• Re: Saudi Arabia Says Trump Is Demented

    From chine.bleu@chine.bleu@yahoo.com to talk.politics.misc,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,alt.politics on Tue Apr 14 13:14:37 2026
    From Newsgroup: talk.politics.misc

    bks@panix.com (Bradley K. Sherman) wrote:
    |
    | Saudi Arabia Is Pressing U.S. to Drop Its Hormuz Blockade
    |
    | Gulf energy exporters worry Iran could escalate and close
    | the Bab al-Mandeb, the main exit route for bottlenecked
    | Persian Gulf oil
    | ... <https://www.wsj.com/world/middle-east/saudi-arabia-us-strait-of-hormuz-blockade-25fbd430>

    --bks


    If the Navy does the usual blockade kinds of things like boarding and inspecting, they will be in range of Iran.
    --
    Siri Seal of Disavowal #777-000. Disavowed. Denied. @
    NO KINGS For I desire mercy not sacrifice. /|\
    The Church of the Holey Apple .signature 5.5 / \
    of Discordian Mysteries. This post insults Islam. Mohamed
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  • From Demented Blue@noreply@dirge.harmsk.com to alt.global-warming, talk.politics.misc, alt.politics.republicans,talk.politics.guns, sac.politics on Tue Apr 14 16:42:05 2026
    From Newsgroup: talk.politics.misc

    Atmospheric carbon dioxide and global temperatures are on the rise after
    33 years of largely fruitless negotiations.

    United Nations' climate change conferences are exercises in futility.
    That is becoming ever clearer as the 30th conference of the parties
    (COP30) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
    (UNFCCC) opens in Belém, Brazil. The chief goal of the UNFCCC is to
    achieve the "stabilization of greenhouse gas concentrations in the
    atmosphere at a level that would prevent dangerous anthropogenic
    interference with the climate system."

    Since the UNFCCC was negotiated at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in
    1992, the concentration of greenhouse warming carbon dioxide (CO2) in
    the global atmosphere has been anything but close to stabilized.
    Instead, it has increased from 359 parts per million (ppm) to 425 ppm
    this year. And the increase is speeding up. The World Meteorological Organization reports that from 2023 to 2024, the global average
    concentration of CO2 "surged by 3.5 ppm, the largest increase since
    modern measurements started in 1957." The increase is largely the result
    of rising emissions from burning oil, natural gas, and coal to produce
    the energy that drives economic growth.


    Scripps
    Global average temperatures have been rising concomitant with the
    increase in atmospheric CO2. In 1992, the global average temperature was
    about 0.5 degrees Celsius (0.9 degrees Fahrenheit) above the 1850–1900 baseline. In the succeeding 32 years, the global average temperature has
    risen, reaching 1.55 degrees Celsius (2.8 degrees Fahrenheit) above the baseline in 2024. In fact, 2024 was the hottest year in the instrumental record, and the last 10 years have been the 10 warmest years on record.


    Copernicus
    The signatories to the 2015 Paris Climate Change Agreement pledged to
    hold "the increase in the global average temperature to well below 2°C
    above pre-industrial levels and pursuing efforts to limit the
    temperature increase to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels." That's not
    going to happen.

    Climate researcher Zeke Hausfather asserted last year at COP29 that the
    1.5 degree limit was "deader than a doornail." In June, Le Monde
    reported that a team of international climate scientists concurred that
    the goal "is no longer attainable." A recent U.N. report seems to affirm
    the unlikelihood of hitting these thresholds, finding that by 2035
    humanity must cut its carbon dioxide emissions by 55 percent below its
    2019 levels to achieve the global temperature limits outlined in the
    Paris Agreement. (I reported in 2022 from COP27 in Egypt that "1.5°C is already dead.")

    At COP30, the Paris Agreement signatories are supposedly obligated to
    increase their nationally determined contribution pledges to cut their greenhouse gas emissions. But at the opening of COP30, around 130 out of
    194 signatory countries had not yet submitted any new emissions
    reduction commitments. The U.N. report calculates that the pledges that
    have been made would cut global emissions by only 10 percent by 2035. So
    yes, the aspirational 1.5 degree limit is kaput.

    So why have more than three decades of international negotiations
    largely failed? Because they have run headlong into what political
    scientist Roger Pielke, Jr. calls the "iron law of climate policy." As
    Pielke puts it, "when policies focused on economic growth confront
    policies focused on emissions reductions, it is economic growth that
    will win out every time."

    In their October 2025 article in Communications Earth & Environment, a
    team of researchers at the University of Washington more or less
    confirmed Pielke's law. The researchers note that "overall carbon
    emissions rose, due to the rapid rise in world GDP, which more than
    canceled out the progress" made in reducing emissions. On the other
    hand, they report the good news that carbon intensity—carbon emissions
    per unit of GDP—has been steadily declining. Basically, markets are encouraging the adoption of low-carbon energy technologies and ever
    greater fuel efficiency. The researchers calculate that if carbon
    intensity continues to improve at current rates that global emissions
    will fall by 64 percent by 2100. That implies a projected increase in
    global average temperature of 2.4 degrees Celsius by 2100 and basically
    rules out the worst-case climate change scenarios.

    On Thursday, U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres denounced missing
    the 1.5 degree limit as a "moral failure" and declared, "This COP must
    ignite a decade of acceleration and delivery." More than three decades
    of largely fruitless climate negotiations argue that COP30 will prove to
    be just more of the same.

    https://reason.com/2025/11/10/the-u-n-has-been-holding-climate-conference s-for-30-years-carbon-emissions-continue-to-climb/

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  • From epstein@maga.gop@epstein@maga.gop to talk.politics.misc,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,alt.politics.trump on Thu Apr 16 01:54:53 2026
    From Newsgroup: talk.politics.misc

    On 14 Apr 2026, bks@panix.com (Bradley K. Sherman) posted some news:10rl5l4$5pl$1@panix3.panix.com:

    Saudi Arabia Is Pressing U.S. to Drop Its Hormuz Blockade

    Of course they would, stupid.

    Does your brain not work at all?
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