Difference between revisions of "User:RahalMccall69"

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(Stop sending $2 million to Israel, keep it at home)
(UN- Carbon dioxide in atmosphere reaches record levels)
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As Israel continues to invade Gaza (Why didn t Israel just close the tunnels from the Israeli side? And exactly <a href=http://www.avanttravel.com/page.php?sale=Michael-Kors-Bootie>Michael Kors Bootie</a>  who is sending weapons into Gaza from Israel?), we might review our support. We give Israel $3.5 billion every year for armaments. That s $10 of federal tax for every man, woman and child in the U.S. For Thurston County, that works out to about $2 million a year. Meanwhile, Anthony Lerman, the former director of The Institute for Jewish Policy Research, says about his homeland: Self-appointed arbiters of what s Jewish in the Jewish state extreme religious Zionists and the strictly Orthodox, aided and abetted by Jewish racists in the Knesset like Ayelet Shaked, a Jewish Home Party member who recently called for the mothers of <a href=http://www.avanttravel.com/page.php?sale=Tory-Burch-Backpack>Tory Burch Sale</a>  Palestinian snakes to be killed and on the streets are trashing democracy more each day. Particularly shocking are the mass arrests, nearly 500 since the beginning of July, of Palestinian Arab citizens of Israel for peacefully protesting, and the sanctions against Arab students at universities for posting pro-Gaza messages on social media. Now more than ever we must support those Israelis who cry out for social justice in their own country. For too long we have supported and funded the Israel right-wing s racist ambitions. We would never allow this in our <a href=http://www.alportico.net/page.php?sale=True-Religion-Eyewear>True Religion Eyewear</a>  own country. Besides, we could use that $2 million per year here at home, where our county budget was recently cut by $6 million.John Van Eenwyk Olympia
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That s an increase of 2.9 ppm from the previous year and is 42 percent higher than before the Industrial Age, when levels were about 280 parts per million.
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Based on the current rate, the world s carbon dioxide pollution level is expected to cross the 400 ppm threshold by 2016, said WMO Secretary-General Michel Jarraud. That is way beyond the 350 ppm that some scientists and environmental groups promote as a safe level and which was last seen in 1987.
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CO2 emissions are growing mainly in China and other large developing countries as their economies expand. So far developed and developing countries have failed to reach a binding pact that would curb emissions <a href=http://www.avanttravel.com/michaelkorssonline.php> michael kors outlet</a>  globally. The goal of U.N. climate talks is to deliver such an agreement next year.
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Concentrations of CO2 build up over time because it stays in the atmosphere for decades. So even if emissions stopped today it would take many years before concentrations dropped significantly.
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Top climate scientists are now becoming increasingly skeptical that countries across the globe will meet the voluntary goals they set at the 2009 Copenhagen climate summit of limiting global warming to about 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (2 degrees Celsius) above preindustrial levels.
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In a draft report last month the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel <a href=http://www.alportico.net/gosoc.php> true religion sale</a>  on Climate Change said it is looking more likely that the world will shoot past that point and by mid-century temperatures will increase by about another 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (2 degrees Celsius) compared to temperatures from 1986 to 2005. And by the end of the century that scenario will bring temperatures about 6.7 degrees warmer (3.7 degrees Celsius), it said.
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We know without any doubt that our climate is changing and our weather is becoming more extreme due to human activities such as the burning of fossil fuels, Jarraud said. Time is not on our side, for sure.
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To address the challenge, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has invited heads of state and other leaders to a Sept. 23 climate change summit in New York on the sidelines of the annual U.N. General Assembly. President Barack Obama has said he will attend to help spur new commitments from governments, industry and civil groups for reducing greenhouse gas emissions ahead of next year s global climate talks in Paris.
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The WMO report Tuesday said the rate of ocean acidification, which comes from added carbon absorbed by oceans, appears unprecedented at least over the last 300 million years.  
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Between 1990 and 2013, carbon dioxide and other gas emissions caused a 34 percent increase in the warming effect on the climate, the report said.
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The warming effect, or radiative forcing, measures <a href=http://capstone.edu.sg/images/guccioutlet.onlinesalecc.php>Gucci Outlet Store</a>  the net difference between the sunlight that the Earth absorbs and the energy it radiates back into space. More absorption leads to higher temperatures.
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After carbon dioxide, methane has the biggest effect on climate. Atmospheric concentrations of methane reached a new high of 1,824 parts per billion in 2013, up 153 percent from pre-industrial levels of about 700 parts per billion.
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About 40 percent of the methane comes from natural sources such as termites and wetlands, but the rest is due to cattle breeding, rice agriculture, fossil fuel burning, landfills and incineration, according to the agency.
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Associated Press writer Karl Ritter contributed to this report from Stockholm.

Revision as of 16:44, 15 September 2014

@@@ That s an increase of 2.9 ppm from the previous year and is 42 percent higher than before the Industrial Age, when levels were about 280 parts per million. Based on the current rate, the world s carbon dioxide pollution level is expected to cross the 400 ppm threshold by 2016, said WMO Secretary-General Michel Jarraud. That is way beyond the 350 ppm that some scientists and environmental groups promote as a safe level and which was last seen in 1987. CO2 emissions are growing mainly in China and other large developing countries as their economies expand. So far developed and developing countries have failed to reach a binding pact that would curb emissions <a href=http://www.avanttravel.com/michaelkorssonline.php> michael kors outlet</a> globally. The goal of U.N. climate talks is to deliver such an agreement next year. Concentrations of CO2 build up over time because it stays in the atmosphere for decades. So even if emissions stopped today it would take many years before concentrations dropped significantly. Top climate scientists are now becoming increasingly skeptical that countries across the globe will meet the voluntary goals they set at the 2009 Copenhagen climate summit of limiting global warming to about 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (2 degrees Celsius) above preindustrial levels. In a draft report last month the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel <a href=http://www.alportico.net/gosoc.php> true religion sale</a> on Climate Change said it is looking more likely that the world will shoot past that point and by mid-century temperatures will increase by about another 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit (2 degrees Celsius) compared to temperatures from 1986 to 2005. And by the end of the century that scenario will bring temperatures about 6.7 degrees warmer (3.7 degrees Celsius), it said.

We know without any doubt that our climate is changing and our weather is becoming more extreme due to human activities such as the burning of fossil fuels, Jarraud said. Time is not on our side, for sure. 

To address the challenge, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has invited heads of state and other leaders to a Sept. 23 climate change summit in New York on the sidelines of the annual U.N. General Assembly. President Barack Obama has said he will attend to help spur new commitments from governments, industry and civil groups for reducing greenhouse gas emissions ahead of next year s global climate talks in Paris. The WMO report Tuesday said the rate of ocean acidification, which comes from added carbon absorbed by oceans, appears unprecedented at least over the last 300 million years. Between 1990 and 2013, carbon dioxide and other gas emissions caused a 34 percent increase in the warming effect on the climate, the report said. The warming effect, or radiative forcing, measures <a href=http://capstone.edu.sg/images/guccioutlet.onlinesalecc.php>Gucci Outlet Store</a> the net difference between the sunlight that the Earth absorbs and the energy it radiates back into space. More absorption leads to higher temperatures. After carbon dioxide, methane has the biggest effect on climate. Atmospheric concentrations of methane reached a new high of 1,824 parts per billion in 2013, up 153 percent from pre-industrial levels of about 700 parts per billion. About 40 percent of the methane comes from natural sources such as termites and wetlands, but the rest is due to cattle breeding, rice agriculture, fossil fuel burning, landfills and incineration, according to the agency. Associated Press writer Karl Ritter contributed to this report from Stockholm.

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