New paper finds risks of natural disasters going down (1970-2019) for both people and property (even as financial risks increase with more wealth) sciencedirect.com/science/articl…
It also has a nice one-paragraph summary of most recent IPCC conclusions on "natural hazards (not disasters)"
A nice addition to the magnum opus literature of mine published earlier this year:
2020 Atlantic hurricane season ends today
Here are updated CONUS normalized losses through 2020
2020 ranks 15th of 121 years
Based on @JessicaWeinkle et al nature.com/articles/s4189…
🧵Allow me to debunk this proposal in the @WSJ to hamstring Pres Biden re-entry into Paris Climate Agreement
The proposal➡️ To prevent the Paris Climate Accord from taking on undue power, President Trump should let the Senate reject it, writes wsj.com/articles/how-t… via @WSJ
Pres Trump cannot submit Paris Agreement to the Senate for ratification because it is not a treaty, but instead an "executive agreement made pursuant to a treaty"
Treaty= Framework Convention on Climate Change (ratified Oct 1992 by U.S. Senate at request of Pres GHW Bush)
Upon entering the Paris Agreement in 2015, Pres Obama defined it as an "executive agreement"
Thoughtful thread argument by @Scienceofsport (as usual) on gender categorization issues in sport
But for me, issues related to female athletes w/ unique biology have no place in debates over trans athletes Who change categories — this always needs to be stated up front
By this metric, who are the most valued people on my campus?
"Student-athletes are tested six days each week – all but their mandatory day off – and sometimes get tested twice in a day" buffzone.com/2020/11/21/how…
College football is important in American culture & as a business
I used to think its contradictions could be reconciled with university missions
No longer
Football can associate w/ universities but should no longer pursue the fiction of being a part of the university mission
One problem in the communication of climate science is that "experts climate communicators" make quick judgments for reporters on deadline on papers they have not read & data they have not analyzed and then, when paper is shown to be fatally flawed, defend their original comments
Example: A scientist in this @capitalweather@washingtonpost article cites hurricanes Michael (2018) and Ike (2008) to emphasize the results of the paper & both of these storms decayed FASTER than the average rate reported in study