California
California admits its climate plan enriches wealthy and impoverishes poor
At 300 pages, plus appendices and supporting supplies, California’s “Scoping Plan for Reaching Carbon Neutrality” shouldn’t be a light-weight learn. However it is likely to be an pleasing one in case you are a conservative or a California resident.
Buried among the many numerous plans to decarbonize the nation’s most populous state in an unrealistic time-frame is a tacit admission of which California native Jennifer Hernandez took be aware: Local weather change mitigation is a type of systemic racism, if you happen to imagine in that form of factor.
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On web page 125, the doc begins this admission by mentioning that on mixture, this plan will trigger California households to lose $600 million in earnings by means of 2035. Nonetheless, these losses is not going to be distributed evenly. Households making lower than $100,000 per yr will lose a complete of $4.1 billion in earnings, with the poor hit hardest. However residents making greater than $100,000 will acquire $3.5 million because of this decarbonization plan.
California’s black and Hispanic residents are disproportionately lower-income. Due to this fact, the report admits on web page 143:
As a result of greater than 60% of households within the race/ethnicity classes of Hispanic, Black alone, Native Hawaiian (HI) or Pacific Islander, American Indian or Alaskan Native, Different, and Two or Extra make lower than $100,000 per yr, these populations usually are more likely to expertise diminished earnings. White and Asian households will usually expertise each elevated and decreased earnings as a result of these households are distributed extra evenly throughout all 4 earnings teams.
Briefly, this multidecade planning doc admits that local weather change mitigation plans could have what liberals prefer to name a “disparate affect” on nonwhite Californians, and a really unfavourable affect at that. This, in flip, signifies that local weather motion is an instance of what they prefer to name “systemic racism” — once more, if you happen to imagine in such issues. And the Democrats who run California most actually declare to do.
Local weather fanaticism is nothing new in California. However the admission that local weather insurance policies have such trade-offs — on this case, worsening systemic racism by disproportionately harming the poor, black, and brown — is certainly new. And the much-vaunted local weather plan has no plan in any respect to rectify this crime towards “fairness.”
Over time, California has chosen to subordinate its financial system to fever goals in regards to the world ending except the financial system is quickly decarbonized. And you’ll perceive the millenarian pondering: If the world actually is about to finish, then who cares in regards to the poor? They will all be lifeless anyway, like the remainder of us, except instant local weather motion is taken.
However on condition that this is not the fact, and that California’s ruling Democrats know that it’s not the fact, they appear to have trapped themselves between the local weather alarmism of their political base and what’s left of their social gathering’s acknowledged (maybe feigned) concern for lower-income and nonwhite households. Are they prepared to persist in one thing they themselves outline as structural racism, simply to placate their environmental extremist base?
The price of residing in California is excessive by selection, together with the selection to overpay for electrical energy and gasoline out of concern that the world will finish in any other case. However now, the state’s inexperienced paperwork has walked proper as much as the road of admitting that this selection creates main disadvantages for individuals on the backside of the Left’s sufferer hierarchy, to the good thing about the wealthiest and whitest segments of the inhabitants. In different phrases, their environmentalism is only one extra occasion of systemic racism.
Possibly they may all use just a few variety, fairness, and inclusion trainings to reeducate them.
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California
What California city has the best weather for you? Take our quiz
California has plenty of options when it comes to finding a place with your preferred weather. If you like cool weather, some cities spend nearly the entire year below 70 degrees. If you hate the rain, there are locations that average just a few inches per year.
The Chronicle gathered data about temperature, precipitation, air quality and extreme weather for 61 places across California, including the 20 most populous cities with data available. In total, 53 of the state’s 58 counties are represented in the analysis.
While there may not be a perfect match with everything you’re looking for, this quiz will help pinpoint a place that gets close.
California
California woman dies from Fresno County's first human case of rabies in more than 30 years
A California woman died of rabies after allegedly being bitten by a bat in her classroom, according to Fresno County health officials.
The woman, later identified as Leah Seneng, 60, marks the first human case of rabies in Fresno County since 1992.
“In general, rabies is a disease that affects the brain, and it is very rare. But when it develops, it can cause very serious consequences,” said Dr. Trnidad Solis, Fresno County Health Department’s deputy health officer. “It’s transmitted through saliva; it is not airborne.”
RABIES PATIENT BECOMES FIRST FATAL CASE IN US AFTER POST-EXPOSURE TREATMENT, REPORT SAYS
Seneng, who was an art teacher at Bryant Middle School in Dos Palos, was bitten by the bat when she was attempting to rescue it in her classroom, local outlet ABC30 reported.
She first came into contact with the bat in October, but did not display symptoms until approximately a month later, according to Fresno County health officials. She was admitted to the hospital and died four days later.
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“The most frequent route of transmission is through the bite of an animal that has rabies. With rabies, unfortunately, there is no cure. So, when symptoms develop, there is no treatment, and often when it develops, it is often fatal. So we want the public to know that prevention is key to preventing rabies infection,” Solis said.
Fresno County officials do not believe there is a threat to public health at this time, but are working with the Merced County Health Department to identify any other possible exposures and administer vaccines.
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Seneng’s coworkers have set up a GoFundMe account to assist her family during this time.
California
Another batch of raw milk from a trendy California brand just tested positive for bird flu
- Two batches of raw milk from a trendy California brand have tested positive for bird flu this week.
- Bird flu has been spreading rapidly among cattle in the US.
- Experts say drinking raw milk is dangerous, and can cause food poisoning.
Another batch of raw milk just tested positive for bird flu in California.
Last Sunday, Fresno-based Raw Farm voluntarily recalled a first batch of cream top whole raw milk with a “best by” date of November 27. By Wednesday, the California Department of Public Health announced that a second batch of Raw Farm cream top, with a “best by” date of December 7 had also tested positive for bird flu, based on retail sampling.
“We’re not making a big deal about it, because it’s not a big deal,” Kaleigh Stanziani, Raw Farm’s vice president of marketing, said in a short video posted on YouTube after the farm’s first voluntary recall was announced earlier this week.
She said there had only been an indication that there might be a “trace element of something possible,” emphasizing that there had been no reported illnesses of Raw Farms cows or positive tests from the cattle.
Raw Farm owner Mark McAfee later told the LA Times that the California Department of Food and Agriculture had requested that his company “hold delivery of further products” until Friday, after conducting thorough testing of two Raw Farms and one creamery on Wednesday. (McAfee could not immediately be reached for comment by Business Insider during the Thanksgiving holiday.)
Raw milk may be helping bird flu spread — but not in the way you might think
Scientists suspect that cross-contamination of raw milk between animals may be one reason the H5N1 virus is spreading rapidly among cows in the US — and could even contribute to the human spread of the virus. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cautions that dairy workers might be able to contract bird flu by infected raw milk splashed into their eyes.
There is no definitive evidence yet that humans can get bird flu from drinking contaminated raw milk. Instead, health authorities generally recommend avoiding raw milk because of other serious health risks, including food poisoning with bacteria like Salmonella, E.coli, or Listeria.
There are no known health benefits of drinking raw milk. Instead, all evidence suggests that pasteurized milk is just as nutritious, and is safer to consume.
Still, raw milk has become a trendy product among some influencers. Gwenyth Paltrow says she has it in her coffee in the morning.
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., President-elect Trump’s pick for Health and Human Services secretary, says he wants the US Food and Drug Administration to stop its “war” against raw milk.
Over the summer, “Carnivore MD” Paul Saladino released a raw milk smoothie in partnership with the elite Los Angeles health foods store Erewhon featuring unpasteurized (raw) kefir from Raw Farms, and powdered beef organs.
California has some of the loosest rules around raw milk in the country; it’s generally fine for California retailers like health foods stores and grocers to sell it, raw milk products just can’t be transported across state lines, per FDA rules.
Michael Payne, a researcher at the Western Institute of Food Safety and Security, told The Guardian that people consuming Dr. Paul’s $19 smoothie were “playing Russian roulette with their health,” and ignoring pasteurization, “the single most important food safety firewall in history.”
California dairy farms have been seeing an uptick in bird flu cases since August. The state has reported 29 confirmed human cases of bird flu, and all but one of those was sourced back to cows.
Last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported the first confirmed case of bird flu in a California child from Alameda County. The child had no known contact with infected farm animals, but may have been exposed to wild birds, the California health department said in a statement.
The child had mild symptoms and is recovering well after receiving antiviral drugs.
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