Thursday, July 2, 2020

Sign Up for Eater Houston’s Newsletter

Sign Up for Eater Houston’s Newsletter https://houston.eater.com/2017/4/5/15192424/eater-houston-restaurant-newsletter Julie Soefer Photography

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By: Claire Cahoon
Title: Sign Up for Eater Houston’s Newsletter
Sourced From: houston.eater.com/2017/4/5/15192424/eater-houston-restaurant-newsletter
Published Date: Wed, 01 Jul 2020 18:08:02 +0000

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Sign Up for Eater Houston’s Newsletter

Sign Up for Eater Houston’s Newsletter https://houston.eater.com/2017/4/5/15192424/eater-houston-restaurant-newsletter Julie Soefer Photography

All the essential food and restaurant intel, in your inbox

Do you want to be the first to know the latest Houston restaurant intel? Sign up for our redesigned newsletter — now optimized for mobile! — and receive the most essential news, maps, and guides every week. Just enter your email address below.

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Can’t get enough of Eater? Check out our other newsletters for more email goodness:

  • Eater.com’s daily roundup of the latest food and restaurant intel on a national and global scale
  • Editor-in-chief Amanda Kludt's favorite news and stories from Eater and beyond each week
  • And newsletters from all the rest of of our 25 local city sites


By: Claire Cahoon
Title: Sign Up for Eater Houston’s Newsletter
Sourced From: houston.eater.com/2017/4/5/15192424/eater-houston-restaurant-newsletter
Published Date: Wed, 01 Jul 2020 18:08:02 +0000

Southeast Forklifts of Houston - Used Forklift Equipment Sales
2121 East Freeway
Baytown,TX,77521
(281) 393-7202
#Forklifts #Houston #Rentals #Service #Sales #UsedForklifts


Southeast Forklifts of Houston - Used Forklift Equipment Sales, by fuseology

Read More

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California’s Spiking Coronavirus Cases

California’s Spiking Coronavirus Cases https://legal-planet.org/2020/07/01/whats-behind-californias-coronavirus-upsurge/

The number of reported COVID-19 cases in California has risen dramatically.  What’s going on, and what should be done about it? The situation has changed so rapidly that I’ve had to rewrite this story repeatedly since I began work on it last week.

Early Last Week

When I started work on the story a week ago, state public health  officials attributed the problem to increased testing rather than a resurgence of the disease.  That was probably true for at least part of the early upsurge in cases, because California actually had expanded testing rapidly.

In general, the raw number of cases is an ambiguous signal about the spread of the disease.  It’s not like we were taking a random sample of the entire population before and now we’re just taking a bigger random sample.   Over time, three things change: the number of tests, a different group of people tested, and the actual rate of infection.

As of a week ago, state officials argued that other factors were more important than the case count:

“Officials are closely monitoring two metrics: the positivity rate, which is the proportion of people who have tested positive out of all those who have been tested, and the daily number of hospitalizations. A rise in the former could indicate an uptick in community transmission that’s taking place separately from increased testing.”

At that time, officials suggested the positivity rate was declining, so that the increased number of cases was nothing to worry about.

Late Last Week

By June 25, according to the Johns Hopkins website,  the positivity rate in California had gone from 4.6% to 5.6%.  Hospitalization and ICU rates are lagging indicators because of the delay between infection and hospitalization, and then between hospitalization and ICU care.  By June 25, however, there were also  signs of an uptick in hospitalization.  According to the SF Chronicle, public health experts at Berkeley were concerned at that point about the increase and said “[increased] testing alone is insufficient to account for the increase in the number of cases.”

The Governor also expressed concern at that point, saying. “We cannot continue to do what we have done over the last number of weeks.”

Sacramento health officials came up with a theory about the origins of the problem. They said they weren’t seeing  an increase tied to retail businesses or public demonstrations. Instead, they thought that people have interpreted gradual reopening as a signal that it’s now safe to meet with friends and families in their homes, often without masks.  It’s not implausible that this could be a factor. A small data point: When out walking, I’ve definitely seen more guests entering or leaving houses in my neighborhood.

This Week

That was last week. What’s happened in the meantime?  The number of new cases is continuing to spike, increasing almost 50% from June 19 to June 26.  The LA Times reports that  “California is on track to roughly double the number of coronavirus cases in June over those it recorded in May.” According to yesterday’s SF Chronicle:

“Clusters of cases from social gatherings, prison outbreaks, nursing homes and a general loosening of shelter-in-place restrictions are all responsible for the surge since California began reopening its economy more than a month ago, public health and political leaders said Monday.”

In particular, LA County is showing a very worrisome increase in hospitalizations. The number of new cases and the positivity rate on tests have seen substantial increases.   According to the LA Times, “the number of hospitalizations of confirmed COVID-19 patients has also soared in L.A. County, rising by 44% in the past two weeks. On Sunday, 1,732 COVID-19 patients were hospitalized, up from 1,206 two weeks earlier.” The positive test rate in LA County is up to 9%, a sign that community spread is accelerating.

Coronavirus risks don’t fall on everyone in LA equally. According to LA public health, “43% of deaths occurred among Latino/Latinx residents, 28% among White residents, 17% among Asian residents, 11% among African American/Black residents.”

Although the absolute numbers are smaller, the trends in the Bay Area are also worrisome. The SF Chronicle reported on Sunday that:

“The number of confirmed coronavirus cases hit record highs in every Bay Area county except for San Francisco between June 18 and June 24, according to a Chronicle analysis of public health data. And in San Francisco, a wave of new cases — more than 100 new reported on Friday — caused the city to postpone plans to reopen some businesses.”

Today

The news continues to be bad. From today’s Chronicle:

“The state set the record for the most cases in a day on Monday, with 8,196 cases.

“The number of Californians hospitalized for the virus spiked 43% over the last two weeks, while the number of patients admitted to intensive care units jumped 37% during the same period.”

The Governor said he would announce new control measures later today. “If you’re not going to stay at home and wear a mask in public, we have to enforce and we will,” he said.  He added that: “We’ll be making additional announcements on efforts to use the dimmer switch we referenced to and toggle back on our stay-at-home order and tighten things up.”

Control Measures

On Friday, the mayor of LA said, “We’re not in the red zone but we’re in the yellow zone.” He said he would wait 3-5 days to decide whether to reverse reopening.  He was hoping for a unified strategy from the city, surrounding areas, and the state. That doesn’t seem to have happened so far.

In my original draft a week ago, I wrote that the increase in California wasn’t as alarming as it seemed but was still worth worrying about.  I thought officials should be cautious about any continued reopening.

Since then, things have clearly gotten worse. On Friday, the Governor moved to reinstate the stay-at-home order for Imperial County in southeast California. Although it is painful to contemplate, we may soon need to undo parts of the reopening elsewhere in the state. The Governor did so on Monday by closing bars in seven counties (including LA).

Unfortunately, too many people seem to have taken limited reopenings as an “all clear” signal, with dangerous results.  According to the LA Times, when bars and restaurants reopened there, inspectors found that “employees at about half of bars and restaurants were not wearing face masks or shields. Half of bars and one-third of restaurants were not adhering to social distancing protocols.”

Hopefully, it’s not too late to get the disease spread under control. This may mean rolling back more of the reopenings. It also appears that we need to get tougher about enforcing social distancing requirements, especially on the part of businesses. Besides the direct effect of improving business precautions, rigorous enforcement might also communicate a message to the general population about the dangers we face.

We know from the initial U.S. surge in New York and elsewhere that delay can be a fatal mistake.  California needs immediate action to put the brakes on disease spread before things get out of control.

In the meantime, please stay home for the Fourth!

 

The post California’s Spiking Coronavirus Cases appeared first on Legal Planet.

By: Dan Farber
Title: California’s Spiking Coronavirus Cases
Sourced From: legal-planet.org/2020/07/01/whats-behind-californias-coronavirus-upsurge/
Published Date: Wed, 01 Jul 2020 14:49:16 +0000

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911 Owner Stories Korea: Jeon Yong Hoon and his 997 MK1 GT2

911 Owner Stories Korea: Jeon Yong Hoon and his 997 MK1 GT2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6CzLtIthGqM

“911 has unchanging values - it reflects the era, but never changes its essence.”
Jeon Yong Hoon covets his 997 GT2, which he one day imagines passing down to his very own daughter. Here is his Owner Story.
__
Follow Porsche on Instagram: https://porsche.click/2R1FOPM
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*Weitere Informationen zum offiziellen Kraftstoffverbrauch und den offiziellen spezifischen CO2-Emissionen neuer Personenkraftwagen können dem 'Leitfaden über den Kraftstoffverbrauch, die CO2-Emissionen und den Stromverbrauch neuer Personenkraftwagen' entnommen werden, der an allen Verkaufsstellen und bei und bei der Deutschen Automobil Treuhand GmbH unter http://www.dat.de/?sf118523178=1 unentgeltlich erhältlich ist

By: Porsche
Title: 911 Owner Stories Korea: Jeon Yong Hoon and his 997 MK1 GT2
Sourced From: www.youtube.com/watch?v=6CzLtIthGqM

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Baytown,TX,77521
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Southeast Forklifts of Houston - Used Forklift Equipment Sales, by fuseology https://i3.ytimg.com/vi/6CzLtIthGqM/hqdefault.jpg

Wednesday, July 1, 2020

CBD for Nerve Pain: Does it Help?



In this video, I go over the benefits of CBD for nerve pain. I go over the experience I have had treating patients with nerve pain that used CBD to help manage the pain. In addition, I address the difference between using CBD oil for nerve pain vs prescription medication.

For a customized plan on how to use CBD Oil tailored for your specific needs, schedule an online consultation --- https://docpatels.com/book-a-consultation/
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If you liked this video, please give it a thumbs up 👍 & share it with your friends.
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DISCLAIMER: The information in this video and on the website (https://docpatels.com/) is for educational and informational purposes only. It should not take the place of seeing a physician and should not be used to diagnose or treat a health problem or disease. It also does not establish a physician-patient relationship between you and Dr. Patel. Individual results may vary. The information contained in this video and on the website (https://docpatels.com/) has not been evaluated by the FDA (Food and Drug Administration).

By: Expert CBD Doctor & CEO of Doc Patels - Dr. Rachna Patel
Title: CBD for Nerve Pain: Does it Help?
Sourced From: www.youtube.com/watch?v=hKkYVJ9Py5o



Fear Mongering (Episode 306) | The Healthy Skeptics



https://thehealthyskeptics.com
https://my2048.com

Fear Mongering (Episode #306)

The Case for DHEA: https://thehealthyskeptics.com/shop/dhea/
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Health conscious consumers today are disoriented and impeded. Their email and Facebook pages are filled with unconventional nonsense and often outright myths. At the same time, they're aware that spectacular innovations are being made in precautionary and regenerative medical care.

In 2048, 11 million Americans (including Stephen) will observe their 100th birthday. But we all will be somewhere in 30 years.
The issue is whether you will roll in at 2048 with a vigorous fit figure and a sharp, creative mind.

My2048 mixes the academic and research expertise of an internationally celebrated biochemist with the scientific insights of a double board qualified physician concentrating in anti-aging.

No Hype. No Webaloney - Stephen and Natalie are known as The Healthy Skeptics, and their informative site, TheHealthySkeptics.com, is devoted to showing consumers what to EXPLORE and what to IGNORE. Their Nutrition Detective course, instructed at a UCLA extension course for nurses, has helped thousands of health seekers to separate the fads from the facts, and make truly informed choices.

There are only 24 hours in a day. If you lose your quality time following fads and elusions, you are going to miss the true advances. Of course, you're also going to exhaust funds. That's unfortunate, but not essential because you can always make more money. The real issue is time. You can't generate more time. Thus My2048.com is dedicated to giving you everything you need to know, and everything you need to do in order to reach and preserve peak health in body and mind."

Stephen Cherniske and Dr. Natalie Kather are your Nutritional biochemist & & M.D. Your personal biomedical crew! Analysis, Knowledge and playfulness. Explore or Ignore!"

Stephen Cherniske, M.S - A biochemist and retired college instructor in Clinical Nutrition. He served on the faculty of the American College of Sports Medicine, advised members of the US Olympic team, and directed the nation's first federally licensed clinical laboratory specializing in diet and immunology. A best-selling author with more than a million copies in print, Stephen has an astonishing gift for conveying breakthrough science that inspires, enthralls and inspires.

Natalie Kather, M.D - She earned her medical degree from The University of Utah School of Medicine. She is board-certified in Family Medicine, as well as Anti-aging, with specializations in women's health, hormone balancing and human performance. Natalie is recognized as a pioneer in the emerging science of metabolic medicine, and frequently serves as Principal Investigator for clinical trials in that arena. Her clinic, Advanced Family Wellness, is located in Olympia Washington, where she lives with her spouse, Stephen Cherniske.

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Watch Video

What Triggers Mood swings in Borderline Personality



Today’s video answers the question: what triggers the mood swings that you can see and borderline personality disorder?

One of the features of borderline personality disorder that make it look like bipolar disorder is having wide mood swings. I compared borderline personality disorder to bipolar disorder in this video.

But this gist of it is, with borderline personality disorder, you get quick shifts in mood that can last hours or even a day. Whereas with bipolar disorder, you get shifts in mood states that last for a minimum of four days for hypomania and two weeks for depression.

With borderline personality disorder, the shifts in personality are triggered by something, it just may not obvious what the trigger is at the time.
Here are some of things that can trigger your mood shifts:
Relationship problems
Feeling empty
Dissociative symptoms
Memories of trauma

Therapy is something that can help you make these connections so that you don't have to be as overwhelmed by the emotions that seem like they're coming out of nowhere. If you start by understanding that the intense emotions come from somewhere, then you can learn to accept the emotions, process them and let them pass without them overwhelming you. In dialectical behavior therapy you learn to do this with lessons on distress tolerance and emotion regulation.

There are a lot of strategies that are taught in dialectical behavior therapy. Take a look at this video I did on managing negative emotions. Thanks for watching. See you next time.

VIDEOS REFERENCED TO WATCH NEXT
Managing Negative emotions
https://youtu.be/puoddnGTAJk

Borderline vs Borderline Personality Disorder
https://youtu.be/MLl4b9726wA

Can You Have Bipolar Disorder + Borderline Personality? |Here’s Why It Matters
https://youtu.be/G8JHjN2AaxA

Want to know more about mental health and self-improvement? On this channel I discuss topics such as bipolar disorder, major depression, anxiety disorders, attention deficit disorder (ADHD), relationships and personal development/self-improvement. I upload weekly. If you don’t want to miss a video, click here to subscribe. https://goo.gl/DFfT33

Disclaimer: All of the information on this channel is for educational purposes and not intended to be specific/personal medical advice from me to you. Watching the videos or getting answers to comments/question, does not establish a doctor-patient relationship. If you have your own doctor, perhaps these videos can help prepare you for your discussion with your doctor.

By: Dr. Tracey Marks
Title: What Triggers Mood swings in Borderline Personality
Sourced From: www.youtube.com/watch?v=wkkSKS238ME



Pencil & Paper DIY Board Games

Pencil & Paper DIY Board Games http://blog.hmns.org/2020/04/pencil-paper-diy-board-games/

Pencil & Paper DIY Board Games

Pencil & Paper DIY Board Games http://blog.hmns.org/2020/04/pencil-paper-diy-board-games/

The Danger of Climate Change Deadlines

The Danger of Climate Change Deadlines https://legal-planet.org/2020/06/30/danger-of-climate-change-deadlines/ deadline, by geralt at pixabay

Seven prominent figures in the global climate change policy discourse published an opinion essay in Nature. In “Three years to safeguard our climate,” they set a deadline for key targets to be met in order to stay on track to meet the Paris Agreement’s global warming goals. The notable thing is that the essay was published three years ago this week:

The year 2020 is crucially important for another reason, one that has more to do with physics than politics. … should emissions continue to rise beyond 2020, or even remain level, the temperature goals set in Paris become almost unattainable… The good news is that it is still possible to meet the Paris temperature goals if emissions begin to fall by 2020.
deadline, by geralt at pixabay
Image by geralt at pixabay

The authors are well-known. The essay’s lead author, Christiana Figueres, was previously Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change and oversaw the Paris Agreement’s creation. Johan Rockström led the development of the influential “planetary boundaries” theory of sustainability, was the director of the Stockholm Environment Institute, and is now joint director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK). Hans Joachim Schellnhuber was PIK’s founding director and helped establish the planetary boundaries theory. They are joined by more than 60 co-signatories [PDF]. Where do the authors’ targets stand? As quoted above, their top-level objective is that greenhouse gas emissions must decline by this year. Although emissions continued to rise through 2019, they will decline this year not due to climate policies but because of the coronavirus slowing the global economy. When the economy rebounds, so too will emissions. In fact, they are already rebounding. According the a recent New York Times article:

But by mid-June, as countries eased their lockdowns, emissions had ticked up to just 5 percent below the 2019 average, the [scientific article’s] authors estimated in a recent update. Emissions in China, which accounts for one-quarter of the world’s carbon pollution, appear to have returned to pre-pandemic levels. The study’s authors said they were surprised by how quickly emissions had rebounded. But, they added, any drop in fossil fuel use related to the coronavirus was always likely to be temporary unless countries took concerted action to clean up their energy systems and vehicle fleets as they moved to rebuild their ailing economies.

In their Nature essay, Figueres et al go on to offer six specific targets that must be met this year. Let’s look the latest figures for these criteria:

By 2020, here’s where the world needs to be: Energy. Renewables make up at least 30% of the world’s electricity supply — up from 23.7% in 2015. No coal-fired power plants are approved beyond 2020, and all existing ones are being retired.

At the source that they cite for 2015, the latest figure is 26.4% of electricity coming from renewables in 2019. Extrapolating the trend linearly, renewables may reach 28.2% in 2020 — not quite 30%.  Regarding new coal-fired power plants, in 2019 the world added 68 GW of coal-fired capacity, two-thirds of which was in China. (A one is about 600 MW, so this implies about 110 such coal-fired plants) Plenty more are in the construction pipeline worldwide. For example, Japan — which has essentially ended its use of nuclear power, which once provided a third of its electricity — plans to build 22 coal-fired plants.

Infrastructure. Cities and states have initiated action plans to fully decarbonize buildings and infrastructures by 2050, with funding of $300 billion annually. Cities are upgrading at least 3% of their building stock to zero- or near-zero emissions structures each year.

I am unsure where to find data for these precise processes, such as “initiat[ing] action plans.” However, greenhouse gas emissions from buildings reached a record high in 2019, while “incremental spending on energy efficiency investments amounted to over USD 150 billion,” only half of Figueres et al’s target. The International Energy Agency concludes that “Energy efficiency investments [in buildings] are still not keeping pace with construction.” Regarding upgrading building stock, the global renovation rate in 2019 was less than 1.5%. This implies that upgrading building stock to zero- or near-zero emissions is even lower than this value, or less than half of Figueres et al’s target.

Transport. Electric vehicles make up at least 15% of new car sales globally, a major increase from the almost 1% market share that battery-powered and plug-in hybrid vehicles now claim. Also required are commitments for a doubling of mass-transit utilization in cities, a 20% increase in fuel efficiencies for heavy-duty vehicles and a 20% decrease in greenhouse-gas emissions from aviation per kilometre travelled.

In 2019, electric cars were 2.6% of global new car sales, about one-sixth of Figueres et al’s goal. Their second sentence concerns “commitments,” which are difficult to measure but matter much less than actual progress. (I have committed to exercising every day, but still do not do so.) What’s more, the authors give no dates for their desired commitments. (With respect to the global use of public transit, it has recently plummeted due to the coronavirus, and might take quite some time to recover.)

Land. Land-use policies are enacted that reduce forest destruction and shift to reforestation and afforestation efforts. Current net emissions from deforestation and land-use changes form about 12% of the global total. If these can be cut to zero next decade, and afforestation and reforestation can instead be used to create a carbon sink by 2030, it will help to push total net global emissions to zero, while supporting water supplies and other benefits. Sustainable agricultural practices can reduce emissions and increase CO2 sequestration in healthy, well-managed soils.

The first sentence concerns policies, which are again hard to measure. And the authors do not say how many or which countries must enact such policies. Looking at the intended effect, the change in global forest cover remains net negative, although this rate has slowed to half of its peak. Net carbon dioxide emissions from re-, af-, and deforestation as well as land-use changes have been roughly steady for years at around 14% of total emissions (but did increase in 2019 due to large forest fires). The rest of Figueres et al’s paragraph regards 2030 and general observations.

Industry. Heavy industry is developing and publishing plans for increasing efficiencies and cutting emissions, with a goal of halving emissions well before 2050. Carbon-intensive industries — such as iron and steel, cement, chemicals, and oil and gas — currently emit more than one-fifth of the world’s CO2, excluding their electricity and heat demands.

Whether or not “heavy industry” this year has a goal for 2050 is not very relevant. Issuing long-term goals is much easier than actually meeting either them or short-term ones. The authors’ second sentence is difficult to parse. Does “current” mean 2017 or 2020? Why does heavy industry’s portion of total emissions even matter if one hopes that all sectors’ emissions will decrease? Either way, I cannot find values for industry’s share of global emissions more recent than 2016.

Finance. The financial sector has rethought how it deploys capital and is mobilizing at least $1 trillion a year for climate action. Most will come from the private sector. Governments, private banks and lenders such as the World Bank need to issue many more ‘green bonds’ to finance climate-mitigation efforts. This would create an annual market that, by 2020, processes more than 10 times the $81 billion of bonds issued in 2016.

In 2018 — the most recent year for which I could find numbers — climate finance was $546 billion. It is increasing rapidly and roughly linearly, at which rate it might be about $700 billion in 2020, significantly short of Figueres et al’s goal of $1 trillion. Meanwhile, “green bonds” appear to be $175 billion (also in 2018) and perhaps $255 billion (in 2019), a far cry from the authors’ goal of $810 billion (in 2020).

To summarize: Figueres et al’s headline objective of declining greenhouse gas emissions will be met this year, but this is due to the coronavirus. Emissions will presumably rebound in within a year or two, although 2019 may (hopefully) turn out to be the year of peak global emissions. According to the latest data that I found, none of their specific criteria have been achieved, many fall dramatically short, and none are on track to be met.

What does failing (completely) to meet these targets mean? In the case of these authors, Figueres et al imply — but do not outright say — that the Paris Agreement’s global warming goals can no longer be met. However, they carefully used language such as “the temperature goals set in Paris become almost unattainable” and, in the press release, “the world… may be fatally wounded by negligence until 2020” (emphasis added) . Likewise, they attach no direct consequences to their statement “By 2020, here’s where the world needs to be.”

More generally, this sort of “deadlinism”– in my opinion — harms efforts to prevent dangerous climate change. To be clear, I understand that deadlines such as the one examined here are meant to motivate action. But short-term deadlines invite dangerous emergency-based thinking. And the last half-century of environmentalism is littered with too many alarmist deadlines that were not met and whose forecast doom never manifested. In the past, it was Paul Ehrlich who, in 1968, wrote “[i]n the 1970s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash programs embarked upon now.” Or in 2006, “unless drastic measures to reduce greenhouse gases are taken within the next 10 years, the world will reach a point of no return, [former US vice president Al] Gore said.” More recently, it was claims (even from the President of the UN General Assembly) that “We have 12 years to limit climate change catastrophe,” a widespread misrepresentation or misinterpretation of the findings of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Supporters of efforts will become unduly despondent. After all, if the assertions of deadlines are true and we have passed a point of no return, why should even try? Furthermore, opponents of these efforts use the missed deadlines as effective political weapons, undermining environmentalists’ credibility. This is especially likely if advocates, such as the authors here, move the goalposts by extending the deadline — which seems likely.

The post The Danger of Climate Change Deadlines appeared first on Legal Planet.

By: Jesse Reynolds
Title: The Danger of Climate Change Deadlines
Sourced From: legal-planet.org/2020/06/30/danger-of-climate-change-deadlines/
Published Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2020 15:00:08 +0000

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(713) 785-9484
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(Houston's Most Trusted Law Firm for Car Accident Settlements)
#CarAccidentAttorney, #CarAccident Lawyer, Houston Auto Accident Attorney, Auto Accident Lawyer, Auto Accident Law Firm, Auto Accident Settlement, Car Accident Settlement, Trucking Accident Lawyers, Truck Accident Attorneys, Trucking Lawsuit Settlements, Personal Injury Lawyers, Personal Injury Attorneys, Personal Injury Lawsuit Settlements

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Maida Law Firm - Auto Accident Attorneys of Houston, by fuseology


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Porsche TAG Heuer Esports Supercup Teaser Race #5 Nürburgring Nordschleife

Porsche TAG Heuer Esports Supercup Teaser Race #5 Nürburgring Nordschleife https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2HkHp12-qhk

The Green Hell is waiting for the world’s best simracers in race #5 of the Porsche TAG Heuer Esports Supercup. Who will conquer the Eifel? Join the action live on 4 July on the Porsche YouTube and Twitch channels. #jointherace #pesc
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Follow Porsche on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/porsche/
Like Porsche on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/porsche/
Subscribe to Porsche on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/porsche
Visit the Porsche Website: https://Porsche.com

*Weitere Informationen zum offiziellen Kraftstoffverbrauch und den offiziellen spezifischen CO2-Emissionen neuer Personenkraftwagen können dem 'Leitfaden über den Kraftstoffverbrauch, die CO2-Emissionen und den Stromverbrauch neuer Personenkraftwagen' entnommen werden, der an allen Verkaufsstellen und bei und bei der Deutschen Automobil Treuhand GmbH unter http://www.dat.de/?sf118523178=1 unentgeltlich erhältlich ist

By: Porsche
Title: Porsche TAG Heuer Esports Supercup Teaser Race #5 Nürburgring Nordschleife
Sourced From: www.youtube.com/watch?v=2HkHp12-qhk

Southeast Forklifts of Houston - Used Forklift Equipment Sales
2121 East Freeway
Baytown,TX,77521
(281) 393-7202
#Forklifts #Houston #Rentals #Service #Sales #UsedForklifts


Southeast Forklifts of Houston - Used Forklift Equipment Sales, by fuseology https://i3.ytimg.com/vi/2HkHp12-qhk/hqdefault.jpg

Parents, Advocates Voice Concerns about Social-Media Impact on Youth - BCTV

Parents, Advocates Voice Concerns about Social-Media Impact on Youth - BCTV https://www.bctv.org/2022/05/10/parents-advocates-voice-concerns...