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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Wednesday, January 22, 2014

RSN: Predictable Republican Sexism, Corrupt Republican Governor and Keep Drinking the POISONED WATER!


FOCUS: Jim Hightower | The Millionaires' Congress vs. The People
Texas' progressive political curmudgeon, Jim Hightower. (photo: JimHightower.com)
Jim Hightower, Creators Syndicate
Hightower writes: "The rich truly are different from you and me - they tend to hold seats in Congress."
READ MORE



Governor Earl Ray Tomblin of West Virginia. (photo: AP)
Governor Earl Ray Tomblin of West Virginia. (photo: AP)

West Virginia Governor on Safety of Water Supply: 'It's Your Decision...I'm Not a Scientist'

By Kiley Kroh, ThinkProgress
22 January 14

mid growing concerns over whether or not the water is actually safe for 300,000 West Virginians following a massive chemical spill into the water supply, the state's governor said it was up to each of them to decide whether they use it.
 
"It's your decision," Gov. Tomblin told reporters at a press conference on Monday. "If you do not feel comfortable drinking or cooking with this water then use bottled water."
 
"I'm not going to say absolutely, 100 percent that everything is safe," Tomblin continued. "But what I can say is if you do not feel comfortable, don't use it."
 
On Saturday, the last of the 'do not use' bans were lifted, meaning all of West Virginia American Water's customers were given the green light to use and drink their water. While state officials have maintained that a level of the coal-cleaning chemical mixture, known as crude MCHM, below 1 part per million is safe, the justification for that threshold has been called into question.
 
Of primary concern is the fact that it is still unclear what exactly spilled and whether or not the proper tests have been conducted. Crude MCHM is a mixture of six chemicals but only the pure form of the main ingredient, 4-MCHM, has been studied. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) set the 1 part per million threshold based on one study of 4-MCHM conducted by Eastman Chemical Company in 1991.
 
"If crude MCHM is truly what leaked, it's possible that we don't even know which of this 'cocktail' is most harmful," Evan Hansen, environmental consultant with the Morgantown-based Downstream Strategies said in an earlier interview with Climate Progress. "We could have set a threshold based on the wrong one. We may be testing the wrong one."
 
Of the Eastman study used by the CDC to set its guidelines, Wired science writer Deborah Blum notes, "there is no human toxicity data. These are studies in species ranging from fathead minnows to rabbits." The Eastman studies told the company's scientists that "this was not one of the worst compounds out there - but not one of the benign ones either." And the lack of mutagenic effects they found would be more assuring, Blum writes, "if that finding had been verified by, say, anyone else, if someone, besides the company that manufactures the compound, could vouch for its safety."
 
After a significant portion of the more than 300,000 affected residents were told their water was safe, the CDC released guidance warning pregnant women to drink bottled water until there were no detectable levels of crude MCHM. Health care professionals and state officials have also recommended that small children not drink the water and that schools only use bottled water.
 
West Virginia American Water president Jeff McIntyre reiterated on Monday that the water was safe, underscoring his point by drinking tap water in front of reporters. And McIntyre disputed a recommendation from the U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, reported in the Charleston Gazette, that residents flush their home water systems until no odor is detected.
 
"Really, it's not the best recommendation … This is an aesthetic issue below 1 part per million. It's not a health-based issue," McIntyre told the Charleston Daily Mail.
 
At Monday's press conference, Tomblin also emphasized the 1 ppm safety standard. "We've been in this thing for 11 days. It's a very complicated issue. I'm not a scientist, you know. I have to rely on the best information that I have," Tomblin said.
 
"My major concern for the last 11 days has been the health and safety of our residents."
 
Both Tomblin and McIntyre said the state will continue to test the water until no amount of the chemical is detected. After criticism that the spill exposed a history of lax oversight of the fossil fuel and chemical industries, on Monday Tomblin announced a "plan for a new regulatory program for above-ground storage tanks," the Charleston Gazette reported.
 
When asked by Al Jazeera America's Robert Ray whether he was drinking the water, Tomblin responded, "I drink it occasionally."



Jane Mayer | Snowden Calls Russian-Spy Story "Absurd"
Edward Snowden. (illustration: Jason Seiler/TIME Magazine)
Jane Mayer, The New Yorker
Mayer reports: "Edward J. Snowden, the former National Security Agency contractor turned whistleblower, strongly denies allegations made by members of Congress that he was acting as a spy...when he took hundreds of thousands of classified U.S. government documents."
READ MORE

Syria Accuses the West of Pouring Arms Into the Hands of Terrorists
Matthew Weaver, Guardian UK
Weaver reports: "The Syrian government has accused the west of backing terrorism in Syria in a defiant opening address at the start of long-awaited talks."
READ MORE

Attacks on Wendy Davis' Life Story Follow Classic Sexist Playbook
Aviva Shen, ThinkProgress
Shen writes: "These personal details...are now being used to paint the state senator as a classic sexist archetype: the ruthlessly ambitious woman who sacrifices her children and uses her sexual wiles to manipulate men."
READ MORE

US Military Eyes Afghan Force of 10,000, or a Pullout
Jackie Calmes, Eric Schmitt, The New York Times
Excerpt: "The Pentagon has proposed to President Obama that 10,000 American troops remain in Afghanistan when the international combat mission there ends after this year, or none at all."
READ MORE

Former Va. Gov. McDonnell and Wife Indicted for Corruption
Rosalind S. Helderman, Carol D. Leonnig, Sari Horwitz, The Washington Post
Excerpt: "Former Virginia governor Robert F. McDonnell and his wife, Maureen, were charged Tuesday with illegally accepting gifts, luxury vacations and large loans from a wealthy Richmond area businessman who sought special treatment from state government."
READ MORE


FOCUS: Alfred McCoy | It's About Blackmail, Not National Security

 (illustration: CNN)
Alfred McCoy, TomDispatch
McCoy writes: "With a few computer key strokes, the agency has solved the problem that has bedeviled world powers since at least the time of Caesar Augustus: how to control unruly local leaders, who are the foundation for imperial rule, by ferreting out crucial, often scurrilous, information to make them more malleable."
READ MORE

Andy Borowitz | Fox: Obama to Force All Americans to Buy Pot
Obama's presidency is on the clock. Hard as it has been to pass legislation, the coming year is a marker, the final interval before the fight for succession becomes politically all-consuming. (photo: Pari Dukovic)
Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker
Borowitz writes: "President Obama is about to issue an executive order that would force all Americans to purchase a monthly supply of marijuana, the Fox News Channel reported today."
READ MORE

Systematic Killing Evidence in Syria Just Tip of Iceberg
Martin Chulov, Guardian UK
Chulov reports: "The cache of evidence smuggled out of Syria showing the 'systematic killing' of 11,000 detainees in Syrian jails may only be the tip of the iceberg, international aid agencies have said."
READ MORE

What Really Happened When a US Drone Hit a Yemeni Wedding Convoy?
Iona Craig, Al Jazeera America
Craig reports: "On Dec. 12, 2013, ... four missiles fired from a U.S. drone hit a wedding convoy near the town of Radda' in the central province of al-Baydah, killing 12 men."
READ MORE

Tom Engelhardt | The Rise of the Reader
Tom Engelhardt, TomDispatch
Engelhardt writes: "The keening and mourning about the fall of print journalism has gone on for years. It's a development that represents - depending on who's telling the story - the end of an age, the fall of all standards, or the loss of civic spirit and the sort of investigative coverage that might keep a few more politicians and corporate heads honest, and so forth and so on."
READ MORE

Lawrence S. Wittner | The Endless Arms Race
Lawrence S. Wittner, HNN
Wittner writes: "44 years after the NPT went into force, the United States and other nuclear powers continue to pursue their nuclear weapons buildups, with no end in sight."
READ MORE

Richard Eskow | How Wall Street Won the War (And What Happens Next)
Richard Eskow, Campaign for America's Future
Eskow writes: "There was a war - but Wall Street won it. What's more, it's not satisfied with the billions it's already looted from our ransacked economy. It's counting on narratives like [Ben] White's to help it get even more."
READ MORE

Chemical-Related Hospital Admissions in West Virginia Have Doubled Since Water Deemed Safe
Emily Atkin, ThinkProgress
Atkin reports: "According to statistics released by the state health department on Saturday, it turns out that since the bans on water began being lifted, hospital admissions and calls to the poison control center have doubled. Emergency room visits have nearly tripled."
READ MORE
 
 

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