NY Times - Percentage of Americans who say that, as children, they knew a compassionate, nonjudgmental adult: 35
Percentage of these Americans who say that their mother was such a person: 50. That their father was: 5
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
NY Times - Percentage of Americans who say that, as children, they knew a compassionate, nonjudgmental adult: 35
Percentage of these Americans who say that their mother was such a person: 50. That their father was: 5
Independent, 'UK - Long lines at airports may soon return as bosses at the Department of Homeland Security warn that they will quickly run out of funds to pay security staff.
“That money is dried up, if I continue down this path, the first week of May, because my payroll at DHS is just over $1.6 billion every two weeks,” newly instated DHS Secretary Markwayne Mullin told Fox & Friends on Tuesday.
“There is no more emergency fund, so the president can’t do another executive order for us to use money, because there’s no more money there,” he added.
According to Office of Management and Budget data, as of this week, less than $1.4 billion remains in the DHS’s $10 billion budget.
Long lines at airports could return soon as bosses at the Department of Homeland Security warn that they will soon run out of funding to pay security staff.
The government shutdown affecting the DHS and Transport Security Administration workers has been ongoing since mid-February and is the longest in U.S. history, with approximately 100,000 employees reportedly at risk of not being paid until summer.
The lack of payment has resulted in heavy understaffing, causing huge lines out of airports and other major disruptions. According to Politico, by early March, nearly 500 TSA officers had already resigned.
Alternet America - The man whose job was to make sure America’s nuclear and chemical weapons stayed secret sat down to dinner with a woman he’d just met and told her everything. Andrew Hugg, the U.S. Army’s Chief of Chemical Nuclear Surety, was escorted out of the Pentagon and placed on administrative leave after O’Keefe Media Group released undercover footage of him spilling sensitive national security information to a woman he thought was on a date with him. She was not on a date with him.
Over dinner, Hugg discussed potential U.S. action against Iran’s leadership, described how nuclear launch decisions are made, confirmed that the U.S. still possesses nerve agents, confirmed an army chemist had recently died from exposure to an agent, and acknowledged that U.S. airstrikes had killed children in Iran. He said all of this to a stranger.
At some point during the evening, Hugg looked across the table and said: “You’re not a spy, right? Your eyes have mesmerized me so much… The easiest way to get intelligence… send a pretty girl, talk to the guy.”
Bloomberg - The Trump administration is said to be nearing a rescue package for Spirit Airlines that could give the US government the option to own as much as 90% of the carrier once it emerges from bankruptcy. It’s the latest unorthodox move by Trump into the kind of state-driven economic policy more commonly seen in places like China. During his second term, Trump has shown an extraordinary willingness to take financial positions in private-sector companies his administration deems essential for the US, such as chipmaker Intel. The strategy has drawn scrutiny from critics who question whether the approach could skew markets and create risks for taxpayers.
Nearly half of Americans, 152.3 million people, live in places with unhealthy levels of air pollution, new study finds (More) | See most polluted cities (More) | ... and cleanest (More)
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Inside Climate News - Nearly half the nation’s children live in places with dangerous levels of air pollution, according to a report released Wednesday by the American Lung Association. That’s 33.5 million children—46 percent of the country’s kids—living in areas with failing grades for at least one measure of air pollution that is particularly harmful to developing lungs.
The report also found that people of color are more than twice as likely as white people to live in a community with failing grades for all three measures. Latinos are more than three times as likely to live in such communities, unchanged from last year’s report.
Since 2000, the ALA’s annual State of the Air reports have detailed the nation’s air quality, which improved for decades following the passage of the 1970 Clean Air Act. But in recent years, heat and wildfires worsened by climate change are reversing some of that progress.
Gabrielle Canon Guardian - Scientists and officials are keeping a close eye on conditions brewing in the Pacific Ocean that could spike temperatures and smash global heat records in the year ahead. It’s still too early to get a definitive picture, but there are signs that a so-called super El Niño could develop this year, supercharging extreme weather events around the world. Some forecasts are suggesting it could become one of the strongest ever recorded.
Alongside heating from the human-caused climate crisis, this could put the world on track to once again temporarily breach the 1.5C average temperature rise over preindustrial levels – the critical climate threshold that experts have warned comes with a host of catastrophic consequences. Some models show that temperature anomalies could even push past that point next year and go beyond a 2C increase for the first time in recorded history.
Are we heading for ‘super El Niño’ – and what could we expect?
Chance of El Niño forming in Pacific Ocean may push global temperatures to record highs in 202
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New Republic - Arizona Senator Ruben Gallego should be commended for some excellent fact-checking of Trump crony Kevin Warsh on Tuesday.
Warsh is Trump’s pick to be the next chair of the Federal Reserve after Jerome Powell’s term expires in May. During Warsh’s Senate committee confirmation hearing, Gallego tried to suss out whether Warsh was going to put the president’s political interests ahead of the country’s economic health.
“Earlier today, you said to Senator [John] Kennedy that President Trump never demanded you to cut interest rates in your job interview. Is that your sworn testimony?” Gallego asked.
“That is, Senator,” Warsh said.
“Well, someone here is lying, then,” Gallego replied. “It’s either you or President Trump. Because in an interview with The Wall Street Journal of December 12, President Trump confirmed he pressed you on your commitment to support interest rate cuts.”
Gallego helpfully cited the Journal article for Warsh: “During a 45-minute meeting … the president pressed Warsh on whether he could trust him to support interest-rate cuts if he were chosen to lead the central bank, according to people familiar with the meeting. Trump, in the Journal interview, confirmed that reporting.”
Warsh responded by claiming the reporters who wrote the story—Meridith McGraw, Nick Timiraos, and Brian Schwartz—were fibbing:
“Senator, there’s, of course, a third alternative. You cite a couple of reporters for a leading financial newspaper.… I think those reporters either need better sources, or better journalistic standards.”
MS Now - There was one question hanging over the room during Tuesday’s meeting of the Senate Banking Committee. According to the hearing schedule, the gathered senators were there to adjudicate Kevin Warsh’s nomination to become the next chair of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors. Matters of monetary policy were discussed, but the focus would inevitably return to whether Warsh, if confirmed, would stand up to President Donald Trump and ensure the independence of the Fed from political pressure.
It’s an issue that barely came up in the most recent confirmation hearings for a new chair, nine years ago. The good news is that Warsh was adamant about having no interest in merely doing Trump’s bidding as chair. “I do not believe that independence of monetary policy is threatened when elected officials state their views on rates,” Warsh declared in his opening remarks. “Fed independence is up to the Fed.”
Much more troubling, however, was Warsh’s response to a simple question from the committee’s ranking member, Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass.: “Did Donald Trump lose the 2020 election?” It is not the sort of complicated economic issue that he’d expect to oversee, though it still had a simple factual answer. And his response wasn’t encouraging given the pressure Trump has placed on Warsh’s predecessor and the current Fed Chair Jerome Powell. More
| Data: Ember; Chart: Ben Geman/Axios |