Water Use in Southwest Heads for a Day of Reckoning

Stephan:  Longtime SR readers know of my view that water is destiny (See the archives for two of my essays on this subject, or go to explorejournal.com/content/schwartz. Here is further evidence of this trend. It isn't hard to understand the implications of this story on life in Phoenix, Las Vegas, or Tucson. Thanks to Judy Tart.

Barring a sudden end to the Southwest’s 11-year drought, the distribution of the river’s dwindling bounty is likely to be reordered as early as next year because the flow of water cannot keep pace with the region’s demands.

For the first time, federal estimates issued in August indicate that Lake Mead, the heart of the lower Colorado basin’s water system – irrigating lettuce, onions and wheat in reclaimed corners of the Sonoran Desert, and lawns and golf courses from Las Vegas to Los Angeles – could drop below a crucial demarcation line of 1,075 feet.

If it does, that will set in motion a temporary distribution plan approved in 2007 by the seven states with claims to the river and by the federal Bureau of Reclamation, and water deliveries to Arizona and Nevada would be reduced.

This could mean more dry lawns, shorter showers and fallow fields in those states, although conservation efforts might help them adjust to the cutbacks. California, which has first call on the Colorado River flows in the lower basin, would not be affected.

But the operating plan also lays out a proposal to prevent Lake Mead from dropping below the trigger point. It allows water managers to send 40 […]

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GOP, U.S. Chamber of Commerce Beat Back Bill to Combat Outsourcing

Stephan:  Here one sees the naked face of the corporate virtual states, through the joint mechanisms of the GOP and the U.S. Chamber of Congress, as they exercise their power over American policy to the detriment of millions of middle class Americans. A virtual corporate state doesn't care if outsourcing devastates the economy of a town, or a whole state because, as a sovereign entity divorced from actual geographical considerations, the point is profit, not social stability or prosperity.

Senate Republicans beat back an effort by Democrats Tuesday to end tax breaks for companies who send jobs offshore only to import products back into the United States. The House has passed a series of similar legislation over the past several weeks, as Democrats work to portray Republicans as in the pocket of Big Business at the expense of workers, the economy, the trade deficit and the budget deficit. That message was muddied, however, by the defection of four Democrats and Independent Democrat Joe Lieberman, who voted against the motion to end a filibuster.

‘I wish this election would be a simple referendum on this issue,’ Dick Durbin, the Senate’s number two Democrat, said on the Senate floor Monday night. ‘Who in the world believes that we should be rewarding corporations in our country for shipping jobs overseas?’

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is one powerful answer to Durbin’s query. The Chamber, which represents businesses in the United States, has aggressively battled the effort to reduce outsourcing. During the debate over the stimulus, the U.S. Chamber fought efforts to include a provision that would encourage taxpayer money to be spent on products made by domestic companies. It opposed the outsourcing bill, arguing […]

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Census Finds Record Gap Between Rich and Poor

Stephan:  Yet another study tracking the destruction of the American middle class. And it looks like the country is getting ready to vote into office individuals who are dedicated to increasing this trend. A triumph of agitprop sensoids over actual information. Thanks to Amy McBride.

WASHINGTON — The income gap between the richest and poorest Americans grew last year to its widest amount on record as young adults and children in particular struggled to stay afloat in the recession.

The top-earning 20 percent of Americans – those making more than $100,000 each year – received 49.4 percent of all income generated in the U.S., compared with the 3.4 percent earned by those below the poverty line, according to newly released census figures. That ratio of 14.5-to-1 was an increase from 13.6 in 2008 and nearly double a low of 7.69 in 1968.

A different measure, the international Gini index, found U.S. income inequality at its highest level since the Census Bureau began tracking household income in 1967. The U.S. also has the greatest disparity among Western industrialized nations.

At the top, the wealthiest 5 percent of Americans, who earn more than $180,000, added slightly to their annual incomes last year, census data show. Families at the $50,000 median level slipped lower.

‘Income inequality is rising, and if we took into account tax data, it would be even more,’ said Timothy Smeeding, a University of Wisconsin-Madison professor who specializes in poverty. ‘More than other countries, we have a very unequal […]

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Bank Losses Lead to Drop in Credit Card Debt

Stephan: 

The substantial drop in credit card debt in the United States since early 2009 has been widely attributed to newly frugal consumers. But analysts say that a significant portion of the decline is actually the result of financial institutions writing off billions of dollars in credit card debt as losses.

While consumers have done their part by shying away from exceeding new credit limits and turning increasingly to debit cards, the question is to what extent are consumers voluntarily reducing their balances, and to what extent are banks making the decision for them.

The answer has wide implications for the broader economy as banks try to determine whom to extend credit to - and how much - and as businesses try to adapt to the changes in consumers’ spending patterns.

‘There is a lot of debate going on right now among economists,

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Darwinism: Devilish Gnostic Myth Dressed Up as Science

Stephan:  This is the best exposition I have found presenting the Creationist case, as most Creationists understand it. What struck me about the essay is that it is essentially an argument grounded in rhetoric. Although some scientists are quoted, they are quoted as one might quote a Talmudic scholar for his exegesis on a passage. There is no actual science in this document. Not a scintilla of data. And it is in this difference that the Great Schism is partially defined. Linda Kimball is the author of numerous published articles and essays on culture, politics, and worldview. Her writings are published both nationally and internationally. Linda is a team member of Grassfire, New Media Alliance, and MoveOff.

Today all people whose faith in God the Father is genuine face a seemingly insurmountable problem with what seems like an overwhelming weight of evidence that evolutionism is true and the Genesis account of creation is false. Mockers and scoffers abound, scornfully accusing the faithful of believing in ‘an invisible being in the sky and that a dead guy from 2000 years ago is coming back soon…instead of believing in reality,’ as one scofflaw said recently.

However, the real issue here is not ‘superstitious, backward Christianity’ vs. ‘enlightened reason and science,’ but about one creation account (Genesis) vs. another creation account (Darwinian evolution). The truth of this claim can be seen in the following quotes:

‘…one belief that all true original Darwinians held in common, and that was their rejection of creationism, their rejection of special creation. This was the flag around which they assembled and under which they marched…. The conviction that the diversity of the natural world was the result of natural processes and not the work of God was the idea that brought all the so-called Darwinians together in spite of their disagreements on other of Darwin’s theories. (One Long Argument,1991, p. 99, Ernst Mayr (1904-2005), Professor of Zoology […]

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