“Groups pointed to pollution from wastewater, leaking septic systems and fertilizer runoff for the algal outbreaks and seagrass loss. … ‘It’s time for EPA to step in and enforce the Clean Water Act for the sake of the manatees,’ [an attorney] said.” [1/2] cbsnews.com/news/manatee-d…
“[SCOTUS has] agreed to use a long-running Idaho fight to consider curbing the reach of the Clean Water Act. …
The justices … will hear an appeal [in] a 15-year-old battle to build a house on land that federal regulators say is protected wetlands.” [2/?] news.bloomberglaw.com/environment-an…
Whether through wholesale demolition by way of inventions such as the ‘major questions doctrine’ or by a piecemeal approach, the regulatory state that has haltingly guarded the environment for 50 yrs looks to soon be kaput—just in time to hobble the fight against climate change.
Oh, hey: my brother drove my mom home crying from the hospital last week, after she left my dad’s side overnight for the first time in 10 years of cancer treatments. With my father stuck in triage all night awaiting a procedure, overcrowding meant she couldn’t stay.
I’m unsure why it makes sense that the AG of Va. _can_ fire the university counsel at U-Va., but we can make a good guess as to why he _has_: retribution for his role, while on a leave of absence from C’ville, as chief investigator for the 1/6 committee. cavalierdaily.com/article/2022/0…
“But they’re not Trumpy,” the narrative went. “They’re laser focused on what suburban moms care about.”
I feel pretty certain that promoting the full closure of schools is a minority position. National unions don’t support it; most systems haven’t chosen it.
But in systems where teachers are out sick with active infections, and students are out for either the same reason or …
… parents and caretakers _choose_ to keep a child out rather than risk their exposure, why are we play-acting at having a normal educational environment? What point is served in that circumstance?
We had better hope, for the sakes of the reputations of pundits who swear that COVID hardly affects children, that America doesn’t see a steep increase in post-COVID chronic illnesses in 20 years.
“New research shows that COVID-recovered youth face higher risk of developing diabetes, but in better news, Congress has moved to make insulin affordable at low cost.”
(*producer whispers into earpiece*)
“I’m being told that Congress has not, in fact, made insulin affordable.”
(To be clear: I was being drily sarcastic with the bit about pundits, who’ve been known to skate for being grievously wrong about … everything, really.)
I’m gonna be back to driving to Atlanta to see my folks, as if I were 19 and between semesters at college, at least until my toddler can get vaxxed — hm?
I’m not seething with annoyance across multiple dimensions right now; you are.
Fun story: today I took my dad—who’s 80 and immunocompromised with leukemia—to an ER a stone’s throw from the CDC.
We took one look beyond the sliding doors — at two waiting rooms packed to the gills, standing room only with many coughing, and others unmasked — and left.