Efforts to pass bills attacking Palestine solidarity movement have failed to pass by regular means.
Category Archives: Viva!
Suriname community uses new open-source app to preserve storytelling traditions
The Matawai of Suriname, a community that once felt forgotten by the rest of the world, is breaking ground by using a new open-source geostorytelling app to create an extraordinary repository of traditional knowledge through oral history storytelling. The goal of the work is to ensure that future generations of Matawai will be able to […]
Tired of Losing in Court, Trump Administration Amplifies Attack on Science
Tired of Losing in Court, Trump Administration Amplifies Attack on Science
The Trump administration is acutely aware of science’s role in pushing for effective government regulation, so it’s instituted a sneak attack on science.
Participants in the 2017 March for Science in Washington, DC., protested the Trump administration’s anti-science attacks.
Several years ago, researchers studying environmental causes of childhood autism found a link to chlorpyrifos, a pesticide widely used across the U.S. on staple crops like corn, wheat, and citrus.
That study and others that followed led the EPA to ban the use of chlorpyrifos for most indoor applications, but agricultural use continued, poisoning farmworkers and others. Thanks to a series of Earthjustice lawsuits, the EPA finally proposed banning this brain-damaging pesticide in 2015. But as soon as President Trump took office, the chemical industry lobbied successfully to derail the ban. We sued, invoking the wealth of scientific data showing there is no safe level of exposure to chlorpyrifos. And in August, we won a resounding court order requiring regulators to finalize the proposed ban.
This victory is just one of several wins Earthjustice has racked up against the Trump administration. We also had another recent court win to protect grizzly bears in Yellowstone National Park from being hunted.
The results in these two cases, as in many of our cases, hinged on years of painstaking work by independent scientists. These wins prove facts still matter in court. They also underscore how much we depend on sound science to protect our health and environment.
The Trump administration and its allies are acutely aware of science’s role in pushing for effective government regulation — which is why they’ve instituted a sneak attack on science. Their effort to disregard or disqualify any scientific finding that threatens corporate bottom lines has been glaringly apparent in the chlorpyrifos fight as the EPA continues to drag its feet. More sweepingly, last year former EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt kicked independent scientists off key advisory boards, and acting EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler has initiated new actions to exclude consideration of sound science altogether.
The administration’s other anti-science attacks include suppressing a report on formaldehyde’s health effects and halting a study on coal’s health risks. Recently, the president ignored findings by the world’s top climate experts, who warned we have less than 20 years to prevent a climate catastrophe. He also denied his own administration’s most recent climate assessment, which details debilitating consequences to our planet and ourselves unless we dramatically cut carbon pollution.
Just as fossil fuel interests have attacked good science to delay climate action, the chemical industry is trying to undermine and eliminate science that keeps us safe. Good science is the foundation on which our legal work stands, as well as the underpinning of our strongest environmental laws. We are taking every opportunity to defend the role of science in the courts. And, in the new Congress, we will be pressing for robust investigations of this administration’s unfounded attacks.
Climate Change, Endangered Species Act, Environmental Protection Agency, Pesticides, Trump Administration
Diageo to Build New Whiskey Distillery in Kentucky – (Diageo plc is a British multinational alcoholic beverages company, with its headquarters in London, England.)
Diageo’
Toyota Recalls Pickups, SUVs to Fix Airbag, Brake Problems
Quality is job 143,000?
‘Trust me’, Britain’s May tells EU leaders she can get Brexit deal passed
No go for Uber Black, rules top German court
The US call-a-chauffeur service Uber Black — banned in Germany — has lost its appeal before top civil judges in Karlsruhe. A Berlin court had previously ruled that swanky cabs could not simply be beckoned via an app.
May brings Christmas wish list to Brussels but the EU looks unlikely to deliver

Embattled UK Prime Minister Theresa May is hoping to win concessions from the EU over the terms of Brexit. While EU politicians have suggested they want to help, they insist the current deal is not open to renegotiation.
Iran-linked group hacks nuclear scientists, US sanctions officials
Strange that such stories are closely timed to events that threaten leaders in USA and Israel, as well as Saudi Arabia? Wonder how much money the security firm gets or hopes to get from those governments ? grin.

London-based cybersecurity group Certfa finds data showing Iran-linked hackers tried to break into private emails of nuclear scientists and US sanctions officials. It is unclear how many accounts they successfully accessed.
Russian woman admits to being a secret agent, in a plea deal
Potential excuses for NRA: “We hardly knew her…” “She told us she was for real, so we believed her…” “A really, really low level person…”

A Russian woman accused of being a secret agent admits that she conspired to infiltrate the American gun-rights movement to gather intelligence on conservative political groups as Donald Trump rose to power.
You must be logged in to post a comment.