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UglyGreed

(7,661 posts)
Fri Nov 20, 2015, 10:52 AM Nov 2015

Why Bernie Sanders Was Right To Link Climate Change To National Security

Friday’s terrorist attacks have made the Paris climate talks “even more” important now, according to Christiana Figueres, head of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

And on Sunday, Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders elaborated on why climate change remains “the biggest national security threat facing the United States,” after remarks he made in Saturday’s Democratic debate were criticized by people who apparently don’t understand the existential nature the climate threat poses to this country and the world.

“Sorry, conservatives: when President Obama describes climate change as the greatest threat we face, he’s exactly right,” as Paul Krugman explains in his latest New York Times op-ed. “Terrorism can’t and won’t destroy our civilization, but global warming could and might.”

http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2015/11/16/3722355/bernie-sanders-climate-change-national-security-paris-climate-talks/

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Why Bernie Sanders Was Right To Link Climate Change To National Security (Original Post) UglyGreed Nov 2015 OP
Syria: Climate Change, Drought and Social Unrest UglyGreed Nov 2015 #1
All of the fear-mongering about refugees, ISIS, immigration, the border - Ron Green Nov 2015 #2
the DoD UglyGreed Nov 2015 #3
Kicked and recommended. Uncle Joe Nov 2015 #4
N/P UglyGreed Nov 2015 #5
K & R LWolf Nov 2015 #6
K & R. Truth. appalachiablue Nov 2015 #7
K&R And it can be only be addressed individually until the ignorant masses awake. If ever. raouldukelives Nov 2015 #8

UglyGreed

(7,661 posts)
1. Syria: Climate Change, Drought and Social Unrest
Fri Nov 20, 2015, 11:06 AM
Nov 2015

Syria’s current social unrest is, in the most direct sense, a reaction to a brutal and out-of-touch regime and a response to the political wave of change that began in Tunisia early last year. However, that’s not the whole story. The past few years have seen a number of significant social, economic, environmental and climatic changes in Syria that have eroded the social contract between citizen and government in the country, have strengthened the case for the opposition movement, and irreparably damaged the legitimacy of the al-Assad regime. If the international community, and future policy-makers in Syria, are to address and resolve the drivers of unrest in the country, these changes will have to be better explored and exposed.
Out of the blue?
International pundits characterized the Syrian uprising as an “out of the blue” case in the Middle East – one that they didn’t see coming. Many analysts, right up to a few days prior to the first protests, predicted that Syria under al-Assad was “immune to the Arab Spring.” However, the seeds of social unrest were right there under the surface, if one looked closely. And not only were they there, they had been reported on, but largely ignored, in a number of forms.

Water shortages, crop-failure and displacement
From 2006-2011, up to 60% of Syria’s land experienced, in the terms of one expert, “the worst long-term drought and most severe set of crop failures since agricultural civilizations began in the Fertile Crescent many millennia ago.” According to a special case study from last year’s Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction (GAR) of the most vulnerable Syrians dependent on agriculture, particularly in the northeast governorate of Hassakeh (but also in the south), “nearly 75 percent … suffered total crop failure.” Herders in the northeast lost around 85% of their livestock, affecting 1.3 million people.
The human and economic costs are enormous. In 2009, the UN and IFRC reported that over 800,000 Syrians had lost their entire livelihood as a result of the droughts. By 2011, the aforementioned GAR report estimated that the number of Syrians who were left extremely “food insecure” by the droughts sat at about one million. The number of people driven into extreme poverty is even worse, with a UN report from last year estimating two to three million people affected.
This has led to a massive exodus of farmers, herders and agriculturally-dependent rural families from the countryside to the cities. Last January, it was reported that crop failures (particularly the Halaby pepper) just in the farming villages around the city of Aleppo, had led “200,000 rural villagers to leave for the cities.” In October 2010, the New York Times highlighted a UN estimate that 50,000 families migrated from rural areas just that year, “on top of the hundreds of thousands of people who fled in earlier years.” In context of Syrian cities coping with influxes of Iraqi refugees since the U.S. invasion in 2003, this has placed additional strains and tensions on an already stressed and disenfranchised population.

http://thinkprogress.org/climate/2012/03/03/437051/syria-climate-change-drought-social-unrest/

Ron Green

(9,823 posts)
2. All of the fear-mongering about refugees, ISIS, immigration, the border -
Fri Nov 20, 2015, 01:51 PM
Nov 2015

it gives talk radio the option to always laugh at anyone concerned about the climate.

raouldukelives

(5,178 posts)
8. K&R And it can be only be addressed individually until the ignorant masses awake. If ever.
Sat Nov 21, 2015, 09:24 AM
Nov 2015

Just like slavery. Some refused to profit from causing suffering to others and thanks to them, things changed for the better. We face the same choice today. Live off the assured suffering of others or work for a better world.

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