Showing posts with label Standard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Standard. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Sen. John Cornyn on the Tea Party’s “impossible standard”


In an interview with Texas Monthly conducted in November but published Tuesday, Texas Sen. John Cornyn — who is now facing a primary challenge from the extremely right-wing Rep. Steve Stockman — complains that the Tea Party has created “an impossible standard” for Republicans to live up to.


Comparing the Republican Party’s current absolutism to the more open-armed approach advocated by Ronald Reagan, Cornyn told the Texas Monthly that “I don’t know how we got off on this track, where some people are welcome in our party and some people are not. Hence my reference to Ronald Reagan’s line, ‘What do you call someone who agrees with you eight times out of 10? An ally, not a 20 percent traitor.’ Well, we’re at a point where you can agree with someone 98 percent of the time, but they think of you as a 2 percent traitor, which is just an impossible standard.”





Expressing his disapproval for the RINO (Republican In Name Only) epithet popular among movement conservative circles, Cornyn said, “If I found someone who agreed with me nine times out of 10, I’d be working with them all I could. I wouldn’t be calling them names.”


Cornyn also took some shots at Tea Party-aligned activist groups like FreedomWorks, saying “there are several Washington, D.C.–based groups that want to cynically manipulate people for their own fundraising purposes.”


Read the whole interview here.


[h/t Talking Points Memo]





Salon.com



Sen. John Cornyn on the Tea Party’s “impossible standard”

Monday, October 21, 2013

Women Forced to Strip at Police Station While Being Filmed -- Officials Say Filming Is "Common Industry Standard"



"They were snickering at these women," says a lawyer for one of the women who was filmed without her knowledge.








 


Nearly two dozen women have reported that they were forced to strip in a Washington police station while being recorded and watched by their male jailers.


“We’ve got dozens of other people calling who had similar experiences in Puyallup [city jail]. We’re sorting through them right now,” Seattle Attorney James Egan told King 5 News.


“I was told I needed to take off all my garments and change into the uniform,” said one woman who requested anonymity.


She refused the order, noting the presence of four male guards and one male inmate.


“Basically I was harassed for not doing it and put back in the holding cell and made to stay there for about 12 hours.”


City officials in Puyallup have defended the practice, arguing that filming in jails is a “common industry standard.”


But law enforcement experts say filming inmates while changing and using the bathroom is “highly unusual and improper,” according to King 5 News.


“They had originally told me to change behind a curtain in a designated area. But when I questioned them, it’s like they took it as insubordination instead of me simply asking a question,” said another woman. “And they sent me into this holding cell to change instead.”


 


“They asked me, ‘Is that everything? I told them, well, I still had my undergarments on. And they said I needed to take off everything. … And then I was shown the videos, and it was absolutely horrifying and embarrassing,” the woman said. “Honestly, it’s embarrassing, I feel violated.”


Others allege officers sexually harassed them while they changed, according to Egan.


“They were snickering at these women,” Egan said. “Called one woman a squatter, asked [a woman with red hair] if she’s red downstairs too.”


h/t Gawker


 

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Women Forced to Strip at Police Station While Being Filmed -- Officials Say Filming Is "Common Industry Standard"

Friday, October 18, 2013

Kerry Claims Afghan Troop Deal Will Be ‘Same Standard’ as Japan, Korea



Kerry Claims Afghan Troop Deal Will Be ‘Same Standard’ as Japan, Korea


US Status of Forces Deals Actually Vary Wildly from Nation to Nation


by Jason Ditz, October 17, 2013




The US is still in the process of trying to get a Bilateral Security Agreement (BSA) in place to keep US troops in Afghanistan beyond 2014. As negotiations with the Afghan government continue to stall, Secretary of State John Kerry spurned questions about troop immunity, insisting that troops always operate under the same standard, and Afghanistan should expect no different from Japan or Korea in that regard.


Kerry’s comments sought to defer Afghan requests to maintain jurisdiction over US troops in the event of certain war crimes, while the US has insisted the troops retain full immunity, and was an effort to kill the debate by arguing that the pact was just standard boilerplate.


The comments were also flat out untrue, as US status of forces agreements vary wildly across the world, with jurisdiction different in almost every single pact, and full immunity is the exception, not the rule.


Indeed, Kerry’s comments were doubly wrong because the deals with Japan and South Korea actually both grant them some jurisdiction over US troops, and both nations have tried US troops in their own courts, the exact same standard the Karzai government has sought, and which Kerry has rejected.


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Kerry Claims Afghan Troop Deal Will Be ‘Same Standard’ as Japan, Korea

Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Florida Repeals Renewable Fuel Standard; Silly Senator, Corn is for Food!

Last week Florida Governor Rick Scott signed HB 4001, repealing the state’s Renewable Fuel Standard. This has researchers seeking handouts at the expense of everyone else in a tizzy.


For example, the Biotech Industry Organization (BIO) says Repeal of Florida’s Renewable Fuel Standard Will Stifle Innovation, Investment and Jobs.

“Florida’s repeal of its RFS sends a chilling message that companies developing advanced biofuel and other biotechnology innovations are unwelcome in the state,” said Brent Erickson, executive vice president of BIO’s Industrial & Environmental Section.

“Companies have invested more than $ 215 million in Florida over the past five years to develop commercial-scale advanced biofuel projects. These projects have generated nearly 1,000 high skill new jobs in the state,” Erickson continued. “Florida’s bioscience industry has monitored the state’s commitment to policies that drive investment and development of new industries. Florida’s biotech sector comprises more than 5,100 companies that employ more than 78,000 Floridians, contributing to the state’s job growth over the past decade.


I am all in favor of research, as long as taxpayers don’t have to pay for it. And mandated ethanol standards come at enormous cost.


Green Car News has additional details in Florida repeals law requiring 10% ethanol blend in gasoline

It looks like ethanol – especially when blended into gasoline – is facing some pushback. Florida has decided to repeal its Renewable Fuel Standard, which had required all gasoline sold in the state to be blended with nine-to-10 percent ethanol or other alternative fuels.

Florida Governor Rick Scott just signed into law HB4001, which repeals the state’s Renewable Fuel Standard as of July 1, 2013. The bill was passed by the Florida House and Senate in April. The Florida Renewable Fuel Standard Act took effect December 31, 2011 and required all gasoline sold by terminal suppliers, importers, blenders or wholesalers (i.e., those up the supply chain) to be blended. These parties were also required to submit a monthly report to the Department of Revenue on the numbers of gallons of blended and unblended gasoline sold. Retail gas stations had not been expressly prohibited by state law from selling or offering unblended gasoline, Green Car Congress reports.


In his signing statement, Scott called the state’s Renewable Fuel Standard, “a state mandate on Florida businesses that is duplication of the Federal Renewable Fuel Standard and inconsistent with the efforts to reduce the regulatory burdens that have helped Florida create over 330,000 new private sector jobs in the past two years.”


The state of Maine is going in a similar anti-ethanol direction. Legislators are concerned about the damaging impact ethanol blend going up to 15 percent in gasoline (E15) could have on engines and the environment. They approved a bill by more than a 3-to-1 margin that would ban ethanol blends in Maine, as long as two other nearby states do the same. State leaders also supported a resolution asking the government to ban E15 altogether.


Ethanol Debacle Heats Up


This Week in Energy reports Ethanol Debacle Heats Up.

This summer we can expect the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to set new targets for US ethanol use while the policy comes under massive criticism. The market has been unkind to the ethanol mandate, and we’re not sure how the EPA is going to now attempt to push through a higher blend ethanol in fuel—above the 10%/gallon, when ethanol supplies aren’t there.

So the new targets to be released this summer will require a bit of a re-think, and the EPA will have to decide how to resolve the issue, which could mean a lowering of targets or an elimination of them altogether.


Refiners and ethanol producers are up in arms over the mandate, which is already threatening to cause fuel shortages and higher prices for consumers—along with higher food prices thanks to the diversion of corn for the ethanol blend.


Of course, the beneficiaries of the EPA’s ethanol targets—primarily the corn-growing states—are hoping there won’t be any lowering of the requirements, but the market clearly sees things differently.


Those trading in Renewable Identification Markets (RINs)—otherwise known as ethanol credits—are also hoping the largesse of the forced mandate continues. The more difficult it becomes to blend low supplies of ethanol with gasoline, the more valuable these RINs become for traders. And the opposition to increasing this mandate from 10% is making the RIN market more vulnerable. For this year, it looks like refiners will be able to meet the ethanol requirements—with help from RIN credits—but next year looks impossible.


What will the EPA’s summer target be? No one’s quite sure yet, including the EPA, so it’s impossible to predict, but we’re inclined to think that the market will convince them that the planned 2014 target of 18.15 gallons of ethanol (up from this year’s 16.5 gallons) is unrealistic.



Silly Senator, Corn is For Food



Please play the video for a correct interpretation of what is happening and why. Link if video does not play: Silly Senator, Corn is for Food!.


Ethanol advocates claim that ethanol is a cheap, renewable energy source that reduces pollution and our dependence on foreign oil. It sounds too good to be true–and it is.


Video quote: “Oil prices are as high as they have ever been, if renewable fuels, biofuels were such a good deal, they would already be emerging without government subsidies.


Precisely!


Mike “Mish” Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com


Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis



Florida Repeals Renewable Fuel Standard; Silly Senator, Corn is for Food!