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


To: locogringo who wrote (897248)10/29/2015 12:40:42 PM
From: FJB1 Recommendation

Recommended By
locogringo

  Respond to of 1573220
 
Liberal hero James Comey now the enemy for telling the truth about cops

October 28, 2015 1:47am



FBI Director James Comey Photo: AP

When James Comey threatened to quit the Bush administration over a wiretapping dispute, he was an instant liberal hero. The incident certainly impressed President Obama, who cited Comey’s “fierce independence” when he made him FBI director in 2013.

But now that Comey is resisting Obama’s party-line claims about police brutality and mass incarceration, the White House is furious with him. Its chief propaganda arm, The New York Times editorial page, is harshly denouncing the man it praised for resisting Bush.

Same Comey, same streak of independence, but now he’s goring the wrong ox. Thou shalt not contradict Dear Leader!

Comey’s sin is that he dares to tell the obvious truth.

In two speeches, the FBI boss said he believes crime is rising in much of the nation in part because growing criticism of cops has emboldened criminals and caused law enforcement to retreat. He said cops complain their every move is often captured on cellphone videos by hostile crowds, and so have backed off from making arrests.

“I do have a strong sense that some part of the explanation is a chill wind that has blown through American law enforcement over the last year,” Comey said at the University of Chicago Law School.

That’s putting it mildly. Baltimore’s mayor admitted her cops were ordered to stand down and give “those who wished to destroy space to do that” during riots last April.

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, another liberal Democrat, attributed soaring murder rates to cops going “fetal.”

“They have pulled back from the ability to interdict . . . They don’t want to be a news story themselves, they don’t want their career ended early, and it’s having an impact,” Emanuel told a recent audience.

Some call the trend the “ Ferguson effect,” after the Missouri case where white Officer Darren Wilson shot and killed Michael Brown, an unarmed black teen. Riots followed there, too, when a grand jury declined to indict Wilson.

The oddity is that Brown was a thug who tried to grab Officer Wilson’s gun. Even Obama’s Justice Department, which aimed to file civil-rights charges against Wilson, was forced to admit no charges were warranted. Yet Wilson still lost his job, and Brown somehow became a civil-rights martyr whose case helped spark the Black Lives Matter movement.

Obama, as I wrote Sunday, supports that movement, an example of his growing radicalism on racial issues. His embrace of Al Sharpton, the most polarizing racialist in America, pits the president against police officers and others in law enforcement who risk their lives to protect the innocent.

From the White House point of view, it’s one thing for mayors and police chiefs to defend cops. It’s quite another when a top member of the president’s law-enforcement team break ranks, which is why the hatchet is out for Comey.

The idea that liberal criticism of cops is leading to more murder is so dangerous that it must be nipped in the bud. Recognizing a threat to its narrative that all cops are racist brutes until proven otherwise, the Times denounced Comey under a headline, “Political Lies About Police Brutality.”

It called his remarks “incendiary” and said they “imply that for the police to do their jobs, they need to have free rein to be abusive.”

He implied no such thing, of course, yet the Times insisted “there is no data” backing him.

Actually, there is a ton of data. It’s called the rising murder rate, and the Times itself noted the frightening trend in a compelling news article last August.

It reported that more than 30 cities had seen big spikes, with Milwaukee’s murder rate up 76 percent, St. Louis’ up 60 percent, Baltimore’s up 52 percent, Washington DC’s up 44 percent, New Orleans’ up 22 percent, Kansas City’s up 20 percent, and on and on. New York’s has been up about 10 percent much of the year.

Another result of the hostility to cops is increased attacks on officers. Four have been gunned down in the city in the last 10 months, the most in 26 years. A funeral for the fourth, Officer Randolph Holder, will be held today.

Comey also gored the White House by faulting Obama’s related claim about “mass incarceration” of nonwhites, saying the very concept is misleading.

“Each drug dealer, each mugger, each killer, and each felon with a gun had his own lawyer, his own case, his own time before judge and jury, his own sentencing, and, in many cases, an appeal or other postsentencing review,” he said in Chicago. “There were thousands and thousands of those individual cases, but to speak of ‘mass incarceration’ I believe is confusing, and it distorts an important reality.”

Comey’s right again, and that makes him dangerous. He must be silenced before the truth spreads.



To: locogringo who wrote (897248)10/29/2015 1:10:09 PM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1573220
 
Dept of Energy says jack-o-lanterns cause 'climate change'..

No; they didn't.
"I'd rather have no conversation at all than spend my time in a futile effort at getting Tom to read what I actually write rather than what he expects me to have written, so he can have his fun resenting me."

Here's what they really said....power the world with your used jack-o-lanterns.

Turn Your Halloween Pumpkins Into Power
October 27, 2015 - 9:37am





Graphic by Sarah Gerrity, Energy Department.

Liz Lowry
Senior Research Analyst, Bioenergy Technologies Office

Alicia Moulton
Communications Specialist, Bioenergy Technologies Office

What are the key facts?
  • 1.3 billion pounds of pumpkins are produced in the United States each year, many of which end up in landfills after Halloween.
  • Producing bioenergy from waste -- like pumpkins -- allows the United States to generate its own supply of clean energy that reduces greenhouse gas emissions.
  • The Energy Department is helping to fund the development of integrated biorefineries, facilities dedicated to converting plant and waste material into biofuels and other products.


  • To commemorate National Energy Action Month, we’re featuring some scarily effective ways to save energy at home. As cooler weather lurks around the corner, tune in to Energy.gov all week long for ways to save energy and money—and avoid cold weather terrors like energy vampires. We also put together some energy-themed pumpkin patterns to help “energize” your neighborhood for Halloween. Send us photos of your energy-themed jack-o-lanterns via Twitter, Instagram, Facebook or email at newmedia@hq.doe.gov and we'll share our favorites.

    With the passing of Halloween, millions of pounds of pumpkins have turned from seasonal decorations to trash destined for landfills, adding to more than 254 million tons of municipal solid waste (MSW) produced in the United States every year. This Halloween, think of turning this seasonal waste into energy as a very important “trick” that can have a positive environmental and energy impact.

    At landfills, MSW decomposes and eventually turns into methane—a harmful greenhouse gas that plays a part in climate change, with more than 20 times the warming effect of carbon dioxide (CO2). However, when MSW is used to harness bioenergy—rather than simply being thrown away—the end result benefits the environment and helps our nation become less dependent on carbon-based fuel. Harnessing the potential of bioenergy allows the United States to generate its own supply of clean energy that reduces greenhouse gas emissions. It also limits stress on landfills by reducing waste and could ultimately create jobs for manufacturing, installing, and maintaining energy systems.

    The Energy Department’s Bioenergy Technologies Office is working together with industry to develop and test integrated biorefineries—facilities capable of efficiently converting plant and waste material into affordable biofuels, biopower and other products. These projects are located around the country and use a variety of materials as feedstocks.

    One of them, Fulcrum Bioenergy’s biorefinery in McCarran, Nevada, will use MSW as a feedstock and use gasification and Fischer-Tröpsch conversion technology to produce “drop-in” biofuel for the military.

    Fulcrum Bioenergy was one of three companies selected to receive federal investments for commercial-scale biorefinery projects to produce military-grade biofuel that can be directly substituted for petroleum-derived jet and diesel fuel. Another one of these projects, from Emerald Biofuels, will use a different type of waste—fats, oils, and greases—as a feedstock that will be hydro-treated and upgraded at its refinery on the Gulf Coast.

    Once in full operation, these two biorefineries will have a combined capacity to produce 92 million gallons of advanced biofuel per year for the military. Fulcrum has since received a $30 million investment from United Airlines and has entered into a long-term jet fuel supply agreement with Hong Kong-based airline Cathay Pacific.

    The Energy Department is working to expand waste-to-energy opportunities in the United States, and its partnership with these companies is helping to remove barriers to the commercialization of fuel and power production from waste, including yard and food wastes. It might not be long until the 1.3 billion pounds of pumpkins we produce annually are nearly as important to our energy security as they are to Halloween!

    energy.gov



    To: locogringo who wrote (897248)10/29/2015 2:31:19 PM
    From: Tenchusatsu2 Recommendations

    Recommended By
    bentway
    Wharf Rat

      Respond to of 1573220
     
    Locogringo, here in the People's Republic of California, we have green recycle bins where we can dispose of our used jack-o-lanterns and other pumpkins. The waste in those bins get hauled away and turned into compost. I imagine many other municipalities in America also have compost recycling programs.

    As for the methane emissions mentioned in the DoE web page, many landfills already have systems that recapture some of those emissions. Some landfills simply burn the methane and turn them into CO2, which is not as bad of a greenhouse gas, but others will actually store the methane and use it toward the generation of electricity.

    It's nothing to go nuts over. The DoE web page is only talking about the basics of recycling.

    Tenchusatsu

    P.S. - I can't stand the Washington Times web site. It's full of click-bait ads.