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Saturday, July 28, 2007
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? for President?
Say hello to White House For Sale. They write: "This Web site allows you to follow the money trail of campaign bundlers - or people who funnel money to campaigns - as they collect thousands, and sometimes even millions, of dollars from other people for the 2008 presidential candidates.
"It reflects the most comprehensive data Public Citizen's team of researchers can obtain. It also explains a little about how we got to this record $1 billion campaign season - and what we can do about it by renewing our dedication to public funding of presidential - and congressional - elections."
They have a companion weblog, Watchdog Blog.
"2008 pres"
6:21:10 PM
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Executive privilege
Captain's Quarters: "The White House hosted a blogger conference call to discuss the issues surrounding the Bush administration's use of executive privilege in the probe of the firings of eight federal prosecutors. The White House arranged the call based on a recommendation by this blog, in order to familiarize the blogosphere with the legal and political arguments on which the administration will rely to prevail in the upcoming fight regarding the contempt citations Congress seems likely to approve."
"2008 pres"
6:58:42 AM
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? for President?
Rocky Mountain Report: "Maybe for the first time in my adulthood, I don't have any strong preference among the Democratic presidential nominees and am not in anyone's camp. I feel blessed to be able to sit back and objectively watch a pretty impressive group of candidates knowing that I'd be just fine with any of the top six (particularly the top four) emerging as my nominee. So far, the punditry seems obsessed with the Hillary Clinton v. Barack Obama race, with John Edwards lurking just behind them. But based on recent polling, are they missing the clear emergence of New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson?"
Political Wire: "A new Democracy Corps/Greenberg Quinlan Rosner survey finds young people 'profoundly alienated from the Republican party and its perceived values.' Key finding: 'Young people react with hostility to the Republicans on almost every measure and Republicans and younger voters disagree on almost every major issue of the day.' In the presidential race, 'both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama lead Rudy Giuliani -- the most acceptable of the Republican offerings among youth -- by significant margins.'"
Political Wire: "A new Diagio/Hotline national survey finds Sen. Hillary Clinton leading the Democratic presidential race with 39%, followed by Sen. Barack Obama at 30%, and John Edwards at 11%. All other candidates receive less than 5%. On the Republican side, Rudy Giuliani edges out former Sen. Fred Thompson 20% to 19%, with Sen. John McCain third with 17% and Mitt Romney fourth at 8%. All other candidates receive less than 5% each."
"2008 pres"
6:57:00 AM
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Global warming: The Earth is a beautifully complex system
From The Cherry Creek News, "The 15,200 megawatts of new wind turbines installed worldwide last year will generate enough clean electricity annually to offset the carbon dioxide emissions of 23 average-sized U.S. coal-fired power plants, according to a new Vital Signs Update from the Worldwatch Institute. The 43 million tons of carbon dioxide displaced in 2006 is equivalent to the emissions of 7,200 megawatts of coal-fired power plants, or nearly 8 million passenger cars."
"2008 pres"
6:53:51 AM
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NASA shelving climate satellite projects
According to The Boston Globe, "NASA is canceling or delaying a number of satellites designed to give scientists critical information on the earth's changing climate and environment. The space agency has shelved a $200 million satellite mission headed by a Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor that was designed to measure soil moisture -- a key factor in helping scientists understand the impact of global warming and predict droughts and floods. The Deep Space Climate Observatory, intended to observe climate factors such as solar radiation, ozone, clouds, and water vapor more comprehensively than existing satellites, also has been canceled."
Thanks to the Daily Kos for the link.
"2008 pres"
6:48:53 AM
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Iraq
Juan Cole: "Steven R. Hurst and Qassim Abdul-Zahra of the Associated Press get the scoop that relations between Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki and US Gen. David Petraeus are so tense that aides to al-Maliki say he has considered asking Washington to pull the general out of Baghdad. The two major sources of tension appear to be al-Maliki's continued lack of control over all Iraqi military units and operations, and Petraeus's policy of arming Iraqi Sunni Arab tribesmen willing to fight the foreign Salafi Jihadis. Al-Maliki fears that once the Sunni tribesmen have dispatched 'al-Qaeda,' they will turn on the largely Shiite government with their new American weapons."
Meanwhile, also from Juan Cole, "The LA Times reports that Baghdadis are down to one or two hours of electricity a day, but that the Bush administration will no longer be measuring or reporting on that sort of local data. It will give Congress only the general statistic for the entire country. But obviously whether the capital has electricity would help you know whether the current policies are working."
Mt. Virtus: "This week alone from Iraq, we see strong evidences of success in our fight against al-Qaeda (Sunni) and against the Iranian-backed Mahdi Army (Shi'a). Both developments provide encouraging news in our slow upward climb to victory. Also encouraging is that our fellow countrymen may be beginning to take notice."
"2008 pres"
6:36:38 AM
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Yearly Kos
Due to a generous donation, along with having blog friends in influential places, Coyote Gulch will get the opportunity to attend the Yearly Kos Convention next week. We hope to arrive in time for the Science Bloggers Caucus on Thursday. If we don't make it there will be ample opportunities for other science blogging events. We're really looking forward to the convention.
Coyote Gulch wants to assure our political mentor and crack news reporter Stephen Colbert that we have not in fact visited the Daily Kos website since Mr. Colbert warned us off. We've been reading the RSS feed instead. Thanks for keeping us out of trouble Mr. Colbert - we're walking the straight and narrow.
Meanwhile we were very sorry to hear that Lowe's has decided to pull their advertising from the Bill O'Reilly show. It's unfair to Fox and O'Reilly to pressure their advertisers when all they were doing was innocently cherry-picking a few comments from the millions on the Daily Kos website to boost their falling ratings.
We would add that readers should be very cautious when visiting Oliver Willis' website. He just might be a Kos sympathizer and he certainly seems to have a low opinion of the Fox News product overall.
"2008 pres"
6:19:47 AM
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Dry conditions worsening
After being pounded yesterday evening by a beautiful rain, and with plenty of irrigation water in the reservoirs in eastern Colorado, it's hard to think about drought. Coyote Gulch feels compelled to remind readers that we live in the desert and conservation is the name of the game. Click on the thumbnail above and compare the image to this one. You can clearly see that western Colorado is getting dryer while drought conditions are creeping into eastern Colorado from Wyoming and western Kansas.
We just thought that we'd keep you in mind of conserving water. We know it's a downer.
"colorado water"
5:58:08 AM
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South Platte River Basin Task Force
Here's an article about using underground storage along the South Platte River. It's an idea being floated by Governor Ritter's South Platte River Basin Task Force, according to The Rocky Mountain News. From the article:
Massive underground reservoir sites along the South Platte River could add much-needed water storage for the heavily populated region, to the benefit of fast-growing cities and farms. Storing water under ground - instead of above ground - is one of several ideas being explored by a special task force charged with finding ways to better manage the battle-weary river. Though many regions don't have good underground storage sites, several areas along the South Platte have the potential to easily store millions of gallons of water, according to a new study...
Subterranean storage is often cheaper and less environmentally damaging than building above-ground reservoirs, and less water is lost to evaporation, [Gordon McCurry, a consulting engineer] said. But finding any extra water to store in these reservoirs is a tough question the task force must still address...
Another idea being considered is whether the state engineer - the top water regulator in the state - can be given more flexibility to manage the waterway. Such flexibility existed for decades, but fell apart after the 2002 drought began and low flows wiped out the liquid buffer zone that helped keep the peace. Arnie Good, a well user and task force member, said such flexibility would help make the river's supplies stretch farther. "We would like the state engineer to have that kind of flexibility," Good said. But others, worried that the state engineer hasn't done enough to protect those with surface water rights, said such flexibility could be dangerous, especially in dry years.
More Coyote Gulch coverage here.
"colorado water"
5:39:26 AM
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District Seven Water Court rules that Colorado Water Law applies to groundwater wells used in the production of coal-bed methane.
The State of Colorado and BP have asked for a stay of the July 7th District 7 Water Court decision on produced groundwater from coal-bed methane wells. Here's a short update on the issue from The Durango Herald. From the article:
The state's arguments to delay a judge's order requiring gas producers to get a water-well permit are unpersuasive, according to the attorney for two Southwest Colorado ranchers who are challenging the exemption gas producers enjoy. "The standards for a stay have not been met," Denver attorney Sarah A. Klahn said Thursday in answer to the delay requested by the state of Colorado and seconded by BP. "The administrative impediments to enforcement raised by the Engineers (the state engineer and division engineers) are a mirage."
But, Klahn said, her clients - Jim and Terry Fitzgerald of La Plata County and Bill and Beth Vance of Archuleta County - are amenable to a compromise. The couples sued the state engineer in 2005, alleging that the extraction of coal-bed methane gas depletes the underground water table...
Klahn said a reasonable compromise would be to stay Lyman's order for existing coal-bed methane gas wells until the matter is settled by the Supreme Court. The judge's order, however, would apply to undrilled wells or wells that are not yet producing. In the process to free coal-bed methane gas, water and chemicals are injected into coal-bed seams. The mixture, plus underground water, is then extracted. The state engineer's office has argued that the mixture is "produced" water and therefore not under its jurisdiction. The plaintiffs say the water is tributary, meaning that it is part of the overall water supply...
Klahn said the state didn't demonstrate that it likely would prevail on appeal. In addition, she said 20 years of drilling and pumping from unpermitted wells also constitute a legal presumption of injury. Klahn said the state failed to show that "irreparable" harm alleged by BP would be proportional for all gas drillers or any others who don't have a water-well permit. A stay isn't warranted, Klahn concluded. But if there is to be one, it doesn't need to be the "all-or-nothing" position of the state and BP, she said. The plaintiffs - the Fitzgeralds raise cattle and tomatoes, the Vances, hay - aren't seeking monetary damages. They sued the state to protect their water rights. "We want a water-court process," Jim Fitzgerald said Thursday. "We want the court to decide who will be hurt."
"colorado water"
5:19:22 AM
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Anti-abortion amendment on fall ballot?
Here's a look at the proposed anti-abortion amendment for the fall ballot from Ed Quillen via The Aspen Times "reg". From the article:
[Colorado for Equal Rights] plans to circulate petitions to amend our state constitution to define "the term 'person' to include any human being from the moment of fertilization as 'person' is used in those provisions of the Colorado Constitution relating to inalienable rights, equality of justice and due process of law." In other words, it's another attempt to ban abortion. And it could even be an end run around Roe v. Wade, by some legal reasoning.
Justice Harry Blackmun, the author of the 1973 Roe decision, noted that if the "suggestion of personhood is established," then the right to abortion "collapses, for the fetus's right to life is then guaranteed specifically by the Amendment," which provides that no state can "deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws." So, the state defines a fertilized human egg as a person, and that person is entitled to due process of law.
That's where county coroners might play a big role. Under state law, as explained by the Summit County Coroner's office, the coroner is supposed to investigate "all victims of homicide or suspected homicide," as well as "victims of accidental death or suspected accidental death." Ferreting out abortions would be tricky enough: "We just got a tip from a neighbor that a 19-year-old girl down the street looked chubby, went to Mexico for three days, and came back thinner. Want me to bring her in for questioning?" But even miscarriages would also have to be investigated as a "suspected homicide" or "accidental death."
"denver n2007"
5:04:52 AM
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© Copyright 2009 John Orr.
Last update: 3/14/09; 9:26:18 PM.
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