• Pragerisms

    For a more comprehensive list of Pragerisms visit
    Dennis Prager Wisdom.

    • "The left is far more interested in gaining power than in creating wealth."
    • "Without wisdom, goodness is worthless."
    • "I prefer clarity to agreement."
    • "First tell the truth, then state your opinion."
    • "Being on the Left means never having to say you're sorry."
    • "If you don't fight evil, you fight gobal warming."
    • "There are things that are so dumb, you have to learn them."
  • Liberalism’s Seven Deadly Sins

    • Sexism
    • Intolerance
    • Xenophobia
    • Racism
    • Islamophobia
    • Bigotry
    • Homophobia

    A liberal need only accuse you of one of the above in order to end all discussion and excuse himself from further elucidation of his position.

  • Glenn’s Reading List for Die-Hard Pragerites

    • Bolton, John - Surrender is not an Option
    • Bruce, Tammy - The Thought Police; The New American Revolution; The Death of Right and Wrong
    • Charen, Mona - DoGooders:How Liberals Hurt Those They Claim to Help
    • Coulter, Ann - If Democrats Had Any Brains, They'd Be Republicans; Slander
    • Dalrymple, Theodore - In Praise of Prejudice; Our Culture, What's Left of It
    • Doyle, William - Inside the Oval Office
    • Elder, Larry - Stupid Black Men: How to Play the Race Card--and Lose
    • Frankl, Victor - Man's Search for Meaning
    • Flynn, Daniel - Intellectual Morons
    • Fund, John - Stealing Elections
    • Friedman, George - America's Secret War
    • Goldberg, Bernard - Bias; Arrogance
    • Goldberg, Jonah - Liberal Fascism
    • Herson, James - Tales from the Left Coast
    • Horowitz, David - Left Illusions; The Professors
    • Klein, Edward - The Truth about Hillary
    • Mnookin, Seth - Hard News: Twenty-one Brutal Months at The New York Times and How They Changed the American Media
    • Morris, Dick - Because He Could; Rewriting History
    • O'Beirne, Kate - Women Who Make the World Worse
    • Olson, Barbara - The Final Days: The Last, Desperate Abuses of Power by the Clinton White House
    • O'Neill, John - Unfit For Command
    • Piereson, James - Camelot and the Cultural Revolution: How the Assassination of John F. Kennedy Shattered American Liberalism
    • Prager, Dennis - Think A Second Time
    • Sharansky, Natan - The Case for Democracy
    • Stein, Ben - Can America Survive? The Rage of the Left, the Truth, and What to Do About It
    • Steyn, Mark - America Alone
    • Stephanopolous, George - All Too Human
    • Thomas, Clarence - My Grandfather's Son
    • Timmerman, Kenneth - Shadow Warriors
    • Williams, Juan - Enough: The Phony Leaders, Dead-End Movements, and Culture of Failure That Are Undermining Black America--and What We Can Do About It
    • Wright, Lawrence - The Looming Tower

The Enemy at Home and Abroad Which the Marines Must Battle!

Marine’s career threatened

 by controversial rules of engagement

By: Sara A. Carter | 01/23/12 8:05 PM
National security correspondent | Follow on Twitter @SaraCarterDC
Marine Corps 1st Lt. Joshua Waddell, 25, in Sangin, Afghanistan, is executive officer with the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Corps Regiment, from Twentynine Palms, Calif. (Courtesy photo)
Marine Corps 1st Lt. Joshua Waddell, 25, in Sangin, Afghanistan, is executive officer with the 3rd Battalion, 7th Marine Corps Regiment, from Twentynine Palms, Calif. (Courtesy photo)
Joshua Waddell, a first lieutenant in the U.S. Marines, appeared on his way to a stellar career as an American military officer. The son of a retired Navy SEAL commander, Waddell had won a Bronze Star during his first tour of duty in Afghanistan and had returned for a second.Then he made a decision in combat that military experts say has severely jeopardized his future in the corps.But some military experts say the black mark on Waddell’s record was undeserved, that he and other young American officers are being put in a difficult, if not impossible, situation by unreasonable rules of engagement foisted upon the military by politically sensitive commanders in the Pentagon.The facts in Waddell’s case are spelled out in Marine Corps documents. But how those facts should be interpreted is a matter of heated dispute.On Nov. 1, Waddell, a 25-year-old executive officer with 3rd Battallion, 7th Marine Corps Regiment, was monitoring a surveillance camera in Sangin, Afghanistan, when he spotted a man who had been identified as a bomb maker working with area insurgents. Two days earlier, a sergeant from India Company had lost both legs and a hand when a bomb detonated in their area of operation. The man spotted on the camera was believed to be responsible.After receiving permission from his battalion commanders, Waddell ordered Marine snipers to open fire on the man, and he was hit. A group of Afghans rushed to the man, put him on a tractor and attempted to flee. Waddell ordered the snipers to hit the engine block of the tractor, disabling it so the man believed to be a bomb maker would not escape. The tractor was hit but no civilians were injured.

Then, about three weeks later, the civilians who helped remove the wounded man from the area were found to be teenagers.

As a result, Waddell was demoted from executive officer, and the battalion commander, Lt. Col. Seth Folsom, determined he had violated rules of engagement that governed when Marines could fire, and at whom. Folsom said Wadell “is not recommended for promotion” and “in violation of [combat rules] during an engagement.” The report stated that “noncombatant local nationals” were in the area of direct fire and that “the engagement resulted in a damaged local national vehicle.”

A Marine brigadier general who reviewed the case was sympathetic to Waddell, whom he described as a “superb and heroic combat leader. But the general said the decision on whether Waddell should be promoted was “the commander’s prerogative,” noting that the battalion commander on the scene had lost “confidence in [Waddell's] abilities.”

Marine Maj. Shawn Haney, spokesman for Marine Corps Manpower and Reserve Affairs, said Waddell’s fitness report will go before a review board at the time of any promotion “and everything is under scrutiny, so Waddell will have a chance to defend himself against the accusations.” Still, Haney conceded, Waddell’s fitness reports play a “significant role in future promotions.”

The upshot is that Waddell’s career has been effectively blunted, his chance for promotion blocked.

Waddell is just one of hundreds of cases of troops who have suffered under stringent rules of engagement, said Jeff Addicott, a former senior legal adviser to U.S. Army Special Forces.

“We have hamstrung our military with unrealistic ROEs that do more harm to our soldiers than the enemy, and now a Marine’s career is on the line because he disabled a tractor,” Addicott said. “In many ways our military is frozen in fear of violating absurd self-imposed rules on the battlefield, How can you tell if it’s a teenager or a man, a farmer or an enemy when you’re fighting an insurgency?”

A Marine stationed in Afghanistan who does not know Waddell, but who has operated under the same rules, said, “The rules of engagement are meant to placate [President Hamid] Karzai’s government at our expense. They say it’s about winning the hearts and minds, but it’s not working. We’re not putting fear into the enemy, only our troops.”

Waddell’s father, Mark Waddell, who served more than 25 years in the military and retired as a commander of a Navy SEAL team, said his son and other Americans fighting in Afghanistan are being victimized by these rules.

“I feel what’s happened to my son is a complete betrayal, and he isn’t the only one,” said Waddell, of Fort Worth, Texas. “Josh is a hero. We expect them to go out and make instantaneous combat decisions, then we Monday-morning quarterback their decisions. It’s an outrage.”

Sara A. Carter is The Washington Examiner’s national security correspondent. She can be reached at scarter@washingtonexaminer.com.

Read more at the Washington Examiner: http://washingtonexaminer.com/news/world/2012/01/marines-career-threatened-controversial-rules-engagement/2127401#ixzz1kQATWw2M

Dennis Prager: Romney’s Faith in Mormonism is of no Concern for the Tolerant!!

      Evangelicals and Romney:

        Should Theology Matter?

by Dennis Prager     at   dennisprager.com  and Salem Radio

“As an American, a Republican, and a fiscal and social conservative — and though I have endorsed no Republican candidate — there is one thing that would disturb me greatly if Mitt Romney were not the Republican nominee: if Romney’s Mormon faith were a factor in his defeat.

Many evangelical leaders have said that if Romney is the Republican presidential candidate, they would not vote for him in the general election. What is implied — and sometimes explicitly stated — is that his Mormonism prevents them from voting for him in the primaries.

Most evangelicals label Mormonism a cult, and many accuse Mormons of being dishonest for calling themselves Christians.

Let me explain where I’m coming from on this issue. First, all I care about with regard to the forthcoming election is that a Republican wins. It is difficult to see how the United States could survive as anything but another Europe between Mexico and Canada (while Europe itself is not surviving as Europe) with another four years of the most left-wing president in American history. Just the prospect of Barack Obama appointing one or more Supreme Court justices should focus every non-leftist’s mind.

Second, as a Jew, I have no religious pony in this race. I believe that American Christianity has been the greatest force for good in the modern world and that evangelicals are at the core of America’s backbone. And I have enormous respect for Mormons. Third, none of my favorite candidates — Paul Ryan and Marco Rubio, for example — are running. So I do not write this column on behalf of Mitt Romney or against Newt Gingrich.

Having said that, let me offer three observations on Mormonism and evangelical views of it.

Observation No. 1: Regarding Mormonism being labeled a cult, my study of religious history has taught me that just about every religion is seen as a cult in its formative years by the religion from which it sprang, or it gets labeled a cult by the older religion in order to delegitimize it. Jews and others regarded Christianity as a cult in its early years. Sunnis regard Shiites as a cult. The Catholic Church saw the early Protestants as a cult, while Protestants regarded the Roman Church as a cult. And Christians regarded the early Mormons as a cult.

Over the course of time, as a religion establishes itself and its members act more or less like members of the older religions, the charge is usually dropped. Jews hardly regard Christianity as a cult, and few Catholics or Protestants regard the other as members of a cult. After nearly 200 years, Mormons are an integral part of American society, with impressive reputations for family life, integrity and other values. The “cult” label just doesn’t seem appropriate.

Observation No. 2: I may be mistaken, but I believe that what most annoys evangelicals (and some other Christians) about Mormonism is that Mormons call themselves Christian. In order for Jews to better understand evangelicals — and for evangelicals to better understand Jews — I think there is a parallel here.

The vast majority of Jews understand that in a free society, people convert to other religions. Therefore, some Christians convert to Judaism and some Jews convert to Christianity. What particularly annoys Jews is not the existence of converts but the existence of “Jews for Jesus.” To most Jews, this is a misleading label because people who come to believe in Christ should call themselves Christian, not Jews.

So, too, in the view of most evangelicals, if people wish to believe in the divinity of the Book of Mormon and the prophecy of Joseph Smith, that is their business, but to call these and other distinctive Mormon beliefs “Christian” bothers many evangelicals. Of course, Mormons respond that a religion that calls itself The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, can hardly be dismissed as non-Christian. But it is not my interest here to adjudicate this debate. I only wish to offer one reason that evangelicals might be disturbed by Mormonism calling itself Christian.

Observation No. 3: Most importantly, theology and values are not the same thing. Traditional Jews and evangelical Christians have quite different theologies, but they often have virtually identical values. (That is why this Jew is so supportive of evangelicals and why evangelical Christians syndicate my radio show.) Conservative Catholics and evangelicals differ on theology but share virtually every important value. The Founders differed on theology but rarely on values.

It is hard to identify any area of life in which Mitt Romney’s values and life differ in any way from the finest evangelical’s values and life. And with regard to electing a president, that is what matters.

What I am asking here is that evangelicals and other traditional and conservative Christians who have problems with Mormonism not allow those problems (however legitimate they may be from the perspective of Christian theology) to play a role in their primary voting or in their general election voting if Mitt Romney wins the nomination. The fate of America and the world hangs in the balance.

In other words, fight the left now. You can fight theology later.”

Obamalings at Daily Beast Analyze GOP Debate

Paul Begala: The Strangely Silent

Jan. 23 Debate in Tampa

by Paul Begala    at Daily Beast: 
 
“Without the cheering and jeering crowds to whip him up, Newt was oddly subdued. That left Mitt in the spotlight, squirming about his tax returns.

When NBC’s Matt Lauer asked multimillionaire Mitt Romney about income inequality and the decline of the middle class, Romney replied, “You know, I think it’s fine to talk about those things in quiet rooms.”

 Lauer’s NBC colleague Brian Williams gave Romney and his competitors a chance to discuss issues without the cheering, jeering, booing, embarrassing crowds we have seen in prior GOP debates. Without the roar of the crowd, Newt was much less effective. Like all bullies, he feeds off the mob. But tonight, at the urging of Williams, the crowd was mute and Gingrich’s faux fury, so effective in prior debates, never materialized.

Romney got what he wanted—a quiet room where he could coolly rebut Gingrich’s attacks and then launch his own preprogrammed counterattacks. His super-duper PAC is already savaging Gingrich on television, spending millions to inform Florida Republicans about Gingrich’s ethical woes, his lucrative Beltway consulting gigs, and his sofa sharing with Nancy Pelosi.

This will not, I believe, stop Newt’s momentum. And it does not do anything for the central problems facing Romney’s candidacy: middle-class voters don’t like him and conservative voters don’t trust him. Romney simply cannot connect to what Bill Clinton used to call “walkin’ around folks.” He looked especially phony when talking about undocumented workers “self-deporting” and squirmed when asked about his tax returns.

Indeed, the saddest moment of the debate—perhaps of the entire campaign—was Willard Mitt Romney distancing himself from George Romney. The elder Romney walked out of the 1964 GOP Convention because he believed the party of Lincoln was walking away from civil rights. And when he sought the presidency in 1968 he released 12 years of back tax returns, noting at the time that releasing only one year might allow a politician to clean up his returns knowing he was planning to run for office.

The tax issue will continue to dog Romney. He will be asked endlessly what he’s hiding: Were there years when he paid even less than 15 percent? Did he ever pay zero—or close to it?

But Romney repudiated his father—sad in any context, but especially when the younger Mitt is so obviously a CEO/governor/millionaire in part because of the advantages his CEO/governor/millionaire father bestowed on him.

“You know,” Mitt said, “I agree with my dad on a lot of things, but we also disagree. And going out with 12 years of returns is not something I’m going to do.” Apparently Romney has placed his filial devotion in the same blind trust in which he has stored his dignity.

The tax issue will continue to dog Romney, even after he releases one or two tax returns. Voters will want to know why Romney reportedly has multimillion-dollar investments in the Caymans. Romney will be asked endlessly what he’s hiding: were there years when he paid even less than 15 percent? Did he ever pay zero—or close to it? These questions simply will not confine themselves to quiet rooms.

Ron Paul and Rick Santorum, two talented debaters who know their minds and are not afraid to speak them (unlike, too often, Romney) were often left in the dust. Santorum was asked about his aggressive intervention in the tragic case of Terri Schiavo, the Floridian whose husband wanted to honor her wish to be disconnected from life support. You could almost see the thought bubble over Newt Gingrich’s head when the topic turned to a helpless woman in a hospital bed: “Obviously, you divorce her.”

(The following comments referred to the Begala article.   I selected them at random without reading them:”

COMMENTS:

Oh please. All this drama over a millionaire’s tax returns. Give us a break. Maybe we actually ifgure out what any of these guys – including Obama – are going to do to make our lives better if the media would just get past the carnival it manufactures over politics. Newt wasn’t subdued. For once, his lies caught up with him and he had no response.
 
 
Like many of the Americans across the nation likely sharing this opinion, the opinions and observations of “the media” are irrelevant, they have demonstrated their lame brains in the conspicuous socioeconomic catastrophes across the nation, and their bantering among themselves is so pompous as to be “indigestible,” to wit, th Sunday morning platform, “Reliable Sources.” 
 
This a.m. CNN’s Soledad O’Brien turned up as her own emcee with the typical “players,” an “air head,” she actually chirped when introducing the grief stricken son and daughter of the late coach of Pennsylvania State, clearly long revered, and had to lead off with the insensitive inquiry as to “how would he be remembered,” suggesting “his reputation might be sullied by the “scandal?”  
 
That kind of stuff .. and then the “chubby guy” had to attack Newt Gingrich related to his association w/Fanny and Freddie, insisting he would have had to be a “lobbyist,” and then O’Brien scoffing at $1M+ in fees; he holds a Ph.D from Tulane, and Soledad, other than an agent, is paid what; next up was to be Obama’s revered “advisor” Valerie Jarrett; what?
 
 After suffering through some of the worst and most ineffective slate of Democratic candidates Mondale, Gary Hart, George Dukakis, John Kerry, (even though, with the exception of Dukakis, all them would have been better presidents than Reagan and Bush) I find myself absent the usual tension and feeling of dread I have felt in previous elections. This is because the lunatic fringe of the GOP base, consisting of evangelical Christian conservatives, Commie fearing descendants of the Burchers and the sanitized offspring of Southern racists and Klan members has taken over the party. Witness their slate of candidates. They purged their party of any semi-sane moderates who might have been acceptable to the general electorate and now all they’re left with are a raging lunatic, a hateful homophobe a corrupt has-been and their fading front runner, an out of touch, unprincipled, empty suit. I take comfort in the destruction of this malignant coalition. It was long overdue. We have not had a constructive and viable opposition to the left for thirty years. Hell, we haven’t even had a “real” left in thirty years. The pendulum swung so far that Bill Clinton was to the right of Richard Nixon and Lyndon Johnson would be considered a Bolshevik today.
 
 
Romney fast talking, through his barely memorized attacks reminds one a middle school student rushing through the Gettysburg address, before he forgets it. Mitt doesn’t have an authentic bone in his body and it’s evident whenever he speaks. He doesn’t connect or really know the meaning of what he’s saying. He is a robo-candidate following a pre-scripted program. It’s obvious in how frazzled he gets when things go, even a little bit, off script. This does not bode well if he’s the nominee. Obama will decimate him in the debates. Newt, on the other hand, does come off more authentic — an authentic, narcissistic, sociopath. He just might be the perfect candidate for the GOP base.
 
 
“Apparently Romney has placed his filial devotion in the same blind trust in which he has stored his dignity”. 
 
Comment:   Whether it is Obama’s Marxism, his own personal race and cultural hate for traditional American values, or simply personal and collective expediency which drives him  to bankrupt the nation, I do not know.
 
What I do know from all my mind and soul, the man is a Marxist and a danger to the present and future of our democratic society.    As Dennis Prager has summed up OBAMA’S  THREAT TO AMERICA;
 
“THE BIGGER THE GOVERNMENT, THE SMALLER THE CITIZEN!”   
 
Mr. Obama’s  expansion of Government Power  makes Americans very, very, small.   Those in the Obama one party  press leftwing corps have become  a tablespoon of poison applied to America’s democracy’s daily diet as an example.   Expansion of Obama’s Marxist rule includes 1. Obamacare, the government dictatorship over citizen health care,           2.  the selection of  tribal oriented Supreme Court  Justices  based on  the  bigotries of diversity rather than the brotherhood  and sisterhood of E Pluribu Unum, and  3.  the Obama attack on the American Legislative Branch of Government, by creating a Dictatorship of Czars to effect Obamarule to circumvent Congress.
 

OXFORD UNIVERSITY Has Just Discovered the Human Male is Sexually Aggressive

AMAZING NEWS FROM PSYCHOLOGY STUDIES  ABROAD!

Yes. Mail OnLine has reported that  a recent psychology  study AT OXFORD UNIVERSITY  has ’concluded’  that man’s sex drive is  connected to warring.    Woweeeeeee!    What a shock!  

DENNIS PRAGER, YOU NEVER TOLD US!     YOU ONLY TOLD YOUR  LISTENERS  THAT  “THE HUMAN MALE IS BORN A SEXUAL PREDATOR”……

(But, then again, isn’t  the male of all warm blooded animals a sexual predator who wars against  intruders attacking  his domain?    Did I get this wrong in 9th grade general science?    What about all of the animal scenes I see on TVs National Geographic?   What about the claims that the human female is just as equal a killer and fighter as the human male one learns in Women’s Studies Departments a proof  males are out of date?   Does that come from her sex drive, too?    What about Black Studies claims that war is caused by white man’s greed and racism?    Does that mean that the black male is born to grow up a pacifist all smiles and cuddly all of his life?    Why are so many boxers black?)

Let’s read what  Mail online is reporting regarding this stunning psychology study of the human male.

Strange…..no reporter seems to have taken credit for writing this important and alarming article…..

     from MailonLine:

“When men go to war, blame their sex drive: Males evolved to be ‘aggressive to outsiders’, says psychology study!”

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2090226/When-men-war-blame-sex-drive-Males-evolved-aggressive-outsiders.html#ixzz1kLdUVsJa

“From football thugs clashing on the terraces to soldiers killing each other on the front line, most conflict can be blamed on the male sex drive, a study suggests.

The review of psychological research concludes that men evolved to be aggressive towards ‘outsiders’, a tendency at the root of inter-tribal violence.

It emerged through natural selection as a result of competition for mates, territory and status, and is seen in conflicts between nations as well as clashes involving rival gangs, football fans or religious groups, say the researchers.

 
Trouble: Male sex drive is at the root of most conflict in the world including football violence, scientists have claimedTrouble: Male sex drive is at the root of most conflict in the world including football violence, scientists have claimed
Reasons for war: Large-scale conflicts between nations is also to blame on the male sex drive, a new study has claimedReasons for war: The male sex drive is also behind large-scale conflicts, researchers say

In contrast, they add, women evolved to resolve conflicts peacefully. They are said to have been programmed by natural selection to ‘tend and befriend’ to protect their children.

 

Professor Mark van Vugt, of Oxford University’s Institute of Cognitive and Evolutionary Anthropology, said: ‘A solution to conflict . . . remains elusive.

Better behaved: Researchers say natural selection has programmed women to ‘tend and befriend’ to protect their offspring

‘One reason might be the difficulty we have in changing our mindset, which has evolved over thousands of years.’

The findings, which support the ‘male warrior hypothesis’, are published in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.

The psychologists claim that in all cultures and throughout history, men have sought to get their way by initiating violence.

They prefer group-based hierarchies and are identified more strongly with their own groups than women.

At a basic level, such ‘tribal’ aggression helped men in a group to obtain more females, increasing their chances of reproduction.

‘We see similar behaviour in chimpanzees,’ said Prof van Vugt. ‘For example, the males continuously monitor the borders of their territory.

‘If a female from another group comes along, she may be persuaded to emigrate to his group. When a male strays too far, however, he is likely to be brutally beaten and possibly killed!

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2090226/When-men-war-blame-sex-drive-Males-evolved-aggressive-outsiders.html#ixzz1kLePRrDA

Comment:    IT CERTAINLY IS ENCOURAGING  TO KNOW THAT OXFORD UNIVERSITY HAS A PSYCHOLOGY DEPARTMENT THAT HAS MOVED UP A GRADE FROM THE KINDERGARTEN LEVEL.   WHO KNOWS WHAT SCIENTISTS WILL COME UP WITH THESE DAYS OF  MARXIST TRUTH AND PEACE, AD 2012!   AREN’T MEN AWFUL!   AND I ALWAYS LEARNED  THAT THE HUMAN MALE HAD TO FIGHT TO MATE FIRST AND MOST OFTEN FOR SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST REASONS  WHICH HELPED TRAIN THE SPECIES TO SURVIVE AGAINST ITS ENEMIES.

WELL, WHAT WE DON’T LEARN THESE DAYS AT UNIVERSITY!   THANK GOD FOR OUR MARXIST LEADERS.   THANK GOD FOR THESE  FEMINAZIS!

Marxist Obama’s Bureau of Weathermen are at it Again at Huffington:

 

It’s Climate Change, Stupid

by Elliot Negin   at Huffington Post

I watched the two Republican presidential candidate debates in South Carolina last week, and although the contenders spent quite a bit of time bickering over economic issues (as well as bashing each other), they ignored the elephant in the room. The biggest long-term threat to the U.S. economy isn’t government over-regulation, high taxes, or even the deficit. It’s climate change.

I work for a nonpartisan, tax-exempt organization that can’t endorse candidates. We do, however, educate the public and promote government policies based on science. So I can’t get into the Republican or Democratic presidential candidates’ positions on climate, which you can easily find with a quick Internet search. But I can tell you how battered their respective states’ economies will be if we don’t dramatically reduce carbon emissions, and do it soon.

The snapshot projections below are what scientists expect the climate in each state to look like over the next three decades and beyond under a business-as-usual scenario where we continue to burn fossil fuels and destroy tropical forests at today’s rates. It’s not a pretty picture. In general, Americans should expect more smog, more heat, more droughts, and more flooding.

Georgia: First, let’s look at the home of former House Speaker Newt Gingrich. Georgia’s largest industry is agriculture, which contributes more than $68 billion annually to the state economy. It’s the nation’s number one producer of broiler chickens, peanuts, pecans and watermelons, and among the top producers of blueberries, cabbage, cantaloupes, cotton, eggs, onions, peaches, tomatoes and tobacco. Unchecked climate change likely would saddle those farmers with more droughts.

In 2007, a major drought across most of the Southeast caused $1.3 billion in economic damage in Georgia, including losses of $63.1 million in corn, $160.1 million in cotton, $83.8 million in hay, and $92.5 million in peanuts. A 2008 report by the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) and the Center for Integrative Environmental Research at the University of Maryland calculated that an additional 5 percent in crop losses due to climate change would mean nearly $110 million in direct and indirect economic losses in Georgia annually.

Rising sea levels and more intense hurricanes, meanwhile, would threaten Georgia’s coastline. According to the NCSL report, the cumulative cost to replenish sand to protect the state’s coastline from a 20-inch rise in sea level could reach $154 million to $1.3 billion by 2100. Georgia generally does not suffer as much damage from hurricanes as its neighboring states Florida and South Carolina, but in 2004, Hurricane Ivan caused nearly $70 million in property damage in the Peach State.

Illinois: You might remember that Barack Obama’s Chicago suffered through a horrific heat wave in July 1995 that led to more than 700 heat-related deaths over a five-day stretch. By 2050, under the business-as-usual scenario, Chicago would experience a heat wave as hot as that one every summer, according to “Confronting Climate Change in the U.S. Midwest,” a 2009 report by the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS). Peoria, Rockford, Springfield and other Illinois cities would face similar conditions. Such searing heat, combined with higher smog and soot levels, would aggravate asthma and other respiratory problems and cause more premature deaths across the state.

Scientists project that Illinois likely would experience an increase of at least 20 percent in heavy precipitation over the next 30 years, mainly in the winter, spring and fall, which could mean more flooding. That, coupled with more frequent short-term summer droughts, heat stress, and wider insect ranges, would spell trouble for the state’s $11 billion-a-year agricultural sector. Corn yields, for example, could decline as much as 50 percent by the middle of the century. Meanwhile, hog and pig producers already are losing $20.5 million a year due to heat stress, and nearly permanent summer heat stress would threaten dairy cows, hogs, pigs and other livestock toward the end of the century.

Massachusetts: Mitt Romney was governor of a state that today is experiencing earlier springs, hotter summers, and milder winters than it did in 1970–all consistent with climate change. Under the business-as-usual scenario, it would get worse. According to UCS’s 2007 report, “Confronting Climate Change in the U.S. Northeast,” over the next 30 years, the state’s largest cities, including Boston, Springfield and Worcester, likely would experience nearly 20 summer days with temperatures higher than 90º F. That could worsen the state’s smog problem and accelerate pollen production, which could lengthen the allergy season.

Massachusetts is home to one of the country’s biggest commercial fishing industries. Based on current emissions trends, scientists project that ocean temperatures will be too warm by the end of this century to support the historically important Atlantic cod. Lobsters in coastal waters south of Cape Cod, meanwhile, would be cooked by mid-century. The state also produces a quarter of the nation’s cranberries. Heat stress would significantly depress yields for them and other fruit and vegetable crops, which currently generate about $94 million annually, by mid-century.

Rising sea level not only would increase the frequency and severity of storm surges and coastal flooding, it is expected to overwhelm some low-lying coastal areas and dramatically accelerate erosion. Sea-level rise also would threaten salt marshes and estuaries, which provide nursery habitat for commercial fish and feeding grounds for migrating birds.

Finally, by mid-century, warmer winters would drive many ski resorts out of business, and by late-century, the trees that provide the state’s spectacular fall foliage displays–maple, beech and birch–would disappear.

Pennsylvania: Rick Santorum, a former senator and representative, hails from Pennsylvania. The top agricultural industry in the Keystone State is dairy farming, and major cash crops include corn, vegetables, mushrooms and fruit, especially grapes and apples. Over the coming decades, Pennsylvanians likely would have to deal with longer, more intense summer heat waves; reduced winter snowpack; and declining farm yields, according to a 2008 UCS study, “Climate Change Impacts and Solutions for Pennsylvania.”

Most state residents would have to suffer through twice as many summer days over 90º F than they did before 1990. That would degrade air quality, exacerbating allergies, asthma and other respiratory illnesses; stress dairy cows, limiting milk production; and reduce yields of Concord grapes, sweet corn and apples. Prized hardwood trees, including black cherry, sugar maple and American beech, would decline precipitously.

Winters, on the other hand, would be milder. The areas in the state that typically experienced 30 days or more of snow before 1990 likely would only see only about two weeks of the white stuff. That would mean significantly fewer ski resorts and very little, if any, snowmobiling.

Texas: Texas Gov. Rick Perry dropped out of the race a few days after the first South Carolina debate, but Ron Paul, the U.S. representative from the state’s 14th district–just south of Houston on the Gulf coast–is still in contention. Given the state’s size, not all counties would be affected in quite the same way over the next few decades, but significant areas already are experiencing extreme heat, drought and wildfires.

Last summer, for example, some counties endured more than a month of consecutive 100º F-plus days, and much of the state is still suffering from a devastating year-long drought that is expected to stretch through at least next summer. The state also is beset by a range of extreme weather, including tornadoes, hail, thunderstorms, damaging winds and hurricanes, but not all are associated with climate change. That said, unchecked climate change is bound to make the withering heat, extended drought and deadly wildfires in the Lone Star State routine.

That isn’t good news for the state’s $20 billion agricultural sector. Texas boasts the most farms in number and acreage in the country. It produces the most cattle and is a leading state for sheep and goat production. It also is the top state for cotton, its leading crop and second-most-valuable farm product, and is a major producer of cantaloupes, cereal grains, grapefruits and watermelons.

The current drought has hit them all, triggering $5.3 billion in losses last year, according to the Texas AgriLife Extension Service at Texas A&M University. Including the drought’s ripple effect on fertilizer dealers, processing plants, grocery stores and other related businesses, the estimated loss balloons to $8.7 billion.

It’s climate change, stupid: Not to let the Republican presidential hopefuls off the hook, but one reason they have largely ignored global warming is because journalists haven’t pressed them on it, especially during the televised debates. I can’t say that I have watched all 23 of the debates that have occurred so far. But I have seen a number of them, and I have read the coverage. As far as I can tell, other than a brief mention about climate science during a debate in early September, moderators have abdicated their responsibility to address one of the most critical issues of our time.

Of course, for most Americans today, the biggest issue is the economy. It reminds me of the 1992 campaign, when then-Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton challenged President George H.W. Bush. To keep the Clinton campaign focused, lead strategist James Carville hung a sign in Clinton’s Little Rock headquarters that said, in part: “The economy, stupid.” Although the sign was only meant for internal consumption, “It’s the economy, stupid” became the de facto slogan of the Clinton campaign.

The difference today is we know a lot more about the threat of global warming than we did two decades ago. We know that, next to a nuclear war, it poses the most significant long-term threat to not only our economy, but to the future of the planet. So it would be fitting to update that 20-year old sign to read “Climate change, stupid” and hang it on the stage during not only the presidential candidate debates, but during the debates for all candidates running for office this year.

Elliott Negin is the director of news and commentary at the Union of Concerned Scientists in Washington, D.C.

Mr. Negin is a propagandist not a climatologist, or a scientist, and some might argue, not a realist……Yes, the climate over the past 75 years the Earth has been slightly warming.    Russian scientists who are not particularly committed  to the re-election of Barack Hussein Obama this year or any other year, and have disdain for Communism,  have been reporting  with persuasive data  that in the past ten years this warming cycle  is cooling,  returning  to its regular seventy  year or so of cooling cycle   a normal climate pattern over the past human millenia.  

That the Earth has warme some in these past decades in not debated.

What is debated  are the data which have come primarily from a small group of academes who have received great sums of money directly or indirectly from the United Nations $3 billion dollar ‘kitty’ to prove global warming is man  caused.     This research has been widely discredited.

Also discredited is the claim of those ‘scientists’ motivated by fundings to prove global warming is not only caused by man, but in twenty or so years,  the seas will rise and the Earth will fall.

Furthermore, the Obama administration, believers in the frauds, were anxious to pass legislation in 2009 to tax American businesses  nearly $1,000,000,000,000 to ‘gift’ third world countries to meet cleaner and cooler Earth standards established by the United Nations. via the  Cap and Trade bill.

Obama’s ambitions to pass Cap and Trade were derailed with the Republican Congressional victories  in the 2010 midterm elections.

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