Robert Parry | One County's Global Warming Failure
Robert Parry, Consortium News
Parry writes: "Even communities where many citizens agree that global warming is a threat to humankind - and have the money to take action - find that the politics of doing something can be complicated and seemingly insurmountable, like the case of Arlington, Virginia."
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Robert Parry, Consortium News
Parry writes: "Even communities where many citizens agree that global warming is a threat to humankind - and have the money to take action - find that the politics of doing something can be complicated and seemingly insurmountable, like the case of Arlington, Virginia."
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Even communities where many citizens agree that global warming is a threat to humankind – and have the money to take action – find that the politics of doing something can be complicated and seemingly insurmountable, like the case of Arlington, Virginia, reports Robert Parry.
he difficulty of the United States and thus the world to confront the worsening crisis of global warming is underscored by the resistance – even in well-to-do communities – to invest the financial and political capital in public transit and other infrastructure necessary for reducing carbon emissions.
Take, for example, Arlington County and other Virginia communities, just west of Washington D.C. You might think that this area of well-educated and politically savvy people with median household incomes over $100,000 would be at the forefront of doing whatever is necessary to get people out of their cars and into mass transit.
After all, scientists warn that a rise in temperatures by more than 2 degrees Celsius from pre-industrial days will wreak havoc on the earth — and we are already halfway there.
Yet, Arlington, which sits between the District and other close-in communities such as Fairfax County and Falls Church city, is turning its back on proposals for light rail that could reduce traffic congestion and help the environment. Arlington’s new ten-year transportation plan looks only to make marginal improvements in bus service inside the county.
A big part of the problem is political. Although the County Board has a Democratic majority, Tea Party Republicans found a winning issue in opposing a light-rail Streetcar for Columbia Pike, a corridor that runs through a poorer part of South Arlington, which has been historically home to a multi-racial population. The predominantly white voters in North Arlington rebelled against this investment in South Arlington, even though the state and regional agencies had agreed to pay for much of it.
Some of Arlington’s Greens also joined the opposition to the light-rail system, arguing that it would encourage gentrification.
So, in November 2014, an anti-Streetcar Republican trounced a pro-Streetcar Democrat, prompting two of the remaining Democrats on the County Board to flip their votes and kill the Streetcar, which had been in development for more than a decade. With the Columbia Pike Streetcar out of the way, two new Democrats were elected to the County Board this November.
In other words, the lesson that Arlington Democrats learned was to avoid proposing a light-rail system, at least for the more racially mixed South Arlington. The Orange/Silver Metro subway lines already serve a major corridor through North Arlington.
Though some residents of other North Arlington areas, such as along Lee Highway, have expressed interest in improved transit, it would be politically difficult for Democrats on the County Board to spend more money on the richer, whiter parts of North Arlington after the demise of South Arlington’s Streetcar.
Hence, Arlington is going small ball on transit, tweaking the county’s internal bus system and making some modest moves to improve bicycle and pedestrian routes.
Once Burned, Twice Shy
After the Streetcar defeat – and knowing that a vastly more expensive subway line for Columbia Pike was out of the question – I urged the County Board to consider a third option, a modern Sky Train that would run above Columbia Pike and connect to the Annandale area of Fairfax County, another underserved community with clogged roadways.
Through some of the narrow sections of Columbia Pike, I suggested using suspension bridge engineering to reduce the number of supports. Plus, if done with enough aesthetic touches, the Sky Train could become an iconic image for the mostly-down-in-the-dumps Columbia Pike, which once was the principal route between Virginia and Washington D.C. and served as a Freedom Trail for African-Americans escaping slavery during the Civil War.
The Sky Train would have two key advantages, I noted. It would be much cheaper than a subway and it would operate on a different plane than the Streetcar, thus avoiding some of the legitimate concerns about a Streetcar intermingling with car and pedestrian traffic.
There was also the possibility that a simultaneous plan could be proposed for Lee Highway in North Arlington to undercut opposition among white voters who didn’t want to invest tax dollars in the poorer, more racially mixed South Arlington. But the County Board – once burned, twice shy – apparently wanted to hear nothing more about light-rail systems of any kind.
So, with Arlington’s politicians still feeling pain from the Streetcar debacle, the county is looking forward to the next ten years without any game-changing transportation innovations for either its residents or the people who live to the west of Arlington. Almost surely, those roads leading into Washington will remain clogged with car traffic spewing out carbon dioxide.
As a microcosm of the challenges that many other communities around the globe will face, the Arlington experience shows how an unlikely coalition of forces – from the Tea Party opposing any government spending to Greens objecting to gentrification that often follows improved mass transit – can combine to frustrate the goal of reducing carbon emissions.
This one county’s capitulation to such political challenges doesn’t speak well to the sense of urgency that is needed to combat global warming. Despite the looming calamity, Arlington, a community that has the money and supposedly the political desire to fight climate change, finds it too hard to do so.
Investigative reporter Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated Press and Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his latest book, America’s Stolen Narrative, either in print here or as an e-book (from Amazon and barnesandnoble.com). You also can order Robert Parry’s trilogy on the Bush Family and its connections to various right-wing operatives for only $34. The trilogy includes America’s Stolen Narrative. For details on this offer, click here.
Ta-Nehisi Coates | The Paranoid Style of American Policing
Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Atlantic
Coates writes: "In America, we have decided that it is permissible, that it is wise, that it is moral for the police to de-escalate through killing."
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Ta-Nehisi Coates, The Atlantic
Coates writes: "In America, we have decided that it is permissible, that it is wise, that it is moral for the police to de-escalate through killing."
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The Tamir Rice Case Shows How Prosecutors Twist Grand Juries to Protect Police
Ari Melber, The Washington Post
Melber writes: "The old saying goes that a grand jury will 'indict a ham sandwich' if a prosecutor tells them to - because the prosecutor calls the shots. The Rice case strongly suggests that the opposite is also true - grand juries will let the sandwich walk, if that's what the prosecutor wants."
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Ari Melber, The Washington Post
Melber writes: "The old saying goes that a grand jury will 'indict a ham sandwich' if a prosecutor tells them to - because the prosecutor calls the shots. The Rice case strongly suggests that the opposite is also true - grand juries will let the sandwich walk, if that's what the prosecutor wants."
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Some Women Are More Invisible
Cynthia Peters, teleSUR
Peters writes: "There are structural impediments to women taking their rightful place as citizens in the United States."
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Cynthia Peters, teleSUR
Peters writes: "There are structural impediments to women taking their rightful place as citizens in the United States."
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Bill Cosby Is Charged With Felony Sex Crime Over 2004 Case
Bill Chappell, NPR
"Narrowly beating a statute of limitations deadline to file charges, prosecutors in Pennsylvania announced a felony sexual assault charge against comedian Bill Cosby on Wednesday. A former Temple University employee says Cosby drugged and assaulted her in January of 2004."
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Bill Chappell, NPR
"Narrowly beating a statute of limitations deadline to file charges, prosecutors in Pennsylvania announced a felony sexual assault charge against comedian Bill Cosby on Wednesday. A former Temple University employee says Cosby drugged and assaulted her in January of 2004."
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Muslims Rank Lowest for Religious Rights Protection in US, Survey Finds
Lydia Tomkiw, International Business Times
Tomkiw writes: "Religious freedom remains an important right for Americans, it just depends on what religion you practice, according to a new survey released Wednesday. Americans ranked Muslims as the group least deserving of religious protections, while Christians ranked the highest."
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Lydia Tomkiw, International Business Times
Tomkiw writes: "Religious freedom remains an important right for Americans, it just depends on what religion you practice, according to a new survey released Wednesday. Americans ranked Muslims as the group least deserving of religious protections, while Christians ranked the highest."
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Powerful El Niño to Affect Tens of Millions with Extreme Hunger
teleSUR
Excerpt: "NASA warns that the 2016 El Niño will rival the biggest on record which could have dire consequences for tens of millions across the world."
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teleSUR
Excerpt: "NASA warns that the 2016 El Niño will rival the biggest on record which could have dire consequences for tens of millions across the world."
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