Society's Child
Morales said he is waiting to hear the results of Sunday's vote from rural areas, which is thought to be a stronghold for the country's first indigenous president.
"They don't like us much in the city, but the first results give me hope," he said.
His third term is set to end in 2020, but if the referendum finishes in his favor, he would be able to run for re-election, and potentially take his presidency to 2025.
All told, the Aliso Canyon leak thrust an estimated 96,000 metric tons of potent methane — not to mention benzene, nitrogen oxides, and other noxious substances — into the atmosphere over a period of months. So vast was the impact of the leak, it has been likened in impactful scope to BP's Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico.
California, however, isn't the only state dealing with mammoth methane leakage.
On Sunday evening, Bloomberg published an article entitled "The U.S. States Where Recession Is Already a Reality". The following is an excerpt from that article...
As economists size up the chances of the first nationwide slump since 2009, pockets of the country are already contracting. Four states — Alaska, North Dakota, West Virginia and Wyoming — are in a recession, and three others are at risk of prolonged declines, according to indexes of state economic performance tracked by Moody's Analytics.
Comment: Yup, the economy is not healthy:
- Financial experts agree this time is different! It is not 2008
- Investment analyst: A recession worse than 2008 is coming
- Financial collapse: A perfect storm
Hans von Spakovsky, a senior fellow at the conservative Heritage Foundation and a former Bush administration official, argued that Scalia's votes on some pending cases should be counted even after his Feb 13 death, reported Right Wing Watch.
The conservative legal activist said the late justice had already heard oral arguments in some cases before the court, including Friedrichs v. California Teachers Association, which could hobble public sector unions.
The girl was accompanied by her aunt who may have tipped her off to a condition known as"the munchies".
Normally, her actions could have earned her a "pioneer" or "hospitality" badge, but the organization didn't seem to support her.
"The Girl Scouts organization said they don't condone this, but it's not against the rules,"said the girl's aunt to KATU.
Yes, these are Girl Scout cookies being sold in front of a marijuana shop in SE Portland. Story #LiveOnK2 @ 11. pic.twitter.com/UhIflKLT5R
— Corry Young (@photocorry) February 21, 2016
A spokesperson from the Girl Scouts of Oregon and Southwest Washington said in a statement they recommend that a minor does not sell cookies outside a premises they cannot enter without being accompanied by an adult.
Still, we do have to admire her for thinking outside the (cookie) box.

IAEA fact-finding team leader Mike Weightman visits the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant on 27 May 2011 to assess tsunami damage.
Dr. Tetsunari Iida is the founder and executive director of the Institute for Sustainable Energy Policies (ISEP) in Japan.
As such, one might have expected a recent presentation he gave in the UK within the hallowed halls of the House of Commons, to have focused on Japan's capacity to replace the electricity once generated by its now mainly shuttered nuclear power plants, with renewable energy.

Saed Mutanus al-Khashoof, from the Christian village of Sadad but living in al-Zahra’a, killed in today’s terrorist explosions.
The explosions at a traffic light at al-Siteen Street in the al-Zahra neighborhood happened within minutes of each other, witnesses said. ...Witnesses said at least one of the two blasts was triggered by a suicide bomber driving a car.Al-Zahra'a has been repeatedly targeted by western-backed terrorists, with almost no condemnation from the same leaders who cried for Paris.
A follow-up bombing after an initial blast is a common terrorist tactic, which allows them to hit first responders, who rush to help victims....
Comment: 130 people died on a single day in Paris, prompting worldwide outrage, sympathy, military action, new laws, arrests, raids, and more. In coordinated terror attacks in Syria, this happened yesterday. But where is the outrage? Where is the support for official Damascus, for the Syrian people? Nowhere to be found - it's just another day in Syria... And who's to blame? The U.S., Western nations in general. Maybe that's why there is so little response. They don't want to look the devil in the eye, because they fear what they'll really see: themselves.
According to the Daily Beast, The bill's stated intent was to require police to obtain a search warrant from a judge in order to use a drone to search for criminal evidence. In fact, the original draft of Rep. Rick Becker's bill would have banned all weapons on police drones. Then Bruce Burkett of North Dakota Peace Officer's Association was allowed by the state house committee to amend HB 1328 and limit the prohibition only to lethal weapons. "Less than lethal" weapons like rubber bullets, pepper spray, tear gas, sound cannons, and Tasers are therefore permitted on police drones.
The term "less than lethal" is thrown around to make tasers, which have been responsible for hundreds of deaths since 2001, seem like they are okay to be deployed on infants. The reality is that "less than lethal" weapons are only slightly less lethal than the real thing. Now that these weapons will be put on drones, entire new safety concerns arise, such as accuracy and the simple issue of a drone falling into a crowd.
After being duped by the police lobby into passing a bill allowing cops to equip drones with weapons, Rep Becker is worried. He spoke up about police deploying these weapons when they aren't near the intended target. "When you're not on the ground, and you're making decisions, you're sort of separate," Becker said. "Depersonalized." One needs only look at the Middle East and the thousands of innocent women and children who've been slaughtered by US drones to imagine the grim reality of such legislation.
Comment: Who is standing up for citizen rights and liberties? Certainly not the politicians, the investors, nor the so-called protectors of the public! There is something so fundamentally wrong, in fact downright predatory, with the making of profits and the ultra-control agencies out-ranking the basic welfare and constitutional rights of the people. "Nothing to hide, nothing to fear"...couldn't be farther from the truth.
Marc Edwards is the Virginia Tech civil engineer and professor who helped expose the Flint water crisis, all while Governor Snyder was colluding to keep that information hidden, as shown by the governor's emails.
When interviewed in February by the Chronicle of Higher Education, Edwards said that both Michigan and Washington authorities knew they were poisoning residents with lead-contaminated water.














Comment: Uncle Sam is his name and dirty tricks is his game. The US government has just got to meddle in the affairs of every sovereign country on the planet.