Thứ Hai, 3 tháng 4, 2017

Waching daily Apr 3 2017

NARRATOR: This week on Vice News Tonight...

TEACHER: I would never wanna intimidate students,

but if you show 'em the paddle,

then they know, "Oh, he does have one".

BAR OWNER: I take a liberal attitude

towards immigration, it has to be controlled, though.

By supporting Brexit, haven't you just screwed over

those EU workers that you have?

There's a Pan-African diaspora.

I'm part of the "Pan."

NARRATOR: The world is changing.

So should the way you see it.

Vice News Tonight.

Here to take you everywhere there's a story.

Four nights a week.

And on Fridays, get closer to the story,

with the award-winning series, VICE.

For more infomation >> Coming This Week: Vice News Tonight (HBO) - Duration: 0:36.

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DO VACCINES CAUSE AUTISM AN HONEST LOOK AT BOTH SIDES - health - Duration: 10:32.

DO VACCINES CAUSE AUTISM?

AN HONEST LOOK AT BOTH SIDES OF THIS CONTROVERSIAL ISSUE

Do vaccines cause autism?

Over the past few decades, a considerable amount of research has emerged, published

in various peer-reviewed journals, declaring the need to look into this further.

Some have said definitively that there is a considerable risk for autism, or autism-like

features and other neurodegenerative diseases, while others claim, just as definitively that

vaccines do not cause autism whatsoever.

One thing is for certain � the masses are unaware of the research showing a link between

vaccines and autism, and in fact, many still do not believe that this type of research

even exists.

We�ve seen a considerable amount of pro-vaccine marketing, and the media heavily stigmatizes

anyone who questions their safety.

The �Vaccines Don�t Cause Autism� Side

Those who believe that vaccines don�t cause autism will commonly point to the science,

usually citing government health authorities, like the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

(CDC), which state that �studies have shown that there is no link between vaccines and

developing ASD (Autism Spectrum Disorder)� and that adverse reactions are rare.

Most of the studies debunking the vaccine-autism link come from the CDC itself.

For example, a study they conducted in 2013 examined the substances and microbes in vaccines

that trigger the immune system to react with antibodies that fight disease (antigens).

They looked at these antigens in two-year-olds and concluded that �the total amount of

antigen from vaccines received was the same between children with ASD and those that did

not have ASD.

When it comes to vaccine ingredients, like mercury, the CDC commonly cites a study from

2004, stating that �the evidence favours rejection of a causal relationship between

thimerosal-containing vaccines and autism.� Several conflicts of interest were noted in

this study regarding the authors, but were not disclosed.

And more evidence is emerging.

One of the lead authors of these studies, a senior scientist at the CDC who has published

multiple studies heavily cited by the CDC debunking a link between mercury, the MRR

vaccine, and autism (Thompson, et al. 2007, Price, et al. 2010, Destefano, et al. 2004),

Dr. William Thompson, came out publicly stating that it was �the lowest point� in his

career when he �went along with the paper� that debunked this link.

He went on to say that he and the other authors �didn�t report significant findings�

and that he is �completely ashamed� of what he did.

Thompson was involved in studies between 2003 and 2012, when the CDC funded or conducted

approximately 10 studies that found �no link between thimerosal-containing vaccines

and ASD, as well as no link between the measles, mumps, and rubella (MR) vaccine and ASD in

children.�

What�s more, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. recently issued a challenge to journalists and scientists,

offering a $100,000 dollar reward to anybody who can provide a study showing that it is

safe to inject mercury into babies, while himself offering approximately 100 studies

showing that it�s not.

Most people don�t know that vaccine adjuvants have simply been assumed safe, without any

toxicology studies to prove it.

This is precisely why Kennedy and his team are taking this initiative.

Lastly, another way the �vaccination does not cause ASD� argument is defended is by

discrediting research that demonstrates a link.

These types of papers come under severe scrutiny, and some have been retracted and even ridiculed

despite being backed by many researchers.

One of the most recent cases involved a paper titled �Behavioural abnormalities in young

female mice following administration of aluminum adjuvants and the human papillomavirus (HPV)

vaccine Gardasil� that found strong evidence for neuroinflammation and autoimmune reactions.

The ironic part is that research showing a link is commonly discredited, even though

those from within the field have been discrediting most �mainstream� science.

The editors in chiefs of some of the most prestigious medical journals in the world,

like Dr. Richard Horton, Dr. Arnold Seymour Relman, and Dr. Marcia Angell, have all emphasized

how a very large percentage of research is corrupted by political and industry interests.

If vaccines and autism aren�t connected, ask yourself, why are so many professionals,

scientists, and doctors convinced otherwise?

Let�s take a look.

The �Vaccines Cause Autism� Side

As mentioned earlier, there are a number of studies implicating vaccines and autism, and

more seem to surface every single year.

According to Dr. Lucija Tomlijenovic, PhD., a post-doctoral fellow at the University of

British Columbia where she works in neurosciences and the Department of Medicine:

I have a document from 2002 from the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) discussing the

assessment of vaccine ingredients� and testing specifically in animal models.

Back then, the FDA stated that the routine toxicity studies in animals with vaccine ingredients

have not been conducted because it was assumed that these ingredients are safe.

When I read that I was kind of pulling my hairs out [thinking] �So, this is your indisputable

evidence of safety?�

Consider the following meta-analysis that was published in the journal Bio Med Research

International:

The studies on which the pro-mercury vaccine CDC relies on and over which it exerted some

level of control report that there is no increased risk of autism from exposure to organic Hg

in vaccines, and some of these studies even reported that exposure to Thimerosal appeared

to decrease the risk of autism.

These six studies are in sharp contrast to research conducted by independent researchers

over the past 75+ years that have consistently found Thimerosal to be harmful.

As mentioned in the Introduction section, many studies conducted by independent investigators

have found Thimerosal to be associated with neurodevelopmental disorders.

Considering that there are many studies conducted by independent researchers which show a relationship

between Thimerosal and neurodevelopmental disorders, the results of the six studies

examined in this review, particularly those showing the protective effects of Thimerosal,

should bring into question the validity of the methodology used in the studies.�

We�re also seeing the same thing right now with aluminum, another substance that�s

been viewed as non-toxic by the FDA and by vaccine manufacturers.

This determination means no appropriate studies have been undertaken to prove its safety.

Yet a growing number of studies have linked the use of aluminum adjuvants to serious autoimmune

outcomes in humans.

The use of this adjuvant has been connected to all kinds of diseases, from autism to brain

disease to Alzheimer�s and much more.

�Experimental research clearly shows that aluminum adjuvants have a potential to induce

serious immunological disorders in humans.�

� Dr. Lucija Tomlijenovic

There are numerous studies that have examined aluminum�s potential to induce toxic effects,

and this is clearly established in medical literature, and has been for a long time.

Perhaps one of the biggest pieces of evidence to emerge within the past few years, as mentioned

earlier, comes from senior CDC scientist and whistleblower Dr. William Thompson (author

of multiple CDC studies debunking a vaccine-autism link).

Not only did he admit to falsifying data on the order of his superiors at the CDC, he

also transferred concealed data to his colleague, Dr. Brian Hooker.

Hooker is one of the authors of the mercury meta-analysis listed above, and he ia also

a long-time CDC scientists who took that data shortly after the Thompson incident and published

a report in 2014 in the peer-reviewed journal Translational Neurodegeneration.

It found a 340% increased risk of autism in African American boys receiving the Measles-mumps-rubella

(MMR) vaccine on time.

The study was retracted during the same time of this controversy.

Apart from the science aspect, the �vaccines cause autism� camp also cites scientific

fraud, but has actual documents to prove it.

For example, a leaked report from GlaxoSmithKline �details adverse effects associated with

autism, including encephalitis, developmental delays, altered states of consciousness, speech

delays and other adverse reactions.�

There are also documents revealing that vaccine manufacturers, pharmaceutical companies, and

health authorities have known about multiple dangers associated with vaccines but chose

to withhold them from the public.

They show that health authorities and vaccine manufacturers made �continuous efforts to

withhold critical data on severe adverse reactions and contraindications to vaccinations to both

parents and health practitioners in order to reach overall vaccination rates, which

they deemed were necessary for �herd immunity.� �

There is a powerful and brand new documentary series you can watch for free titled The Truth

About Vaccines, which brings together an impressive line up of experts who will explore this subject.

The details above are just the tip of the iceberg.

Whether autism is connected to vaccination or not is an issue that clearly requires closer

scrutiny and in-depth analysis.

It�s time to make all of the evidence available to the public and have a serious discussion

between experts on both sides of the coin.

For more infomation >> DO VACCINES CAUSE AUTISM AN HONEST LOOK AT BOTH SIDES - health - Duration: 10:32.

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'Enjoying being alive by celebrating death' at the Frozen Dead Guy festival|WEIRD NEWS - Duration: 8:46.

'Enjoying being alive by celebrating death' at the Frozen Dead Guy festival

Thousands will visit this weekend's party for all things deceased, inspired by the bizarre tale of a grandad cryogenically frozen alone in a Colorado shed

It may be the dead of winter and there's more than a good chance of finding a frozen stiff, but that won't deter thousands of festival-goers from celebrating life this weekend surrounded by corpses, coffins and all things deceased.

After all, this annual festival was inspired by a former Norwegian grandad who, by a bizarre twist of fate, ended up being cryogenically frozen alone in a shed in the US state of Colorado.

This icy resident was the inspiration for the three-day event which, from today, will see 20,000 people invade the town of Nederland. Population: 1,800.

And what do they do when they get there? They revel in the joy of being alive by acknowledging death in playing strange games and major partying.

Norwegian grandad Bredo Morstøl, who died in 1989, is the star of the Colorado event.

"It's like a weird mix of Halloween and the Winter Olympics," says organiser Amanda MacDonald. "There is something very Monty Python about it isn't there? Just the name – 'The Frozen Dead Guy Days.'.

"It's certainly unique. The frozen turkey bowling is a firm favourite.

"One of the funniest things is the frozen T-shirt contest. The competitors get handed something as hard as a brick and they have to smash it up and get it on as quickly as possible.

Some of them are bleeding by the end.". Some of the activities are designed to test essential skills, like tossing frozen salmon, while others are all about showmanship – the fancy-dress dives into the icy plunge pool are a must-see.

Another favourite is the Newly Dead Game, a variation on the "Mr & Mrs" gameshow where contestants are tested on how much they know about their partners' wishes once they've passed away.

The festival is likened to a cross between Halloween and the Winter Olympics.

In the hearse parade, contestants try to create the most imaginative decorations for these macabre vehicles. But the biggest draw is the coffin races, which involve teams carrying a passenger inside, well, a coffin.

"The teams usually come up with unusual fancy-dress themes," says Amanda, "depending on what's going on at the time. This year we're expecting to see Trump appear quite a lot, but we hope not.

We thought about doing a 'Dunk Trump' dunk tank but that's not really what the festivals about. "It's not about our differences, but what we have in common – and death's gonna come to all of us, right? Death trumps everything.

Even the controversial President can't eclipse the star of this event – Bredo Morstøl, who was 89 when he suffered a fatal heart attack in 1989.

Bredos frozen corpse is the bizarre starting point for the festival. His grandson, Trygve Bauge, was travelling in the US when he heard about the death. He's a hippy and a strong believer in the science of cryogenics.

"The will to live is the very essence of life. If this is thwarted, we cannot be happy, we cannot be anything," Trygve said. "This is the highest goal for any individual.".

So he asked his mother Aud to ship her father across the Atlantic on dry ice, before he was stored, from 1990 to 1993, at a cryogenics centre near San Francisco.

Mother and son then decided to build their own cryogenic chamber in the Colorado town, nestling high in the Rocky Mountains.

As a summer destination for many hippies, Trygve, then 31, knew it well and thought it the perfect tranquil resting place.

When Bredos family had to leave America, locals in Colorado stepped in to keep his body preserved.

Unfortunately, shortly after he built the chamber, Trygve was deported because he didn't have a visa. Then his mother was evicted from her home. They had little choice but to leave Bredo behind.

The shack containing Bredo started to fall apart, but people in the surrounding area came to the rescue.

A local Tuff Shed supplier gave him a new protective shell and a local man, ecologist Bo Shaffer kept it topped up with dry ice.

Around this time, the local Chamber of Commerce were trying to organise some kind of winter carnival.

"Then someone on the chamber said, 'Well, we're known as the town with the frozen dead guy, why don't we just have The Frozen Dead Guy Festival?'".

Nederland, population 1,800, now hosts a winter carnival and world-class music event for 20,000 people.

The first took place in 2001 and they have gone from strength to strength. It is now a world-class music event in its own right. Last year saw the biggest bash, with 20,000 festival-goers.

Over the last 16 years a myth has grown that Trygve and Aud disapprove of the event, believing it to be in poor taste. But Amanda insists this couldn't be further from the truth.

"In 2005 the chamber wrote to Aud and she came across and was actually marshall for one of the parades." she says.

"We're also in touch with Trygve and he's said he'd like us to restart the tours of the shed which were stopped for years.

"It's not distasteful in any way. We don't use Mr Morstøl's name or his likeness. His story's just the starting point for the festival.

Cars proceed up main street for the procession of the Frozen Dead Guy Days Parade in Nederland, Colorado. It's about enjoying being alive by celebrating death. "Importantly it's also put the town on the map.

Initially I think quite a few people were annoyed by being known for such a thing but in time it's became a great way to keep the town's businesses going during the winter months.".

There's still the danger that Trygve, now 59, may still come back to collect his grandfather. So would Amanda, and the town he made famous, try to stop him?.

Trygve Bauge, whose desire to cryogenically freeze his grandad has had unexpected results.

"Definitely not, we'd have to respect his wishes," she says. "But whether he's still in the town or not, it doesn't really matter too much, the festival's really its own separate entity now.

"Besides it would just be a reason to have another big party, this time a farewell party. But we'd still being having the Frozen Dead Guy Days.".

For more infomation >> 'Enjoying being alive by celebrating death' at the Frozen Dead Guy festival|WEIRD NEWS - Duration: 8:46.

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Tech World: A $200m tech fund, Uber leaves Denmark, AI stealing jobs and more - Duration: 4:48.

For more infomation >> Tech World: A $200m tech fund, Uber leaves Denmark, AI stealing jobs and more - Duration: 4:48.

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Coal is dying, and Trump can't save it But there are much better alternatives for coal country and o - Duration: 19:07.

Coal is dying, and Trump can�t save it But there are much better alternatives for coal

country and our economy

Donald Trump is wrong again � it�s not government regulation that�s killing off

the coal industry.

It�s the marketplace.

Even if that could be reversed, today�s coal mining is much less labor-intensive.

It would never be a jobs bonanza.

The idea that coal is suffering from some enviro-radical �war on coal� may still

sell to the fake news crowd, but in the real world coal�s share in power-generation continues

its long-term decline, supercharged by cheap natural gas as much as by government action.

As noted by Devashree Saha of the Brookings Institution in December:

In 2000, coal accounted for 51.7 percent of electricity generation, compared with just

15.8 percent for natural gas.

By 2015, coal�s share had dropped to 33.2 percent, while natural gas rose to 32.7 percent

of total generation.

Beyond that, there�s the dramatic development of renewables, the undisputed fuels of the

future.

As Bloomberg News explained last April:

Government subsidies have helped wind and solar get a foothold in global power markets,

but economies of scale are the true driver of falling prices: The cost of solar power

has fallen to 1/150th of its level in the 1970s, while the total amount of installed

solar has soared 115,000-fold.

[Chart.]

Sure, government policies have played some role in coal�s decline, but not the predominant

one.

Even old-fashioned bottom-line capitalists have no good reason to throw in with Trump

on this fight � their money is increasingly going to renewable energy.

�Renewables are beating fossil fuels 2 to 1? in power capacity investments, Bloomberg

noted.

[Chart.]

And, of course, if you include the social costs of coal � especially the premature

deaths that run into the tens of thousands each year � it becomes ridiculously expensive,

like almost everything Trump puts his name on.

Consider the most recent release of the Sustainable Energy in America Factbook, earlier this year.

It reported the following:

Since 1990, more than 90 percent of cumulative generating capacity additions has been renewable

energy or natural gas, and, in the past 10 years, over half (54 percent) of total additions

have been dedicated to renewable energy resources.

At the same time, the retirement of coal-fired power plants continues to shrink that fuel�s

contribution to the power mix: 2016 saw 7 gigawatts of coal-fired capacity disconnect

from the grid, after a record 15 GW retired in 2015.

Another 12 GW are currently scheduled to retire within the next five years.

These retirements are due to a confluence of factors, including competition from low-priced

natural gas and aging boilers.

As a result, coal provides a smaller share of U.S. power than ever recorded, with only

30 percent of electricity generated by coal-fired units in 2016.

This figure contrasts with 48 percent in 2008 and represents the lowest share held by coal

in at least the past 70 years.

Furthermore, the report continues, the retirement of coal-fired power plants and the construction

of replacement plants fueled by natural gas, wind or solar is a structural change that,

to use technical language, �should assure some permanency to U.S. decarbonization.�

In plain English, coal is dying.

The death of coal is a long-term process, to be sure: Last year marked the first moment

when natural gas generation overtook coal, and short-term market fluctuations could reverse

that temporarily.

But the long-term trends are clear: Coal is in long-term decline, and the best thing we

can do about it is manage it more wisely and compassionately � especially regarding the

coal miners Trump pretends to love, rather than the coal investors � his Commerce Secretary

Wilbur Ross, most notably � with whom his loyalty actually lies.

The decline in coal�s market share wreaked havoc in the industry, as reflected in two

stories from SNL Financial in June 2015.

One reported that, �The market value of publicly traded U.S. coal companies was sliced

nearly in half over the past year, falling almost 50% since August 2014 amid deep market

turbulence.� The other found that �more than three dozen coal operations have been

forced into bankruptcy in just over three years.� It went on to explain:

A review of bankruptcy filings by SNL Energy found that most of the operators turning to

the bankruptcy courts in the U.S. are primarily doing so in Central Appalachia.

The coal mining region has been hardest hit by market pressures as the region�s increasingly

difficult geology has left neighboring coal basins with a competitive advantage as the

entire sector battles increased regulatory scrutiny, weak export markets and inexpensive

natural gas.

Ross is one of the very few who�s made out handsomely in this situation.

In a December post for Random Lengths News, I wrote:

Ross is actually a specialist in making money of off stripping once-vibrant economic sectors

� primarily steelmaking, coal-mining and textiles.

For example, on Sept. 24, 2004, Ross�s International Coal Group � a conglomeration of investors

along with A.T.

Massey Coal Co. � shut down six union mines taken over from Horizon Natural Resources

in a bankruptcy proceeding, while keeping its non-union mines open.

International Coal Group paid $786 million for the mines, but only because a federal

bankruptcy judge voided $800 million in health insurance benefits owed by Horizon to more

than 3,000 active and retired United Mine Workers of America union members.

How does this sort of mentality translate into taking care of miners and bringing back

their jobs?

Short answer: it doesn�t.

Don�t believe me.

Believe Robert Murray, who is the founder and CEO of Murray Energy, the largest privately

held coal mining company in the U.S. Murray sued to block Obama�s Clean Power Plan,

and is personally pleased with Trump, whom he recently met with.

But a recent Guardian headline said it all: �Top US coal boss Robert Murray: Trump �can�t

bring mining jobs back�.� The story explained:

Trump has consistently pledged to restore mining jobs, but many of those jobs were lost

to technology rather than regulation and to competition from natural gas and renewables,

which makes it unlikely that he can do much to significantly grow the number of jobs in

the industry, said Murray.

�I suggested that he temper his expectations.

Those are my exact words,� said Murray.

�He can�t bring them back.�

But that�s all right � or at least it could be, on two main counts: First, renewables

are a source of many more jobs, and second, coal mining is so harmful that easing out

of it with a sensible transition plan would leave everyone in coal country better off

in the end.

On the job front, Kristen Kleiman, writing for the Climate Trust, laid out the basics:

In 2010, there were approximately 86,000 coal mining jobs � that equates to a loss of

almost 30,000 workers in less than a decade.

Contrast that rate with the jobs created by a low carbon economy.

In 2010, renewable energy accounted for about 175,000 U.S. jobs.

According to a recent U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) report, as of January 2017, that figure

had grown to almost 800,000 workers employed in low carbon electricity generation.

Most of the job growth in renewables can be attributed to solar and wind development.

Of those 800,000 jobs, 374,000 were in solar and 102,000 in wind for a total of 475,000

jobs � more than two and a half times the number of jobs six years ago.

And the outlook is positive.

The DOE reports solar employment increased by 25% in 2016, while wind employment increased

by 32%.

These new jobs are not just good for those who get them, but for their communities, too:

Growth in the solar industry means the creation of blue-collar jobs that stay local and cannot

be outsourced to other countries.

These professions involve locally based workers who, in turn, spend their money locally.

And, importantly, jobs are in suburban and semi-rural areas where jobs are needed the

most.

Of course laid-off workers from a dying industry need government support transitioning into

a growing one.

Government has a key role to play.

But that role is working to facilitate moving everyone together in the direction the market

is already taking us.

As Kleiman notes, Massachusetts is the 26th sunniest state but ranks second in solar employment,

with more than 15,000 jobs in 2016.

The reason:

Because the state provided progressive tax and feed-in tariff incentives to bolster a

renewable energy industry which, in turn, provided much-needed jobs in manufacturing

and in trades like plumbing and electricity.

Over half of Massachusetts� solar jobs were in installation and 14% in manufacturing,

with an average hourly wage of $21.

In contrast, the two most sun-drenched states, Arizona and New Mexico, �rank 7th and 27th

in solar jobs respectively,� she notes.

They had all the natural advantages, �but without the right incentives to attract early-stage

capital, they have largely missed the boat.� The longer politicians cling to the past,

and ignore the future, the more they will cheat people out of opportunities, the way

these two states have done.

But there�s another dimension to the argument, as J. Mijin Cha explained recently in the

American Prospect:

From a climate perspective, there is no doubt that coal mining should be phased out.

Yet it is also true that coal mining should be phased out to protect workers and communities.

From the beginning, coal mining exploited workers and communities.

For nearly 70 years in the post-Civil War South, tens of thousands of incarcerated men

were forced to work in coal mines.

The vast majority were black men convicted of minor offenses or �Black Code� statute

violations that were passed to reassert white control in the aftermath of the Civil War.

The pay was atrocious � less than a dollar a day � and none of it went to the miners

themselves.

In addition to prisoners, child labor was exploited as well.

Social progress in mining was a long, slow process.

�While the Bureau of Mines was established in 1910, it was not given authority to inspect

mines until 1941,� Cha notes.

Even to this day, safety violations run rampant:

A 2014 NPR and Mine Safety and Health News investigation found that over the preceding

20 years, thousands of mine operators failed to pay safety penalties; indeed, most unpaid

penalties were between two and ten years overdue.

Among the study�s findings, the 2,700 mining company owners failed to pay almost $70 million

in delinquent penalties and mines that didn�t pay their penalties had a 50 percent higher

injury rate.

And then there�s black lung disease, which, after a long period of decline following passage

of the 1969 Coal Mine Health and Safety Act, is now rising again.

�Black lung disease is being seen in miners younger than 50,� Cha notes.

�The inability of the 1969 act to protect these coal miners from a lifelong debilitating

disease indicates that the legislation�s protections are inadequate to the conditions

in today�s mines or, as evidenced by the high level of safety violations, are not being

enforced � or both.�

Historically, the United Mineworkers of America has played a key role in making mines safe,

and the union remains an important factor.

A Stanford University study published in 2012 found that unionized mines were substantially

safer than non-unionized mines.

Among the findings, the study found that unionization predicts an 18 percent to 33 percent drop

in traumatic injuries and a 27 percent to 68 percent drop in fatalities.

However, the number of mines that are unionized is on the decline.

For the first time in nearly a century, unionized mines have completely disappeared in Kentucky.

As already noted, Trump�s commerce aecretary has helped contribute to this increasingly

dangerous situation.

There is simply no history of concern for miners� welfare to be found on the industry

side, or in the Trump administration.

In fact, the negative health impacts of coal mining stretch far beyond what has traditionally

been recognized.

In Appalachia, the costs associated outweigh the economic benefits for the region as a

whole, and are concentrated where production is highest.

More than a decade ago, Michael Hendryx began a series of studies of coal�s health impacts

in Appalachia.

His 2009 paper, �Mortality in Appalachian Coal Mining Regions: The Value of Statistical

Life Lost� co-authored with Melissa Ahern, �examined elevated mortality rates in Appalachian

coal mining areas for 1979�2005,� and concluded that the �human cost of the Appalachian

coal mining economy outweighs its economic benefits.� (The value of a statistical life

has been calculated by a number of different methods, all reflecting the value that people

themselves place on putting their lives at risk.)

This work drew the attention of Harvard researchers, and in 2011, Hendryx and Ahern joined a team

of 11 researchers, headed by Paul Epstein, publishing an exhaustive study, �Full cost

accounting for the life cycle of coal,� which included a much broader accounting of

the costs involved, including damage due to climate change, public health damage from

air pollution, fatalities due to rail accidents transporting coal, the public health burden

in Appalachia due to coal mining, government subsidies and the lost value of abandoned

mine lands.

The researchers estimated that �the life cycle effects of coal and the waste stream

generated� are costing the public $300 billion to $500 billion every year.

�Accounting for the damages conservatively doubles to triples the price of electricity

from coal per kWh generated, making wind, solar, and other forms of non fossil fuel

power generation, along with investments in efficiency and electricity conservation methods,

economically competitive.�

Of course, wind and solar costs have continued to fall dramatically since then, and are now

fully competitive or better, even without considering the externalized costs.

Now that market forces by themselves favor shifting away from coal, it should clearly

be government�s responsibility not to fight the inevitable, but to ensure the most just

and equitable transition.

Toward this end, Cha points to a plan developed by Robert Pollin and Brian Callaci �that

would ensure a just transition away from a polluting economy for fossil fuel workers.�

Their article describing the plan last year argued: �A combination of better jobs and

pensions will remove one political obstacle to a green transition � and it�s the right

thing to do.� It is, they say, both a matter of simple justice and a matter of strategic

politics.

Given the justified political resistance if nothing is done, they write:

It follows that the global climate stabilization project must unequivocally commit to providing

generous transitional support for workers and communities tied to the fossil fuel industry.

The late U.S. labor leader and environmental visionary Tony Mazzocchi pioneered thinking

on what is now termed a �Just Transition� for these workers and communities.

As Mazzocchi wrote as early as 1993, �Paying people to make the transition from one kind

of economy to another is not welfare.

Those who work with toxic materials on a daily basis � in order to provide the world with

the energy and the materials it needs deserve a helping hand to make a new start in life.�

This is particularly true in light of how many burdens and broken promises these workers

have already been made to bear, and are still bearing today.

Pollin and Callaci estimate that their �just transition� program would cost $500 million

per year, about �1 percent of the annual $50 billion in new public investment that

will be needed to advance a successful overall U.S. climate stabilization program.� That

modest annual commitment �would pay for income, retraining, and relocation support

for workers facing retrenchments as well as effective transition programs for what are

now fossil fuel�dependent communities.�

That�s pocket change in federal budget terms.

Indeed, the authors point out it could be raised simply by setting aside some of the

gains the federal government itself is expected to reap by raising its own efficiency standards,

which are expected to save about $1.3 billion a year:

So the heavy lift here is not paying the cost of a just transition.

It�s the cost of not paying it � a cost we�re paying right now.

We�re paying it in all the ways that calculated by Epstein, Hendryx, Ahern and their colleagues,

and in ways that can�t be counted as well.

Those other ways have contributed to the poisoning of our body politic, along with the poisoning

of our air and water.

It�s time we stopped paying the deadly price for coal, and began paying the price for a

more humane and efficient future.

For more infomation >> Coal is dying, and Trump can't save it But there are much better alternatives for coal country and o - Duration: 19:07.

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EXCITING NEWS BEST MONDAY EVER ^W^ - Duration: 3:11.

Angel~Chan Here GUESS WHO'S BACK BACK A AGAIN

Donna~Kun:Hey its Donna from Hawaii and New England for Spring Break also with

Sadie~Senpai:Hey Its Sadie

Laxy~Sama Matthews: Hey I'm Donna friend couzin irl I moved

Angel~Chan:today its Raining where we live and You know what that means Girls??

All:NO SCHOOL WOW

Donna~Kun:That Means

Sadie~Senpai:We can study more

Laxy~Sama Matthews:And You all can help me cuz I'm new I just moved here on Sunday

Angel~Chan:Angel~Chan thinks Laxy~Sama,Donna~Kun, and Sadie~Senpai need to Live little bit

Laxy~SamaMatthews:Fine

Sadie~senpai:Okay then

Donna~Kun:Okay then

angel~Chan: Shout out to Blue Wolf If you love puppies *W* Daw

Donna~Kun:And Eletric Tornado Gaming

Donna~Kun:please Like,

Angel~Chan:Share

Laxy~SAma Matthews:Subscribe

Sadie~Senpai:And Comment

All:JOIN THE CRYSTAL HEARTZ BAI

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