Daily Archives: January 1, 2023

Why some House Republicans are holding out on McCarthy’s Speaker bid


PBS NewsHour Jan 1, 2023


2023

When the new Congress convenes on Tuesday, one of the first orders of business in the House will be selecting a new Speaker. Normally, the role goes to the leader of the majority party, but House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy is still rounding up votes. Congressional correspondent Lisa Desjardins joins John Yang to discuss.

Broken Jet Stream Cause of Recent Flash Freeze, Big Blizzard, then Rapid Melt in North American


Paul Beckwith – Jan 1, 2023

I coined the phrase “weather whiplashing” many years ago to describe the wrenching changes that often occur now due to abrupt climate system change.

The recent weather in North America is a perfect example of this phenomena. Shortly before Christmas, there were warm temperatures and rainfall, followed by a flash freeze, high winds, and heavy snowfall, leading to blizzard conditions in many places. Buffalo, NY and the Fort Erie region were particularly hit hard by the cold front picking up moisture from the warmer than normal Great Lakes causing heavy lake effect snowfalls on the eastern shoreline regions of the lakes. The long duration high winds pushed lake water eastward, causing a seiche whereby water levels on western shorelines dropped 7 feet, and the water piling up on eastern shorelines raised water levels over 10 feet, which combined with 30 foot plus waves to damage coastal properties.

A week later, there was a massive melt of this snow, as temperatures went well over freezing and caused rapid melt and flooding.

Welcome to the turbocharged weather wilding phenomena that is directly caused by abrupt climate system change.

Why scientists are tracking the COVID-19 virus in deer


CBC News: The National – Jan 1, 2023

Researchers in Manitoba are swabbing deer for the virus that causes COVID-19 to determine how the virus evolves in deer, which could give scientists a better understanding of how COVID-19 impacts animals, and even humans.

Some food banks see up to 40% increase in usage


CBC News: The National – Jan 1, 2023

Food banks are continuing to cope with a surge in demand due to rising food prices, with little hope of relief in sight. In Manitoba, the province’s largest food bank says it’s seen a 40 per cent increase in clients in the last year alone.

Growing up Suzuki: Environmentalist’s daughters on carrying on his legacy


CBC News: The National


Jan 1, 2023

From death threats to eating on camera, Severn Cullis-Suzuki and Sarika Cullis-Suzuki talk about what it was like growing up with their famous environmentalist father, David Suzuki (including some little-known facts about their dad).

McCarthy’s concession could ‘put him on constant thin ice’ says analyst | Trump

CNN Dec 30, 2022

House Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy has offered a key concession to critics of his bid for the House speakership. CNN Political analyst Scott Jennings discusses the possible ramifications on this move.

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Kevin McCarthy’s Ambitions Are Going to Take Him to Some Dark Places | Trump

01 january 23

In order to secure enough votes to become speaker, he will have to make a bargain with more than one devil.

Sometime next week, Kevin McCarthy, an amiable (if largely invertebrate) career politician from Bakersfield, California, will offer himself up as human sacrifice to the barbarian tribes of the Republican caucus in the House of Representatives.

Remember Richard Harris in the egregious 1970 movie, A Man Called Horse, in which Harris is a British nobleman who joins the Sioux, but not before he completes initiation rites that include being hung up by the thorax with pins? Next week, McCarthy will undergo something similar—except, unlike Harris’ John Morgan, McCarthy also will have to listen to Marjorie Taylor Greene. The arrangement is blatantly unconstitutional as a violation of the Eighth Amendment. It’s cruel and she’s unusual.

You see, McCarthy wants to be speaker of the House of Representatives. Nero didn’t want to be emperor as much as McCarthy wants to be speaker. Poisoning his rivals being unavailable as a campaign strategy, McCarthy has determined instead to further poison the political culture. He has already promised endless snipe hunts into everything from the administration’s COVID and border policies to Hunter Biden’s laptop, soon to replace “But Her Emails” as shorthand for pointless wastes of time, money, and political energy, all of which would be better spent on actual problems. He’s even teeing up the January 6 select committee. From the Washington Post:

McCarthy’s letter echoes the desire of many other Republican lawmakers to aggressively go after the Jan. 6 committee, which they have long criticized as a purely political vehicle to attack former president Donald Trump. Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) — the likely next chairman of the House Judiciary Committee — and his staff are already preparing to examine any evidence omitted from the final report that is more flattering or at least exculpatory about Trump’s actions leading up to the Jan. 6 assault, according to one Republican operative who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe GOP strategy.

Only McCarthy’s vestigial conscience can tell him if the gavel is worth his coming humiliation. At the moment, for all his truckling and groveling, he still might not have the votes. Largely through the efforts of the people he’s currently placating and the former president* to whom they remain enthralled, the new Republican majority in the House is a slim 10 votes, which means that—assuming no Democrats vote for him, and god help any who do—with six new members already on record as refusing to vote for him, McCarthy is two votes short of what he needs. Since the establishment of the Constitution, only 14 elections for speaker have gone to multiple ballots; the last of them occurred in 1923, the only time it’s happened in the years since the Civil War.

I don’t think I want to know what McCarthy is going to have to do in order to get the votes he needs. I hope he has a strong thorax.

Frederick Huntington Gillett was a career Republican politician of the old WASP school in Massachusetts: a graduate of Amherst College and Harvard Law, Gillett did a turn as assistant attorney general for the Commonwealth (God save it!), did a year in the state House of Representatives, and then got elected to Congress, where he served from 1893 to 1925. After leaving the House, he got elected to a single term in the Senate and then died in 1935. But it was in January 1923 that Frederick Huntington Gillett becomes relevant to current events.

Four different political parties sent representatives to the House in the election of 1922. In addition to Republicans and Democrats, two were from the uniquely Minnesotan Farmer-Labor Party; one of them had defeated Andrew Volstead, the Republican whose name had become synonymous with Prohibition; and the other was Socialist Victor Berger of Wisconsin. Everything in politics was rather fluid. The Republicans lost 77 seats, which still left them with a 17-seat majority. The older Republicans were still divided over the 1912 election, and the old Bull Moose hands refused to follow Sen. Robert LaFollette, the putative Republican congressional leader. The anger around bonus payments to veterans of World War I was still raging, and Prohibition, which outlasted Volstead, had everybody furious. In this atmosphere, the House of Representatives met in January of 1923 to elect a Speaker for the upcoming 68th Congress.

…(read more).

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NASA Methane source animation

Peter Carter Nov 14, 2022

Short NASA Methane source animation

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What’s going on with the jet stream?


YaleClimateConnections Nov 17, 2022

What exactly is the jet stream, and what, if any, is its connection to the increasing number and severity of extreme weather events, be they drought, extreme heat, wildfires, or flooding?

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NASA Warming Animation 2022

Peter Carter Nov 14, 2022

NASA temperature increase animation published 2022

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