Wednesday, 19 November 2014

Rep. Steve King, The Unlikeliest Amnesty Supporter



Rep. Michele Bachmann and Rep. Steve King at the Capitol after a vote in August.i i



Rep. Michele Bachmann and Rep. Steve King at the Capitol after a vote in August. Alex Wong/Getty Images hide caption



itoggle caption Alex Wong/Getty Images

Rep. Michele Bachmann and Rep. Steve King at the Capitol after a vote in August.



Rep. Michele Bachmann and Rep. Steve King at the Capitol after a vote in August.


Alex Wong/Getty Images


A new term may have been coined today on Capitol Hill: "gaggle bombing."


Ahead of President Obama's executive action on immigration, Rep. Steve King, R-Iowa, was a hot interview Wednesday afternoon. He has been known to say inflammatory things on the topic of immigration. And there was this awkward interaction with young immigration activists earlier this year at an event in his district.


Reporters gathered around King, just off the House floor, to get his thoughts on the president's expected action (he thinks it is likely unconstitutional and that the House should pass a resolution condemning it before possibly trying to pull funding from any programs Obama would create). This clump of reporters is called a scrum or a gaggle.


So what happened next can only be described as a "gaggle bombing." Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., walked up while a reporter was asking a question, put her arms around King and said: "Don't believe a thing he says. He's totally for amnesty. In fact, he called up the president and said 'Barack, please, please, would you do the executive amnesty? I've been beggin' ya.'"


Laughing, King kept the joke going: "And I would let anybody come into this country that wanted to come in, provided we could deport a liberal for each one," said King, tongue fully in cheek.



Delinquent Mine Fines: 'Clearly Troubling ... More Can Be Done'


A key House Republican called today for federal regulators to crack down on mine owners who don't pay fines for safety violations, saying, "Clearly more can be done."


Rep. John Kline, R-Minn., the chairman of the House Committee on Education and the Workforce, was reacting to an investigation by NPR and Mine Safety and Health News, which documented nearly 4,000 injuries and 131,000 violations at more than 4,600 mines — all as they failed to pay nearly $70 million in safety fines.


"The findings of the NPR report are deeply troubling," Kline said in a written statement. "We have tools in place to crack down on these scofflaws, but what's missing is a stronger commitment to use those tools."


NPR/MSHN found that these delinquent mines collectively had an average injury rate 50 percent higher than that of mines that paid their fines.


"I intend to reach out to Assistant Secretary [of Labor Joe] Main and others within the administration to discuss how we can do better [at] ensuring [that] federal mine safety laws and the consequences for breaking those laws are both vigorously enforced," Kline said.


As chairman of the Workforce Committee, Kline is the House gatekeeper for any mine safety reform legislation. A sweeping bill that would, among many other things, force the shutdown of mines six months after they become delinquent has languished in Congress. Opponents say it brings unnecessary regulation to an industry already reeling from declining demand for coal, competition from cheaper natural gas, tougher emission restrictions on coal-fired power plants, and diminishing coal seams, especially in Appalachia.


Kline's statement emphasizes existing enforcement tools and not any new regulatory authority.


According to Brian Newell, Kline's spokesman, the tools he's referring to involve the Labor Department's partnership with the Justice Department to force debt collection with federal court orders and settlements.


Our investigation found that this approach has limited success. The agencies sought settlements or filed federal court complaints in 34 cases since 2007. The mining companies involved agreed to pay or were ordered to pay $5.9 million in delinquent fines. Less than $800,000, or roughly 13 percent, was actually collected.


The Mine Safety and Health Administration, which regulates mine safety, has not responded to NPR's requests for comment about our findings or to questions about what the agency is doing, if anything, as a result.



Aoun offers to take on Geagea in presidency race


BEIRUT: MP Michel Aoun said Wednesday he was ready to face off with his Christian rival, Lebanese Forces chief Samir Geagea, in a presidential vote in Parliament if there was no third candidate, an unexpected stance that was quickly rebuffed by MP Walid Jumblatt.


Jumblatt said he would not withdraw his party’s candidate, Aley MP Henri Helou, from the presidential race as demanded by Aoun to attend a Parliament session to elect a president. “I respect Gen. Aoun’s opinion, but we have the right to a democratic competition,” Jumblatt said on his Twitter account.


Aoun, the head of the Free Patriotic Movement, also demanded that rival parliamentary blocs pledge that there would be no deal behind the scenes over the presidential election as a condition to challenge Geagea over the country’s top Christian post.


“I am ready to go to Parliament to fight the presidential battle against Geagea provided that all [blocs] pledge that there will be no deal under the table,” Aoun said in an interview with MTV station Wednesday night.


“If the presidential battle is confined to me and Geagea, I will go to Parliament,” he said. “The offer I made includes Geagea only because he has been challenging me. I want guarantees the presidential vote will take place and the [Parliament] session will not be turned into a party.”


Aoun’s remarks came shortly after Parliament failed Wednesday for the 15th time since April to elect a president over a lack of quorum, prompting Speaker Nabih Berri to postpone the session to Dec. 10.


Lawmakers from Aoun’s parliamentary Change and Reform bloc and Hezbollah’s bloc and its March 8 allies have thwarted a quorum with their persistent boycott of parliamentary sessions to elect a president, demanding an agreement beforehand with their March 14 rivals on a consensus candidate for the country’s top Christian post.


Earlier Wednesday, Geagea lashed out at Aoun and Hezbollah, blaming them for scuttling the vote with their boycott of Parliament sessions.


While Geagea is the March 14-backed presidential candidate, Hezbollah leader Sayyed Hasan Nasrallah earlier this month named Aoun as the March 8 coalition’s candidate. Helou is also the candidate of Jumblatt’s Progressive Socialist Party.


With neither the March 8 bloc, nor the March 14 coalition being able to muster majority votes to win the presidency, Jumblatt, with his 11 MPs, is seen as the kingmaker whose support for any of the two coalitions can tip the balance in its favor.


Aoun charged that all Maronite presidents had been appointed by outside powers.“I want the Christian position to represent the Christians ... I have proposed a solution through the election of the president directly by the people,” he said.


Aoun, whose bloc has filed a challenge with the Constitutional Council against the extension of Parliament’s mandate earlier this month for two years and seven months, said he was waiting for the council’s decision.


The council will meet Friday to look into the FPM’s appeal against the extension of Parliament’s term.


Despite Wednesday’s failed bid to elect a president, Berri said Wednesday he was still optimistic about breaking the presidential deadlock.


He also said he was still making efforts with Jumblatt to open channels of communication between Hezbollah and the Future Movement, whose strained ties have raised sectarian tensions in the politically divided country.


Berri was quoted by MPs during his weekly meeting with lawmakers at his Ain al-Tineh residence as saying that he still sees “positive signals over the presidential election issue.”


Meanwhile, Geagea accused Aoun and Hezbollah of derailing the presidential vote with their boycott of Parliament sessions.


“The Change and Reform bloc and Hezbollah are responsible for the situation in which we are living today because of their obstruction of the presidential election. The time has come to hold them accountable, or let them attend the electoral sessions,” Geagea told a news conference at his residence in Maarab, north of Beirut.He scoffed at the March 8 argument that Aoun can be a strong president if elected.“Aoun has been obstructing the electoral sessions on the pretext of imposing two choices: either a vacuum or the election of a strong president. This logic is unacceptable,” Geagea said. He implicitly accused Aoun of recklessness. “In our eyes and the eyes of others, Aoun is not a strong president because neither recklessness nor anarchism can lead to a strong presidency.”



Jumblatt urged Hariri to leave Lebanon after Assad meet


BEIRUT: Syrian President Bashar Assad threatened to “break Lebanon” on former premier Rafik Hariri’s head if he did not acquiesce to the demands of Damascus, according to new testimony at the Special Tribunal for Lebanon that also touched on Hezbollah’s relationship with the embattled Syrian leader.


“You believe that you can dictate a new Lebanese president to Syria,” MP Marwan Hamade said, quoting a conversation between Assad and Hariri in August 2004. “You are making a mistake because you are ignoring that we are the ones who decide this.”


“No, it will be Emile Lahoud, and if you try to object, I will break Lebanon on your head and Walid Jumblatt’s head,” he added. In a tweet to The Daily Star, Jumblatt confirmed the veracity of the statement.


Hamade’s testimony described in open court for the first time the details of the notorious, stormy meeting in Damascus between Assad and Hariri, during which the Syrian president ordered Lebanon’s premier to obey his orders and back the extension of Lahoud, the pro-Syrian president at the time.


The deeply unpopular move led to a breakdown in relations between Assad and Hariri, the passage of Resolution 1559 calling for the withdrawal of foreign forces from Lebanon and the disarmament of all militias. Prosecutors allege the conspiracy to assassinate the former premier began about a month later.Both Hamade and Jumblatt met Hariri immediately after the meeting with Assad, and the former minister, who was once an ally of Hafez Assad and himself survived an assassination attempt two months later, described Hariri’s disheveled state as he arrived at Jumblatt’s Clemenceau residence. “Hariri considered the threat extremely dangerous on both of them,” he said.


Hamade recalled a macabre conversation between Hariri and Jumblatt, in which the Druze leader advised Hariri to back the extension, resign from government, and leave Lebanon to protect himself.


“I will shoulder the threat,” Jumblatt told Hariri, according to Hamade. “In the mountain I can protect myself.” In a chilling response, Hariri said: “But Walid, Assad told me that he will reach you even if you are with the Druze.”


The STL is tasked with prosecuting those responsible for the Valentine’s Day bombing in 2005 that killed Hariri and 21 others, and plunged Lebanon into turmoil and street protests that ended Syria’s tutelage over its neighbor.


The court has indicted five members of Hezbollah in connection with the attack, and the hearings are part of their trial in absentia.


No Syrian official has been charged over the Hariri assassination, and prosecutors have not indicated that they plan on issuing new indictments in the case. But they said the examination would help elucidate a motive for Lebanon’s worst political murder in recent history.


Prosecutors have long focused on the actions of the suspects in tracking Hariri and purchasing the vehicle that was allegedly used to carry out the bombing, but have stopped short of saying why members of Hezbollah would seek to assassinate the premier.


Hamade is the first of over a dozen “political witnesses,” including former Prime Minister Fouad Siniora, who are set to testify on the deterioration of relations between Lebanon and Syria ahead of the assassination. Prosecutors said they may also call on Jumblatt to testify.


Hamade said that Jumblatt was convinced Hariri was in “imminent danger,” and that the best way to ensure his personal protection was to leave Lebanon. He said the two Lebanese politicians would occasionally joke about which one of them would be assassinated first.


But Hamade said they did not believe the regime would take a step as drastic as killing senior Lebanese leaders. Hamade said Hariri believed his international clout and good relations with the West and other Arab states would act as a “deterrent” against Syria or any other organization killing him, and instead feared more for Jumblatt’s safety. Hariri often used that clout to defend Syria and block accusations against it of sponsoring terrorism, often intervening with French President Jacques Chirac in particular.


Hamade said their bloc decided instead to gather the strength of the civilian opposition to Syria’s tutelage over Lebanon ahead of the 2005 parliamentary elections that were expected to favor Hariri’s bloc. Hariri wanted to avoid open conflict with the Syrians ahead of the elections.


“I understood that the relationship between us and Damascus had gone beyond the red lines, and that we had to recover our strength as an opposition, a peaceful opposition, to oppose Syria’s expansion and infiltration in all sectors of Lebanon,” he said.


Hariri ultimately acquiesced to a constitutional amendment extending Lahoud’s mandate, while Jumblatt and his bloc, including Hamade, voted against the measure.


Hamade said Hariri and his allies believed that if the extension was blocked there would be “bombings, strife, assassinations, revenge attacks; things of that type are already in the dictionary of the Syrian regime since 1975.”


But the race to amend the Constitution and re-elect Lahoud progressed in tandem with the deliberations over Resolution 1559, which raised Syrian fears that it would lose influence in Lebanon.


Hamade said that Syrian tutelage had effectively rendered the Lebanese Foreign Ministry a “branch of the Syrian Foreign Ministry,” with identical statements sent to U.N. bodies.


Though Resolution 1559 called for the disarmament of all militias in Lebanon, Hamade said that Jumblatt and Hariri both stressed with foreign governments that Hezbollah’s arms would be dealt with through internal Lebanese dialogue, not imposed by the international community.


Hamade said the Syrians had forcefully disbanded other militias in south Lebanon, including the Amal, the Syrian Social Nationalist Party and the Communist Party militias, and deliberately limited resistance activities to Hezbollah, because of the party’s close ties with Syrian intelligence and Iran.


He said the “special relationship” between the Syrian regime and Hezbollah was apparent with the party’s participation in the conflict in Syria, where Assad is fighting an uprising that has lasted nearly four years. “It’s enough to see who is defending the Syrian regime in Syria right now,” he said.


Hamade is expected to continue his testimony Thursday before being cross-examined by the defense.



Mixed feelings as Karantina slaughterhouse shut down


BEIRUT: Meat traders expressed anger and confusion over the abrupt closure of the Karantina slaughterhouse Wednesday, as the municipality laid out new health regulations for the controversial facility’s reopening. The slaughterhouse was “temporarily” closed for renovations Wednesday, a day after the Beirut governor revealed the decision during an interview with The Daily Star.


Renovations were in full swing Wednesday afternoon, with workers seen digging into the concrete floor.


Several meat traders that run their businesses out of the slaughterhouse were also present, and they expressed a mixture of bewilderment and frustration over what to do with their remaining cattle.


Meat trader Farouk al-Hasan said he was glad the slaughterhouse was undergoing some much-needed renovations, but added that he wished they had been given more notice.


“We wanted some time to take care of our things and the cattle that we were going to work on, to discuss things with our customers, find somewhere else to slaughter,” Hasan lamented. “But they just dropped this on us out of nowhere.”


Hasan said he and the other meat traders found out about the closure via a television interview with the Beirut governor. The slaughterhouse administration has given them until Monday to clear out their cattle.


The closure of the Karantina slaughterhouse is the latest development in the ongoing food scandal sparked last week by Health Minister Wael Abu Faour’s decision to name and shame food establishments that sell contaminated products.


This week, Abu Faour said the Karantina slaughterhouse was closed as it did not meet minimum health and hygiene requirements and said the water they used to clean the meat was also contaminated.


The minister also said a partial solution was no longer sufficient, and demanded the closure of three other slaughterhouses in south Lebanon. Governor of north Lebanon Ramzi Nahra also announced Wednesday that Tripoli’s slaughterhouse would be closed for failing to meet hygiene requirements.


Besides refurbishing the building to be more sanitary, the Beirut municipality has laid out some basic health regulations for the slaughterhouse’s reopening and has announced it is looking for a location to build a new one.


The new regulations stipulate the public will no longer be allowed to purchase meat directly from the slaughterhouse and only licensed butchers and restaurant owners will be allowed to enter the building. Licenses to enter will have to be renewed every three months.


Previously, the meat traders were merely bringing staff “off the street” to slaughter their cattle, Beirut slaughterhouse director Joseph Mounem said, but now only licensed slaughterers would be allowed on the premises.


The decision also included stipulations that all equipment be cleaned and that staff wear protective gear.


However, there was a notable absence of details regarding how to improve the treatment of the animals at the Karantina slaughterhouse. Compassion In World Farming, an NGO that campaigns to end factory farming, has been calling for the building’s closure for over a year in light of what they say is the abuse of the animals inside. During a visit to the facility last week, The Daily Star saw clearly distressed and struggling cows tied by their necks to the ceiling before being slaughtered.


Mounem said these concerns would be addressed when the municipality builds a new slaughterhouse.


“The issue of animal rights is going to be fundamental in the new slaughterhouse,” he explained.


Mounem said that there would be an improvement in the methods of slaughter and measures would be taken to ensure the animal is calm before it dies, possibly even playing calm music in the slaughterhouse, but he admitted it could take up to two years to build a new slaughterhouse.


Hasan doubts the project will ever see the light of day. “That’s what they say but that’s not likely because they’re liars,” he said. “This is the ‘temporary’ slaughterhouse of Beirut. We’ve been here for 20 years and two months and 10 days.”


Local business owners who work next to the slaughterhouse shared their doubts regarding the likelihood of a new slaughterhouse being built, but said they were happy that to have a break from the pungent odor that emanates from the area.


“It’s best to get rid of it once and for all,” said Munir Amayrat, a fruit stand owner. He said the meat was not truly halal as the slaughterers claimed it was and the place required round-the-clock monitoring, though he admitted he did not trust the state with such a task. “You can’t trust anyone from the government. They all work on bribes. You need monitors to watch the monitors.”



Food safety to top Cabinet agenda


EDL prints household electricity bills


Electricite du Liban announces that it has started printing its first bills for households in more than three months...



Abu Faour slams slaughterhouse conditions


BEIRUT: Health Minister Wael Abu Faour denounced Lebanon’s slaughterhouses Wednesday for violating health and hygiene requirements, and revealed more supermarkets and restaurant chains that failed to meet food safety standards. “Today, the health of the Lebanese is at stake. The least we can say is that the situation is catastrophic,” Abu Faour said, referring to Beirut’s only slaughterhouse.


The slaughterhouse was ordered to be shut down Tuesday for failing to meet minimum health and hygiene requirements, Abu Faour said. Other abattoirs across the country will also be inspected as part of a sweeping campaign.


“Partial solutions will not be tolerated, especially in [Beirut’s] slaughterhouse, which is the main source of meat for the majority of Lebanese,” he said.


According to the health minister, superficial changes such as repainting or cleaning would not suffice. The abysmal conditions required the construction of a new facility, he said.


The Health and Agriculture ministries will issue a request to the Cabinet Thursday, urging the Council of Development and Reconstruction to build a new slaughterhouse in the same location.


Following the example of Beirut’s governor, who approved the decision to close down the slaughterhouse, Governor for north Lebanon Ramzi Nahra will shut Tripoli’s slaughterhouse, also for violating standards, he said Wednesday.


The governor said the slaughterhouse, which he had visited, was “in miserable condition” and “in dire need of reforms in order to preserve the public health.”


He said metal rails that carried animal carcasses were rusted and the water used to clean livestock was contaminated. Moreover, slaughtering and packaging methods did not meet standards.


In an effort to come to a permanent solution, Abu Faour noted that a meeting between Prime Minister Tammam Salam and other relevant ministers Thursday would tackle proposals for reform.


The proposals will include a joint request issued by the health and agriculture ministers calling for the formation of a Foundation for Food Safety in Lebanon, he added.


Also during the news conference, Abu Faour revealed more supermarkets, butcher’s and restaurants that he said failed to meet the ministry’s food safety criteria. Wednesday’s was the third such announcement since the health minister launched the campaign last week.


The list included fast food chains Pizza Hut and KFC, and Bsat supermarket in Sidon, in addition to Bou Khalil Supermarket in Koura and Hadath, and Al-Salam butcher’s in Zghorta, Al-Natour butcher’s in Beirut and Al-Shabab butcher’s in Burj Hammoud, as well as the Al-Mahata shawarma sandwich chain.


Abu Faour also said at least three slaughterhouses in south Lebanon would be shut down until they could prove they met safety standards.


The health minister issued a request to Interior Minister Nouhad Machnouk, calling for the closure of the Aqabiyeh, Bisserieh and the Al-Aziyeh slaughterhouses due to insect infestation, lack of large refrigerators for storage and bad sewage, he said.


Abu Faour is also set to issue another request to the interior minister to close down the Aitoul Center, which specializes in the sale of chicken in Sidon.


The decision was made after inspections revealed contaminated frozen chicken imported from Ukraine, he said. The store may be reopened at some point in the future.


Abu Faour gave blacklisted establishments two weeks to get their act together, and said the ministry would assist in this endeavor. Offering an example, he said Halabi restaurant and Bou Khalil, a supermarket chain, which had been found to be in violation of standards, had requested that the ministry examine meat products purchased from a new supplier. Abu Faour expressed hope that other establishments would follow their example.


After his meeting with Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri, the health minister said Parliament’s joint committees would convene Thursday in order to discuss the drafting of a food safety law.


Abu Faour also announced that his ministry has closed down unlicensed beauty parlors and aesthetic centers that did not employ specialized technicians and dermatologists to conduct beautification procedures.


Meanwhile Wednesday the Al-Youssef Hospital in the northern Akkar town of Halba admitted 11 patients who had suffered food poisoning after eating fajitas and chicken taouk from a local sandwich shop, said Dr. Khalil Hanna.


Upon hearing of the 10 cases, doctors from Akkar transferred samples they had collected from the shop to a lab for tests, which revealed the mayonnaise in the sandwiches had been the cause of the poisoning.



Daher has strong criticism of Army


TRIPOLI, Lebanon: Violence could erupt again in the north at any moment, according to Future bloc MP Khaled Daher, who accused the Army of using more force than was necessary in recent clashes in the area in order to cover up for Hezbollah’s involvement in Syria.


“Is the problem over in Tripoli? Was it addressed properly? Or will state [security] agencies set more traps in the city?” Daher said in an interview with The Daily Star at his Tripoli residence.


He said that he expected Army Intelligence to continue to stir up trouble in the area.


A harsh critic of the Army because of what he deems its targeting of Sunnis, Daher made headlines in October when media reports that Ahmad Salim Mikati, an ISIS-affiliated man arrested during an Army raid the same month, had confessed to having had a WhatsApp conversation with the lawmaker.


But Daher dismissed the media reports, saying he did not have any links to the suspect.


“These accusations are silly. I met Mikati 11 or 12 years ago and that’s it,” he said. “I did not telephone him and he did not telephone me.


“I do not even have his phone number ... If he had telephoned me, I would have warned him against making mistakes.”


The Army clashed with Islamist militants inspired by ISIS and the Nusra Front in Tripoli and other parts of the north shortly after the raid. The military was able to restore order in the north after four days of fighting.


The battles in Tripoli were led by fugitive Islamists Shadi Mawlawi and Osama Mansour. The fighting killed 42 people, including eight civilians, 11 soldiers and 23 gunmen.


Daher said that Army Intelligence personnel should be held accountable for disproportionate use of force during Tripoli’s battle.


“How many fighters battled the Army in the Tripoli souqs? Just 13 ... does this require using tanks, artillery and thousands of soldiers?” Daher said, adding that Mansour and Mawlawi had had only 20 fighters.


“Why blow the problem out of proportion when it is small? Why don’t you address it properly? Why are you trying to make out to the Americans, Arab states and embassies that there is a big problem and terrorism?


“Honestly, this is aimed at covering up the terrorist activities of Hezbollah, which is sending thousands of fighters to Syria.”


Daher also accused the Army Intelligence of being behind the rounds of fighting between supporters and opponents of Syrian President Bashar Assad that have plagued Tripoli over the past few years.


He also blamed Tripoli’s political figures, including Future Movement MPs, for not doing enough to protect the northern city.


“Our political and religious leaders are not fulfilling their duties. It is a shame that Tripoli witnesses 20 rounds of fighting and they do not put an end to this by calling a spade a spade and saying who is responsible for it,” he said.


Despite some differences, Daher said he had normal ties with his colleagues in the Future bloc, and that they said in closed-door meetings what he said in public about the Army’s behavior.


Daher explained that media outlets affiliated with both March 8 and March 14 groups were imposing a media blackout on him under the pretext that he was attacking the Lebanese Army.


“There has been a clear attempt to suppress my voice lately because I was raising my voice for the sake of my people and country and in order to reform [state] institutions and prevent what has happened [in Tripoli] from happening,” Daher said. “You are the first people breaking the media siege imposed on me.”


Daher claimed that he had “never attacked the Army” in his life.


“I was criticizing irregularities and warning against insulting and harming supporters of the March 14 coalition, and the Sunnis in particular.”



Smartphones Are Destroying Your Posture


If cell phone radiation giving us all cancer and prematurely wiping out the nearly 2 billion people that use smartphonesworldwide wasn't enough to worry about, a new study suggests our precious hand-screens are giving us all back problems, too. Of course they are.


According to a study published in Surgery Technology International, chronic screen-staring could be adding up to 60 pounds of force to your spine, depending on if you're more of an eye-shifter or all-out huncher when it comes to reading texts and scrolling through what you've missed on Instagram.


The human head is not weightless, it turns out, so when you tilt it forward it is, in effect, pulling on your spine in a way that your spine isn't meant to be pulled on so frequently. Writes back surgeon Kenneth Hansraj: "As the head tilts forward the forces seen by the neck surges to 27 pounds at 15 degrees, 40 pounds at 30 degrees, 49 pounds at 45 degrees and 60 pounds at 60 degrees."


You're not going to throw your back out after a single heavy day of phone-gazing, but over time the added stress "could deteriorate the back and neck muscles to the point of needing surgery."


But if back surgery's not your thing, there's hope: The radiation cancer could wipe us all out first.


[H/T: Science of Us]



Electric Vehicles Help Drive Climate Action

Yesterday at the White House, Energy Secretary Ernie Moniz and I got to see American innovation in action, as Pacific Gas & Electric demonstrated their new plug-in hybrid bucket truck — a utility vehicle with emissions nearly 80% lower than a conventional truck.


Not only does PG&E’s plug-in hybrid utility vehicle run cleaner, it provides up to 120 kW of exportable power — meaning that the trucks can actually be used to shorten or end power outages by plugging their reserves into the grid.


This is the kind of innovation we need to take action on climate change — reducing emissions on the one hand and finding creative ways to boost community resilience on the other.


read more


North Lebanon governor to shut down Tripoli slaughterhouse


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This Day in History: Seven Score and 11 Years Ago...


This Day


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On November 19, 1863, speaking at the Gettysburg National Cemetery in Pennsylvania, President Abraham Lincoln gave one of his most iconic speeches -- the Gettysburg Address.


What Was the Gettysburg Address All About?


As it turns out, President Lincoln wasn’t actually intended to be the keynote speaker. He attended the ceremony to dedicate a cemetery for fallen Union soldiers who had fought in the Battle of Gettysburg. After the initial keynote speaker Edward Everett -- a popular orator at the time -- spoke for two hours, President Lincoln gave a two-minute speech highlighting the overarching purpose of the Civil War.


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Berri seeking to promote Hezbollah-Future dialogue


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Rifi confirms Islamists' rulings irreversible


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