DL Open Thread: Sunday, July 16, 2023

Filed in Featured, Open Thread by on July 16, 2023

Saudis Bled Arizona’s Aquifers Dry? Legally?  It appears so:

BUTLER VALLEY, Ariz. — A megadrought has seared Arizona, stressing its rivers and reservoirs and reducing water to a trickle in the homes of farmworkers near this desert valley.

But green fields of alfalfa stretch across thousands of acres of the desert land, shimmering in the burning sunlight. Wells draw water from deep underground, turning the parched earth into verdant farmland.

For nearly a decade, the state of Arizona has leased this rural terrain west of Phoenix to a Saudi-owned company, allowing it to pump all the water it needs to grow the alfalfa hay — a crop it exports to feed the kingdom’s dairy cows. And, for years, the state did not know how much water the company was consuming.

The lack of information was a choice.

Soon after the company, Fondomonte Arizona, arrived in the Butler Valley in 2015, state planners suggested asking the company to install meters and report its water use, according to a memo reviewed by The Washington Post. That way, the memo argued, the state could “at least obtain accurate information” on water drained from the valley — water that could otherwise serve as backup for booming urban areas.

But the proposal “hit a stone wall,” John Schneeman, one of the planners, told The Post. It was spurned, he said, by officials in the administration of then-Gov. Doug Ducey (R) who were “cautious of tangling with a powerful company.” The proposal also ran headlong into a view, deeply held in the rural West, that water is private property that comes with access to land, rather than a public resource.

The inaction was an early sign of how state officials gave leeway to Fondomonte as a global fight for water took root in the Arizona desert. Leaving water unprotected amid a drought worsened by climate change has been a boon to Saudi Arabia, where industrial-scale farming of forage crops such as alfalfa is banned to conserve the Persian Gulf nation’s limited water supply.

Got it, makes perfect sense.  Saudi Arabia is taking water from parched Arizona to grow alfalfa that is then sent to Saudi Arabia.  They need Arizona’s water because, what was that phrase again, “industrial-scale farming of forage crops such as alfalfa is banned to conserve the Persian Gulf nation’s limited water supply.

Betcha that water also goes to irrigate those Arizona golf courses so that MBS’ mercenaries can play there.

Nothing wrong with any of this.  Right?  An award-worthy story.  Read it.

‘Jew-Sparing Bioweapons’.  Just one more phrase I never thought I’d write. Never thought I’d link to the NY Post either.  I’ll make an exception for my first, and last, reference to RFK, Jr.:

“COVID-19. There is an argument that it is ethnically targeted. COVID-19 attacks certain races disproportionately,” Kennedy said. “COVID-19 is targeted to attack Caucasians and black people. The people who are most immune are Ashkenazi Jews and Chinese.”

“We don’t know whether it was deliberately targeted or not but there are papers out there that show the racial or ethnic differential and impact,” Kennedy hedged.

Kennedy’s remark echoes well-worn anti-Semitic literature blaming Jews for the emergence and spread of coronavirus which began circulating online shortly after the pandemic broke out, according to The Center for the Study of Contemporary European Jewry at the University of Tel Aviv’s 2021 Antisemitism Worldwide Report.

That boy ain’t right.

Guess Who’s Reneging On Their Climate Pledges?  I knew you’d be able to guess:

Oil majors have, over the past several years, rolled out pledges to decrease oil and gas production and slash their emissions, citing concerns about the climate crisis. But more recently, many have walked those plans back.

Amid record-shattering warmth this February, BP scaled back an earlier goal of lowering its emissions by 35% by 2030, saying it will aim for a 20 to 30% cut instead. ExxonMobil quietly withdrew funding for a heavily publicized effort to use algae to create low-carbon fuel. And Shell announced that it would not increase its investments in renewable energy this year, despite earlier promises to dramatically slash its emissions.

Climate-fueled extreme weather persisted through spring and summer. But fossil fuel companies have only doubled down on their oil- and gas-filled business models. Shell promised to cut oil production by 20% by 2030, but then this year said it already met that goal by selling off some operations to another oil company –thereby not reducing emissions in the atmosphere. BP has also expanded gas drilling. And Exxon’s CEO, Darren Woods, told an industry conference last month that his company plans to double the amount of oil produced from its US shale holdings within the next five years.

I think it’s time for DOJ to go after them.  Past time, really.  Destroying the climate has to be prosecutable under RICO, doesn’t it?

Some fun, eh?  Yes, Elk Have Their Own Regional Dialects.  Consider this a dialectic:

Bugles are the telltale sound of elk during mating season. Now, new research finds that male elk’s bugles sound slightly different depending on where they live. Other studies have shown that whale, bat and bird calls have regional dialects, too, but a team led by Jennifer Clarke, a behavioral ecologist at the Center for Wildlife Studies and a professor at the University of La Verne in California, is the first to identify such differences in any species of ungulate.

Pennsylvania’s elk herds were translocated from the West in the early 1900s, and today they have longer tonal whistles and quieter bugles than elk in Colorado. Meanwhile, bugles change frequency from low to high tones more sharply in Wyoming than they do in Pennsylvania or Colorado.

Clarke isn’t sure why the dialects vary. She initially hypothesized that calls would differ based on the way sound travels in Pennsylvania’s dense forests compared to Colorado and Wyoming’s more open landscapes, but her data didn’t support that theory. Clarke hopes to find out whether genetic variation — which is more limited in Pennsylvania’s herd — might explain differences in bugles, and whether those differences are learned by young males listening to older bulls.

Hmmmm, might it be something as simple as elks who drink the pee of Rolling Rock drinkers are impacted differently than elk who drink the watered-down pee of Coors Lite aficionados? That’s my theory.  Prove me wrong.

What do you want to talk about?

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  1. Alby says:

    It’s time to nationalize the oil companies.

    Almost all the value of any oil company is in the oil that’s still in the ground. If it’s not pumped, it’s worthless.

    Buy them out now.

    • puck says:

      It will probably take about thirty million US dead in a single summer before public attitudes begins shifting to demand nationalization of fossil fuels. Even then, the heat deaths will be weighted toward Democratic voters in urban centers, so expect Republicans to continue denial.

  2. Jean says:

    Just caught up on the latest Bunker, I share similar sentiments with the token victories. Doulas and the foster care transitioning are great but that’s not moving the needle and we can’t pat ourselves on the back when the corporatists steamroll real progress

    I’m not impressed with Monica just yet. I think she has the right ideas but the next generation of legislators needs to be more cutthroat or they will get steamrolled. What I heard sounded a little too nice.

    When rob broached the subject of Monica’s education, I think there was a big missed opportunity. Later it was mentioned that she had kids in Montessori. I would have challenged her earlier on that point and asked why she wasn’t sending her kid(s) to a traditional public school, especially after explicitly stating that she felt her horizons were limited by attending a more cloistered private school. To me this is the definition of the problematic “hockessin values”

    • Alby says:

      Delaware does not have real charter schools. Delaware’s so-called “charter” schools are what is known in the rest of the country as “magnet” schools.

      Charter schools were supposed to be institutions that used non-traditional educational methods, not non-traditional curricula, which is what Delaware’s charter schools do. If we had real charters, you could send your kids to a Montessori public school. There’s nothing wrong with Montessori education per se.

      And can we stop pretending that public education is some land of butterflies and balloons? I sent my kids to Delaware’s public schools. Most of them suck.

    • puck says:

      1. Nice is good.
      2. Dems won’t win Hockessin by picking fights over education.
      3. Send your kids to whatever school works best for your family. But vote for equity.

      • Jean says:

        I see nice as an extension of the Delaware way. How about getting a little cutthroat and serve it back to the chamber of commerce? REV gets it.

        The school thing bugs me. If you think public schools are so terrible then be clear about it and push to give everyone a voucher to the public/private school of your choice. But don’t talk about how you support them while sending your own kids elsewhere.

        • Alby says:

          Do you have children?

        • Jason330 says:

          You do know exactly how full of shit you are. That is clear. All sassy and full of piss and vinegar for a very good challenger to Smith. Vouchers… Give me a break. You’ve tipped your hand.

          Your transparent malarkey is a little more amusing than most trolls, at least there is that. Probably not amusing enough in the end.

          • Jean says:

            That’s right, I’ve been playing the long game all this time as a double agent for Mike
            Smith! Ha-gotcha!

            In reality, I demand a higher level of ideological purity from legislators. I want fighters and those who actually believe in something and those who have skin in the game. Trying to have it both ways is not a long term secret to success

            • Jason330 says:

              Ok, vouchers.

            • You ‘demand a higher level of ideological purity’.

              In other words, you demand that nothing ever get done.

            • Alby says:

              Answer the question: Do you have children? Because I find the opinions of those without children about what those with children should do with those children to be the height of presumptuousness.

              • Jean says:

                No children of my own; but from a large tight family where parental responsibilities were shared.

                If this disqualifies me from having an opinion that’s fine, just hold every person responsible for the education of kids to the same standard. Maybe childless people shouldn’t sit on school boards or direct education policy. That seems even more presumptuous than what I’m asking for

              • Alby says:

                Of course you can have an opinion. And I am free to ignore it, for the reason I stated.

                I don’t really care what childless people think should be done with other people’s kids. YMMV.