WATER WARS

15 comments

Posted on 8th December 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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From Montana to West Virginia, officials on both sides have written President Barack Obama urging him to intervene — or not — in a long-running dispute over whether water from the Missouri’s upstream reservoirs should be released into the Mississippi River to ease low water levels that have imperiled commercial traffic.

The quarrel pits boaters, fishermen and tourism interests against communities downstream and companies that rely on the Mississippi to do business.

“We are back to the age-old old battle of recreation and irrigation verses navigation,” said Sen. Claire McCaskill, a Democrat from Missouri.

If the water is held back, downstream states warn that shipping on the Mississippi could come to a near standstill sometime after Christmas along a 180-mile stretch between St. Louis and the southern Illinois town of Cairo. But if the water is released, upstream communities worry that the toll of the drought could be even worse next year for farms and towns that depend on the Missouri.

Obama has not decided whether to enter the dispute, nor has the White House set a timetable to respond. But tensions are rising in this decades-old battle.

From his perch as executive director of the Southeast Missouri Regional Port Authority, Dan Overbey watched this week as workers scrambled to ship out as much grain as possible before the Mississippi gets so low that it is not economically feasible or physically possible to move loaded-down barges.

“I don’t know if we’ll have, ‘How the Grinch Stole the River’ here,” Overbey said. But if there is water to spare, “it would be a good thing to do.”

More than 800 miles to the northwest, Michael Dwyer was also stewing. He’s the executive vice president of the North Dakota Water Users Association.

To Dwyer, the downriver interests are “taking selfishness” to “a level you can’t even comprehend.”

“We suffered the impact of these reservoirs” when they were created decades ago by dams that flooded 500,000 acres of bottomland, Dwyer said. “To have some use of the resource only seems appropriate.”

At the Mississippi River port near Cape Girardeau, Mo., about a million tons of cargo are loaded or unloaded annually, providing about 200 jobs, Overbey said.

The water is also vital in parts of the Dakotas, where the dammed-up Missouri River has spawned a tourism industry centered on boating and fishing.

Todd Martell serves as a guide for walleye fishing in the summer and also runs an upholstery business in Pierre, S.D., that makes custom boat covers and interior furnishings. Lower water levels don’t necessarily hurt the fishing but can leave certain boat ramps high and dry, he said.

Over the past three decades, more than a dozen lawsuits have been filed challenging the management of the river, many of which set Missouri and other downstream states against the Dakotas and other upstream states.

The battles started in 1982, when Missouri, Iowa and Nebraska challenged a government contract allowing water to be drawn from the Missouri River in South Dakota to flush coal through a pipeline to power plants in the southeast. The U.S. Supreme Court blocked the project, but other lawsuits followed, including an effort by upstream states to reduce the water released from dams in an attempt to boost sport fishing in the reservoirs.

Missouri, meanwhile, sued the Army Corps of Engineers when it held back water because of droughts and shortened the navigation season. Environmental groups also joined the court battles, advocating for spring surges and summer declines in downstream river levels to help threatened species of birds and fish.

So far, no lawsuits have been filed in the current competition for water. But battle lines have been drawn.

In May, North Dakota Sen. John Hoeven teamed up with Sen. Roy Blunt of Missouri to tour dams and levees along the Missouri River a year after devastating floods in 2011. The Republicans stressed their desire to work together to improve flood control and river management. Now they are on opposing sides.

“There are times when they need to get rid of water, and we need to appreciate what we have to do about that,” Blunt said. “And there are times when we need water, and they need to appreciate the fact that we need that water, even though they’d rather not get rid of it.”

Said Hoeven: “Obviously, we’re not going to be in agreement all the time.”

Senators from 17 states along the Mississippi and Ohio rivers sent Obama a letter urging him to intervene and release water from Missouri River reservoirs. A day later, 15 officeholders from upstream Missouri River states countered with a letter warning the White House that intervention would be unlawful and would “only exacerbate the drought-related losses already experienced” by towns, Native American tribes and industries that rely on the Missouri River.

The Corps of Engineers, which manages both the Missouri and Mississippi rivers, says its guidelines prohibit it from releasing water from the Missouri River reservoirs for the primary purpose of improving navigation on the Mississippi. That position was backed up by a 1990 report from the federal government’s General Accounting Office, though officials from downstream states believe Obama could trump that by declaring an emergency to avoid an “economic calamity.”

Martell said it’s hard to envision a truce in the water wars.

“The years we’ve really needed the water to stay here, it’s gone,” he said. “And then when we let it go, they complain about that, too. I don’t think there’s any happy medium, to be honest with you.”

BE PREPARED

8 comments

Posted on 28th October 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Good article, but if you haven’t followed this advice by now, it’s too late.

Emergency preparedness checklist for perfect storm Hurricane Sandy – Here’s what you need to get NOW

Mike Adams Natural News [1] Oct 28, 2012

Called a “monster storm,” Hurricane Sandy is much more than a hurricane. It’s a hybrid monster storm system that weather experts are now warning could cause $1 billion in damage when it strikes the U.S. eastern seaboard early Tuesday morning.

If you’re living anywhere near Philadelphia, Boston, Delaware or surrounding states, you have a very limited window of opportunity to get ready with everything you’ll need to ride out this storm. That’s the purpose of this article: To give you an emergency preparedness checklist for surviving this “monster storm.”

Even if you don’t leave nearby, this storm can serve as an important reminder: We must ALL be prepared for unexpected events, or we can easily be caught empty-handed.

A long-lasting event: 2-3 days of being hammered by Mother Nature

Hurricane Sandy is not some simple hurricane that blows through in one night and then is over. “It’s going to be a long-lasting event, two to three days of impact for a lot of people,” said James Franklin [2] of the National Hurricane Center in Miami. “Wind damage, widespread power outages, heavy rainfall, inland flooding and somebody is going to get a significant surge event.”

Given that it usually takes another 2-3 days for cleaning up city streets after a massive snowfall event, this means the following:

!! You need to have a 6-day food and water supply ready right now! !!

That’s 3 days for the storm and 3 days for cleanup. And that’s if nothing else goes terribly wrong. In a worst case scenario, this could extend to 7 – 10 days in some of the harder-hit areas.

Local grocery stores are already sold out of essential items

Anthony Gucciardi of NaturalSociety.com [3] lives in the area expected to be hit by this super storm. Here’s his firsthand report from earlier today:

Major grocery stores in the area have completely sold out of essential items like batteries, bottled water, and even highly processed snack foods that do not require preparation or refrigeration. I personally went to purchase a few minor items for my preparedness [4] kit from a local grocery outlet that is quite large and witnessed completely empty shelves within the aisle that generally contains large amounts of water bottles along with gallon jugs, and various glass sparkling water [5] bottles. The aisle that houses the batteries (particularly the heavy duty kind used for most flashlights) was also almost entirely dry. When shopping I also saw several individuals with the government-approved ‘survival’checklist [6], striking off the items one by one as they acquired them.

 

Last year’s hurricane Irene prompted somewhat of a response from locals within the Philadelphia and New York City area in regards to preparation and concern, but this hurricane has generated one that is far more severe. It is conservative to say that by the end of this weekend going into the storm (assuming it does hit as predicted), most if not all local stores will be out of most essential and even non-essential items. And this is just a few days after the news of the storm hit the mainstream media.

See my complete preparedness checklist, below…

Staying warm

Another huge concern with all this is the possibility that the power may be out. As temperatures drop, this could put many people in the position of having to endure very cold indoor temperatures. This lacking of heating could endure for many days, even as long as two weeks in some areas.

The best defense against the cold is, of course, to have good shelter (a roof over your head), warm clothing and extra sleeping bags for all family members.

Do NOT plan on using propane heaters indoors as these are a health hazard and a fire hazard when used indoors. Same story with candles.

Water: Do you have enough?

Imagine a week without tap water. Now you’re starting to get the picture of what may be coming.

If this storm hits as promised, you’re going to be living in third-world conditions for about a week. Most Americans have never lived in a third-world country like I have, so they’ve never really tried to live without running water, electricity, grocery stores, and so on. (It’s no fun, believe me. Nothing like a cold sponge shower to wake you up in the morning, eh?)

You’ll need a MINIMUM of 2 gallons per day, per person, stored in your home or apartment. So if there are two of you living there, and you’re planning for six days without running water, you will need 24 gallons of water stored, got it?

How can you store [7] that much water?

• Fill your bathtub(s) with water. • Fill empty containers with water and set them aside: Milk jugs, soda bottles, jars, buckets, coolers, etc. • Buy water storage bags and fill them

Make sure you have a home water filter that doesn’t need water pressure to operate: A gravity filter or hand-pumped filter is best. I like the Katadyn brand for portable water filters.

Is your immune system ready?

If you think about the stresses put on you by a disaster scenario, many of them impact your health:

• Sleep deprivation • Adrenal gland depletion • Stress-induced nutrient depletion • Stress from cold temperatures • Possible spread of infectious disease • Anxiety

All of these can be prevented, in part, with immune-boosting nutrition. So this is a time when you really want to boost your intake of superfoods, immune-boosting herbs and nutritional supplements. You want to make sure your body is ready for the stresses and uncertainties it will soon be experiencing.

Remember: Good nutrition will also help you think better, because food affects your brain function. The cleaner your diet, the clearer your thoughts, and the better decisions you’ll make in a crisis.

Staying physically safe

Do you have a fire extinguisher? Fire trucks won’t be able to get to your house during a storm, and indoor fires can rage out of control for hours or days before help arrives. So make sure you have at least one fully-charged fire extinguisher at the ready.

What about physical safety? Do you have a way to defend yourself and your family in case looters start going door to door, demanding money, jewelry and anything else they want? Remember, if the power grid goes down, all the street lights will be off, too, plunging your city and neighborhood into darkness. Criminals love darkness. In their minds, that’s time to “loot and pillage.”

Massachusetts is very much an anti-gun state, meaning only the citizens are disarmed, but not the criminals. When the police are too busy responding to other emergencies, the green light is on for armed criminals to go door to door, robbing (disarmed) citizens at gunpoint. This doesn’t fly in Texas, where the average looter is met with a 12 gauge shotgun shoved in his face, but in Boston, it’s a free-for-all for the criminals.

Even if you don’t own a gun (or can’t legally own one), you can still have bear pepper spray — a large-sized canister of pressurized pepper spray which will strongly dissuade bad guys from hanging around and bothering you. (Check your local laws, please.)

Forget about calling 911. Virtually all emergency [8] services will be tied up dealing with other emergencies. Just because YOU have an emergency doesn’t mean it’s THEIR emergency. By law, fire, police and ambulance services are under no legal obligation whatsoever to respond to your call. Think about that as you plan for preparedness.

For me personally, I don’t call 911 and wait to die. Instead, I call on Mr. Benelli. If you don’t know what “Mr. Benelli” means, here’s a picture that explains why Mr. Benelli instantly stops all looters: http://www.benelliusa.com/shotguns/benelli-m4.php [9]

Hurricane Sandy “monster storm” survival checklist by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger

I’ve taught preparedness to tens of thousands of people, so I know this subject very well. Here’s my preparedness checklist, and then below it, I link to some of my preparedness courses and solutions if you’re interested in those:

• Minimum 6 days of stored food. • A way to safely boil water so you can prepare food. • Non-electric can openers. • Minimum 6 days of stored water. • Portable water filter. • Full fuel tanks in all your vehicles. • Gasoline and cords for your generator (if you have one). • Sleeping bags for all family members. • Flashlights and batteries. • Minimum 6-day supply of any prescription meds. • Colloidal silver and other emergency medicine items. • Cell phones full charged, with spare batteries. • Minimum one large fully-charged fire extinguisher. • Plenty of clean laundry with warm socks, undies and heavy clothing. • Backup power source: large 12V marine (deep cycle) battery with an inverter to charge cell phones and laptops. • Sponges for cleaning things when there’s no power. • Cleaning agents: Hand soap, dish soap and bleach. • Immune boosting herbal tinctures and supplements. • Topical first aid supplies: Antiseptics, bandages, etc. • Personal hygiene items, including toilet paper. • Emergency multi-purpose knife. • Activities to pass the time when there’s no TV: books, cards, games, etc. • Copies of your important paperwork and identification documents. • Two-way radios for you and your family members to communicate. • Wind-up weather radio so you can tune in to government broadcasts. • CB broadcasting radio so you can call for help if the cell towers are down. • Nuclear preparedness: Do you have potassium iodide pills? • Hiding stuff: Do you have good hiding places in your home in case criminals break in and overpower you? • Pet preparedness: Do you have enough food and water for your animals? • Go bag: Do you have a “bug out bag” ready in case you have to evacuate? • Hiking gear: What happens if you have to leave on foot? – Cold weather hiking shoes – Rugged backpack – A good hat to protect you from the elements – Local map and compass – Water carrying containers (and a way to carry them) – Portable food – Weather-proof writing notepad – Flashlights – Identification – Portable self defense items

• Security plans for your neighborhood or building: How will you defend against looters? • Physical barriers to block doors and windows: Are your windows locked? • Tripwire alert devices and motion alert devices (see course, below). • Self defense items to defend against possible looters: – If firearms, double check your ammo, firearm lubrication and sights. – Have a challenge / response code word with your family members so that you can identify each other in the dark. For example, if you say “Flash” they should say “Thunder” in response. – Drill all safety procedures in the home. Children should know in advance where a “safe hiding place” is located. – Emergency whistles for all children or senior citizens so they can call for help.

Does this sound like a long preparedness list? It’s nothing, actually, compared to what many preppers, patriots and survivalists have already accomplished. I’m not afraid to say publicly that my own personal preparedness plans have gone far beyond the list you see above. If a three-day hurricane struck my home right now, I would be completely prepared without even making a trip to the store for supplies.

Emergency readiness products

Here are the best products we’ve put together so far for emergency preparedness:

IMPORTANT NOTE: Most delivery services are shut down Monday and Tuesday across the eastern seaboard, so if you are trying to order these products to have them delivered before Tuesday, that won’t work. UPS, Fedex, and the U.S. Postal Service will all be shut down during the storm.

Sovereign Silver first aid gel [10]Sovereign Silver liquid hydrosol [11]100% organic 40-day survival food supply [12] • Enerhealth Herbal Medicine Cabinets: Basic [13] | Intermediate [14] | Advanced [15]Nascent Atomic Iodine [16]Zeotrex (zeolites) [17]Emergency ruggedized flashlights [18] and other supplies

Coming soon at the Natural News Store [19]: Storable certified organic food (including chia seeds), chlorella, potassium iodide pills, water filters and more.

Preparedness and survival courses

By now, most Natural News readers are fully aware that I’m well versed in the realm of preparedness. In addition to having in-depth knowledge of herbal medicine and nutritional defenses, I have also been licensed to carry concealed handguns by four different U.S. states, and I’ve been fingerprinted, vetted and approved by the FBI and federal law enforcement agencies. I have trained with U.S. military personnel on hand-to-hand combat, I’ve trained on vehicle evasion and pursuit tactics with local law enforcement, and I have helped teach physical self defense to children, women and senior citizens.

If you want to get a download of my best knowledge on food preparedness, self defense preparedness and emergency survival, here are the three most popular courses I’ve ever produced, and ALL of these are available for instant streaming from Natural News:

Health Ranger LIVE: How to Protect and Defend Yourself [20]

Be Prepared, Not Scared – Food Security [21]

Surthrival with Daniel Vitalis and Mike Adams [22]

Stay safe, folks. Get prepared NOW, even if you’re not in the path of this approaching storm.

THESE PRETZELS ARE MAKING ME THIRSTY

32 comments

Posted on 2nd October 2012 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Report: Water Prices Rise Sharply Across America; Double and Triple in Some Locales

Mac Slavo
October 1st, 2012
SHTFplan.com

It’s often overlooked and taken for granted, but it’s the most essential of all human resources.

Water.

We’re paying 75% more for it today than we were in the year 2000.

According to a recent study by USA Today, which looked at 100 large municipalities across the country, the price increases over the last decade are so significant that many Americans are having to cut other expenses just to keep up:

…the cost of this necessity of life has outpaced the percentage increases of some of these other utilities, carving a larger slice of household budgets in the process.

“I don’t know how they expect people to keep paying more for water with the cost of gas and day care and everything else going up,” complains Jacquelyn Moncrief, 60, a Philadelphia homeowner who says the price hikes would force her to make food-or-water decisions. She gathered signatures on a petition opposing a proposed water rate increase in her city this year.

USA Today’s study of residential water rates over the past 12 years for large and small water agencies nationwide found that monthly costs doubled for more in 29 localities. The unique look at costs for a diverse mix of water suppliers representing every state and Washington, D.C. found that a resource long taken for granted will continue to become more costly for millions of Americans. Indeed, rates haven’t crested yet because huge costs to upgrade or repair pipes, reservoirs and treatment plants loom nationwide.

In three municipalities — Atlanta, San Francisco and Wilmington, Del. — water costs tripled or more.

Source: USA Today

According to the report, we can expect rates to continue to rise at a whopping 5% to 15% per year going forward, and for a variety of reasons.

The trend toward higher bills is being driven by:

- The cost of paying off the debt on bonds municipalities issue to fund expensive repairs or upgrades on aging water systems.

- Increases in the cost of electricity, chemicals and fuel used to supply and treat water.

- Compliance with federal government clean-water mandates.

- Rising pension and health care costs for water agency workers.

- Increased security safeguards for water systems since the 9/11 terror attacks

One critical aspect USA Today failed to mention as a reason for higher prices and the adverse effects on our purchasing power is, of course, monetary expansion over this same time period. While water prices are up in the high double digits over the last decade, the same cannot be said for Americans’ wages.

Taking that into consideration, we may well see rates go even higher than estimated.

Coupled with an ever expanding global population, the notion that countries will soon be fighting water wars over this critical resource is not out of the question.

The days of endless clean and cheap water are behind us.

The Big Fracking Bubble: The Scam Behind the Gas Boom

22 comments

Posted on 5th March 2012 by DavosSherman in Economy

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The inter-generational tyranny continues.

When cancer rates of 1 in 2 men, and 1 in 3 women–just don’t cut it—fear not, for there is hydraulic fracking.

Since Medicare is bust with $81,000,000,000,000 and the Prescription Drug plans is shot with another $20 trillion—don’t worry, for when the cancer rates hit 1:1 and your hospital can’t afford to keep its oncology wing open—you can get dosed by the pizza-box hirees before your next flight or visit to Wal-Mart.

For Obama supporters, who would like to contribute to his campaign—but can’t because you fall into that 22.5% (and growing) unemployment camp—your worries are over, this is good news for you.  Deepak Chopra hired the former TSA chief (Michael Chertoff), to get his naked, radiation spewing, body scanners into our airports.  Deepak, for anyone living under a rock, stands for Donation Pack.  D-Pack is a huge Obama supporter and even jets off to Mumbai on Air-force One with Obama and his two fat assed bitches (Mrs. Big Sis Hitler and Michelle).

Here is a super article from Rolling Stone Magazine.

http://youtu.be/Ia1UjNBK_3Y

Oh, and one more thing.  Well three.

  1. Fracking uses 400 tanker trucks and 1-8 million gallons of—-drum roll please—fresh water.  As in: Jim Quinn’s Peak Water.  Then the water is dumped into “evaporation pits” so the 596 carcinogenic chemicals they mixed the water with will make it to your kids and their kids genes.
  2.  Fracking, according to our government, causes earthquakes.
  3. If you haven’t seen GasLand it’s a super watch.  Take plenty of Prozac first.

And now, without further ado, let me please introduce myself, I’m a man of great wealth and taste,

Aubrey McClendon, America’s second-largest producer of natural gas, has never been afraid of a fight. He has become a billionaire by directing his company, Chesapeake Energy, to blast apart gas-soaked rocks a mile underground and pump the fuel to the surface. “We’re the biggest frackers in the world,” he declares proudly over a $400 bottle of French Bordeaux at a restaurant he co-owns in his hometown of Oklahoma City. “We frack all the time. What’s the big deal?”

McClendon dominates America’s supply of natural gas the same way the Tea Party-financing Koch brothers control the nation’s pipelines and refineries. Like them, McClendon is an influential right-wing power broker – he helped fund the Swift Boat attacks against John Kerry in 2004, donated $250,000 to the presidential campaign of Rick Perry,

, perhaps what’s puzzling you is the nature of my game,  the Rolling Stone Article.

The New York Times documented how gas drillers were dumping millions of gallons of irradiated wastewater loaded with toxic chemicals into Pennsylvania’s rivers and streams, largely without regulatory oversight.

At the same time, scientists began to conclude that America’s reserves of natural gas have been overhyped. In January, the Energy Department cut its estimate of the amount of gas available in the Marcellus Shale by nearly 70 percent, and a group affiliated with the Colorado School of Mines warns that there may be only 23 years’ worth of economically recoverable gas left nationwide. Even worse, new studies suggest that because of fugitive emissions of methane from wellheads and pipelines, natural gas may actually be no better than coal…



PROPHETS OF DOOM

13 comments

Posted on 6th January 2011 by Administrator in Economy |Politics |Social Issues

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Did anyone else watch Prophets of Doom last night on the History Channel? I thought it was well done. Theybroke it into categories with an expert per category. One guy each on economic collapse, water depletion, peak oil, nuclear bomb proliferation and artificial intelligence gone amuck. Kunstler did an excellent job on peak oil. I sent him an email telling him I like the show and that I thought the artificial intelligence guy was weird.

His response was that the original name of the show was The Futurists, but the History Channel changed it to Prophets of Doom to boost ratings. He also said the AI guy was nutty and a creep. He described the room they were in as Hannibal Lecter’s Family Room.

Avalon thought I would have fit in well. She liked Generation Zero better.

I’m not sure when it will be on again, but here is a link to a youtube of most of it. 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nSpLUpiMkj0