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Month: September 2018

Trump cannot simply erase the Palestinian right of return

Trump cannot simply erase the Palestinian right of return

James Zogby writes: First, the Trump Administration “took Jerusalem off the table.” Now, in an especially dangerous display of recklessness, it has announced its intention to do the same for the Palestinian “right of return.” The first indication that this was in the works came with the administration’s announcement that it would be suspending all U.S. assistance to UNWRA, the UN agency created to address the humanitarian needs of the Palestinians who were forced to flee from their homes in…

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The Oslo Accords served only to advance, entrench and protect Israel’s occupation

The Oslo Accords served only to advance, entrench and protect Israel’s occupation

Joseph Dana writes: Next week marks the 25th anniversary of the Oslo Accords, when then Israeli foreign minister Shimon Peres and Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat signed an agreement outlining a timeframe for a lasting Middle Eastern peace process. In a now infamous photo, Arafat and then Israeli prime minister Yitzhak Rabin shook hands on September 13, 1993, on the lawns of the White House, overlooked by a congratulatory Bill Clinton. The accords saw Arafat, Rabin and Peres awarded the Nobel…

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Wildlife preservation depends on saving animals, their habitats, and their cultures

Wildlife preservation depends on saving animals, their habitats, and their cultures

Ed Yong writes: In the 1800s, there were so many bighorn sheep in Wyoming that when one trapper passed through Jackson Hole, he described “over a thousand sheep in the cliffs above our campsite.” No such sights exist today. The bighorns slowly fell to hunters’ rifles, and to diseases spread from domestic sheep. Most herds were wiped out, and by 1900, a species that once numbered in the millions stood instead in the low thousands. In the 1940s, the Wyoming…

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Is it time to use 25th Amendment to remove Trump from office?

Is it time to use 25th Amendment to remove Trump from office?

CNN reports: Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren, seizing on an explosive op-ed from an anonymous administration official, said Thursday that it’s time to use constitutional powers to remove President Donald Trump office if top officials don’t think he can do the job. “If senior administration officials think the President of the United States is not able to do his job, then they should invoke the 25th Amendment,” Warren told CNN. “The Constitution provides for a procedure whenever the Vice President and…

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Justice Dept. demands millions of North Carolina voter records, confounding elections officials

Justice Dept. demands millions of North Carolina voter records, confounding elections officials

The New York Times reports: Federal prosecutors have issued sweeping subpoenas demanding that millions of North Carolina voter records be turned over to immigration authorities by Sept. 25. With just two months to go before the midterms, the subpoenas threatened to sow chaos in the state’s election machinery, while renewing the Trump administration’s repeatedly discredited claims of widespread voting by illegal immigrants. The unsealed grand jury subpoenas were sent to the state elections board and to 44 county elections boards…

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Germans are more afraid of Trump than terrorism

Germans are more afraid of Trump than terrorism

AFP reports: The policies of Donald Trump are now the greatest source of German angst, according to an insurance company’s survey of the deepest fears plaguing the country’s people. The US president’s policies were named as the top fear factor by 69 per cent of respondents in the annual survey, in which last year’s number one issue, terrorism, was bumped down to fifth place. “More than two-thirds of Germans have a great fear that the politics of Donald Trump are…

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The attempted assassination of Sergei Skripal was designed to send a message

The attempted assassination of Sergei Skripal was designed to send a message

Mark Galeotti writes: Six months after the attempted assassination of Sergei Skripal, a former Russian double agent in the United Kingdom, details about the suspected killers are finally coming out. According to British prosecutors, the two men named as suspects belonged to the GRU, Russia’s military intelligence service, which is the very agency Skripal worked for when he was a British spy. On the one hand, these alleged ties attest to the GRU’s aggressive agenda—something of which governments in the…

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As temperatures rise, so do insects’ appetites for corn, rice and wheat

As temperatures rise, so do insects’ appetites for corn, rice and wheat

Science News reports: With temperatures creeping up as the climate warms, those very hungry caterpillars could get even hungrier, and more abundant. Crop losses to pests may grow. Insects will be “eating more of our lunch,” says Curtis Deutsch of the University of Washington in Seattle. Based on how heat revs up insect metabolism and reproduction, he and his colleagues estimate that each degree Celsius of warming temperatures means an extra 10 to 25 percent of damage to wheat, maize…

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The resistance inside the Trump administration

The resistance inside the Trump administration

In an op-ed published anonymously at the New York Times, a senior Trump administration official says: Given the instability many witnessed, there were early whispers within the cabinet of invoking the 25th Amendment, which would start a complex process for removing the president. But no one wanted to precipitate a constitutional crisis. So we will do what we can to steer the administration in the right direction until — one way or another — it’s over. The bigger concern is…

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The Gulf Coast is most at risk and least prepared for climate change

The Gulf Coast is most at risk and least prepared for climate change

Eric Holthaus writes: There’s been a recent lull of high-profile hurricanes in Louisiana, Mississippi, and Alabama, but the Gulf Coast’s vulnerabilities go far beyond the attention-getting late summer storms. By many metrics, it’s the region most at risk — and least prepared — for climate change. A study published last year in Science magazine showed that for the country’s poorest counties, largely located in the Southeast, climate change could exacerbate already-pervasive economic inequality. If the region continues along a business-as-usual…

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How can China satisfy surging demand for meat without undermining the country’s commitment to combating climate change?

How can China satisfy surging demand for meat without undermining the country’s commitment to combating climate change?

Marcello Rossi reports: Fueled by rising incomes rather than urbanization, meat consumption in China grew sevenfold over the last three decades and a half. In the early 1980s, when the population was still under one billion, the average Chinese person ate around 30 pounds of meat per year. Today, with an additional 380 million people, it’s nearly 140 pounds. On the whole, the country consumes 28 percent of the world’s meat — twice as much as the United States. And…

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Trump called Sessions a ‘dumb Southerner,’ but ‘without the South he wouldn’t be the president of the United States’

Trump called Sessions a ‘dumb Southerner,’ but ‘without the South he wouldn’t be the president of the United States’

The Washington Post reports: Southern Republican senators defended Jeff Sessions after an explosive new book by Bob Woodward recounted how President Trump called his attorney general a “dumb Southerner” and mocked his accent. In the forthcoming chronicle of Trump’s White House, “Fear,” Woodward writes that the president privately called Sessions a “traitor,” saying: “This guy is mentally retarded. He’s this dumb Southerner . . . He couldn’t even be a one-person country lawyer down in Alabama.” The remarks are said to have…

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I survived the Warsaw ghetto. Here are the lessons I’d like to pass on

I survived the Warsaw ghetto. Here are the lessons I’d like to pass on

Stanisław Aronson writes: Germany’s chancellor Angela Merkel stated this summer that “when the generation that survived the war is no longer here, we’ll find out whether we have learned from history”. As a Polish Jew born in 1925, who survived the Warsaw ghetto, lost my family in the Holocaust, served in a special operations unit of the Polish underground, the Home Army, and fought in the Warsaw uprising of 1944, I know what it means to be at the sharp…

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Trump admin rejected report showing refugees did not pose major security threat

Trump admin rejected report showing refugees did not pose major security threat

NBC News reports: The Trump administration has consistently sought to exaggerate the potential security threat posed by refugees and dismissed an intelligence assessment last year that showed refugees did not present a significant threat to the U.S., three former senior officials told NBC News. Hard-liners in the administration then issued their own report this year that several former officials and rights groups say misstates the evidence and inflates the threat posed by people born outside the U.S. At a meeting…

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