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To: Brumar89 who wrote (937355)5/28/2016 10:50:52 AM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1575767
 
"The only impact on us is its delaying some internal remodeling we have going on"
Well, I guess that means this won't be another $B disaster; no deaths, no drowned cars, no torn up bridges and roads.

"Don't worry, we're following your lead and not installing solar"
I've had solar since '06, and it's already generating electricity this morning.

" Liberty (where the local USHCN station is) "
Does that mean Brenham didn't get any rain?

" this is strictly inside the house remodeling"
That's the best place to start. First you save energy, then you make your own.

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To: Brumar89 who wrote (937355)5/28/2016 12:35:10 PM
From: Wharf Rat  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1575767
 
Yes, I know; you've lived there all your life, and you've never felt an earthquake.
=

Oil and Gas Activities Behind Texas Earthquakes Since 1925, Scientists Conclude

by Sharon Kelly,

originally published by DeSmog blog | May 25, 2016



If you've felt an earthquake in Texas at any point over the last four decades, odds are that quake wasn't naturally occurring, but was caused by oil and gas industry activities, according to a newly published scientific report.

Just 13 percent of Texas earthquakes larger than magnitude 3 since 1975 were the result of natural causes alone, according to scientists from the University of Texas who published their peer-reviewed paper in the journal Seismological Research Letters.

In recent years, fracking wastewater injection wells have become the primary cause of tremblors in the state, the report adds.

And it's not simply a modern phenomenon, the researchers found. In fact, so-called induced earthquakes, or those caused by human activities, date all the way back to the 1920's.

“The record clearly demonstrates that induced earthquakes have been broadly distributed in several different geographic parts of Texas over the last 90 years,” the study concludes.

“The public thinks these started in 2008, but nothing could be further from the truth,” Cliff Frohlich, a senior research scientist at the University of Texas at Austin and the lead author of the new study, told Claims Journal, an insurance industry publication.

While wastewater injection in Oklahoma has drawn national attention for the earthquake swarms that have resulted — making Oklahoma more earthquake-prone than California in recent years — the industry's impacts in Texas have gone less-noticed, though the numbers are striking.

Between 1975 and 2015, Texas was shaken by 162 reported earthquakes registering over 3.0 on the Richter scale. Forty-two of those quakes were “almost certainly” caused by the drilling industry, the researchers concluded, and an additional 53 were “probably” the result of oil and gas activities – or roughly 60 percent of the total. Another 28 percent were “possibly” connected to oil and gas activities, the researchers said, explaining that a lack of detailed information about many quakes made definitive conclusions more difficult.

In other words, there is good reason to suspect that nearly 90 percent of earthquakes in Texas over the past 40 years were industry-linked.

And as the shale drilling boom has expanded, the number of quakes shaking Texas has risen dramatically, the scientists added. Over the last eight years, Texas went from experiencing two or three earthquakes a year to twelve — with fracking wastewater disposal the likely culprit.

So while the drilling industry has been causing quakes since at least 1925, the problem has become particular acute in recent years.

After reviewing the paper's findings, other scientists agreed that the rise in earthquakes showed that the industry's impacts in recent years have intensified.

“By having this all in one place, it becomes quite obvious that we're observing something quite different from what we had been observing 10 years previously,” Geoffrey Abers, a Cornell professor specializing in seismology, geology and tectonophysics and who was not part of the study, told the Christian Science Monitor.

Prof. Frolich and his colleagues pulled data from court filings, scientific papers, and oil and gas industry records to collect as much information as possible about the history of earthquakes in Texas, where the drilling of the first gusher in the Spindletop oil field in 1901 launched the transformation of the Gulf Coast region into one of the world's largest oil producers.

In Baytown, Texas, just outside of Houston, the Goose Creek oilfield pumped so much oil from underground between 1903 and 1925 that ground level fell by roughly a meter, accompanied by quakes that “'shook the houses, displaced dishes, spilled water, and disturbed the inhabitants generally',” the study says. As the ground level dropped, nearby waters from the Gulf of Mexico flooded in, submerging parts of the oilfield. This prompted the state of Texas to attempt to seize the oil rights to Goose Creek, arguing that territory off the coast belonged to the state and not individuals. Humble Oil – a predecessor of ExxonMobil – argued in court that because their drilling had caused the earthquakes, the ground subsidence was an “act of man,” rather than nature – and the courts agreed, ruling that the company had caused the earthquakes.

“Thus, one notable feature of the Goose Creek earthquakes is that there is a court ruling and a 90-year-old precedent supporting the assertion that oil and gas activities induce land subsidence and accompanying earthquakes in Texas,” the new study says.

That's a very different type of conclusion than the oil industry – and specifically ExxonMobil itself – has advanced for earthquakes that have struck the state in more recent years. “It looks to me like we're in a period of natural tectonism,” Andree Griffin, vice president for geology and geophysics at XTO, an ExxonMobil subsidiary, testified before the Texas Railroad Commission, the state's oil and gas regulator, last year during a hearing over a swarm of roughly 20 earthquakes in 2013 and 2014 which XTO denied it had caused.

The energy giant remains the subject of a separate probe by state attorneys general in 17 states over its early knowledge of scientific evidence showing that oil and gas emissions were changing the climate, and the company's subsequent, potentially fraudulent, denial of that science.

Across the U.S., the evidence has piled up connecting the oil and gas industry to earthquakes. In California, for example, a 2005 earthquake swarm was caused by the oil and gas industry, according to a peer-reviewed study published in February. Oklahoma went from having two earthquakes over magnitude 3.0 a year prior to 2009 to 907 such quakes last year, with oil and gas activities the cause, 60 Minutes reported in a major expose earlier this month. And in March, the United State Geological Survey (USGS) warnedthat over 7 million people now live in areas endangered by human-caused earthquakes, with those at the highest risk including not only residents of Texas and Oklahoma, but also Kansas, Colorado, New Mexico and Arkansas.

Last year, the Texas state government budgeted $4.47 million to install 22 more seismic monitoring stations, bringing the state's total to 39, in the hopes of collecting more data about earthquakes, both natural and induced.

But many environmental and community groups say that monitoring fails to go far enough to protect people and property. Earlier this month, a coalition of environmental groups filed a federal lawsuit demanding that the Environmental Protection Agency update its rules surrounding how oilfield wastewater is disposed under the nation's hazardous waste handling laws, citing in part the connection between wastewater injection and induced earthquakes.

Around the same time, the Center for Biological Diversity asked the federal Bureau of Land Management to drop oil and gas drilling leases for roughly 2,300 acres of land in Oklahoma and Kansas because of earthquake risks.

For the time being most of the earthquakes caused by the oil industry have been relatively minor – in no small part because for decades, the quakes took place in lightly populated areas like Texas deserts.

“If these kinds of things cause huge earthquakes, Texas would be famous for huge earthquakes that rock the state all the time,” Prof. Frohlich told a Texas Fox News affiliate, adding that if a magnitude 5.0 quake struck Dallas, it would do far more financial damage than even one more than ten times that size in isolated parts of West Texas.

But already wastewater injection has been tied to quakes as large as the magnitude 5.7 earthquake that shook Prague, OK in 2013 – big enough to destroy 14 homes and be felt as far away as Wisconsin.

Federal researchers say that the largest induced earthquakes are likely to top out at roughly 6.0 on the Richter scale. “But we can’t rule out quakes of magnitude 7 and above,” Mark Petersen, head of the National Seismic Hazard Mapping Project, told Scientific American.

And the new research shows that it's not just wastewater injection, but a broad range of oil and gas industry activities that have caused earthquakes in the U.S.

While ground subsidence caused some of the earliest known industry-connected quakes, later in the 20th century, as production from aging Texas wells began to slow, the oil industry began pumping water down into oil reservoirs to help push oil to the surface, a technique called waterflooding – and again, the ground began to shake. In West Texas, for example, quakes as strong as magnitude 4.6 rattled the state between 1974 and 1982 – which the researchers said was “almost certainly” the result of waterflooding in the area.

This means, Prof. Frolich said, that it wasn't possible to point the finger at just one or two practices to prevent the industry from causing more earthquakes in the future.

“I think we were all looking for what I call the silver bullet, supposing we can find out what kinds of practices were causing the induced earthquakes, to advise companies or regulators,” he said. “But that silver bullet isn't here.”

resilience.org



To: Brumar89 who wrote (937355)5/28/2016 12:35:20 PM
From: Brumar89  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1575767
 
Autism and the Transgendered

Clearly, this is the horror story of the day. It shows what can happen when transgendered individuals become the latest, greatest oppressed class… deserving of every consideration and attention. And of course, receiving of the full protection of the Obama administration.... which tends to see everything through the lens of civil rights.

Beyond the question of whether or not these individuals are suffering from a psychiatric disorder or whether God made a mistake in giving them the wrong body, the current mania is not only allowing boys to shower in girls locker rooms. More importantly, it is producing more transgender individuals.


One knows, because one has read Ethan Watters’ book Crazy Like Us, that it is possible to produce epidemics of different mental illnesses. During the Victorian period there was an epidemic of hysteria, in England and on the European continent. The epidemic stopped, on its own, in the 1920s.

In Hong Kong, before 1997 there was no anorexia. Then a girl died of self-starvation and the media became saturated by stories about the dangers of anorexia. The result of this enhanced consciousness of anorexia was an epidemic of anorexia. Girls who were troubled but who did not know what was wrong lit on the idea that they were anorexic. They stopped eating.

Physicians often have difficulty dealing with people whose problems are ill defined. Anyone who is troubled and who needs medical attention might very well select an illness or symptoms that have been publicly recognized as worthy of care.

The same applies to those who want to become culture heroes. If they select a symptom that the nation is focused on, they are more likely to receive the kind of public adulation that has befallen one Caitlyn Jenner.

It is nearly certain that the current national conversation about transgenderism has produced more cases of transgenderism. It is most easy to see in cases of the disabled, people who are relatively easy to manipulate.

Consider the case of the daughter of social work professor Kathleen“Kelly” Levinstein. Both mother and daughter are autistic. They are on the spectrum. The daughter believed that she was a lesbian until she saw a television show that suggested another interpretation: she was really a male trapped in a female body.


Allow Levinstein to explain:

My daughter, who is on the autism spectrum, as am I, is now 19 years old. She had felt (and told others) that she was a lesbian most of her life. When she was 16, she began watching a TV show called “Degrassi,” which featured an FtoM character. After a few weeks, she announced that she was not actually a butch lesbian, as she had previously said, but was in fact trans.

The daughter started going to meetings of a group called PFLAG—short for Parents, Families and Friends of Lesbians and Gays. The meeting functioned like a cult that recruited people by convincing them that they were trans.

Levinstein continues:

She started attending a local PFLAG meeting, where she met many trans people, including a number of FtoM trans teenagers who were raving about a certain “gender therapist.” Although the APA recommends a minimum of one year of “gender counseling” before surgery, this gender therapist (whom I consented to, before really understanding what I was doing) gave my daughter the go-ahead to have a bilateral mastectomy after only two sessions. This gender specialist never reviewed any of the Special Ed records or spoke to my daughter’s previous therapist, who had known her for a decade. And, crucially, she never asked my daughter, “Might you be a lesbian?”

The gender therapist (whom I believe has an unholy financial alliance with the surgeon) gave my daughter (then 18 and one day) the go-ahead for the $30,000 surgery (covered for all university employees and their families where I work). My daughter is now on testosterone (which she clearly is unable to evaluate the risks and consequences of).

How well did the girl understand what was happening to her? Not very well at all.

Levinstein explains:

To give you some sense of my daughter’s level of understanding of what it means to transition, she told me recently that she believes that the testosterone “will grow her a penis.” I had to break the news to her that, although this is the mythology in the PFLAG meetings (where a number of the other young trans people are also autistic), this is not the case.

In any rational and moral community this would easily be recognized as criminal activity. Levinstein implies that the people involved in this scam ought to be prosecuted:


She has been taken advantage of. Healthy organs were amputated. This is insurance fraud, poor clinical practice, a violation of APA standards, unethical and unjust. It is a crime not just against women, but particularly against disabled women. So many of these young women who are “transitioning” are also autistic.


My daughter has a representative payee on her SSDI [disability] check, as it was felt that she was unable to handle her own money. This was of little concern to the gender therapist. I believe that once the therapist realized the “treatment” would be covered by the University of Michigan insurance, it was full speed ahead.

The girl was unable to handle her own money but was allowed to consent to radical surgery that mutilated her healthy female body. And then, to consent to hormone therapy.

How is Levinstein’s daughter doing? Sorry you asked:

She had a legal name change in Dec of 2014, a bilateral mastectomy in April 2015, and started testosterone in Sept 2015. My daughter has severe Crohn’s Disease, and currently, she is having grave reactions to the testosterone. She has been hospitalized three times now for complications.

And naturally, given the current state of American culture, you will understand that Levinstein has been attacked for questioning these dogmas.

How many times have we heard that anyone who is anti-trans is indulging in hate speech. In New York City you can get fined for using the wrong pronouns. In Canada they are proposing laws that will incarcerate people who say the wrong thing about the transgendered
.

Levinstein explains:

Instead, there is a vilification of anyone daring to ask questions about these issues, including the evidence of MtoF physical, sexual and psychological violence against women. Women who publicly question receive death threats, threats to rape us and our children, burn us to death with gasoline, decapitate us, and so on. This all coming from people who claim they are our “sisters.”

Even health care professionals have been silenced.

She continues:

I have found no health professionals willing to go on the record against this. Everyone is afraid of professional suicide and threats of violence. I am standing alone.

My daughter’s latest hospitalization has been described by doctors as due to “absorption issues.” She now has a full beard but still has her period. The testosterone is wreaking true havoc on her system.

Autistic women (again, I am one) frequently have a difficult time, sensory-wise with their periods. But rather than attempting to help us with this difficulty, our problems get labeled “gender dysphoria” and the answer has become to remove our periods from us.

We will find out in 20 years the effects of testosterone on our young women. I am confident that it will not be a pretty picture.

Making this a civil rights issue ought to be a crime, in and of itself.

http://stuartschneiderman.blogspot.com/2016/05/autism-and-transgendered.html