The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of the Planet

 

Recent US earthquakes could be linked to human behavior. [npr.org]

 

Experts agree that 2012 will see a significant increase in gas prices. Make your travel plans accordingly. [latimes.com]

 

Porous roads lead to less runoff and even more durable roads. [sightline.org]

 

These cities are looking forward with new projects that are increasing green space in urban areas. [salon.com]

 

Scientists find a fish that has evolved the markings to disguise itself as an octopus arm. You can’t make this stuff up. [bbc.co.uk]

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of the Planet

For those who are making a resolution to travel more in the coming year, here are the top travel destinations for 2012. [cnn.com]

There has been a dramatic increase in whale sightings of the California coast. This could mean increased numbers of whale or just a change in behavior. Either way it is good news for whale watchers. [latimes.com]

In India the use of solar panels is growing, but there are also complications that arise. [nytimes.com]

New technology turns paper into power. [bbc.co.uk]

THE RP’s BREAKING NEWS: THE PASSING OF “DEAR LEADER”

The Passing of "Dear Leader"

 

 

 

Kim Jong Il’s death passes the reigns of power to his son. However, will the son’s reign be as secure as the father’s? [New York Times]

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of the Planet

 

Receding ice in the Arctic reveals columns of methane gas being released. Scientists believe that this is a much bigger threat to climate change than CO2. [yahoo.com]

 

Globalization in Madagascar has led to a decrease in Taboos about eating lemur meat, and because of this the lemur population is suffering. [bbc.co.uk]

 

An increase in domestic gas drilling leads to issues over property rights between communities and drilling companies. [nytimes.com]

 

No vacation to China would be complete without a visit to what would have been the largest amusement park in Asia. Only it was never completed. [yahoo.com]

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of the Planet

It wasn’t as hot of a year as 2010, but 2011 may be known as the year of extreme weather. [cnn.com]

In California scientists are looking at a new solution to offset greenhouse gases; carbon farming. [npr.org]

New laws in Brazil make it easier to cut down the rainforest and will make it almost impossible for Brazil to reach their emissions targets. [bbc.co.uk]

God creates dinosaurs. God destroys dinosaurs. God creates man. Man destroys God. Man creates dinosaurs…  Scientists are trying to clone a Wooly Mammoth. [bbc.co.uk]

An endangered crocodile finds sanctuary near a nuclear power plant. [yahoo.com]

THE RP’S BREAKING NEWS: THE POLITICS OF EUROPE

France's Sarkozy

 

 

German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicholas Sarkozy call for a new EU Treaty to strengthen the financial union of the member countries. [Washington Post]

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: The Politics of the Planet

Which “going green” home improvement projects are really worth your time and money? [latimes.com]

 

Scientists look to identify how animals can predict earthquakes. [bbc.co.uk]

 

Here are some of the top unique winter destinations in the world. [cnn.com]

 

A more in depth look at the “pizza as a vegetable” controversy. [latimes.com]

Andrei Cherny: American Spring

In those days before kids, I was fast asleep when the phone by my bed rang at about half past six in the morning. It was my father calling. Planes had flown into the World Trade Center. America was being attacked. I knocked on the door of my guest bedroom to awaken a visiting friend. Together, thousands of miles from New York and Washington, we experienced the day—the fall of one tower and then the other, the attack on the Pentagon, the confusion, the rumors, the terror—the way most Americans did: watching television in stunned silence. It’s not just that we all still remember where we were when we heard; it’s that at that very moment we knew we would always remember.

But even as it was already clear on September 11, 2001 that the attacks were a turning point in American history, no one could have foreseen the direction of that pivot. The terrorists struck an ascendant America that had seen a period of unprecedented peace and prosperity. While so much was destroyed that day, our confidence was unshaken. Most Americans anticipated a long war in Afghanistan with many casualties, but were certain of victory.

In the days after 9/11, according to a poll conducted by Harris Interactive, two-thirds of Americans said they had prayed and a similar number admitted to having wept. Eighty percent told someone they loved them as a result of the attack, and 60 percent kept in closer touch with relatives. Seventy percent had sung “God Bless America” and 63 percent sang the national anthem. But by September 27, 2001, 60 percent of Americans believed life had returned to normal. Looking back after ten years, we were clearly wrong. September 11 ushered in a sorry, sad, low decade. Ten years later, we are a nation that has been humbled abroad and felled at home. In a Time poll conducted this summer, only 6 percent of Americans now believe the country has fully recovered from the attacks.

It is more than the tragedies of Iraq or the sorrows of economic stagnation that have beset America in the ten years since 2001. It is the widespread sense that we are no longer the young, brave nation that brushes off adversity and charges forward—the America that went from Sputnik to Apollo in 11 years and from “malaise” to “Morning in America” in five. It is the belief that we are a slower, older country—an America stuck in its ways, no longer able to tackle big challenges and make big changes. More than a hundred years ago, the transition into the Industrial Age saw the rise of the Progressives and a new approach to public action. But now America moves into an individualized economy while politicians still repeat the familiar arguments of a bygone era. The Great Depression brought about the New Deal and a transformation of government while the Great Recession has produced little more than tinkers to an ossified system. In the wake of Pearl Harbor, America mobilized its manpower and machinery to win a global war against fascism. We invaded North Africa and Normandy. Four years after the attack, Hitler lay dead and Tojo was in chains. The occupations and transitions to democracy of Germany and Japan began and would succeed. Ten years after 9/11, the case for victory is far more muddled—at best.

In a nondescript house on a leafy street in a medium-sized city in Pakistan, Osama bin Laden—surrounded by porn and Pepsis—met his long overdue end on May 1. With the news, cheering crowds poured into Times Square and gathered in front of the White House. It had the feeling of a victory celebration, a national relief after a decade of frustration. But, in many ways, it was the Arab Spring—as much as a Navy SEAL’s bullet—that closed the chapter on bin Laden. And it is the impulse that led to that Arab Spring—for all its contradictions and uncertainty—that provides the best hope for a regeneration of an optimistic, forward-looking American spirit at home and around the world.

Read the rest of…
Andrei Cherny: American Spring

The RP: The Liberal Case for Israel

As loyal members of the RP Nation already know, the RP recently returned from a life-changing trip to Israel.

Last week, he filed reports on Bibi Netanyahu, Why Israel Traded 1000 Prisoners for Gilad Shalit, Fun Facts from an Extraordinary Tour Guide, and Walking in Jesus’ Footsteps.  (Click on the preceding topics to access the links).

Today, The Huffington Post has published the RP’s most comprehensive and thought-provoking post yet: The Liberal Case for Israel.

(And controversial — within the past hour, more than 150 people have commented — Join in on the fun!)

In it, the RP introduces his readers to the 21st century Israel — one that is much-under-publicized — a country with a vibrant, open, tolerant, and yes, progressive culture. Israel’s record for promoting liberal values — on gay rights, economic equality, race, and immigration — matches or passes most Western democracies, including the U.S, and far, far exceeds its intolerant and illiberal neighbors.

Here’s an excerpt:

The Palestinian flag at a gay rights rally?

It’s the iconic ironic image of the New New Left.

The sentiment’s familiar: a maltreated minority identifying with the victim célèbre of radical academia.

But the juxtaposition of these two particular causes would be absurdly hilarious if it weren’t profoundly tragic: The Hamas regime represented by that flag demeans, oppresses, jails, harrasses, assaults, and tortures gays and lesbians.

Imagine what would happen if you flew a gay rights flag in Gaza City.

(On second thought, don’t even imagine it.)

Of course, the flag waving is less likely an endorsement of Hamas than a symbol of the Far Left’s persistent preoccupation with Israel’s reluctant occupation of lands it captured in its defensive struggle for existential survival during 1967’s Six Day War.

I’m not going to use this column to relitigate that debate.

Rather, as a card-carrying member of America’s center-left — those of us who call ourselves liberals, progressives and/or mainstream Democrats — I write to share with my ideological fellow travelers a much-under-publicized reality: That Israel is not simply the region’s only democracy and the U.S.’s strongest ally; but that the Jewish State also models liberal and progressive values as well as — or even better — than any other nation today.

Click here to read the RP’s full Huffington Post column, “The Liberal Case for Israel”

 

 

The RP’s Weekly Web Gems: Politics of the Planet

An appeals court keeps grizzly bears on the “threatened list”. [latimes.com]

 

The Arab Spring continues with the President of Yemen stepping down. [wsj.com]

 

As reported here months ago West Hollywood passes a ban on fur in the entire city. [latimes.com]

 

In “politics of not the planet” scientists release a list of the most livable planets. [bbc.co.uk]

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