The Total Cost Of War since 2001 Counter

IRAQ
AFGHANISTAN

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Cost of #War

The US clearly has its priorities backwards ..while at home we expend to bail out the banks, we refuse to provide universal health care or help the multitude of forecloses. Our school system continues to deteriorate

Our national debt continues to rise

But we always find ways to fund the senseless wars

Amplify’d from www.accuracy.org

ost of War: Breaking It Down

January 12, 2011



Cost of U.S. Wars Since 2001
$1,136,606,437,629

Monday (January 17) is the 50th anniversary of President Dwight Eisenhower’s farewell address, in which he warned of the rise of a “military-industrial complex.”

Martin Luther King Day is also Monday. He said: “A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual death.”

On Tuesday, the LA Times reported, Vice President Biden “backed away from his own recent promise that the U.S. would pull out of the country ‘come hell or high water’ by 2014.” Instead “conceding that the U.S. might retain a presence in Afghanistan when the 2014 deadline hits and beyond.”


JO COMERFORDCHRIS HELLMAN

Comerford is executive director of the National Priorities Project; Hellman is budget analyst for the group, which as part of the re-launch of its website, CostofWar.com, has just issued “What’s at Stake?” — 50 state-level briefs focused on the impact of war spending. [more]

Read more at www.accuracy.org
 

o
Share/Save/Bookmark

Sunday, January 9, 2011

Palin Put a Gun Target on Giffords' District; Now a Colleague Says: 'Palin Needs to Look at Her Own Behavior' | CommonDreams.org

I Wonder what would happen if it was " Joe six pack " the one inciting violence ??

What do you say ?? Homeland security


o
Share/Save/Bookmark

Canadian Study Sees Global Warming for Centuries

Still unconvinced ??

Amplify’d from www.commondreams.org

Centuries


by Jeffrey Jones




CALGARY, Alberta - Carbon dioxide already emitted into the atmosphere will keep contributing to global warming for centuries, eventually causing a huge Antarctic ice sheet to collapse and lift sea levels, Canadian scientists said on Sunday.

[

]" />"I think you do see a big divergence in potential futures depending on if there are some reductions in emissions,"said Shawn Marshall, a University of Calgary geography professor and one of the study's authors. (AP Photo/Subhankar Banerjee, File)


Even the complete abandonment of fossil fuels and halt to emissions cannot prevent devastating ocean warming in Antarctica as well as increasing desertification in North Africa, the research finds.

Even so, many of the negative consequences in the Northern Hemisphere, such as loss of Arctic sea ice, are reversible. That means global efforts to cut greenhouse gases are not a waste of effort and money, said Shawn Marshall, a University of Calgary geography professor and one of the study's authors.

Canadian Study Sees Global Warming for Centuries


by Jeffrey Jones




CALGARY, Alberta - Carbon dioxide already emitted into the atmosphere will keep contributing to global warming for centuries, eventually causing a huge Antarctic ice sheet to collapse and lift sea levels, Canadian scientists said on Sunday.

[

]" />"I think you do see a big divergence in potential futures depending on if there are some reductions in emissions,"said Shawn Marshall, a University of Calgary geography professor and one of the study's authors. (AP Photo/Subhankar Banerjee, File)


Even the complete abandonment of fossil fuels and halt to emissions cannot prevent devastating ocean warming in Antarctica as well as increasing desertification in North Africa, the research finds.

Even so, many of the negative consequences in the Northern Hemisphere, such as loss of Arctic sea ice, are reversible. That means global efforts to cut greenhouse gases are not a waste of effort and money, said Shawn Marshall, a University of Calgary geography professor and one of the study's authors.

"But there are some parts of the climate that have a lot of inertia and it will take many centuries before they start to reverse," said Marshall.

The study, led by Nathan Gillett of the Canadian Centre for Climate Modelling and Analysis, is published in the journal Nature Geoscience.

Using simulations with a climate model, the scientists estimated the effects on climate patterns for the next 1,000 years by stopping emissions completely in 2010 and in 2100.

Major differences of the impacts in various regions lie in the centuries it takes for heat to circulate from the North Atlantic through the world's ocean currents and into the deep sea, Marshall said.

"The atmosphere cools pretty quickly when atmospheric gases go down and surface water will cool, but that doesn't reach the deeper waters of the ocean for a long time," he said.

Wind currents in the southern hemisphere may also play a role.

As a result, in the next 1,000 years, the average ocean temperature around Antarctica could rise by as much as 5 degrees Celsius, triggering the collapse of the West Antarctic ice sheet, according to the study.

The elimination of the ice sheet, which covers an area about the size of Texas and is up to 4,000 meters (13,120 feet) thick, could raise sea levels by several meters.

The climate impacts would also dry out the land in parts of North Africa by up to 30 percent.

Simulations show big differences in some parts of the world, however, between cutting emissions in 2010 and in 2100, including long-term temperature variations between 1 and 4 degrees Celsius, an argument for action on carbon dioxide, Marshall said.

"You sometimes hear that defeatist argument that it's too late and there are a lot of changes that are going to happen, so just worry about adaptation," he said. "But I think you do see a big divergence in potential futures depending on if there are some reductions in emissions."

(Editing by Frank McGurty)

Read more at www.commondreams.org
 

o
Share/Save/Bookmark