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


To: Winfastorlose who wrote (1363141)6/17/2022 4:06:03 PM
From: Bonefish4 Recommendations

Recommended By
AJ Muckenfus
Broken_Clock
locogringo
Winfastorlose

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574102
 
A vote for Biden ranks right up there on the list of biggest disasters of the millennia.



To: Winfastorlose who wrote (1363141)6/17/2022 4:37:07 PM
From: Tenchusatsu1 Recommendation

Recommended By
Winfastorlose

  Respond to of 1574102
 
WFoL,
Poll: Biden disapproval hits new high as more Americans say they would vote for Trump
Hence the reason why the Democrats continue to hold their January 6th hearings for prime time TV.

They need to convince their base that a vote for Trump is a vote against democracy itself.

"They lItErAlLy held a knife to the lItErAl throat of democracy! lItErAlLy!" - Brandon

Tenchusatsu



To: Winfastorlose who wrote (1363141)6/17/2022 5:05:26 PM
From: sylvester801 Recommendation

Recommended By
pocotrader

  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1574102
 
BREAKING: Thousands of cattle dead due to heatwave in Kansas
theguardian.com

Extreme heat is predicted for large parts of the US including Kansas, which is one of the country’s top three beef producers


‘What is clear is that the livestock heat stress issue will become increasingly challenging,’ said one expert. Photograph: Richard Hamilton Smith/Design Pics/Getty Images/Design Pics RF

Samira Asma-Sadeque
Thu 16 Jun 2022 13.47 EDT



The record-breaking heat sweeping across the US is having a deadly effect on livestock, with Kansas reporting 2,000 cattle dead.

This week, the National Weather Services (NWS) predicted extreme heat on parts of the Gulf coast and spreading to the Great Lakes in the midwest, with more than 100 million Americans advised to stay inside to fight the heat.



Over a third of US population urged to stay indoors amid record-breaking heat

Read more

Kansas has also been hard hit and will continue to be. The state is among the top three producers of beef in the country, where there are twice as many cows as people, and beef is among its top exports.

According to the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), heatwaves in the US have steadily gone up by frequency, duration and intensity in four decades since the 1960s.

It says the annual number of heatwaves rose from two in the 1960s to six in 2010s. Heatwave seasons now accumulate more days than in past decades: whereas in the 1960s the heatwave season would last about 20 days, by the 2010s it reached 70 days on average.

“What is clear is that the livestock (and human, for that matter) heat stress issue will become increasingly challenging for livestock farmers to deal with, as the world warms,” said Philip Thornton, a climate researcher and professor who authored a 2021 report on the impact of increasing heat on livestock.

Gerald C Nelson, his co-author in the report, shared a more personal account.

Nelson, an agriculture economist and professor emeritus at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign (UIUC), is from a cattle ranching family. In the past two years alone, his only cousin who remained on the farm has witnessed catastrophic damage: extreme drought, a wildfire that destroyed much of his grazing area and extensive damage to physical infrastructure.

Thornton, who is a research strategist at the Netherlands Food Partnership and a professor at the University of Edinburgh, said there were measures that farmers could take to care for their cattle during such extreme heat, but it depends on feasibility.

He suggested improving ventilation and cooling systems and for outdoor production, feed additives can help address the heat stress in some cases.

But it could raise the cost, he added. That may be an issue given that farmers are already struggling with increasing cost of cattle feed following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the impact on global grain supplies.

“In the long run, the most effective way to address the challenge is to redouble our collective efforts to reduce greenhouse has emissions as quickly and as comprehensively as possible,” he said.



To: Winfastorlose who wrote (1363141)6/19/2022 12:27:15 PM
From: Jamie1531 Recommendation

Recommended By
sylvester80

  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1574102
 
The president is dealing with many problems created by Trump. For example, we all know tariffs cause prices to explode. The CEO of Whirlpool was in favor of tariffs until China raised tariffs on the US. Then he strongly opposed them. The price increases would have hit sooner (and trump would have gotten all the blame) if the pandemic hadn't crippled the economy.