ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

Spanish nursing home orderly admits 11 killings

Amplify’d from www.bbc.co.uk

Spanish nursing home orderly admits 11 killings

An orderly at a Spanish retirement home has admitted killing 11 residents, reports say.

Map locator

Joan Vila, 45, said he poisoned them with bleach, an overdose of insulin or drugs at the home in the north-eastern town of Olot, Spanish media reported.


He had confessed to killing three residents "to end their suffering" when he was arrested in October.


He then told a judge on Tuesday that he had killed another eight, the Spanish news agency Efe reported.


The confession came 10 days after a judge ordered the eight bodies exhumed as part of an investigation into suspicious deaths at the La Caritat home.


Doctors first alerted police after they found burns to the mouth and throat of an 85-year-old woman who died last month.


Mr Vila then confessed he had killed the woman and two others by forcing them to drink bleach.


In his latest confession Mr Vila told a judge he killed another six with a mix of drugs and two from an overdose of insulin, Efe reported.


The newspaper El Periodico quoted Mr Vila's lawyer, Carles Monguilod, as saying that the first killing was carried out in August 2009, another later that year and the other nine this year.


Mr Vila, who worked weekends at the home, is currently being held in the psychiatric ward of a prison.


Mr Monguilod said his client acted out of "compassion... because they were suffering and he wanted to give them some peace".


Most of the patients were said to have been suffering terminal illnesses, including Alzheimer's, and had fevers or were disorientated.

Read more at www.bbc.co.uk
 

Obama's anti-child obesity initiative receives faith, community support

Amplify’d from news.adventist.org

Obama's anti-child obesity initiative receives faith, community support

At White House, Wilson pledges support for 'Let's Move' goals
Ansel Oliver/NAD staff

The Seventh-day Adventist Church joined some 50 other faith and community organizations yesterday in supporting a national initiative of United States first lady Michelle Obama to fight the epidemic of childhood obesity.



The initiative, "Let's Move: Faith and Communities," seeks pledges from organizations to promote exercise, the planting of community gardens to provide fresh food, and other activities contributing to healthful living.



About one-third of children in the U.S. are overweight or obese, Obama told faith and community leaders gathered at the White House.



"It's clear that when it comes to ensuring our children's health and well-being, when it comes to tackling childhood obesity, our faith-based and community organizations have a very critical role to play," Obama said.



She said this new phase of the previously established Let's Move initiative would work to support existing programs. "Many of you have been leading the way on this issue for so long..." Obama said, referring to faith-based health ministries, exercise clubs and education in "Saturday and Sunday schools."



The new initiative is comprised of four goals for next year:



-Community and faith-based members walking a total of three million miles.

-Complete 500,000 Presidential Active Lifestyle Awards or establish exercise programs.

-Host 10,000 community gardens or farmer's markets nationally.

-1,000 new summer feeding sites nationally.



Several leaders of prominent faith groups expressed support for the goals, including Ted N. C. Wilson, president of the Adventist world church, who said he "resonate[d] with the issue personally." He holds a master's degree in public health from the church's Loma Linda University.



"The 'Let's Move' initiative is consistent with our church's approach to ministering to people physically, mentally, socially, and spiritually," Wilson said. "It has been shown that Seventh-day Adventists live longer because of their healthy lifestyle.



"Seventh-day Adventists have extensive educational and health systems in which we promote better health through practical, healthy lifestyles such as balanced nutrition, exercise, drinking enough water, adequate sunlight, abstaining from alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drugs, fresh air, appropriate rest and trust in divine power.



"We will promote balanced and healthful vegetarian meals for children and young people in our schools and summer Vacation Bible Schools, walking programs for young people, and possible use of periodic local produce markets on church properties.



"The Seventh-day Adventist Church will do its part to fulfill God's wish found in 3 John [chapter] 2 which indicates that God wants us to be in physical and spiritual health," Wilson said.



Katia Reinert, Health Ministries director for the church in North America, said members will be encouraged to:



-Walk 1 million miles through InStep for Life and other exercise initiatives. Health Ministries will aim to motivate 100 churches walking 10,000 miles a year and at least 10 people per church walking 2.5 miles a day.

-Engaging youth at churches and schools to establish vegetable gardens in the community, with the goal of one garden in each local conference.

-Encourage youth to receive the Presidential Active Lifestyle Awards; at least one award per Adventist school in North America.

-Establish summer feeding programs through Vacation Bible School, summer camps, and community service outreach initiatives.



"I think more than ever the time has come for God's message of healing and restoration to be heard," Reinert later said in a statement. "This is a wonderful opportunity to engage our churches and schools to make a positive impact for Christ in our communities on a national level."



For more information, resources and an initiative tool kit, visit www.letsmove.gov.

Read more at news.adventist.org
 

Tea Party Leader: Restricting Voting to Property Owners 'Makes a Lot of Sense'

Amplify’d from gawker.com

Tea Party Leader: Restricting Voting to Property Owners 'Makes a Lot of Sense'Tea Party Leader: Restricting Voting to Property Owners 'Makes a Lot of Sense'Judson Phillips, president of prominent Tea Party group Tea Party Nation, has a terrific idea: "The Founding Fathers... put certain restrictions on... the right to vote... you had to be a property owner. And that makes a lot of sense."

Like a lot of people, I was pretty worried that after The Tea Party won the November elections and executed President Obama for treason, they'd stop peddling their bizarre, antiquated views of government in public. But I was wrong! Because Judson Phillips is out there, fighting the good fight for the landed gentry, on the Tea Party Nation radio station:


The Founding Fathers originally said, they put certain restrictions on who gets the right to vote. It wasn't you were just a citizen and you got to vote. Some of the restrictions, you know, you obviously would not think about today. But one of those was you had to be a property owner. And that makes a lot of sense, because if you're a property owner you actually have a vested stake in the community. If you're not a property owner, you know, I'm sorry but property owners have a little bit more of a vested interest in the community than non-property owners.


That whole property owners-only deal worked out pretty well back in the nineteenth century, didn't it? I mean, if you were a property owner! If you weren't (or if you were female, or black) well, no, it probably did not make so much sense, to you. But who cares what you think! How on earth could you have a vested interest in your community if you are renting, or, say, homeless?

So why not just add this proposal to the bizarre movement to repeal the 17th amendment, which would end the direct election of Senators? Hell, why not repeal all the amendments? And let's get a king in here, too! He'd look after the property-owners.


Send an email to Max Read, the author of this post, at max@gawker.com.

Read more at gawker.com
 

Wikileaks chief said he has 5GB of secret docs on Bank of America

Amplify’d from www.rawstory.com

Flashback: Wikileaks chief said he has 5GB of secret docs on Bank of America (exclusive)

julian assange  Flashback: Wikileaks chief said he has 5GB of secret docs on Bank of America (exclusive)

In an interview published Monday, Wikileaks founder Julian Assange revealed that his whistleblower website intends to publish a trove of secret documents exposing the corruption of a major American bank.


He declined to say which bank, but he offered what may be a telling hint last year as to who the megaleak will target.


"At the moment, for example, we are sitting on 5GB from Bank of America, one of the executive's hard drives," Assange told the technology site Computer World in an article published on October 9, 2009.


The Wikileaks chief continued: "Now how do we present that? It's a difficult problem. We could just dump it all into one giant Zip file, but we know for a fact that has limited impact. To have impact, it needs to be easy for people to dive in and search it and get something out of it."


The Internet has been abuzz with speculations as to which bank the famous -- or notorious -- website will expose. Although Assange's hint is far from a dead giveaway, his strategic approach to publishing secrets suggests that his next target may well be Bank of America, the nation's largest bank in terms of assets.

Speaking to Andy Greenberg of Forbes, Assange said the leak -- to be unveiled early in 2011 -- "will give a true and representative insight into how banks behave at the executive level in a way that will stimulate investigations and reforms."


It would blow the lid off an "ecosystem of corruption," he added.


The Australian-born Wikileaks chief predicted it would be as damaging as the Enron emails, which brought the powerful Houston-based energy company to its knees and led to its bankruptcy.


Assange has long maintained that he is sitting on far more secret documents than he can handle at any given moment, and is generally astute in terms of winning the maximum amount of media coverage for his leaks.


Having exposed explosive US secrets pertaining to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, Wikileaks this week has put the US in damage control mode after revealing 250,000 classified diplomatic cables obtained from the Department of State without permission, exposing the modus operandi of American foreign relations and countless diplomatic secrets of world leaders.


Stephen C. Webster contributed to this story.

Read more at www.rawstory.com
 

John Boehner's Next Target: Ant-Covered Jesus (Updated)

Amplify’d from gawker.com

John Boehner's Next Target: Ant-Covered Jesus (Updated)John Boehner's Next Target: Ant-Covered Jesus (Updated)Reps. John Boehner and Eric Cantor, the two leading House Republicans, have issued a warning to the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery: Take down that exhibit where Jesus is covered with ants, or face "tough scrutiny" next year. [Update below]

The Catholic site CNSNews.com brought the exhibit — called "Hide/Seek," which "contains video of a Jesus statue with ants crawling on it, as well as works of art with strongly sexual themes" — to Boehner and Cantor's attention, asking what they thought of it. They could have responded, "We have other shit to do before worrying about the aesthetic merit of some art exhibit in Chinatown," but that would've been too easy. Instead we get:


"American families have a right to expect better from recipients of taxpayer funds in a tough economy," Boehner's Spokesman Kevin Smith told CNSNews.com. "While the amount of money involved may be small, it's symbolic of the arrogance Washington routinely applies to thousands of spending decisions involving Americans' hard-earned money at a time when one in every 10 Americans is out of work and our children's future is being threatened by debt.


"Smithsonian officials should either acknowledge the mistake and correct it, or be prepared to face tough scrutiny beginning in January when the new majority in the House moves to end the job-killing spending spree in Washington," Smith said.


Meanwhile, Eric Cantor's flack responded: "This is an outrageous use of tax payer money and an obvious attempt to offend Christians during the Christmas season." Not quite as blatantly authoritarian a tone as Boehner's, but still a bit much. An obvious attempt to offend Christians. All of them. And considerably less discreet than the equally threatening Green Dragon.

Ant-covered Jesus screencap via Penny Star/CNSNews.com

Update:

That didn't take too long. The ant-covered Jesus is now gone. From TBD.com:


The National Portrait Gallery has removed a work of art from a GLBT-themed exhibition after it attracted conservative and religious ire for its images of homosexuality and Christianity. Director Martin Sullivan announced the removal of A Fire in My Belly by artist David Wojnarowicz after conservative news service CNS wrote yesterday that the "Christmas-season exhibit," which opened in October, used taxpayer money to indirectly fund an exhibition that includes imagery of genitalia, homoerotic situations, and Christ covered in ants.



Send an email to Jim Newell, the author of this post, at newell@gawker.com.

Read more at gawker.com
 

Julian Assange Calls for Hillary Clinton's Resignation

Amplify’d from gawker.com

Julian Assange Calls for Hillary Clinton's ResignationWikileaks founder Julian Assange told an interviewer today that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton should resign if she had her diplomats "engage in espionage in the United Nations." Hillary Clinton, however, is unlikely to listen to Julian Assange.


Send an email to Jim Newell, the author of this post, at newell@gawker.com.

Read more at gawker.com
 

Women accused of hiding merchandise in body fat

Amplify’d from www.orlandosentinel.com

Women accused of hiding merchandise in body fat

Bobbie Miller Reporting
KFOR
EDMOND, OK -- Two women are arrested for shoplifting and police say they used their bodies to conceal the goods. Edmond police authorities say it was at the Edmond TJ Maxx that loss prevention officers found the duo stuffing items under their belly fat and breasts.



They say they took four pair of boots, three pair of jeans, a wallet and gloves; $2,600 worth of store merchandise.



Ailene Brown, 28, and 37-year-old Shmeco Thomas were arrested for shoplifting and are facing felony charges.



Officer James Hamm said, "These two were actually concealing them in areas of their body where excess skin was, under their chest area and armpits."
Police say Brown also had a knife in her purse they say she used to cut security tags in the store.


Read more at www.orlandosentinel.com
 

Women Caught Trying to Hide Stolen Goods Under Their Fat Rolls

Amplify’d from gawker.com


Women Caught Trying to Hide Stolen Goods Under Their Fat Rolls Two Oklahoma women were nabbed while attempting to leave a TJ Maxx with shoplifted goods stowed in their body fat. How much did they conceal? Four pair of boots, three pair of jeans, a wallet and gloves! Only in America.


Send an email to Brian Moylan, the author of this post, at brian@gawker.com.

Read more at gawker.com
 

Computer Game Makes You a Genetic Scientist

Amplify’d from www.wired.com

Computer Game Makes You a Genetic Scientist

A new online game harnesses the computational power of idle brains to help decipher the origins of genetic diseases.


The game, called Phylo, stands on the shoulders of crowdsourced science giants like the protein-folding game Foldit and the celestial object identification powerhouse Galaxy Zoo. Each project takes advantage of humans’ prowess at pattern recognition, something computers are notoriously terrible at.


“There are some tasks that humans can do better than computers, like solving puzzles,” said bioinformatics expert Jerome Waldispuhl of McGill University, one of Phylo’s project leaders. The game was officially launched Nov. 29.


Phylo players move colored squares representing the four nucleotides of DNA to find the best alignment between snippets of DNA from two different species. These particular sections of DNA, called promoter regions, determine which parts of the genome end up as traits in the organism, whether it be blue eyes or heart disease.


Seeing where the genes line up across species can help biologists pinpoint the sources of genetic disorders.



“If some region is conserved across all species after alignment, it probably was conserved for some very specific reason,” Waldispuhl said. “We should be able to provide better understanding of the reason for which mutation potentially will create a disease, or why this disease appears.”


Unlike in Foldit or Galaxy Zoo, the science in Phylo is pretty well hidden. It feels like an abstract puzzle game, with colorful shapes and jazzy music. That was deliberate, Waldispuhl says.


“We don’t want to be restricted only to the people interested in science,” he said. Science geeks won’t need as much convincing to play a game that helps research move forward, he says. The Phylo developers want the game to appeal to people who would otherwise play Farmville.


“If it’s not fun, people won’t play it,” Waldispuhl said. “We wanted a good trade-off between what’s fun, and what’s the interesting information in science… so that when we provide the game on the web, people won’t think about the biological problem, but just have fun and be entertained.”


The team hopes to make versions of the game for smart phones and tablets, and eventually to incorporate it into social networking sites like Facebook. The game already has its own Facebook page, where you can leave feedback.


“The only way to make it better for the community is to release it to the community, and open it to comments from around the world,” Waldispuhl said.


Image: Phylo


See Also:


Read more at www.wired.com
 

Teacher To Stand Trial In Sex Case | Woman Accused Of Having Sex With 2 Boys

Amplify’d from www.wgal.com

Teacher To Stand Trial In Sex Case

Woman Accused Of Having Sex With 2 Boys

LANCASTER, Pa. --
Christy L. Smith



The teacher at McCaskey High School in Lancaster accused of having sex with two teens has been ordered to stand trial.

English teacher Christy Smith, 32, is accused of having sex with a 15-year-old and a 17-year-old boy.

The School District of Lancaster suspended Smith amid the allegations.

The district attorney is asking any other potential victims to come forward.

Copyright 2010 by WGAL.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


Read more at www.wgal.com
 

New Age or Old Satan Lie | Watch Sister Talk From New Age To New Birth - Testimony of Emma Biant

Amplify’d from thesearethey.blogspot.com


New Age or Old Satan Lie

Listen to this article. Powered by Odiogo.com
From New Age to New Birth - by Testimony of Emma Biant
Spiritualism is the last full deception by Satan for the world.
Read more at thesearethey.blogspot.com
 

Thank God Jesus Didn’t Copyright The Gospel

Amplify’d from theresurgence.com

Thank God Jesus Didn’t Copyright The Gospel

Tim Smith

For most musicians, details of copyright law are the last thing they want to deal with. Yet the nature of music for gathered worship makes these issues unavoidable.


Copyright law has real implications on how we use music and, if you are a songwriter, has a huge effect on how you protect and give permission for others to use your songs. The problem is that when faced with these issues, most Christians either stick their heads in the sand and ignore them or maintain the status quo, neither of which is acceptable.


 


A Few Things You Should Know About Copyright


Once you create a work (at least in the USA) it is automatically covered under the protection of US Copyright with “all rights reserved.” There is an exemption in copyright law allowing copyrighted material to be performed in the context of “religious services.” This means anything outside of a musical performance specifically in the confines of a worship service is illegal unless you have either a specific agreement with the content creator or a license that covers that content.


 


This includes:



  • Displaying or printing lyrics in any form

  • Recording music in any form for any purpose

  • Translating songs into a different language

  • Distributing recordings in any way


 


How a License Protects


So if you have ever recorded a worship song that is copyrighted, made a demo for your band, put lyrics on a projection slide, or made a song sheet without a license or permission, you have broken the law. Many of us seek the protection of CCLI (Christian Copyright Licensing International), but you need to know that their license only applies to displaying lyrics and recording worship services onto physical CDs or DVDs.


 


There is another organization called Christian Copyright Solutions that offers a range of other licenses for performance, webcasting, and video/sync (putting music with your videos) rights. However, even if you bought both of these licenses, you still cannot legally make a recording of a worship song that you do not own for any purpose, even if you don’t charge for it.


 


Render to Caesar What Is Caesar’s?


At this point in the conversation the common response is, “Well, Jesus said to render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s.” This is true, as far as it goes. Where songwriters have chosen to reserve all their rights, we need to honor their wishes and make every effort to comply with the law. In this sense we do need to give Caesar what he deserves. But when we write new songs, we have a choice. We don’t have to live in Rome!


 


There are many other options, and I will get into them in the next post.

Read more at theresurgence.com
 

Catholic Bishops Back House Resolution to Protect Iraq's Christians

Amplify’d from www.christianpost.com

Catholic Bishops Back House Resolution to Protect Iraq's Christians

By Ethan Cole|Christian Post Reporter

U.S. Catholic bishops urged congressmen on Monday to quickly pass a resolution that condemns the recent attack on a downtown Baghdad church and calls for a comprehensive plan to improve security for religious minorities in Iraq.

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB) Committee on International Justice and Peace sent the letter to sponsors of House Resolution 1725, which was introduced by Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.) and co-sponsored by six congressmen.

“Our conference welcomes this bipartisan resolution as a way to focus attention on the situation of the vulnerable religious communities in Iraq,” the bishops wrote. “In particular, we support the emphasis on developing a comprehensive plan to improve security for religious minorities and to increase their representation in the government of Iraq and to include them in all aspects of Iraqi society.”

The resolution is a response to the Oct. 31 attack on worshippers at Our Lady of Salvation Church in Baghdad that killed 58 people, including three priests, and wounded 75. The attack was the deadliest against the Assyrian Christian community since Islamic extremists began targeting them in 2003.

In the following weeks, extremists killed more people in Baghdad’s Christian neighborhoods as well as in the northern city of Mosul. Two weeks ago, extremists killed a six-year-old girl and her Christian father in Mosul, which has a large Christian population. Two Christian men were also gunned down in their living room in the city.

The Islamic State of Iraq, an umbrella group for Sunni Islamic insurgent groups that include al-Qaida, has claimed responsibility for the Oct. 31 and the Nov. 10 attacks. Police reported that at least 11 roadside bombs exploded within an hour in three Christian neighborhoods in Baghdad on Nov. 10.

On Saturday, Iraqi security forces arrested 12 people suspected to be linked to the attack on Our Lady of Salvation Church, including al-Qaida’s Baghdad leader, Huthaifa al-Batawi.

In addition to calling for a security plan for Iraq’s religious minorities, the resolution also calls for measures to accelerate the resettlement applications of Iraqi refugees and to improve conditions so they can safely return to Iraq.

“We sincerely hope that H. Res. 1725 will be adopted quickly by the House of Representatives as we believe it will help improve security for all Iraqis, especially Christians and other vulnerable minorities,” the bishops said. “We hope it will contribute to the overall goal of achieving a ‘responsible transition’ that will reduce further loss of life and address the refugee crisis in Iraq.”

Resolution 1725 was introduced on Nov. 18. Its co-sponsors are: Reps. Frank Wolf (R-Va.), Anna G. Eshoo (D-Calif.), Mark S. Kirk (R-Ill.), Gary C. Peters (D-Mich.), Joseph Pitts (R-Pa.), and Trent Franks (R-Ariz.).

There are only about 600,000 Christians in Iraq now, down from about 1.2 million before the U.S-led invasion in 2003.

Read more at www.christianpost.com
 

Ethiopia Imprisons Christian Accused of Defacing Quran

Amplify’d from www.christianpost.com

Ethiopia Imprisons Christian Accused of Defacing Quran

NAIROBI, Kenya (Compass Direct News) – A Christian in Ethiopia’s southern town of Moyale who languished in jail for more than three months after he was accused of desecrating the Quran has been sentenced to three years of prison, church leaders said.

Tamirat Woldegorgis, a member of the Full Gospel Church in his early 30s, was arrested in early August after a Muslim co-worker in the clothes-making business the two operated out of a rented home discovered Woldegorgis had inscribed “Jesus is Lord” on some cloth, area Christians said. His business partner later accused him of writing “Jesus is Lord” in a copy of the Quran, although no evidence of that ever surfaced.

Woldegorgis was sentenced on Nov. 18 for allegedly defacing the Quran and was subsequently transferred to Jijiga prison, a source said. Jijiga is the capital of Ethiopia’s Somali Region Zone Five, which is governed by Islamic principles, and his transfer there – after a period in which his whereabouts were unknown – puts his life in greater danger, a church leader said.

In Ethiopia’s federal state system, each state is autonomous in its administration, and most of those holding government positions in Somali Region Zone Five are Muslims.

“Three years in a harsh jail in Jijiga for an innocent man is quite costly,” said the church leader, who requested anonymity for security reasons.

The church is concerned about the condition of the father of two from Hagarmariam village.

Additionally, two of Woldegorgis’ friends were fined 5,000 Kenyan shillings (US$60) each for supporting him by either taking food to him or visiting him while in prison. The two were said to be condemned for supporting a criminal who allegedly desecrated the Quran and allegedly defamed Islam, church leaders said.

Woldegorgis’ Muslim associate, whose name has not been established, had gone to a mosque with the accusation that Woldegorgis had written “Jesus is Lord” in the Quran itself, sources said. Angry sheikhs at the mosque subsequently had Woldegorgis arrested for desecrating the book sacred to Islam, they said. Other sources said, however, that Muslims accused Woldegorgis of writing “Jesus is Lord” on a piece of wood, on a minibus and then on the wall of a house.

Sources previously told Compass that authorities had offered to release Woldegorgis if he would convert to Islam.

Hostility toward those spreading faiths different from Islam is a common occurrence in predominantly Muslim areas of Ethiopia and neighboring countries, they said. Christians are often subject to harassment and intimidation.

Ethiopia’s constitution, laws and policies generally respect freedom of religion, but occasionally some local authorities infringe on this right, according to the U.S. Department of State’s 2010 International Religious Freedom Report.

According to the 2007 census, 44 percent of Ethiopia’s population affiliate with the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, 19 percent are evangelical and Pentecostal and 34 percent are Sunni Muslim.

Read more at www.christianpost.com
 

Islands fear "end of history" due to climate changes

Islands fear "end of history" due to climate changes

Some low-lying island nations face the "end of history" due to rising sea levels unless the world takes stronger action to slow global warming, a spokesman said at U.N.

Reuters

CANCUN, Mexico (Reuters) - Some low-lying island nations face the "end of history" due to rising sea levels unless the world takes stronger action to slow global warming, a spokesman said at U.N. climate talks on Monday.


Kiribati, Tuvalu, the Cook Islands, the Marshall Islands and the Maldives were most at risk, said Antonio Monteiro Lima, a delegate of Cape Verde who is vice-chair of the 43-member Alliance of Small Island States.


"All these countries are at this moment struggling to survive ... they are facing the end of history," he told a news conference on the opening day of November 29 to December 10 negotiations among almost 200 nations on slowing global warming.


Island states say that storm surges are eroding beaches, blowing salt water onto farmland and contaminating fresh water supplies. In the longer term, they fear that rises in sea levels will wash them off the map.


AOSIS reiterated demands that the Cancun talks should work out a legally binding treaty by the end of 2011 to limit any temperature rise to below 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 Fahrenheit) above pre-industrial times.


That target is far tougher than a 2C ceiling set by most other nations in a non-binding Copenhagen Accord agreed at a 2009 summit. Goals for Cancun are modest, including setting up a new "green fund" to aid poor nations.


"We have clear scientific evidence, from sea level rise through desertification, of the impact on small, vulnerable countries," said Dessima Williams of Grenada, who chairs AOSIS at the talks.


She said AOSIS would on December 8 announce details of a deal to promote low-carbon economic growth for 17 small island states, backed by a group of developed nations as part of "fast-start" aid for the poor meant to total $30 billion from 2010-21.


The U.N. panel of climate scientists said in a 2007 report that seas were likely to rise between 18 and 59 cms (7-24 inches) this century, before accounting for the possibility of a change in the melt rates or Greenland and Antarctica.


Seas rose by about 17 cms in the 20th century, a trend the panel blamed on emissions of greenhouse gases, mainly from burning fossil fuels.


For Reuters latest environment blogs, click on: http://blogs.reuters.com/environment/

Read more at www.scientificamerican.com
 

Can Faith Slow Climate Change?

Can Faith Slow Climate Change?

As the moral implications of climate change become more apparent, faith communities around the world are taking action, both personal and political

LET THERE BE SOLAR: Faith communities are taking action--both personal, like installing solar panels on church rooftops, and political--as the moral implications of climate change become more apparent.

Give us all a reverence for the Earth as your own creation, that we may use its resources rightly in the service of others and to your honor and glory.


The prayer was recited regularly by a young Sally Bingham growing up in San Francisco.


Only years later, as an ordained Episcopal Church priest, did Bingham realize something was amiss with the childhood supplication.


"There was this terrible hypocrisy," she said. "This disconnect between what we said we believed in and how we behaved."


This bothered her for years until 1998 when, in her 50s, she finally took action.


Bingham founded what today is Interfaith Power and Light, a national campaign promoting "a religious response to global warming" that works with 10,000 congregations in 38 states.


"Climate change is one of the most challenging moral issues of our time," she said in an Earth Day sermon at San Francisco's Grace Cathedral where she is now Reverend Canon for the Environment.


Faith communities around the world are taking action - both personal and political - as the moral implications of climate change become more apparent.


While politics is split on climate change and governments worldwide have failed to pass meaningful climate legislation, faith communities are becoming a powerful force in the transition to green energy. By focusing on values rather than politics, they are transcending partisan pigeonholes and taking care of what they see as God's creation, and the people - particularly the poor - who depend on it.


"If you are called to love your neighbor, you don't pollute your neighbor's air," Bingham said.


More than 300 evangelical leaders have signed the Evangelical Environmental Network's climate call to action, including mega-church leaders like Rick Warren and Bill Hybels. A 2007 poll commissioned by the group found that 84 percent of evangelicals support legislation to reduce carbon emissions.


While mainline Protestants, Roman Catholics and Reformed Jews may have a stronger environmental presence, according to religious political scholar John C. Green, evangelicals - 26 percent of the U.S. population - are the most influential religious environmental faction.


"As evangelicals become more vocal on climate change, they have the potential to alter the position of the Republican party," said Green, director of the Ray C. Bliss Institute of Applied Politics for Religious Studies at the University of Akron and senior fellow at Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life.


But it's not there yet.


Religious political sway wasn't enough to push climate legislation through Congress this year. And a Pew Research Center Poll of 3,000 respondents found that most religious environmentalists do not derive their green leanings from their faith. Solid majorities of all major religious traditions favor strong environmental laws and regulations, according to the poll, and just under half of those who attend worship services regularly say their clergy speaks out on the topic. Yet the poll found that only six percent said their environmental views were primarily influenced by religion. Education and the media were more influential.


The poll, conducted over the summer, had a margin of error of 2.5 percent.


Still, Dan Lashof, Climate Center director for the National Resources Defense Council, sees results from political action in faith communities.


"It has a significant impact," said Lashof. "Faith communities put a high priority on ensuring that the United States makes a fair contribution to global efforts to address the impacts of climate change in developing countries."


President Obama's 2011 budget reflects the religious influence, Lashof said, with $1.9 billion requested for international climate adaptation. The U.S. Senate this summer released 2011 budget recommendations for over $1.2 billion in "fast start" investments for developing countries to address the impacts of climate change, speed a shift to clean energy and reduce tropical deforestation - part of the U.S. commitment to the Copenhagen Accord.

Read more at www.scientificamerican.com
 

Is the U.S. Falling Behind in the Clean Energy Race?

Is the U.S. Falling Behind in the Clean Energy Race?

A new report outlines a strategy for the federal government to encourage clean energy technology

Steven-Chu
SPUTNIK MOMENT: China is rapidly outdistancing the U.S. in clean energy technology development, a new "Sputnik moment," according to U.S. Secretary of Energy Steven Chu.
In the 1970s, refrigerators were growing in size—and energy consumption. In one of the more successful government-supported programs for energy-efficient technology, research and development of better compressors now have provided refrigerators that are larger still—but use roughly the same amount of energy as the smaller iceboxes of the past.



Similar examples of the federal government at work range from the creation of an industry for producing natural gas from coal seams to the ongoing Advanced Research Projects Agency–Energy (ARPA-E), a small-scale funding agency with outsized ambitions. As the U.S. faces what Secretary of Energy Steven Chu calls a "Sputnik moment" on energy—falling behind China and others in the race to develop clean energy technologies worth trillions of dollars—the question is: can the U.S. compete? And how?



"America still has the opportunity to lead in a world that will need a new industrial revolution to give us the energy we want inexpensively but also carbon-free. It's a way to secure our future prosperity," Chu said at a press event at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. on November 29. But "I think time is running out."



Creating a coordinated review


A new report from the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology released on November 29 looks at how best to accelerate the pace of change in energy technologies. The report's primary recommendation calls for setting up a quadrennial energy review—analogous to the quadrennial defense review from the Department of Defense that coordinates national security policy. Such a review would holistically coordinate the multiplicity of ways various elements of the government address energy: legislation, executive actions, research and development funding, demonstration projects, subsidies, incentives, standards, regulations, purchasing agreements, even tax policy.



"We've had technology du jour events quite regularly. We've had tax incentives that are stops and starts," says physicist Ernest Moniz of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, co-chair of the report, which recommends the DOE start the energy review process with an interim report by June 2011. "We just have to get something that is more stable."



The report also calls for a major investment in energy research and development as well as demonstration projects—jumping to $16 billion per year from roughly $5 billion now. As it stands, the U.S. spends roughly 0.14 percent of the federal budget on energy-related research. Including the comparatively small amount spent by the private sector, the total amount spent on research amounts to roughly 0.03 percent of the U.S. gross domestic product—a number three times smaller than the amount spent by Japan and far behind other nations as well.



One way to boost funds is new fees on the production and use of electricity and transportation fuels. Moniz notes that just 0.1 cent per kilowatt-hour of electricity and 2 cents per gallon of transportation fuels would yield about $8 billion per year, although such surcharges would need to be developed "with collaboration from industry and consumers. It's clearly easy to block something."



Game-changing targets


Ultimately, the idea is to fund innovation, broadly construed, with the aim of cost reduction for various clean energy technologies, ranging from better batteries for electric cars to carbon capture and storage at coal-fired power plants. "We are not interested in funding incremental work, we are interested in funding game-changing work," Chu said in his talk, noting the potential for the zinc-air batteries currently used in hearing aids to be scaled up into better batteries for electric vehicles. "There is the distinct possibility of giving [electric] cars that have a 100-mile range, a 500-mile range at one-third the cost."



Otherwise, the U.S. risks falling further behind in the race to dominate the clean energy technology markets of the future—becoming a customer, rather than a supplier. Other countries have specifically targeted this area. "We will accelerate the development of a low-carbon economy and green economy so as to gain an advantageous position in the international industrial competition," Chinese premier Wen Jiabao told the World Economic Forum in September 2009. "We will make China a country of innovation."



China has now become, among other things, the world leader in high-efficiency coal-fired power plants. "It's now competitive in terms of power per unit of investment, but you get a lot more power per unit coal," Chu noted. And the world's largest producer of photovoltaic cells—Suntech—imports raw materials from U.S. suppliers and manufactures its high-technology product in China.



At the same time, unlike the Sputnik space race with the Soviets, significant opportunity exists for the U.S. to collaborate with other countries. In coming years, China will be constructing buildings, cities, roads and transmission lines equivalent to the entire infrastructure of the U.S.—both a market opportunity for U.S. companies and a chance to determine the most effective technologies. "If we collaborate with China and India, we both come out better for it," Chu said.



Ultimately, getting energy policy right translates into environmental and national security improvements as well as economic development. "Energy is important because the economy is important, the environment is important, national security is important," says physicist John Holdren, director of the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy. "Energy is intimately intertwined with all three."



In fact, U.S. wealth creation over the last century has largely been driven by cheap energy and innovation, whether that be the invention of the airplane or integrated circuits. "Innovation is the key to prosperity and progress," Chu said, noting the key role government funding played in making the U.S. aerospace industry a world-leading enterprise. "You're making an expenditure because, in the long run, it's the future economic health of the country. That's not 20 years in the future; we're talking one, two, three years. We've got to make these investments."
Read more at www.scientificamerican.com