Tuesday, August 9, 2016

 
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There really isn't much that a human being can do.  One wakes up in the morning and falls asleep at the end of the day.  Everything actually depends upon the actions of the system that is in place and being operated by those elite few who have their hands on the controls.  The regular everyday person is simply a numerical statistic that documents the events.  There is no point in that statistical person doing anything because no matter what that person attempts, it is against the back-drop of a system which operates beyond the control of any average person or group of regular, ordinary people.

Our problems require systematic change and only the elite among us have any influence that could lead to system changes.  The wheel turns and the cogs have no options but to move to the next predetermined location and to participate in the programed organization of components.  The machine is entirely directed by the bosses.   Rather than to address global warming as a serious issue, our leadership is threatening the world with nuclear war.   Evidence demonstrates clearly that the bosses have lost their collective minds.

A popular tale involves the emperor Nero fiddling while Rome burns.  There are implications to lead to the conclusion that Nero must have been 'mad'.  The leaders of the world powers must be 'mad' in the same sense.  There can be no other valid explanation for the attitudes that seem to prevail as we move toward extinction of the human race... one can question the 'extinction of the human race' and claim that worry of that nature represents an extreme position.  Perhaps that is true.  Perhaps it is not.  But, the truth is that the leaders of the modern world are fiddling and serious stuff is on the line and not being handled appropriately.

Our leadership has failed us.  We must come to that conclusion in order to move toward some kind of resolution.  New leadership and new directions are absolutely necessary if in fact there is any hope for human beings in the future.

The millions upon millions of years of evolution that have produced human beings is very close to reaching an abrupt ending.  If we handle things properly, we could, perhaps inhabit distant planets that circle distant suns and continue the human species indefinitely into the future.  OR, as appears more likely, we will snuff out human life right here on Earth due to the stupidity and miscalculations of our inept leadership.
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Fiddling while the Doomsday Clock ticks

from OpEdNews by Brian Cooney 

Last Jan. 26, unnoticed in the sound and fury of the presidential primary season, the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists announced that its famous Doomsday Clock would remain at 3 minutes to midnight (=global catastrophe): "As the signatories to this report make clear, the Earth remains perilously and inexcusably close to metaphorical midnight." 

The Bulletin was first published in 1945 by scientists who had helped develop the atomic bomb. In 1947 The Bulletin began using the image of a Doomsday Clock to symbolize how close nuclear weapons technology had brought us to the destruction of civilization. They have since included the threat from human-induced global warming. The only other years the clock was this close to midnight were in 1949 when the Soviets acquired their atomic bomb, in 1953 when the U.S. and USSR acquired the hydrogen bomb, and in 1984 when cold-war tensions were at their peak.

The start of the Doomsday Clock signaled a new era in human history: one in which humans had acquired the power to destroy their planet but lacked the wisdom and institutions that would make its use unlikely. That's why the clock was set from the start at the final minutes of the last hour, and since then never earlier than 17 minutes before midnight. What now alarms the Bulletin's panel of scientific experts (including  16 Nobel Laureates ) is a combination of rising tensions among nuclear powers and the inadequate international response to accelerating climate change.

Climate Change 
Seashore flooding and increasing weather extremes make it hard to ignore the threat from climate change. According to the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society's annual State of the Climate  report, in 2015 greenhouse gases, global land and sea surface temperatures and global sea levels were the highest on record.

The latest international attempt to address global warming was the Paris Agreement signed on Earth Day by the leaders of 175 nations. Unfortunately, as the  New York Times points out, the agreement will not have the legal force of a treaty because it would "be dead on arrival on Capitol Hill without the required two-thirds majority vote in the Republican-controlled Senate." Of all the major political parties in the democratic world, only the GOP rejects climate science. 

Republicans have nominated for President a climate-change denier who has shown himself to be a narcissistic man-child. They also want him to be commander-in-chief of U.S. nuclear forces. The GOP is a major threat to human survival. 

Nuclear War 
On August 6, 1945 the U.S. dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima. It instantly killed 70,000 people, and 140,000 more died from radiation effects. The city of 310,000 was obliterated. A second atomic bomb on August 9 caused similar devastation in Nagasaki. The first bomb had an explosive power of 15 kilotons (=15,000 tons of TNT), while the second was 22 kilotons. The estimated total  destructive force of the current nuclear arsenal is 570,000 kilotons (570 megatons) for the U.S. and  660+ megatons for Russia, equal to 38,000 and 44,000 Hiroshimas respectively.

According to the Arms Control Association, the world's nuclear powers now possess a  total of 15,300 nuclear warheads, 90% of which are held by the U.S. and Russia. About a third of these are retired and await dismantlement. Each nation has about 4500 warheads stockpiled for potential use. Russia has 1648 warheads deployed on ballistic missiles or heavy bombers, while the U.S. has 1538. Each side maintains a "nuclear triad" consisting of land-based ballistic missiles (ICBMs), submarine-launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs) and strategic bombers. 

It's a terrible irony that we nearly ended the threat of a nuclear doomsday 30 years ago at the 1986 Reykjavk summit between Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev. Both offered to completely eliminate their nuclear arsenals, and then backed off. The obstacle was Reagan's refusal to limit the development of his so-called Star Wars anti-ballistic missile system even though the elimination of the missiles would make the system unnecessary.

The kind of irrationality that led to the failure of the Reykjavk summit is now at work in U.S. foreign policy toward Russia. The immediate background of the current threat is the American-sponsored expansion of NATO to the borders of Russia, incorporating many former Warsaw Pact countries. NATO even announced that Ukraine, despite its deep historic and economic ties with Russia, would be considered for membership.

As Noam Chomsky put it  recently: "One can imagine how the United States would react if the Warsaw Pact were still alive, most of Latin America had joined, and now Mexico and Canada were applying for membership."

In 2013 the U.S. supported a coup that ousted the democratically elected Ukrainian President Yanukovych, replacing him with a Western-leaning regime. This was the last straw for Russian President Putin. He responded by annexing Crimea, an ethnically Russian part of Ukraine that included port facilities for the Russian Black Sea fleet. He also supported a separatist insurrection in Russian-speaking eastern Ukraine that continues today.

The American narrative from politicians and the mainstream media is that Russia is an aggressor that needs to be contained by economic sanctions and military threats. NATO is moving military forces close to the border with Russia, and Russia is responding with its own troop movements. There is a growing acceptance of a New Cold War.

Instead of urgently pushing for nuclear arms reduction, President Obama (winner of the Nobel Peace Prize) has committed to a trillion-dollar renewal program for the U.S. nuclear triad. It envisions weapons and delivery systems that "move toward the small, the stealthy and the precise" ( NYT , 1/11/16). The Russians have noticed, and are scrambling to catch up. The Doomsday Clock is ticking.
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