Saturday, April 8, 2017

RSN: Andy Borowitz | Nation Desperately Hopes Real Reason for Bannon's Exit Will Not Involve Sex Tape




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Andy Borowitz | Nation Desperately Hopes Real Reason for Bannon's Exit Will Not Involve Sex Tape
White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon. (photo: Reuters)
Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker
Borowitz writes: "A broad majority of Americans do not believe that they have heard the real reason for Steve Bannon's abrupt removal from the National Security Council but desperately hope that, when that reason ultimately emerges, it will not involve a sex tape."
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Rebekah Mercer Talked Bannon out of Resigning
Eliana Johnson, Kenneth P. Vogel and Josh Dawsey, Politico
Excerpt: "The man credited with honing Donald Trump's populist message and guiding him into the White House has grown frustrated amid continued infighting in the West Wing, so much so that in recent weeks a top donor had to persuade him to stay in his position."
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Chris Cillizza | There's a Lot of Smoke Around Donald Trump's Associates and Russia
Chris Cillizza, CNN
Cillizza writes: "President Donald Trump likes to dismiss the allegations surrounding the contacts between top aides on his campaign and Russian officials as 'fake news.' Trump insists that there is no there there. That there is no fire. To date, he's right. But there is a whole heck of a lot of smoke."
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Prescribing Crisis: How the Pharmaceutical Industry Fuels the Opioid Epidemic
Nicole Colson, Jacobin
Colson writes: "A profit-hungry pharmaceutical industry and an indifferent political class are fueling the deadly opioid epidemic."
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The Cost of Betsy DeVos's Security Detail: $1 Million Per Month
Emma Brown and Devlin Barrett, The Washington Post
Excerpt: "Federal marshals are protecting Education Secretary Betsy DeVos at a cost to her agency of nearly $8 million over nearly eight months, according to the U.S. Marshals Service."
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Tomahawk Maker Raytheon's Stock Rises After US Launches Missiles Against Syria
Paul R. La Monica, CNN
La Monica writes: "Raytheon, the company that makes the Tomahawk missiles used in the air strikes on Syria by the United States, is rising in early stock trading Friday."
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Do You Live Near Toxic Waste? There Are 1,317 "Superfund Sites" Across the US
David Johnson, TIME
Johnson writes: "There are more than 1,300 of these spots in all - dubbed 'Superfund sites' by the federal government - where toxic chemicals from factories and landfills were dumped for decades, polluting the surrounding soil, water and air."
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U.S. government employees work to clean up a 'Superfund' site. (photo: EPA)
U.S. government employees work to clean up a 'Superfund' site. (photo: EPA)




azardous waste sites are scattered all across the country, from a Brooklyn canal once surrounded by chemical plants to a shuttered garbage incineration facility in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

There are more than 1,300 of these spots in all — dubbed "Superfund sites" by the federal government — where toxic chemicals from factories and landfills were dumped for decades, polluting the surrounding soil, water and air.
“The Superfund list contains the worst of toxic sites in the U.S. — it’s really the nasty places," says Chris Portier, former director of the Agency for Toxic Substances, a division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services which is responsible for assessing each site’s hazard level.

The name "Superfund site" comes from legislation Congress passed in 1980 creating a "Superfund" program at the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to identify and clean up hazardous waste sites. Since industry and waste tend to follow people, Superfund sites are often concentrated in highly populated areas. New Jersey — the densest state by population — has more toxic sites than any other state in the country, at 114, with California and Pennsylvania close behind.

The cleanup program may face cuts under President Trump, whose proposed budget includes slashing EPA's funding by 31%. That would include reducing the Superfund program from over $1 billion to $762 million in funding, though the cuts are still preliminary and would need to go through Congress for approval.

In Florida, a study published in the journal of Statistics and Public Policy recently found that people living in counties containing Superfund sites were 6% more likely to be diagnosed with cancer than people living in counties without the sites. There have also been findings of increased cancer rates near specific Superfund sites in other states, though none of the results can be applied to all sites nationwide. (For those living near Superfund sites, experts suggest checking out published health investigations on each site for more information.)
People often don't think about Superfund sites unless they happen to live or work near one. It was a Superfund site 3 miles from campus in Gainesville Fla. that piqued Emily Leary's interest in cancer research. Then a graduate student at the University of Florida, Leary went on to co-author the recent study finding elevated cancer levels in Florida counties with Superfund sites.

"A lot of cancer research has looked at air pollution and cancer, but very few have looked at other modes of transportation for toxins," said Leary, who believes Superfund sites are spreading chemicals through Florida's surface water.

Still, it is complex to measure the impact of exposure to chemicals like arsenic, lead and mercury. Since cancer registries do not routinely include where someone lived when they were diagnosed, it's difficult to draw conclusions about proximity to toxic sites. There are also plenty of other factors that could lead to cancer, including behaviors like smoking and drinking. Leary's findings recommend additional studies with more detailed data.

Portier, the former Agency for Toxic Substances director, said Leary's findings echo earlier studies. He gave the example of Base Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, where Marines and their families drank water contaminated by chemicals dumped near wells on base for three decades. The agency later found elevated cancer risks in those exposed, compared to unexposed Marines. In 2012, Congress mandated care for thousands of affected veterans and their families through the Janey Ensminger Act, named after a 9-year old who died of leukemia after growing up on Lejeune.

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