The Republicans do have an agenda
17 minutes ago
Efforts to work out which crops are most environmentally friendly have, until now, focused only on the amount of greenhouse gases a fuel emits when it is burned. Scharlemann and Laurance highlighted a more comprehensive method, developed by Rainer Zah of the Empa Research Institute in Switzerland, that can take total environmental impacts - such as loss of forests and farmland and effects on biodiversity - into account.Read More......
In a study of 26 biofuels the Swiss method showed that 21 fuels reduced greenhouse-gas emissions by more than 30% compared with gasoline when burned. But almost half of the biofuels, a total of 12, had greater total environmental impacts than fossil fuels. These included economically-significant fuels such as US corn ethanol, Brazilian sugar cane ethanol and soy diesel, and Malaysian palm-oil diesel. Biofuels that fared best were those produced from waste products such as recycled cooking oil, as well as ethanol from grass or wood.
Scharlemann and Laurance also pointed to "perverse" government initiatives that had resulted in unintended environmental impacts. In the US, for example, farmers have been offered incentives to shift from growing soy to growing corn for biofuels. "This is helping to drive up global soy prices, which in turn amplifies economic incentives to destroy Amazonian forests and Brazilian tropical savannas for soy production."
New York Mayor Bloomberg's idea for a summit meeting of aging moderate poobahs to discuss an independent third party seems a bit moldy to me. Not that I'm opposed to centrism--as regular readers of Swampland know very well, I'm sort of an aging moderate not-quite-poobah myself. But there is no real potential for a moderate third party this year, and no real need for it, either. [...] Every four years, we get a group of high-minded Mugwumps who are just shocked and appalled by the messiness of the democratic process and yearn for something more pristine.I love it! He goes on to explain why this is true, citing reasons more detailed (but similar to) mine, and I couldn't agree more. Read More......
Rudy Giuliani, speaking about his sixth place finish in Iowa yesterday:Read More......
"None of this worries me -- Sept. 11, there were times I was worried."
As a GOP operative I know loves to say, the man has "9/11 Tourettes." Can't help himself.
Michelle Malkin says: "Obama gave the peppiest speech of the night - and his supporters registered the loudest on the applause-o-meter." She also gives Paul Mirengoff at Power Line a nod, quoting his reference to Huckabee as a "big spending governor who doesn't know much about foreign policy but did stay at a Holiday Inn Express". Who's side is she on, again?They can't stand the guy. And what I'm hearing from my sources is that a big part of the reason is his ties to, and proselytizing for, the religious right.
Bloggers at the NRO's the Corner seem to be saying anyone but Huckabee..."
The Iowa results, with a victory for a populist social conservative [Huckabee] deeply mistrusted by many people in the Republican establishment, also virtually guarantee that the nomination contest will not simply be a battle over personalities and credentials. Instead, the race will now be a deep and probably intensely negative fight for the direction of the party in the post-Bush era.Demolition derby. We'll be seeing a lot more of these headlines and article over the next couple months. Hopefully all the way til November.
Here’s what still utterly uncertain: Who will emerge from this demolition derby? Iowa’s historic role is to winnow the field. In 2008, it has the effect of expanding the number of credible top-tier contenders. There are now five people who can conjure at least somewhat plausible paths to the nomination.
The Food and Drug Administration is expected to declare as early as next week that meat and milk from cloned animals and their offspring are safe to consume, the Wall Street Journal reported without naming its source.Read More......
Ministers are hurriedly working on new lists for the Légion d'Honneur, awarded to "eminent" French and foreign citizens, and the Ordre Nationale du Mérite, awarded for "distinguished" achievement. Announcements are expected in the next few days.Read More......
In the case of the country's second ranking honour, the Ordré du Merite, the new list, already almost two months overdue, is expected to include equal numbers of men and women for the first time. The list of recipients of the Légion d'Honneur, which was due on 1 January, may not be equally balanced but will contain more women than ever before. In future, President Sarkozy has made it clear, he wants to see parity between the sexes in the award of honours.
According to the newspaper Le Monde, President Sarkozy was also unhappy that the proposed lists contained too many civil servants and politicians and, implicitly, too many white people. He has asked for candidates who reflect "French diversity" and more people from businesses and charitable associations.
Overall, of 1,340 new nominations to the order, less than a third were women.
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