PRESIDENT OBAMA takes on Rush Limbaugh

Matt Drudge is calling Obama’s warning for Republicans not to listen to Rush Limbaugh’s empty rhetoric a “Media War.” When did Rush Limbaugh become part of the media? Of course, such an assertion is to admit the existence of the Bush Administration’s and the Republican’s attempts to control the media—not to mention corporate efforts to homogenize the media.

I recognize the need for bipartisanship, but my problem with some Republicans are their attempts to sabotage almost everything politically, ignore the facts and reality, promote divisiveness and culture war, in addition to being total hypocrites.

President Obama is absolutely correct to call out Rush Limbaugh, especially after Limbaugh recently expressed his hope for the Obama Administration to fail by saying, “I want him to fail” to Sean Hannity of FOX News.  Personally, I disagreed with the Bush Administration’s policies on Iraq, but I never wished for the Administration’s policies to fail.

On the Net: Limbaugh against stimulus because its success could hurt GOP’s electoral chances

rush-limbaugh

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CAN YOU SEE ME? | ANIMAL CAMOUFLAGE

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See more animal camouflage here on The Conservation Report.


Photo source for attribution here and here. The authors or licensors of these images do not endorse my work or me and their images are protected under an attribution license.

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CULL: Yellowstone bison cull necessary?

american-bisonThe American Bison (Bison bison), a symbol of conservation, the west, and a time when more species of megafauna roamed North America, is currently the victim of a poor management plan. At one time, American bison roamed east towards the Atlantic Ocean, but “the bison’s near-demise, much like the actual demise of the Passenger Pigeon, was commercial hunting.” The “last free-range herd of [American] bison” roams Yellowstone National Park. However, cattle ranchers fear that American bison may transmit brucellosis, a zoonotic disease. Once cattle become infected with brucellosis, states lose their brucellosis-free status. However, a new study is arguing that the current management plan is costly and unnecessary. From the San Jose Mercury News, USA:

The bison were killed in an attempt to halt the spread of brucellosis in Montana cattle. The infection causes miscarriage and reduced milk production in cows; ranchers fear bison could spread the bacteria when winter snows drive the bison out of the park in search of food. The current management plan – “hazing” stray buffalo with helicopters and snowmobiles and shooting those that refuse to return to the park – is both costly and controversial. It also might be avoidable, said Marm Kilpatrick, an evolutionary biologist at UCSC.

“Most years, the risk of transmission is really, really low,” said Kilpatrick, lead author of a new study which found only sporadic risk of brucellosis transmission in the areas surrounding Yellowstone.

.       .       .

Compensating ranchers for allowing bison on their land would cost half of what the current management plan costs – $2.5 million a year according to a 2000 estimate, Kilpatrick said.

.       .       .

Just two brucellosis cases within two years can rob a state of its coveted “brucellosis-free” status. Many areas refuse to import beef from brucellosis-infected states. Montana lost its brucellosis-free classification in September 2008 after two outbreaks traced to wild elk.

“It’s a disastrous event, but it’s a very rare event,” Kilpatrick said of bison-to-cow transmission. If Montana were divided into two zones so infections in the Yellowstone area wouldn’t affect distant ranches, “the cost of dealing with the transmission event would be smaller than the current cost of management,” Kilpatrick said.

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Map Found Here


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PRESIDENT OBAMA tackling Bush Administration’s weakening of environmental regulation

The Obama Administration is working to prevent and undo the Bush Administration’s efforts to weaken environmental regulations. From Business Green:

President Obama’s chief of staff Rahm Emanuel issued a memo on inauguration day warning federal agencies not to send proposed or final regulations to the Office of the Federal Register for publication. The Oval Office is to review each of them first.

The White House memo also gives the president’s designates the chance to re-evaluate rules that have already been published in the federal register, but which agencies have not yet brought into effect.

Last-minute rules, known as midnight regulations, are common when one administration leaves office. The Bush administration was working on a swathe of regulations in the run-up to the transition, many of which carried an environmental impact.

For example, on Tuesday, as president Obama took office, a rule exempting factory farms from reporting pollution emissions from animal waste came into effect. It had been finalised on 18 December.

Other rules that took effect in the previous week governed the reclassification of hazardous waste as fuel, allowing it to be burned, and the opening of two million acres of western land to leasing for oil shale development. Last Thursday, a regulation also came into effect allowing federal representatives to approve projects without considering global warming, and without consulting biological health experts about the effect on endangered species.

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ECO CHIC: Moss carpet by Nguyen La Chanh

moss-carpet

I believe this moss carpet by Nguyen La Chanh is really neat—especially if the moss is hardy enough to flourish in most bathroom environments. I’m all for integrating living plants into a home, so I’m not a big fan of plastic plants. According to the designer’s description:

This bathroom carpet is made of imputrescible [not subject to decay] foam called plastazote. Each cell welcomes a piece of moss (ball moss, Island moss, forest moss). The humidity of the bathroom and the drops flowing from the body, water the mosses. This vegetable carpet procures a great feeling to your feet.

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