This Is Fine

And there will be no fines from the state agency that is supposed to regulate pollution. Because the GOP political apparatus has steadily starved that agency of funding and removed most of their enforcement mechanisms.
This, in particular, is egregious

TCEQ typically allows companies that emit excess pollutants to cite an “affirmative defense” and argue that the emissions were beyond their control because of unforeseeable circumstances. The agency says it “carefully considers the facts” in deciding whether excess emissions were unavoidable.

That’s bullshit. Any excess beyond the extremely lenient limits should be automatically fined. They chose to release. They also chose not to harden their equipment against extreme temperatures. The why shouldn’t matter.

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97% accuracy at what? “Yes, that’s a humanoid!”?

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:100:
:dart:

Agree x 1023%.

I’ve always thought the Holy Trinity of Texas Capitalism consists of football, the oil industry–now more generally the energy industry, and “cowboy-ism” (which itself can be broken down into the genocide of indigenous peoples, land-grabbin’ and runnin’ cattle, driven by greed and carnivory). I digress.

The Texas Energy Industry has had our state gummint in regulatory capture purt-near since Spindletop.

That same TCEQ affirmative defense bs “works” (<–super gigantic sarcastic quotes) for the Texas nuclear power industry… the South Texas Project in Matagorda Bay comes to mind: too hot and that reservoir water’s hot and evaporating fast? too cold and the pipes all freeze? aw HeCk, wHo CoULdA prrrrDiCtEd that?!?

In a better world, yes.

Here and now, with our Texas Freedom® [to litigate to enforce environmental regs] (this being what so many of our pro-environment groups end up having to do; the courts here as you doubtless know are a very mixed bag when it comes to environmental justice), and your well-spotted defunding of various gummint enforcement entities duly constituted to penalize environmental offenders in our Lone Star State)… it’s all about the benjamins.

You and I, dear Kii, are merely collateral damage in the way.

Yee-fuckin’-ha.

“A few early farmers conserved the soil - George Washington was one - but they were stray oddities. A few pioneers had naturalistic interests, but any revelation of such interests branded the holder of them as being peculiar or even undemocratic. The mass rule then, as now, was: Conform and be dull.”

J. Frank Dobie,
The Voice of the Coyote

howling night sky GIF by hoppip

ETA:
added singing coyote

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According to the latest version of the bill (as of late May), any Texas resident with a large solar or wind system who wants to connect to the grid would need a permit. The lengthy permitting process requires a public meeting to allow comments, multiple surveys and assessments, and a website with information about the project.

SB 624 also requires that wind turbines be placed a whole 3,000 feet — more than half a mile — away from the property line, except with the permission of neighboring property owners.

“Texas #SB624 would turn all of Texas into an HOA where your neighbors are now going to be able to tell you what you can and can’t do on your own property,” tweeted Rhodes.

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Can’t say I’m crying about this. Have you seen the US Mil budget??

Me thinks some republican is crying and moaning for more funding for his or her state.

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The oceans–they are big.
The plankton–very small.
The changes in color are visible from space.

This is… “fine.” /s

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https://archive.is/LV8Hc

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Jesus wept.

I want to emphasize that this trooper–this whistleblower–did a good thing, calling this out.

Texas troopers employed by Greg Abbott’s border patrol initiative were instructed to push children into the Rio Grande and deny migrants water in extreme heat, according to emails sent by a state employee.

A trooper-medic from the state’s department of public safety expressed concern over “inhumane” actions towards migrants in a 3 July email to supervisors and reveals other unreported incidents involving migrants, the Houston Chronicle first reported.

The email, which the Guardian independently reviewed, gives a report of weekly events from 24 June to 1 July, detailing several cases of migrants being caught or injured by barbed wire in Eagles Pass, a Texas city along the US border with Mexico.

In the email, the trooper calls for several policy changes to prevent further injury to migrants, including removing barrels wrapped in razor wire in the river.

“The wire and barrels in the river needs to be taken out as this is nothing but a in humane trap in high water and low visibility,” the trooper wrote.

The trooper also told officials to reverse orders to withhold water from migrants.

“Due to the extreme heat, the order to not give people water needs to be immediately reversed as well,” the trooper wrote, the Chronicle reported.

The trooper added: “I believe we have stepped over a line into the inhumane.”

In one instance on 30 June, the trooper treated a four-year-old girl who passed out from heat exhaustion after she attempted to pass through the wire amid 100F (nearly 38C) conditions. Texas national guard soldiers pushed her and her group back towards Mexico.

The same day, a pregnant woman was treated after troopers found her caught in the wire and in extreme pain. The woman was having a miscarriage, and emergency responders took her to a hospital.

One teenager also broke his leg trying to avoid the wire and had to be carried by his father.

In a separate case on 25 June, troopers discovered a group of 120 people along a fence on the river, the trooper wrote. The group, including small children and infants who were nursing, were exhausted and hungry. But a commanding officer ordered troopers to “push the people back into the water to go to Mexico”, the trooper wrote in an email.

Troopers ultimately refused their supervisors’ orders given “the very real potential of exhausted people drowning”. They expressed their concerns to the commanding officer but were told to “tell [the migrants] to go to Mexico and get into our vehicle and leave,” the trooper wrote. The trooper wrote that other border patrol employees provided care to migrants after they left.

“I believe we a have stepped over a line into the in humane. We need to operate it correctly in the eyes of God,” the trooper wrote in the email. “We need to recognize that these are people who are made in the image of God and need to be treated as such.”

The trooper’s email added that wire running along the river “forces people to cross in other areas that are deeper and not as safe for people carrying kids and bags”.

The trooper’s email also reveals additional drownings in the Rio Grande that were not reported. On 1 July, a mother and one of her two children drowned while crossing the river as federal border patrol agents saw the family struggling. The mother and one child were taken from the water, and they were pronounced dead after being brought to a hospital by emergency responders. The second child was never found, the trooper emailed…

Thank you, whistleblower human.
:pray:t5:

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Meanwhile, two days later…

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People with anthrax aren’t infectious, unless you eat them.

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… this is not actually about global warming but rather a sort of failed geo-engineering project

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Move over Murderwasp…

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I stopped there 10 or so years ago just to see it, pretty weird place. Remains of a lot of dead fish and strange substances on the ground made it seem like a place headed nowhere good. Sucks that efforts to save it or to remediate ecological damage from its ongoing demise have apparently been fruitless. :disappointed:

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… they would have to re-route the Colorado River through it (again) or else dig a canal to the Gulf of California — either way, not a conventionally pro-environment sort of project :evergreen_tree: :deer: :mountain:

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Yup. The impact would probably be so huge that it would make little difference if they went all project plowshare to dig the trenches.

There is a tiny ray of hope on the horizon, though. Not for the Salton sea as such, but for the rest.

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