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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: RetiredNow who wrote (303607)9/19/2006 12:43:39 AM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572178
 
All I'm saying is that there are SOOOOO many important issues that the ACLU should be tackling such as government spying and unlimited detentions, etc,

And they are.



To: RetiredNow who wrote (303607)9/19/2006 2:35:49 AM
From: SilentZ  Respond to of 1572178
 
>All I'm saying is that there are SOOOOO many important issues that the ACLU should be tackling such as government spying and unlimited detentions, etc, and yet they focus on the Pledge of Allegiance. What a joke.

Take five minutes and actually look at their website.

-Z



To: RetiredNow who wrote (303607)9/20/2006 7:03:42 AM
From: Road Walker  Respond to of 1572178
 
Dumb as We Wanna Be
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
São Paulo, Brazil

I asked Dr. José Goldemberg, secretary for the environment for São Paulo State and a pioneer of Brazil’s ethanol industry, the obvious question: Is the fact that the U.S. has imposed a 54-cents-a-gallon tariff to prevent Americans from importing sugar ethanol from Brazil “just stupid or really stupid.”

Thanks to pressure from Midwest farmers and agribusinesses, who want to protect the U.S. corn ethanol industry from competition from Brazilian sugar ethanol, we have imposed a stiff tariff to keep it out. We do this even though Brazilian sugar ethanol provides eight times the energy of the fossil fuel used to make it, while American corn ethanol provides only 1.3 times the energy of the fossil fuel used to make it. We do this even though sugar ethanol reduces greenhouses gases more than corn ethanol. And we do this even though sugar cane ethanol can easily be grown in poor tropical countries in Africa or the Caribbean, and could actually help alleviate their poverty.

Yes, you read all this right. We tax imported sugar ethanol, which could finance our poor friends, but we don’t tax imported crude oil, which definitely finances our rich enemies. We’d rather power anti-Americans with our energy purchases than promote antipoverty.

“It’s really stupid,” answered Dr. Goldemberg.

If I seem upset about this, I am. Development and environmental experts have long searched for environmentally sustainable ways to alleviate rural poverty — especially for people who live in places like Brazil, where there is a constant temptation to log the Amazon. Sure, ecotourism and rain forest soap are nice, but they never really scale. As a result, rural people in Brazil are always tempted go back to logging or farming sensitive areas.

Ethanol from sugar cane could be a scalable, sustainable alternative — if we are smart and get rid of silly tariffs, and if Brazil is smart and starts thinking right now about how to expand its sugar cane biofuel industry without harming the environment.

The good news is that sugar cane doesn’t require irrigation and can’t grow in much of the Amazon, because it is too wet. So if the Brazilian sugar industry does realize its plan to grow from 15 million to 25 million acres over the next few years, it need not threaten the Amazon.

However, sugar cane farms are located mostly in south-central Brazil, around São Paulo, and along the northeast coast, on land that was carved out of drier areas of the Atlantic rain forest, which has more different species of plants and animals per acre than the Amazon. Less than 7 percent of the total Atlantic rain forest remains — thanks to sugar, coffee, orange plantations and cattle grazing.

I flew in a helicopter over the region near São Paulo, and what I saw was not pretty: mansions being carved from forested hillsides near the city, rivers that have silted because of logging right down to the banks, and wide swaths of forest that have been cleared and will never return.

“It makes you weep,” said Gustavo Fonseca, my traveling companion, a Brazilian and the executive vice president of Conservation International. “What I see here is a totally human dominated system in which most of the biodiversity is gone.”

As demand for sugar ethanol rises — and that is a good thing for Brazil and the developing world, said Fonseca, “we have to make sure that the expansion is done in a planned way.”

Over the past five years, the Amazon has lost 7,700 square miles a year, most of it for cattle grazing, soybean farming and palm oil. A similar expansion for sugar ethanol could destroy the cerrado, the Brazilian savannah, another incredibly species-rich area, and the best place in Brazil to grow more sugar.

A proposal is floating around the Brazilian government for a major expansion of the sugar industry, far beyond even the industry’s plans. No wonder environmental activists are holding a conference in Germany this fall about the impact of biofuels. I could see some groups one day calling for an ethanol boycott — à la genetically modified foods — if they feel biofuels are raping the environment.

We have the tools to resolve these conflicts. We can map the lands that need protection for their biodiversity or the environmental benefits they provide rural communities. But sugar farmers, governments and environmentalists need to sit down early — like now — to identify those lands and commit the money needed to protect them. Otherwise, we will have a fight over every acre, and sugar ethanol will never realize its potential. That would be really, really stupid.



To: RetiredNow who wrote (303607)9/20/2006 11:49:48 AM
From: bentway  Respond to of 1572178
 
"government spying and unlimited detentions"

I think if you actually LOOK at their website, you'll see that they ARE "tackling" these issues. Like the President, they can't help what the press chooses to cover.



To: RetiredNow who wrote (303607)9/20/2006 2:23:06 PM
From: bentway  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1572178
 
Bush Administration, Senate move to axe reporter shield law

Brian Beutler
Published: Wednesday September 20, 2006

rawstory.com

The Bush Administration is seeking to undermine legislation that, if passed, would protect journalists and anonymous whistleblowers, RAW STORY has learned.

Members of the Senate Judiciary Committee will listen to testimony today regarding a reporter shield law called the Free Flow of Information Act.

"I think they want no law at all," said one senior staffer familiar with the proceedings. "They're sending [Deputy Attorney General Paul] McNulty up to hammer it."

The bill, cosponsored by a bipartisan coalition of nine moderate senators, is a successor to a similar piece of legislation that appeared before the same committee last year.

Last year's bill never made it past committee hearings, despite having a greater number of cosponsors--including Senators Feingold (D-WI), Kerry (D-MA), and Obama (D-IL)--who have not supported the current version.

Both bills would make it more difficult for prosecutors to force reporters to name sources or to yield information that would result in their sources being identified.

However, the current bill's national security exception has been broadened. It abandons the requirement, enshrined in last year's bill, that the threat to national security be imminent before the Attorney General can compel any disclosures.

The 2006 bill has also been amended with a reminder clause stating, "Nothing in this Act shall be construed to limit any authority of the Government under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act."

Sources in both parties characterize the bill's evolution as a negotiation between moderates, who seek to enshrine certain protections for members of the media, and the White House and Justice Department, both of which seek to minimize legal obstacles when conducting investigations.

"They raised concerns," said another senior judiciary staffer yesterday. "We addressed some of them, and we're prepared to address more."

Deputy Attorney General McNulty's opposition to the bill was voiced early this morning in testimony before the committee.

"Our nation is engaged in a war on terror; our prevention efforts must be tailored to the nature of the enemy we face," McNulty insisted. "Secrecy and surprise are cornerstones of our enemy's approach. Our response must follow suit."

He went on to say that, "the consequences of leaking are extraordinarily grave," and therefore, "the Department of Justice firmly opposes the bill."

This is the third time members of the Justice Department have objected to the legislation. The previous bill was roundly criticized last year by U.S. Attorney Chuck Rosenberg on their behalf. He said such a law "would create serious impediments to the Department's ability to effectively enforce the law, fight terrorism, and protect the national security."

However, many see the situation differently. They are concerned that creating bipartisan legislation is not possible with a White House that prizes secrecy and executive privilege to this extent.

In a statement released to RAW STORY, Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT), ranking member of the Judiciary Committee, blamed the stall on the president and "a minority of the majority of this Committee," and criticized the president for his "inability" to appreciate the value of whistleblowers to law enforcement and to the broader public.

Likewise, civil libertarians are concerned that their position in this debate is not being considered. In a letter to the committee, the ACLU noted, "the national security exception could be misused in such a way as to nullify any protection afforded a reporter's source."

The letter went on to say, though, that "If the Free Flow of Information Act is amended to narrow the national security exception, and adequately protect defendants' rights, and no problematic amendments are adopted, the ACLU would support this legislation."