Moms who work at Walmart are fed up! And this week, in more than 20 cities across the country, they’re going on strike to protest the company’s retaliation against its employees who have spoken up about inequality.
Can you stand with them at a store near you?
Thanks for stepping up at this important moment, Smiley Director of Campaigns, Jobs With Justice P.S. If you can’t make it to an action, check out this powerful video on how we’re all living in the Walmart Economy.
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Tag Archives: Food
White House and Climate Change
We have a moral obligation to lead the fight against carbon pollution.
The most comprehensive look yet at climate change

Hi, everyone
We released the third National Climate Assessment report, by far the most comprehensive look ever at climate change impacts in the United States.
Based on four years of work by hundreds of experts from government, academia, corporations, and public-interest organizations, the Assessment confirms abundant data and examples that climate change isn’t some distant threat — it’s affecting us now.
Not only are the planet and the nation warming on average, but a number of types of extreme weather events linked to climate change have become more frequent or intense in many regions, including heat waves, droughts, heavy downpours, floods, and some kinds of destructive storms.
Those steps include, importantly, the three sets of actions making up the Climate Action Plan that President Obama announced last June: cutting carbon pollution in America; increasing preparedness for and resilience to the changes in climate that already are ongoing; and leading the international response to the climate change challenge.
We’ve made great progress in the year since his announcement — but there’s much more work to be done.
Thank you,
John
Dr. John P. Holdren
Director, Office of Science and Technology Policy
The White House
Climate change is happening now
Climate Change Is Happening. How Much Worse It Gets Is Up To Us.
Yesterday we previewed the release of the third installment of the National Climate Assessment — the massive, periodic report on the science of climate change and its coming impacts in the United States. Congress passed and President George H.W. Bush signed the law mandating periodic assessments. The assessment was authored by 300 climate scientists and experts, and reviewed by the National Academy of Sciences.
Today, the report was released and the findings are grim. By CAP Action War Room
Climate Change Is Happening. How Much Worse It Gets Is Up To Us.
Yesterday we previewed the release of the third installment of the National Climate Assessment — the massive, periodic report on the science of climate change and its coming impacts in the United States. Congress passed and President George H.W. Bush signed the law mandating periodic assessments. The assessment was authored by 300 climate scientists and experts, and reviewed by the National Academy of Sciences.
Today, the report was released and the findings are grim. “Climate change is happening now. It’s not something in the future,” said Dr. Don Wuebbles, coordinating lead author of the report and University of Illinois atmospheric scientist. “It’s happening now, it’s actually happening quite rapidly … and the evidence clearly points to the reason we’re getting these changes is because of human activity, particularly the burning of fossil fuels.”
We’ve gone through the report (which has a very accessible and interactive web site) and media coverage of it to bring you three major scientific conclusions.
1. Climate change is man-made.
In the report, the authors are subdued in stating that the evidence for man-made climate change “continues to strengthen.” Given the fact that they are as sure of the fact that human causes of climate change as they are that cigarettes cause lung and heart disease, there’s not much more room for confidence. Natural factors may play some role, but the dramatic rise in global temperatures are predominantly due to human factors. The chart below from the Assessment demonstrates this:
CREDIT: 2014 National Climate Assessment
The black line traces global temperature changes going back to 1900. Natural factors — the shaded green area — explain some of the fluctuation. But only the combination of natural and human factors — the shaded blue area — explain all of the increase over the last three decades.
2. The effects of climate change are here and occurring all around us.
“Once considered an issue for a distant future,” the report says, climate change “has moved firmly into the present.” It then goes on to break down in great detail the destructive impacts that climate change is already having in the various regions of the United States. The table below offers a summary of the observed and projected regional impacts, which are all too familiar:
CREDIT: 2014 National Climate Assessment
These changes and the increasing damages they cause have huge economic consequences — to say nothing of the loss of life. A Center for American Progress analysis estimated that from 2011 to 2013 alone, the 34 most destructive weather events cost the United States $208 billion.
And that’s a big reason why the National Climate Assessment is so important: shining a light on the reality of climate change altering so much of our day-to-day lives. Climate change “interacts with, and in many cases exacerbates, the concerns we already have — concerns about the economy, concerns about the health of our children, about immigration, social justice, national security,” said Dr. Katharine Hayhoe, a Texas Tech University climate scientist and lead author of the report. “And that’s why we care about it, not because it’s some brand new issue that we add to the bottom of our list.”
3. We must act.
Indeed, no matter what the Republican climate deniers in Congress keep saying, we need to take big steps to reduce the carbon pollution our nation produces.
Climate Progress’s Joe Romm puts it another way: “The time to act was a long time ago when we were first warned by climate scientists, but continued inaction in the face of the vindication of those scientists and even graver warnings today, is beyond immoral.”
On June 2, the Environmental Protection Agency will likely propose its draft plan to limit carbon pollution from power plants – our largest domestic pollution source — which is an essential step. Rejecting the Keystone XL pipeline is another. And there are many more possibilities. Certainly having more members of the legislative branch who trust science would help.
BOTTOM LINE: The new National Climate Assessment has detailed the significant impacts climate change has on America, and warns that future impacts of climate change are “now unavoidable.” We have to adjust to a new normal that we created. It’s up to us how much worse it will get.
“Climate change is happening now. It’s not something in the future,” said Dr. Don Wuebbles, coordinating lead author of the report and University of Illinois atmospheric scientist. “It’s happening now, it’s actually happening quite rapidly … and the evidence clearly points to the reason we’re getting these changes is because of human activity, particularly the burning of fossil fuels.”
We’ve gone through the report (which has a very accessible and interactive web site) and media coverage of it to bring you three major scientific conclusions.
1. Climate change is man-made.
In the report, the authors are subdued in stating that the evidence for man-made climate change “continues to strengthen.” Given the fact that they are as sure of the fact that human causes of climate change as they are that cigarettes cause lung and heart disease, there’s not much more room for confidence. Natural factors may play some role, but the dramatic rise in global temperatures are predominantly due to human factors. The chart below from the Assessment demonstrates this:
CREDIT: 2014 National Climate Assessment
The black line traces global temperature changes going back to 1900. Natural factors — the shaded green area — explain some of the fluctuation. But only the combination of natural and human factors — the shaded blue area — explain all of the increase over the last three decades.
2. The effects of climate change are here and occurring all around us.
“Once considered an issue for a distant future,” the report says, climate change “has moved firmly into the present.” It then goes on to break down in great detail the destructive impacts that climate change is already having in the various regions of the United States. The table below offers a summary of the observed and projected regional impacts, which are all too familiar:
CREDIT: 2014 National Climate Assessment
These changes and the increasing damages they cause have huge economic consequences — to say nothing of the loss of life. A Center for American Progress analysis estimated that from 2011 to 2013 alone, the 34 most destructive weather events cost the United States $208 billion.
And that’s a big reason why the National Climate Assessment is so important: shining a light on the reality of climate change altering so much of our day-to-day lives. Climate change “interacts with, and in many cases exacerbates, the concerns we already have — concerns about the economy, concerns about the health of our children, about immigration, social justice, national security,” said Dr. Katharine Hayhoe, a Texas Tech University climate scientist and lead author of the report. “And that’s why we care about it, not because it’s some brand new issue that we add to the bottom of our list.”
3. We must act.
Indeed, no matter what the Republican climate deniers in Congress keep saying, we need to take big steps to reduce the carbon pollution our nation produces.
Climate Progress’s Joe Romm puts it another way: “The time to act was a long time ago when we were first warned by climate scientists, but continued inaction in the face of the vindication of those scientists and even graver warnings today, is beyond immoral.”
On June 2, the Environmental Protection Agency will likely propose its draft plan to limit carbon pollution from power plants – our largest domestic pollution source — which is an essential step. Rejecting the Keystone XL pipeline is another. And there are many more possibilities. Certainly having more members of the legislative branch who trust science would help.
BOTTOM LINE: The new National Climate Assessment has detailed the significant impacts climate change has on America, and warns that future impacts of climate change are “now unavoidable.” We have to adjust to a new normal that we created. It’s up to us how much worse it will get.
Moms who work at Walmart are fed up! And this week, in more than 20 cities across the country, they’re going on strike to protest the company’s retaliation against its employees who have spoken up about inequality.



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