A WaPo article discusses the retreat of major insurance companies from exposure to global warming-related disasters:
In the aftermath of extreme weather events, major insurers are increasingly no longer offering coverage that homeowners in areas vulnerable to those disasters need most.
At least five large U.S. property insurers — including Allstate, American Family, Nationwide, Erie Insurance Group and Berkshire Hathaway — have told regulators that extreme weather patterns caused by climate change have led them to stop writing coverages in some regions, exclude protections from various weather events and raise monthly premiums and deductibles.Insurance providers are also more willing to drop existing policies in some locales as they become more vulnerable to natural disasters. Most home insurance coverages are annual terms, so providers are not bound to them for more than one year.In its response to the regulators’ survey, Nationwide said it no longer underwrites coverage for “properties within a certain distance to the coastline” because of hurricane potential.
It's not clear what the impacts of this will be. As capitalists withdraw, competent government can step in. If government does it competently, it can potentially undercut the private sector. Maybe that's a good thing because there is reason to believe that the capitalists take too much for what they deliver. This is an opportunity to set the public and private sectors against each other to see who can provide the best at the lowest cost.
Of course, the foregoing assumes competence in government. The last thing the authoritarian radical right Republican Party wants to see is competent governance. That undercuts their entire platform of hate of government due to its alleged incompetence. These days that is often or usually significantly associated with GOP sabotage of government operations. Time will tell how this fascinating story plays out.
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Foreground: Pig snout
Elsewhere: Other stuff
On April 26, 1986, the infamous explosion at a Chernobyl nuclear power plant unleashed large amounts of radiation into the atmosphere, an event that contaminated wildlife across country lines. The radiation levels seen in animals as a result has decreased in recent years — with the exception of one animal: the wild boar.
For years, scientists questioned why levels of a radioactive isotope known as cesium-137 have remained surprisingly high in wild boars rooting around Germany and Austria, while decreasing in other deer and roe deer. In a new study released last week, a team of researchers finally solved this “wild boar paradox.” They uncovered that the main radioactive source is not the Chernobyl accident but nuclear weapons testing from the 1960s.
In the new research, Steinhauser and his colleagues took a step back and reinvestigated the amount and origin of cesium in wild boars. Working with hunters collecting wild boar meat across southern Germany, they measured cesium levels with a gamma-ray detector.
Radioactive cesium results from both nuclear weapons explosion and nuclear energy production. The element comes in different isotopic composition, cesium-135 and cesium-137, depending on the source. By analyzing the ratio of these amounts, the researchers can pinpoint the source of the radiation. From previous literature, the team knew a higher ratio of cesium-137 indicated a nuclear weapons explosion but a lower ratio is linked with nuclear reactors.
Baby radioactive pigs rooting around for food
(aw, they're so cute)
* Just kidding. Don't get excited. They don't glow in the dark.
Germaine's usual Sunday morning rasher
of crispy bacon for a hearty breakfast
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With television ads and text messages, direct mail and billboards, supporters of the embattled Texas attorney general, Ken Paxton, have embarked on an escalating campaign of political pressure, backed by hard-right billionaires, aimed at trying to sway the outcome of Mr. Paxton’s upcoming impeachment trial.
But the effort to save Mr. Paxton, who is seen by many hard-core conservatives as their legal standard-bearer, is also the latest proxy in the broader fight over the future direction of the party, both in Texas and nationally.It has drawn in a range of conservative figures on both sides, with Rick Perry, the former Texas governor, and Karl Rove, the political consultant to former President George W. Bush, arguing in support of the impeachment process, and Steve Bannon, the former Trump political adviser, lampooning it as a Democrat-inspired witch hunt.
“We want the entire MAGA movement to understand that what’s going on in Texas is not just about Texas,” Mr. Bannon told his podcast audience this month.
Steve Bannon's method of fighting for tyranny and kleptocracy is simple but effective: Flood the zone with shit! Or as Vox put it a few years back: “Flood the zone with shit”: How misinformation overwhelmed our democracy -- The impeachment trial didn’t change any minds. Here’s why.
This is the ghastly face of the MAGA wing of the modern radical right Republican Party. An arrogant, corrupt criminal like Ken Paxton is seen as the GOP's legal standard bearer by authoritarian billionaire elites.
Meanwhile, a small group of loyal Republican foot soldiers in Florida protested at Disney -- they hate LGBQT people and etc.
Not protesting in support of Joe Biden or
pluralist democracy
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Invasive species are costing the world more than $423 billion a yearInvasive pests are wreaking havoc across the planet, destroying crops, disseminating pathogens, depleting fish people rely on for food and driving native plants and animals toward extinction, according to a major report backed by the United Nations.The landmark assessment found more than 3,500 harmful invasive species cost society more than $423 billion a year, a tally only expected to grow as the modern age of global trade and travel continues to supercharge the spread of plants and animals across continents like never before.“One of the things that we stress that really is the tremendous threat this does pose to — and I know this is going to sound grandiose — but to human civilization,” said Peter Stoett, an Ontario Tech University professor who helped lead a group of about seven dozen experts in writing the report.The spread of plants and animals between continents is one of the main causes of Earth’s ongoing biodiversity crisis, an extinction event on par with the asteroid that killed the dinosaurs. Invasive species are playing a role in 60 percent of extinctions, according to the report.The lovely, innocent South American water hyacinth:A free-floating plant that grows so quickly that it can cover entire ponds and lakes, leaving a matted mess that impedes boat traffic and fishing. In some cases, the plants suck up so much water that they render lakes dry and leave communities without drinking water. The report deemed the water hyacinth, which is popping up everywhere from Africa to Australia, the most widespread invasive plant on Earth.In addition to invasive species, the other four key drivers of extinction are climate change, habitat destruction, pollution and direct exploitation of species, with a million plants and animals at risk of vanishing for good.
Global warming is poised to make the problem of invasive pests worse by enabling animals such as tropical fire ants to march north into higher latitudes.
Well now, that's sobering. 😨
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