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Politics : President Barack Obama -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ChinuSFO who wrote (73769)5/6/2010 2:49:43 PM
From: Broken_Clock  Respond to of 149317
 
I did suggest what needs to be done.

Fire Salazar, a known friend of polluting and deceitful corporations and replace him with someone who is , shall we say, less politically motivated.

I am not, as you say, letting accusations fly. Salazar was a bad choice from the environmentalists' camp from the day he was appointed. In fact, I thought the one area O might do good was the environment. very sad state of affairs.
=============================

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 16, 2008
Industry likes Salazar at Obama Interior, not greens
Ken Salazar (left) supporting Bush's disgraced AG Alberto Gonzalez.
dpatterson.blogspot.com
UPDATE, Wed. Dec 17: I congratulate Sen. Salazar and offer him my help in the interest of conservation. I'll give him a chance, even though I don't think he's the best choice.

OTHER COVERAGE: Arizona Daily Star, Grijalva talks about Interior pick; Tucson Citizen, Why did Obama forsake Grijalva?; International Herald Tribune, Praise and Criticism for Proposed Interior Secretary; New York Times, Environmentalists Wary of Obama's Interior Pick.

TUCSON -- It appears likely President-elect Barack Obama and his controversial Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel will nominate conservative Senator Ken Salazar of Colorado to head the US Dept. of Interior.

Since no official announcement has yet been made, I urge Obama to make a better pick. Overall, I and other American conservationists who deal with Interior are disturbed, but mining, livestock, argibusiness and other industries who have dominated Interior for years are excited about Salazar, which should worry anyone concerned with the public-interest.

While Salazar has promoted a few decent environmental actions, his overall record is decidedly mixed, and is especially weak in the arenas most important to the next Secretary of the Interior: protecting scientific integrity, combating global warming, reforming energy development and protecting endangered species.

Salazar has voted against increased fuel efficiency standards for the US automobile fleet; voted to end protection for offshore oil drilling off of Florida’s coast; voted to allow the Army Corps of Engineers to ignore global warming impacts in their water development projects; voted against the repeal of tax breaks for ExxonMobil; voted to support subsidies the livestock industry and other users of public forest and BLM lands; threatened to sue the US Fish and Wildlife Service when its scientists determined the black-tailed prairie dog may be endangered; and fought efforts to increase protection for endangered species and the environment in the Farm Bill.

Some comments from Interior experts about Ken Salazar, with more coming out every hour:

From Reuters: Big oil executive 'BP America Chairman and President Robert Malone... expressed approval for U.S. Senator Ken Salazar of Colorado, Obama's nominee for secretary of the interior... Also, Malone called for access to the Outer Continental Shelf for energy exploration...'

From NPR: 'The only ones pleased with the rumored pick were those in the agriculture and mining industries. During the campaign these folks, generally, were counted as supporters of Republican John McCain.'

"Salazar is the first name mentioned that we could support," said Laura Skaer, executive director of the Northwest Mining Association.

"Of all the names mentioned, Salazar is the one we're happiest with," said Dan Keppen, head of the Family Farm Alliance. Note: Keppen was formerly the head of Klamath Water Users Association, the group that worked with the Bush administration to manipulate science and overturn salmon restoration efforts in the Klamath Basin (leading to the deaths of as many as 70,000 salmon before they could spawn in September of 2002). His current group was launched to be the lobby front for agribusiness interests that get Bureau of Reclamation water.

From the Arizona Daily Star: Patrick Bray of the (anti-conservation) Arizona Cattlemen's Association on Salazar, "We feel that he understands the issues very well and that he would be a very viable candidate."

Colorado wildlife biologist Dr. Nicole Rosmarino in Denver: "Ken Salazar does not bring the change we need at Interior. Salazar will not take strong stances on behalf of science and environmental protection and is not up to the task of undoing the enormous damage the Bush administration has done to public lands, endangered species, and the credibility of the Department of the Interior over the last 8 years."

Also in the Star: Jon Marvel of the Idaho-based Western Watersheds Project says: Salazar "will completely undermine Obama's message of change. He will not bring change to the public lands of the western United States." He called the appointment "a travesty."

Coloradan Rob Edward of WildEarth Guardians says: "President Elect Obama is set to stick it to wildlife and public lands in the West, by appointing Senator (and rancher) Ken Salazar to head the Department of the Interior."

Arizonan Ron Kearns, a former wildlife biologist with the US Fish and Wildlife Service, an Interior Dept. agency, says: "As a 30-year Republican, I will regret having voted for Obama if this happens."

Coloradan Phil Doe, who formerly worked with Interior agency Bureau of Reclamation says of Salazar: "He's green washed himself of late with his stand on the BLM oil and gas leases, but he is at bottom the same cautious careerist he always has been, aimlessly testing each decision for its potential impact on his slow steady rise to the top of the pond.

"He is anathema to many Dems here, especially for his support of the the war, his avuncular embrace of the little torture maestro, (Alberto) Gonzalez.., and his insistence that he is the senator for rural America. The latter is code for big ranching and farming America, the same people who are rewarded lavishly every year with a bundle of goodies from Washington. It sure as hell doesn't mean rural labor, among the poorest of the working poor. ...he is outright disliked by activist Dems.

"One thing is for sure, he would make the traditional big farm and ranch interests happy. And it is probably from this group that his name surfaced. From my own vantage, I would make book that the O man's promise of infrastructural restoration in the west would mean more dams and probably some irrigation at the public's expense if Salazar could influence the nature of the expenditures, and why couldn't he. He ain't much, and there is a place reserved in hell for his kind, the parsers. The O man needs to toss the west a bone, and Salazar sure as hell isn't it."

Arizonan Kieran Suckling of the Center for Biological Diversity says: "The Department of the Interior desperately needs a strong, forward looking, reform-minded Secretary. Unfortunately, Ken Salazar is not that man. He endorsed George Bush's selection of Gale Norton as Secretary of Interior, the very woman who initiated and encouraged the scandals that have rocked the Department of Interior. Virtually all of the misdeeds described in yesterday's Inspector General expose occurred during the tenure of the person Ken Salazar advocated for the position he is now seeking."

"Obama’s choices for Secretary of Energy and his Climate Change Czar indicate a determined willingness to take on global warming. That team will be weakened by the addition of Ken Salazar who has fought against federal action on global warming, against higher fuel efficiency standards, and for increased oil drilling and oil subsidies."

Also from Suckling: 'In addition to his misstep on Norton, Salazar endorsed the elevation of William Myers III to the federal bench. Myers was a former Interior Department Solicitor and lobbyist for the ranching industry. Senator Leahy called him 'the most anti-environmental candidate for the bench I have seen in 37 years in the Senate." Bizarrely, Salazar praised Myers' "outstanding legal reasoning" regarding endangered species, Indian affairs, federal lands and water, timber, and fish and wildlife issues. The American Bar Association rated Meyers as "not qualified." Salazar later supported Alberto Gonzales for Attorney General, introducing him at his Senate confirmation hearing.'

"One of the most important jobs of the Secretary of the Interior is to help pick dozens of critically important political appointees to oversee America's conservation system. His past misjudgments of Norton, Meyers and Gonzales give us little confidence he will choose wisely in the future," says Suckling.

As an ecologist and supporter of Arizona Congressman Raul Grijalva as the best choice for Interior, at this time I'm wary of Salazar, but I will give him a chance to change his ways if he is nominated and confirmed as Secretary.

If Obama nominates Salazar, add it to the questionable pick of Lisa Jackson for EPA for a somewhat shaky start for his energy and environmental agenda.

With all due respect Mr. Obama and transition team, these picks are not the most courageous, and are not 'the change we need or can believe in' on energy and the environment.



To: ChinuSFO who wrote (73769)5/6/2010 3:24:20 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
Check out the Dow......it dropped 700 pts in a matter of minutes:

clearstation.etrade.com



To: ChinuSFO who wrote (73769)5/6/2010 4:28:33 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
Stocks Plunge, Then Recover As Debt Worries Slam Markets

By: CNBC.com With AP

In one of the most dizzying half-hours in stock market history, the Dow plunged nearly 1,000 points on worries about the spreading European debt crisis before paring those losses in an equally rapid rebound.

A possible culprit for the drop was a trader error in which someone entered a "b" for billion instead of an "m" for million in a trade. Multiple sources confirmed the report to CNBC and CNBC.com

The apparent trigger for the massive selloff, which began shortly after 2 pm ET, was the approval of austerity measures by the Greek Parliament, which sparked renewed rioting in Athens.

"There is simply a growing recognition that Greece has got to default," banking analyst Dick Bove told CNBC.com. "The riots in the streets showed the decision to repay the debt was not going to be made by the people in Germany, France and Switzerland—it's going to be made by people in Greece and they're not going to repay it."

There also is a growing sense that any collapse of Greece could trigger a wave of defaults across Europe and even the world.

"We've seen a crisis start in a country—Greece—become regional, impact the whole of the Euro zone and is on the verge of truly going global," El-Erian, CEO of the world's biggest bond fund, told CNBC shortly before the selloff began. (Click here for story)

The euro fell further against the dollar, hitting a new 14-month low. The euro has tumbled against the dollar since last fall as faith in Europe's shared currency dwindles. Greece's debt crunch is widely seen as a test of Europe's ability to restore fiscal discipline to the weak economies in its union and keep the decade-old currency viable.

"It's going to drop further," Tim Speiss, chairman of the personal wealth advisers practice at Eisner LLP in New York, said of the euro.

The dollar's rise pushed commodities prices lower, especially oil. That sent prices of oil companies like ExxonMobil [XOM Loading... () ] and Chevron [CVX Loading... () ] lower.

Greece passed a bill in its Parliament after heated debate that calls for unpopular cuts in public spending in pensions and other areas, as well as tax increases. Greece needed to approve the austerity measures to be eligible to receive a $141.9 billion aid package from the International Monetary Fund and the 15 other countries that use the euro.

Bonds Cling to Gains as Stock Market RecoversEuro Shares Fall for 3rd Day to 2-Month LowEurope Worries Rock Asia, Nikkei Down 3.3%Gold Hits $1,200, Settles at Highest Since NovemberOil Settles Near $77 on Euro Zone Debt WorriesEuro Drops Below $1.26 vs Dollar on Greece Fears
Greece needs access to an initial portion of the money by May 19 to cover $11.6 billion in debt payments, or it likely will default.

Even if Greece gets the money, there are still worries that the loans would be only a temporary fix to a growing debt problem across the continent. Portugal and Spain have also seen their debt ratings downgraded.

In economic news, the Labor Department said new claims for jobless benefits fell lass than expected last week. It also said productivity rose more than forecast in the first quarter, but that was due in part to a drop in labor costs, which is a negative signal for consumer spending. The report comes a day ahead of the government's April jobs report. It is widely seen as the most important economic report.

Treasury prices rose, pushing interest rates down in the bond market. The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note fell to 3.41 percent from 3.54 percent late Wednesday.

cnbc.com



To: ChinuSFO who wrote (73769)5/6/2010 5:00:55 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 149317
 
Halt U.S. Offshore Drilling After BP Oil Spill:

businessweek.com

Commentary by Michael Brune

May 6 (Bloomberg) -- The death of 11 oil workers and the devastation of the Gulf Coast’s ecosystems and economy by the toxic sludge gushing from a BP Plc accident site is a tragedy that may well change the course of our nation.

Americans are horrified. Leaders who had been willing to give offshore drilling the benefit of a doubt have abruptly changed their minds, including California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, who said he no longer supports a plan to allow limited drilling for oil off his state’s coast.

They’re right. There is no safe way to drill for oil in oceans. This disaster is an impetus to halt our dependence on oil completely and move to a clean energy future fast.

Cost-benefit analysis shows this is the smart approach. Even the BP executives who, in the midst of this catastrophe announced that the company’s first-quarter profit more than doubled from a year earlier to $6.08 billion, must be aghast at the powerful downward tug this awful event will exert on their bottom line.

The most urgent matter, of course, is to plug the well’s leaks and launch a massive cleanup, making sure BP doesn’t foist upon U.S. taxpayers one dime of the cost of removing the oil or compensating local residents who have lost their livelihoods due to the spill.

Then President Barack Obama and Congress need to develop a clear, ambitious vision for weaning us off our addiction to oil within, say, 20 years. Dirty fuels are undermining our national security and contributing to the future disasters that climate disruption will bring.

Hot Electric Cars

Look at the facts. The U.S. transportation system depends almost entirely on oil, guzzling some 13 million barrels worth daily, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

We already have the technology to run our cars on electricity generated from wind and solar power. Feel the neck- snapping acceleration of the all-electric Tesla, and you’ll be disabused forever of the misconception that environmentally friendly travel is necessarily dull.

People are ready to change, and the Gulf disaster will only motivate them more. For example, when people use public transportation, they are helping to move the nation away from oil. Clever city planners are designing light rail and rapid- transit bus services and are making more neighborhoods safe for walking and biking. These efforts are blossoming across the country and are improving the quality of life.

Just last week, the Obama administration approved the nation’s first offshore wind farm -- Cape Wind, off the coast of Massachusetts. There’s no chance of an environmental disaster in a wind farm or a solar plant.

Smarter Grids

We will save even more energy as we improve the efficiency of transmission lines and update the nation’s power grid. A 21st-century grid could deliver plenty of cheap, reliable, clean electric power to all of us. Bold investments of this type would create millions of jobs and get us off dirty oil faster.

Smart grid pilot programs like the Pecan Street Project in Austin, Texas, are seeking to give consumers more control over their energy use than the simple light switch. Using computers and cell phones, we will be able to run appliances in our homes at optimal times, saving money and energy.

Another, often overlooked, way to wean ourselves from oil and other fossil fuels, is to improve energy efficiency.

If every U.S. household replaced one light bulb with a compact fluorescent light bulb (CFL), it would be like removing 1 million cars from the road in terms of reduced pollution. Replacing a business’s computers and copiers with more efficient models can cut its energy usage by half. Municipalities are installing LED bulbs in street lights, reducing energy consumption by as much as 50 percent compared with conventional methods.

Cleaner Future

Clearly, we’ve begun moving toward a clean energy future. But oil industry executives seem to care more about their own prosperity than the health of their workers or the world we all share. Their idea of economic growth -- now coming from the sale of detergents, dispersants, and oil-absorbing booms -- is not as we environmentalists say, “sustainable.”

If the future I’m suggesting here seems unrealistic, remind yourself of the millions of dollars BP and other oil industry conglomerates have spent trying to persuade us that it’s possible. They are not so much against a clean and safe planet; it’s just that they’re so unequivocally for the massive profits their dirty business puts in their pockets, regardless of the price to everyone else.

Sometimes, though, major events play a clarifying role. It should be clear to all now, that offshore oil drilling is bad business. We are calling on the president to reinstate a federal moratorium on new offshore drilling, and to prevent future disasters -- including climate disruption -- by presenting the nation with a visionary plan to wean America from dirty energy for good.

(Michael Brune is executive director of the Sierra Club and the author of “Coming Clean -- Breaking America’s Addiction to Oil and Coal.” The opinions expressed are his own.)

Click on “Send Comment” in the sidebar display to send a letter to the editor.

--Editors: Steven Gittelson, James Greiff

To contact the writer of this column: michael.brune@sierraclub.org