitigate the impacts of sea level rise in Florida, but his re-election environmental plan published last year didn’t mention climate change.

http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2015/03/08/3631198/florida-dep-bans-climate-change-investigation/
 
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