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Kay Bradley

TerraPower - 1 views

shared by Kay Bradley on 07 Jan 19 - No Cached
Kay Bradley

Opinion | Your Tax Dollars Help Starve Children - The New York Times - 0 views

  • he United States is thus complicit in what some human rights experts believe are war crimes.
  • Houthi rebels who control much of Yemen,
  • Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, backed by the United States, are trying to inflict pain to gain leverage over and destabilize the Houthi rebels.
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  • The reason: The Houthis are allied with Iran.
  • The governments of Saudi Arabia and the United States don’t want you to see pictures like Yaqoob’s or reflect on the suffering in Yemen.
  • Even the survivors may suffer lifelong brain damage.
  • Yemen began to disintegrate in the aftermath of the Arab Spring, and then the Houthis, a traditional clan in the north, swept down on Sana and seized much of the country.
  • Houthis operate a police state and are hostile to uncovered women, gays and anyone bold enough to criticize them.
  • I asked President Houthi about the sarkha, the group’s slogan: “God is great! Death to America! Death to Israel! Curses on the Jews! Victory to Islam!” That didn’t seem so friendly, I said.
  • the system.”
  • When I asked about Saudi and American suggestions that the Houthis are Iranian pawns, he laughed.
  • “That’s just propaganda,”
  • But he cautions that the risk of another Somalia is real, and he estimates that there may be two million Yemenis in one fighting force or another.
  • nother danger is that the Saudi coalition will press ahead so that fighting closes the port of Hudaydah, through which most food and fuel come
  • To avert a catastrophe in Yemen, the world needs to provide more humanitarian aid. But above all, the war has to end.
mbarclay

CO₂ and other Greenhouse Gas Emissions - Our World in Data - 1 views

  • "territorial-based"
  • this method takes no account of emissions which may be imported or exported in the form of traded goods.19 "Consumption-based" accounting adjusts CO2 emissions
  • see the net emissions transferred between countries as a percentage of their domestic production emissions
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  • CO2 embedded in imported goods minus the CO2 embedded in exported goods.
  • some of the CO2 produced (and reported) in emission records of Asian and Eastern European countries is for the production of goods consumed in Western Europe and North America
  • The composition of this trade is also important in terms of carbon intensity.
  • The goods exported from Russia, China, India, and the Middle East typically have a high carbon intensity, reflecting the fact that their exports are often manufactured goods. In contrast, we see that exports from the UK, France, Germany and Italy are low; this is likely to be the higher share of export of service-based exports relative to those produced from heavy industry.
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