Tag Archives: Supply chain

do you speak for the trees?


Português | Español | Deutsch | [+]“The loss of biodiversity is the only truly irreversible global environmental change
the Earth faces today.”
– Biologists Rodolfo Dirzo and Peter Ravencarmen –Walking through the Amazon, we encounter more species of trees in a 30-minute time period than we would if we walked across the entire continent of North America. There is simply no other place like it anywhere. Today we are asking for your financial commitment to protect this biodiverse ecosystem because it is under threat.It’s more than just trees that are at stake – the Amazon is home to over 2.5 million insect species, tens of thousands of plants, and 2,000 birds and mammals. To date, at least 40,000 plant species, 2,200 fish, 1,294 birds, 427 mammals, 428 amphibians, and 378 reptiles have been scientifically classified in this region. And there are thousands more that have yetto be formally documented, along with myriads we have yet to evenencounter.But resource extraction and the resulting deforestation is destroying the biodiversity of the Amazon and threatening to wipe out countless species. Amazon Watch works to prevent expansion of oil drilling and industrial development throughout this region. Such projects always begin with the creation of roads, whether the industrial expansion is from oil drilling in Yasuni National Park in Ecuador or mega-dams in the Brazilian Amazon. Roads enable access to untouched areas, bringing massive deforestation and more threats to Amazonian cultures. In fact, 95 percent of deforestation in the Amazon occurs on land less than five kilometers from a road.

That’s why our work to delay, disrupt and ultimately stop the expansion of these projects must grow to meet the increasing threats to the Amazon. In the last forty years we have lost ONE HALF of the world’s wildlife! That staggering fact should be a wake-up call for us all. How can we fail to act when our planet is in such great peril? Please join Amazon Watch and contribute today to protect the richest source of the remaining life on our planet.

Thank you!


Branden Barber
Engagement Director

The Last Place on Earth


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Honoring Our Veterans


Honoring Our Veterans

Earlier today, Vice President Joe Biden visited Arlington National Cemetery and took part in a ceremony to honor America’s veterans.

After laying a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns, he delivered remarks in which he thanked our nation’s veterans for their service to bravely and faithfully protect our freedom.

The Vice President also sent a message to the White House email list this afternoon, in which he explained that “it’s our sacred obligation” to care for our troops not only when they go to war, but also when they return home.

Read the Vice President’s full email here — and take a moment to thank America’s troops.

Watch the President's full remarks here.

Vice President Joe Biden delivers remarks on Veterans Day, in the Memorial Amphitheater at Arlington National Cemetery, Nov. 11, 2014. (Official White House Photo by David Lienemann)

Chart of the Week: The Progress We’ve Made on Ending Veteran Homelessness

Here’s a look at where we stand in our efforts to eliminate veteran homelessness.

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President Obama Heads to Beijing, Kicking Off Trip to Asia and Australia

Over the weekend, President Obama headed to Beijing to kick off his sixth trip to Asia as President — and his second trip to Asia this year.

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A Free and Open Internet: What You Need to Know About Net Neutrality

Here are some answers to key questions about net neutrality and what the President is doing to ensure a free and open Internet.

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Ratcheting Up The Repeal Threat


By

The Latest Conservative Attempt To Sabotage Obamacare Just Got A Lot More Serious

In a surprise move late last week, the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case of King v. Burwell, a lawsuit seeking to strip premium tax credits from people living in states with a federally-operated insurance marketplace. If the lawsuit, which employs an overt misreading of the Affordable Care Act, is successful, it would hike premiums by triple digits and make health coverage unaffordable for millions of Americans. We have written about the case before, when a panel of the Fourth Circuit Courts of Appeals ruled on it and unanimously upheld the law. But that wasn’t enough for at least four Justices, who now think it worthwhile that the case be argued in front of the nation’s highest court.

Make no mistake, the lawsuit is a strategic attempt at repeal by another name by ideological conservatives. Here are five key things to keep in mind about it:

1. The Affordable Care Act is working. Millions of people have the peace of mind of knowing they have quality, affordable coverage when they need it most. Thanks to the ACA, 10.3 million people now have health care who did not have it before. That includes 7.1 million people who are enrolled in state and federal marketplaces and currently paying their premiums.

2. Nothing has changed as a result of the Supreme Court’s decision. This lawsuit will not stop people from choosing health care that works for them, with access to the financial assistance available, when open enrollment begins November 15. Consumers should be confident that financial help will be available for them to help make health coverage more affordable. In an event today at the Center for American Progress, Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Matthews Burwell reassured that “open enrollment this year will be a positive experience for the consumer.”

3. The law is clear. Those challenging the law cherry pick a single clause in the law’s text where it appears to limit the subsidies to individuals who obtain insurance through “an Exchange established by the State” — and not the federal exchange (which operates in 36 states). They ignore the entire intent of the law, which was to provide premium tax credits for anyone eligible, regardless if they lived in a state with its own marketplace or a federal marketplace. Indeed, in the ruling of the Fourth Circuit, Judge Roger Gregory quoted a longstanding legal doctrine, writing, “We ‘will not usurp an agency’s interpretive authority by supplanting its construction with our own.’ ” The authors of the law also have written that “none of us contemplated that the bill as enacted could be misconstrued” as the King lawsuit attempts to do. We are confident the Supreme Court will agree.

4. This is an attempt at repeal by another name. This lawsuit is unquestionably a part of a wider effort to try to undermine and repeal the Affordable Care Act. The lead plaintiff in a similar case, Jacqueline Halbig, was an appointee in the George W. Bush administration. Another plaintiff in the Halbig case, Sarah Rumpf, described herself as a “Republican operative .”

5. Repealing the tax credits would make insurance inaccessible for millions of Americans and could mean the difference between life and death. Of the 5.4 million people enrolled in the federal marketplaces, 87 percent picked a plan using federal tax credits, lowering the amount of what they paid for their monthly premium from $346 to $82, on average. Without the tax credits, these people would be paying an average of $264 more per month, a 322 percent increase. The Rand Corporation modeled what would happen without subsidies and found that “in scenarios in which the tax credits are eliminated, our model predicts a near ‘death spiral,’ with very sharp premium increases and drastic declines in individual market enrollment.” It is no exaggeration to say that this decline in enrollment could cost some people their lives.

On the surface, the case presents an all or nothing choice for the Court’s conservatives. Either they reverse the Fourth Circuit decision that did not defund the law and hand a sweeping victory to conservatives who oppose the Affordable Care Act; or they affirm the court’s decision, earning the gratitude of the people who will die without a fully operational law and the scorn of the law’s opponents. ThinkProgress Justice editor Ian Millhiser writes that there is also potentially a third way that could placate conservative and save the ACA at the same time.

BOTTOM LINE: Despite the unexpected news that the Supreme Court has agreed to hear King v. Burwell, nothing has changed: financial assistance is available to consumers and open enrollment will proceed starting November 15. We trust that when the Supreme Court does make its decision, common sense and decades of legal precedent will prevail.

The President wants you to see this:


 President Obama asked the FCC to put in place strong rules to protect the Internet.

Every day, the Internet unlocks countless possibilities for creation and innovation. And one reason it’s been so successful is a level playing field: Most service providers have traditionally treated all Internet traffic equally.

That’s the principle of “net neutrality.” It’s an idea that says an entrepreneur’s fledgling company should have the same chance to succeed as established corporations, and access to a high school student’s blog shouldn’t be unfairly slowed down to make way for advertisers with more money.

As the FCC considers new rules, we simply can’t take that principle for granted.

Hear directly from President Obama why he supports net neutrality, and what that means for you. Then pass this message on to anyone who cares about the future of the Internet.

 

Watch this important message from President Obama.

http://www.whitehouse.gov/net-neutrality