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Sunday, May 26, 2019

The Story of my Journey to change How Society Perceives, Perpetrates, and Handles Sexual Assaults and Abuse and How You Can Help

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It was the epiphany of 5 other women, who shared a history of rape, incest and sexual molestation.  Right here in a Discussion Group on Facebook.  Revealing all this over the course of a night and a morning.  One who was even from my childhood.  Then two weeks later.  The ugly graphic airing of Trump triumphantly declaring he could do anything to women.  Kiss them or grab their pussy and there was nothing they could or would do.  That terrible night.  So many.  Sharing their stories of groping and molestation.  Millions and millions!  The shame, the assault, the sorrow.  I wanted a new way.  Where it was no longer accepted to molest, rape, grope others unwantedly, whether male or female.  I started a group.  With a vague purpose in mind.  To work toward the purpose of sexual freedom.  Where the person is respected whether male or female. Where others don't assume or presume ownership or the right to handle or invade their body without permission.  These others.  These women.  Who shared their stories, their horror, their sorrow, their shame.  We formed a group.  For others to feel safe.  With the gentle guidance and advice of others, we formed a group.  A Band of Sisters.  A place for women only, to feel safe and supported.  To share their stories or, not.

I began to share my story. People who deny that we're a rape culture, usually have had no intersection with survivors and their stories. They don't realize the prevalence. When these people hear the experiences of real, "normal" people, suddenly statistics become flesh. The stories become real.  First person stories are compelling.  The terror and helplessness become real. The emotions become personal.  People who hear these stories then understand how it can happen to anybody.  Sharing survival stories is a very effective way of making rape or abuse very real and personal, almost something the listener themselves experience.  These stories create greater understanding of how "rape culture" creates situations and circumstances where rape is understandable, if not accepted. Just something that happens because of the Survivor's poor choices. I hoped to use these stories to create an understanding of how rape and assault happen. I wanted our society to understand the tragedy of being violated. How terrifying it is, and how prevalent.  

We have had multiple cultural revelations since then where millions of people have now shared their stories of abuse, rape, molestation, unwanted touch.  Stories of men in power, abusing it, for years.  Harvey Weinstein and hundreds of male power brokers.  From this, the #metoo movement started a decade earlier, was reignited.  But the stories were changed, because men, silent for years, started to come forward with their own stories.  Then the horror of the Kavanaugh Hearings and brave Christine Blasey Ford, telling her story.  And now, with States passing draconian anti-abortion laws, stories of rape and sexual abuse resulting in unwanted pregnancies are being shared again.   
I want to work toward a society where my grandchildren are not physically molested at young ages by strangers in crowds and in public.  I want a society where children are safe from sexual assault from relatives or trusted friends, teachers, pastors. I want a society where college students don't have to watch each other's cups to make sure they aren't roofied. I want a society where college athletes don't feel such a sense of entitlement that rape and gang rape are just part of the Academic package and a sign of a great weekend.

Initially, I wanted to help create an FB support group for males that have been sexually assaulted.  I may not be the person to do that.  I’m recognizing my energy limitations all too well lately.  But I still want people to understand that males are at risk for being violated too, and have even fewer supports that will believe them, and access to services that will help them heal.   

I want to help educate people on rape culture and how to work against it. One that people will call others out on bad behavior. Where they are now allies for combating rape culture.  

I feel EVER so strongly that to combat rape culture we MUST create an environment where it is the perpetrator and not the survivor who is shamed. Where the shame and secrecy are removed by the lights shining in the corners.

I am still in the process of figuring out what my personal next step is with regard to addressing the dysfunctional ways in which our society responds to accusations of abuse and molestation, especially sexually.  The way the justice system treats victims of assault is an area of great concern for me.  Rule of law treats the victim as one to be disproven and the accused as innocent until proven guilty. Rule of law is important, but NEVER should be used to revictimize the victim.

But here are some actions that we ALL can do to change our culture; to decrease incidents, increase awareness, change how our legal system investigates accusations of sexual assault and how they treat assault survivors.

WHAT CAN WE DO?

* Start by believing.  This doesn’t mean investigators make a premature judgment, or reach a preordained conclusion. It simply means that investigators listen carefully to the victim’s report, without communicating an attitude of doubt or blame. The next step is then to follow the evidence, by conducting a thorough, professional, and impartial investigation.
* Ask that your Police Department and District Attorney’s office be trained in “best practices” that can help prosecutors win more rape trials, even while scrupulously respecting the rights of the accused. These practices have been systematized by the National District Attorneys Association and End Violence Against Women International.  More information can be found here:
Free online Training Institute:  https://www.evawintl.org/onlinetraining.aspx
* Help pass legislation that will provide moneys to local police departments to process the backlog of rape kits.  http://www.endthebacklog.org/backlog/what-rape-kit-backlog. http://www.endthebacklog.org/backlog/what-rape-kit-backlog
* Become involved:
    *  https://metoomvmt.org/
* Help foster healthy relationships between teens and young adults.        https://www.joinonelove.org/
* Become aware of the facts regarding child sexual abuse.  Darkness to Light believes that adults are responsible for the safety of children and should be taking proactive steps to protect children from this significant risk. It is unrealistic to think that a young child can take responsibility for fending off sexual advances by an adult. Adults are the ones who need to prevent, recognize and react responsibly to child sexual abuse. Yet, the statistics clearly show that adults aren’t shouldering this responsibility. We believe that adults want to, they just don’t know how.
Become involved by receiving training to become a Child Advocate, host a Workshop, train adults in abuse awareness and recognition:
 Find alternatives for rape prevention and punishment.  “It would be one thing if we knew that mass incarceration and harsh prison sentences are a good way to fight crime. The truth, based on centuries of research, is they’re not.”  https://www.vox.com/2016/9/1/12652758/rape-prison-mass-incarceration 

Our penalties for sexual predation are already the most severe in the developed world. Today, sex offenders constitute the fastest growing segment of America's prison population.”    http://theweek.com/articles/646202/why-lengthy-prison-sentences-arent-best-punishment-rapists

* If you are interested in joining Band of Sisters, our FB abuse survivors group, message me a request.  Women only please.

Thank you for reading.
“Only when we are brave enough to explore the darkness will we discover the infinite power of our light.”  Brene Brown

Peace and light.

Kismet


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Saturday, April 13, 2019

Wanderings in my Mind: Places of the Heart

Wanderings in my Mind: Places of the Heart: In 2000, after I walked the Honolulu Marathon with my husband to raise money for the Arthritis Foundation, I decided to go off of the anti-...

Wednesday, April 3, 2019

Reclaiming our Time, Reclaiming our Bodies and the #metoo Movement

Content Warning 

The women coming forward regarding Joe Biden’s “Handsiness” are being ridiculed, accused of being political pawns, being accused of lying or being oversensitive, “it’s just a hug”, being accused of “being paid” by Republicans to make these accusations.Men and women alike are incensed, saying the #metoo movement has “gone too far.” I have even seen statements that treating “handsiness” as an “assault” is doing a disservice to people who have “actually” been sexually assaulted.

Let us review this movement, because I believe the #metoo movement is evolving now so that it is addressing a CONTINUUM of the bodies of men and women alike, being treated and used by others as their property to force physical and sexual attention and touch that the owner has not been asked for or given consent to touch or use.

It’s only been since 2016 and Donald Trump’s “Pussy grabbing” tape, that we have realized the scope of people, male and female, who have endured physical assaults from grabbing of body parts to rape, to sexual abuse to sexual harassment.  Before that time, none of Bill Cosby’s “victims” was able to gain any traction with police or in the courts, despite the first victims coming forward 20 years ago.  Nor were the gymnasts under Dr. Nassar’s “care” treated as credible sources when they complained to USA Gymnastics or Michigan State University.  It turned out that both entities had known about the allegations for at least two decades.  Dr. Nassar was still being allowed to “treat” patients even as he was being investigated in 2014 and before he resigned from USA Gymnastics in 2015.  Ultimately over 300 victims/athletes would come forward and say they were violated during supposed “treatments”.

Despite the pussy tape and over 20 women coming forward to say they had been violated by Trump, he was still elected and there has been no acknowledgement of any wrongdoing by Trump.

Then the story of decades of sexual malfeasance and manipulation of scores of actresses by Henry Weinstein was broken by the investigative reporting of the New York Times and the New Yorker.  The #metoo hashtag initiated a decade earlier by Tarana Burk, was given new life by Alyssa Milano and the stories of hundreds of survivors, male and female were told throughout the world of social media.   Then the accused in positions of power throughout the entertainment and media industries began to resign or be fired.  These revelations have spread to Universities, Congress, and most recently was a major part in hearings for a Supreme Court Justice. Many livelihoods and careers have been affected or cut short.

Allegations that were never investigated or were never made started filling headlines in droves, showing us that neither Federal nor Corporate Sexual Harassment Policies were being adequately implemented.

And here is where the generational gap comes into play.  Since women have entered society and the work force, fighting off not only sexual advances, but grabbing of body parts, sexual innuendos, cat calls, etc. were just another part of everyday life for women and girls of all ages.  Not until 2016 did our culture change enough that women found the unacceptable no longer an acceptable cost of working with men.  People previously silent, sometimes for decades, finally felt safe enough to come forward to the entities that were supposed to provide safe work environments for all their employees, but also to come forward to tell their stories and say “This has to stop.”  Until then, the onus was on men and women to endure violation of their physical space and bodily autonomy as part of the power structures in place in many work environment.

No longer are butt pats, boob grabs, boob brushes, unwanted kisses, unwanted dick pics tolerated and up to the molested to stop.  No longer are people accepting that they must change jobs and even careers in order to maintain bodily autonomy.

Along with this, we are discovering that young boys as well as girls under the ages of 18 are being sexually abused.  Stats are varied and changing as the whole scope of sexual abuse in our culture is slowly becoming clearer, but the most recent I have seen are 1 in 5 girls and 1 in 7 boys.  This is a major change from the 1 in 53 boys that RAINN is still citing.  Slowly, men of all ages are coming forward with their own #metoo stories. 

I would like to point out that the women who are advocating listening to Biden’s accusers are not complaining about hugs, pecks on the cheeks, pats on the shoulders.  They are complaining about smelling of hair, stroking of hair, hands on the body uncomfortably close to breasts or bottoms, hands resting on thighs, but most of all are concerns for the children who are pulling away, turning faces, hiding faces from unwanted or too familiar touches.  They are not complaining just about over familiarity, but invasion of PRIVATE bodily space without consent.

Yes.  Lucy Flores could have pulled her head forward, turned around and faced Vice President Biden and tell him “hands off”.  But he was the Vice President, present in Nevada to campaign for her.  The power differential here is enormous.

More concerning are the uncomfortable children, who have no voice with adults that they are being asked to trust.  They rely on the adults around them to keep them safe; to be their voices when they’re visibly uncomfortable.  We now know that most child sex abusers are people who are well known and trusted by the very people or ARE the very people who are supposed to keep them safe.  We now realize that “stranger danger” is a myth.  What does it tell the child, when their obvious reluctance to be touched or kissed is overridden by their parents?  What do they learn about their own bodily autonomy?

Most of us still don’t know the history of the people around us.  We don’t know if they had a history of childhood sexual, physical or emotional abuse.  We don’t know if they were assaulted in the Military.  We don’t know what kinds of touch, hugs, kisses are uncomfortable or even triggering for these people.  Because I am a survivor of both sexual and emotional abuse,  and because I want children to know that I respect their autonomy, I ALWAYS ask both children and adults if they are okay with a hug and I respect their answers.  In my work as an Occupational Therapist, I worked with kids with Autism and other sensory processing disorders that made them actually ill or kicked in fight, flight or fright responses when touched, especially without warning.  This can be genetic, but is also a typical response for children who have undergone multiple invasive medical procedures.  It is also a response for soldiers in combat, people who have been physically, emotionally or sexually assaulted, prisoners of war, for people who have been tortured, etc.

It should no longer be up to the individual person to have to fight off unwanted and inappropriate touch.  This is a global concern.  In Africa, some tribes iron the breasts of adolescent girls and bind them so that they don’t attract the unwanted attention of men.  We should not be expecting people to be fighting off unwanted touch.  We should be raising our boys and girls, retraining our adults, to respect the physical space of others including their physical body.  A mature society respects all members, all ages, and all genders and allows them to say how they are to be treated.

Tarin Ann Vincent
Copyright April 3, 2019

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Monday, January 21, 2019

Places of the Heart

In 2000, after I walked the Honolulu Marathon with my husband to raise money for the Arthritis Foundation, I decided to go off of the anti-depressent that I was on for my Fibromyalgia.  I did this, without consulting my physician, unaware that I would need to taper myself off of the medication.  I fell into a deep, suicidal depression.  It took awhile, but I contacted my Family Nurse Practirtioner, who was able to see me immediately; putting me back on an antidepressent and getting me into a Therapist.

I realized I needed to make changes, if I was to survive.  A co-worker reccommended that I move from my shared office with a controling co-worker who took up 3/4 of the office space with herself and her clutter, and move into an office housing equipment used very seldom.  I set up a Zen space.  A water fountain, Japanese Lanterns, a sand bowl, plants, and those electronic scent dispersers.  It made all the difference in the world.  Despite the fact that I used the space to make phone calls and write my Progress Notes, it was a space where I could decompress, calm and regroup.  People would drop by whether I was present or not; listen to the fountain, play in the sand.  It wa not only a space for me, it became a space for all.

When I got sick and could no longer work, I let all my hobbies go.  Photography, gardening, stained glass, batik. Laughing.  About 8 years into my illness, the weeds had utterly and completely taken over the flower beds.  I’m not sure what changed, perhaps I was put on a better antidepressant?  But I decided I would take back the garden. One bed at a time. It took me 4 years. Then. I bought a flying pig. A big one. Nothing flashy, it was green.  I noticed it missing one day.  I found it in our propagne grill, an apple by its nose.  Which is the same as an eye roll from my family and proof that I live in a house with Gremlins. 

My garden is me.  Special and magical. There are things.  My family calls them “Tschotschkes”. Nothing anywhere close to garden gnomes.  Nothing cutesy, bright or garish.  I prefer the subtle; as if it grew whole cloth from the soil or crawling on a tree.  A pig here,a lizard there, birds and frogs, even a fairy.  Hiding under leaves, peeking through the bushes. There is beautiful Haitian Oil Drum Art on the fences.  My family teases me every time I buy something new when we go on vacation.  According to my family, I have achieved maximum Tschotschke capacity in the garden.  My Tschotschkes tell the story of my life, my travels, my garden.  My family and I even painted a mural on the formerly severely white wall of the garage, forming much of the South end of the yard. My husband painted the base coats.  I painted the trees and flowers.  My daughter painted a beautiful mandala sun, flying in the sky.  My son outlined the painted birdhouse...each gremlin to his/her own talents. 

 Last summer, I was able to find waterproof solar candles to put in the 20 plus lanterns I have in the gardent.  We





sit on the patio, listening to the stillness, watch the light fade from the sky, leaving colors in its wake.  And slowly, almost magically, the lights come on; hung from trees, fenceposts, in garden beds, shining on plants, into the warm summer air.   Every summer, I give a Garden Party. And we have a Scavenger Hunt with prizes. It’s wonderful and silly and magical.  As it should be.  Because. What else should life be about, but friends, laughter, beauty and magic?  
Make a place for yourself.  Where you can breathe.  Where you can be.  Surrounded by life and beautiful things.  A place where you can be by yourself, or when you want, where you can invite friends.  Every summer. I give a Garden Party. And we have a Scavenger Hunt with prizes. It’s wonderful and silly and magical.  As it should be.  Because. What else should life be about, but friends, laughter, beauty and magic?

Wednesday, December 12, 2018

Fuck the Dust Bunnies

So much of what I see on FB, on the Internet, and in the media, are arguments pointing out the hypocrisy of others and whataboutism.

Life itself is one giant hypocrisy.  We all know we’re going to die, yet we go about living our lives each day.  We know that we will just end up back in bed, yet most of us get out of it each day, only to return to it each night.  What the hell am I doing sweeping the kitchen floor when I KNOW GOOD AND WELL I’M NEVER GOING TO CLEAN ALL THE DUST BUNNIES IN THE BASEMENT!?!?


Fuck the dust bunnies! No one person can care about all things simultaneously. Concern in one area does not mean that they aren’t thinking about, know about, doing something about other things.  I can hug my husband without having to hug every other person present.  You. Pointing out other areas of concern is just a distraction and tells me that you are unable to intelligently discuss the subject at hand.  So. FUCK THE DUST BUNNIES!

Sunday, December 9, 2018

Paradigm Shifts and`Culture Wars

Let’s talk about change.  Over the course of our Nation’s History, we have witnessed and experienced monumental changes.  Sometimes we were the progenitors of that change, sometimes we resisted, but changed with the world.

We witnessed great plantations, manned by slaves, who were kept, bought, sold and treated like animals.  Only landed white men were considered citizens and allowed to vote.  Women were viewed as possessions and possessed no rights and no say on how they were treated.  lThe Papal Bull Inter Caetera, a solemn edict authored by Pope Alexander VI in 1493, gave Christians dominion over Indigenous lands and called for the subjugation of Native Indigenous peoples for the purpose of propagating Christian doctrine. In fact, Christians were charged with the duty of overthrowing Indigenous Nations in order to convert them to Christ, and Christian heirs were granted “full and free power, authority, and jurisdiction of every kind.  https://newsmaven.io/indiancountrytoday/archive/a-letter-to-pope-francis-abolish-the-papal-bull-behind-colonization-fZdn3jE4ikeHv58sizi_Hg/

In the 19th century, manifest destiny was a widely held belief in the United States that its settlers were destined to expand across North America. There are three basic themes to manifest destiny:
Sweatshops, child labor, illiteracy, slavery, restricted voting rights, unregulated work hours and conditions, industrial pollution of land, waterways, and air...all were common place.  Until both legislation and societal expectations changed the reality.

Now we stand upon a precipice.  We have taught our children and grandchildren that we all are entitled to education, health, safety, and living wages.  We have taught them that rape is wrong and consent is importatnt.  That we all should be afforded respect and opportunity.

We are at a new height for income inequality.  The United Nations has issued a report documenting 3rd World Levels of Poverty.  There are many communities, usually in areas with high density populations of people of color, who have no indoor plumbing and restricted access to clean water.  There is disparity in educational opportunites not just at the pos-secondary level, but also at the Public School levels.  We are seeing record high levels of homelessness, suicide, opiate addiction, and poverty.  25% of children under the age of 18 live in poverty.  Veterans of old and recent wars kill themselves at the number of 22 a day.

Since the 1980’s the disparities have increased.  Since the Recession, those who had wealth outside of stocks and bonds have recovered.  Those whose retirement was in stocks have recovered at levels at parity with their race.  People of color have had no recovery of stocks or savings.

Now our conversations are about behavior.  What is acceptable and unacceptable.  We call people snowflakes for refusing to accept name calling and judgement.  Safe spaces for people in marginalized populations are being ridiculed, without any awareness or acknowledgement that being racially or sexually different can also be a life threatening situation or at the very least a socially unacceptable occurrence.

We talk about consent...to touch, to sexual behavior, to sex.  When women entered the work force, women tolerated sexual touching, innuendos, harassment, acts in order to keep or advance in their jobs.  It was seldom acknowledged, but generally known and accepted.  There are many women of older generations who see the demands for consideration and the abolition of sexual currency and power in the work place as being whiners, pussies and snowflakes.  But we, and they, were the ones who taught our children about bodily autonomy, about consent.

We whine about people who are made uncomfortable about lyrics of generations old popular songs, popular movies, popular books.  But we elders are the ones that told them, stand up for yourself.  Do not let others tread on your autonomy by insulting and infringing on your right to self-determination. We cannot in good conscience simultaneously admonish our yournger generations to be their best and demand respect, yet berate them when they do so.

We have reached this divide.  Those who are comfortable with racial division and derision, sexual innuendos and sexual domination, sexual currency as power in the workplace, separation of the races in education as well as along economic lines.  We have enormous inequality in housing, public utilities, the justice system, access to healthcare, education.  Our political systems have become the gambling places of the wealthy, the oligarchy calling the shots, voting access being determined in many areas according to race, age and income.

It is time to pull up our big girl panties.  We are pointing and laughing at the newcomers in our Political Systems who are calling out the corruption in campaign financing, corporate dominance in politics and political etiquette that has been acceptable since the times of slavery as unacceptable.  We taught them to do this. 

We aren’t there anymore.  We know the wages of sexual, racial, educational, economic and health disparity.  We know the devils it breeds, the children it kills.

It is time for us to fully invest in democracy.  To listen to our children, whom we have taught so well. To step into the void and stop accepting the unacceptable.  It is time be what even our forefathers never dreamed of.  To be a Country where every persons potential is maximized.  Where the earth is honored and treated with the respect needed if we are to continue our legacy upon its lands.  It is time to embrace our indigenous populations and enrich where they live or remove the shackles that bind them to a non-productive land.  It is time to embrace, feed, educate and love every child.  If we do not, we already know what will happen.  We are seeing it now.  Suicide, opiate addiction and deaths, fun violence associated with underground and drug economies, human trafficking, mass shootings.  “We have seen the enemy and he is us.”

Monday, July 30, 2018

Climate Change is NOW

The proof of Climate Change 
Both my kids' degrees are in conservation. My daughter has worked for Watershed Coalitions, and my son is majoring in habitat restoration and Fire Ecology. Their knowledge about this is amazing. Climate change is actually changing the types of trees that are claiming the land after these fires. It is thought that these "cleansing" fires are paving the way for more heat and drought tolerant trees and vegetation.  I witnessed that this summer on the North Rim of the Grand Canyon.  The formerly mixed Aspen and pine forest burned in 2006 is now being replaced by massive stands of pure Aspen. 

Everything is changing almost more quickly than can be studied. Pine bark beetles are a part of this. Did you know that beetle killed pine is one of the most popular (and now) most expensive woods you can buy? It has a beautiful blue and natural hue. Of course it can only be used cosmetically because it doesn’t have the strength to bear loads.

When the last White Pine Tree dies, there will be no juveniles to replace it. White Pine Forests will then be obsolete because it cannot survive in this changed global climate environment. All you have to do to believe in climate change is go to the Arctic where the Ice Cap and permafrost are melting or go to California, Norway, Greece where climate change and the resulting fires are actively changing our forests.
Nature will be fine.  It's adapting, changing. We can't stop it, we can't save the nature we're used to, probably not the animals and marine life either. At some point though, we're going to have to get off of our stupid asses and come to the realization that if we live in flood plains, coastal areas and interfaces with Western forests, our homes will, at the very least, be damaged, possibly destroyed, and we ourselves will be displaced and at the very worst, die.  Do you disagree with this?  Do you see anybody trying to address this reality?  I'm not panicking. I will be fine. Lots of people will not be.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=O4Q8Nm4ksVU

“Global warming is already having significant and costly effects on our communities, our health, and our climate.”
“Rising seas and increased coastal flooding”
“Average global sea level has increased eight inches since 1880, but is rising much faster on the U.S. East Coast and Gulf of Mexico. Global warming is now accelerating the rate of sea level rise, increasing flooding risks to low-lying communities and high-risk coastal properties whose development has been encouraged by today's flood insurance system.”
“Longer and more damaging wildfire seasons”
“Wildfires are increasing and wildfire season is getting longer in the Western U.S. as temperatures rise. Higher spring and summer temperatures and earlier spring snow-melt result in forests that are hotter and drier for longer periods of time, priming conditions for wildfires to ignite and spread.”
“More destructive hurricanes”
While hurricanes are a natural part of our climate system, recent research indicates that their destructive power, or intensity, has been growing since the 1970s, particularly in the North Atlantic region.
“More frequent and intense heat waves”
“Dangerously hot weather is already occuring more frequently than it did 60 years ago—and scientists expect heat waves to become more frequent and severe as global warming intensifies. This increase in heat waves creates serious health risks, and can lead to heat exhaustion, heat stroke, and aggravate existing medical conditions.”
“Military bases at risk”
“Rising seas will increasingly flood many of our coastal military bases.”
“National landmarks at risk.”
“The growing consequences of climate change are putting many of the country's most iconic and historic sites at risk, from Ellis Island to the Everglades, Cape Canaveral to California's César Chávez National Monument.”
“Widespread forest death in the Rocky Mountains”
“Tens of millions of trees have died in the Rocky Mountains over the past 15 years, victims of a climate-driven triple assault of tree-killing insects, wildfires, and stress from heat and drought.”
“Costly and growing health impacts”
“Climate change has significant implications for our health. Rising temperatures will likely lead to increased air pollution, a longer and more intense allergy season, the spread of insect-borne diseases, more frequent and dangerous heat waves, and heavier rainstorms and flooding. All of these changes pose serious, and costly, risks to public health.”
“An increase in extreme weather events”
“Strong scientific evidence shows that global warming is increasing certain types of extreme weather events, including heat waves, coastal flooding, extreme precipitation events, and more severe droughts. Global warming also creates conditions that can lead to more powerful hurricanes.”
“Heavier precipitation and flooding”
“As temperatures increase, more rain falls during the heaviest downpours, increasing the risk of flooding events. Very heavy precipitation events, defined as the heaviest one percent of storms, now drop 67 percent more precipitation in the Northeast, 31 percent more in the Midwest and 15 percent more in the Great Plains than they did 50 years ago.”
“More severe droughts in some areas”
“Climate change affects a variety of factors associated with drought and is likely to increase drought risk in certain regions. As temperatures have warmed, the prevalence and duration of drought has increased in the western U.S. and climate models unanimously project increased drought in the American Southwest.”
“Increased pressure on groundwater supplies”
“As the climate changes in response to global warming, longer and more severe droughts are projected for the western US.  The resulting dry conditions will increase the pressure on groundwater supplies as more is pumped to meet demand even as less precipitation falls to replenish it. In California, water and wastewater utilities have an opportunity to significantly increase clean energy in the state's water sector.”
“Growing risks to our electricity supply”
“Our aging electricity infrastructure is increasingly vulnerable to the growing consequences of global warming, including sea level rise, extreme heat, heightened wildfire risk, and drought and other water supply issues.”
“Changing seasons”
“Spring arrives much earlier than it used to — 10 days earlier on average in the northern hemisphere. Snow melts earlier. Reservoirs fill too early and water needs to be released for flood control. Vegetation and soils dry out earlier, setting the stage for longer and more damaging wildfire seasons.”
“Melting ice”
“Temperatures are rising in the planet's polar regions, especially in the Arctic, and the vast majority of the world's glaciers are melting faster than new snow and ice can replenish them. Scientists expect the rate of melting to accelerate, with serious implications for future sea level rise.”
“Disruptions to food supplies”
“Rising temperatures and the accompanying impacts of global warming — including more frequent heat waves, heavier precipitation in some regions, and more severe droughts in others — has significant implications for crop and meat production. Global warming has the potential to seriously disrupt our food supply, drive costs upward, and affect everything from coffee to cattle, from staple food crops to the garden in your backyard.”
“Destruction of coral reefs”
“As global temperatures rise, so too do average sea surface temperatures. These elevated temperatures cause long-term damage to coral reefs. Scientists have documented that sustained water temperatures of as little as one degree Celsius above normal summer maxima can cause irreversible damage.”
“Plant and animal range shifts”
“A changing climate affects the range of plants and animals, changing their behavior and causing disruptions up and down the food chain. The range of some warm-weather species will expand, while those that depend on cooler environments will face shrinking habitats and potential extinction.”

The changes predicted above are already well underway. Since this is an exhaustive list, I am including only a few of the more significant climate change events of this year and last.  Coral reefs are dying. Mass extinctions are already occurring.

“Agriculture has always been at the mercy of unpredictable weather, but a rapidly changing climate is making agriculture an even more vulnerable enterprise. In some regions, warmer temperatures may increase crop yields. The overall impact of climate change on agriculture, however, is expected to be negative—reducing food supplies and raising food prices.  Many regions already suffering from high rates of hunger and food insecurity, including parts of sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, are predicted to experience the greatest declines in food production.  Elevated levels of atmospheric carbon dioxide (CO2) are also expected to lower levels of zinc, iron, and other important nutrients in crops.”
“With changes in rainfall patterns, farmers face dual threats from flooding and drought. Both extremes can destroy crops. Flooding washes away fertile topsoil that farmers depend on for productivity, while droughts dry it out, making it more easily blown or washed away. Higher temperatures increase crops’ water needs, making them even more vulnerable during dry periods.”
http://www.foodsystemprimer.org/food-production/food-and-climate-change/

I acknowledge that fuel build-up is responsible for the intensity of fires.  Western Forests are dependent on fires to maintain forest health, but there are other contributory factors that have changed.  “According to Funk, not only US forests are endangered by increasing wildfires - the trend has been that wildfires are burning more area around the world.”
"In recent years, there have been big fires in Siberia and various other places around the world where we typically don't see large-scale wildfires," he said.
Projections by the UCS suggest that wildfires could get four, five and even six times as bad as they currently are within this century."

"Science suggests that over the past few decades, the number of wildfires has indeed increased, especially in the western United States. According to the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), every state in the western US has experienced an increase in the average annual number of large wildfires over past decades.
What's more, wildfire season - meaning seasons with higher wildfire potential - has universally become longer over the past 40 years."

http://www.dw.com/en/how-climate-change-is-increasing-forest-fires-around-the-world/a-19465490

“It's been a hot July.”
“Wildfires in Greece killed at least 83, Sweden is desperately fighting fires above the Arctic circle, heat waves have struck everywhere from the U.K. to Siberia, and at least 70 deaths in Quebec in July were linked to the heat.”
“If we want to understand what's driving this heat wave — and if we should expect more of the same — we need to look northward, according to Dr. Jennifer Francis, research professor in Marine and Coastal Sciences at Rutgers University. 
Francis has been studying Arctic climate her entire career, and has authored and co-authored dozens of articles in peer-reviewed publications on the subject since the 1990s.”
"The basic story is that because the Arctic is warming so much faster than everywhere else, it's having an effect on mid-latitude weather," she told CBC.
Winds fan flames, rip trees from ground in deadly California wildfires 
According to Francis, weather patterns can stall in certain areas — prolonging an intense heat wave, for example — if the jet stream gets too weak. 
She describes the jet stream is a fast-moving current of air flowing across the northern hemisphere, passing over mid and northern Canada. It's caused by the collisions between frigid, descending air moving southward from the Arctic, and rising warm air coming from the equator.”
“Given that the Arctic is warming at least  twice as fast as anywhere else in the world, Francis says the temperature difference between Arctic and equatorial winds becomes smaller and smaller.”
“This is "weakening the winds of the jet stream," she said.”
"This creates weather patterns on the surface that tend to also get stuck in one place for a long time."
“Francis says while this research isn't conclusive yet, the science is "pretty well-settled."
"We can't finger point directly at the Arctic to say that this summer's crazy weather is directly related to the rapid warming up there, but it certainly fits the story that we've been putting together over the last several years."

“If Hurricane Harvey had happened at the end of the 20th century, that amount of rain falling in Houston in a single storm would have been rare—a 1-in-2,000-year event, said Kerry Emanuel, an MIT professor of atmospheric sciences. But as temperatures continue to rise, those rare events are becoming increasingly less rare, he said."

"There are myriad reasons why individual storms develop as they do, including a combination of natural and manmade causes. That can make it hard to assess what role climate may have played in an individual storm (though the science behind attribution studies is getting better all the time). What scientists who study hurricanes are confident in, though, is the underlying physics that show that warmer temperatures are among the factors changing the way that storms form."

"According to the 2014 National Climate Assessment, the intensity, frequency and duration of North Atlantic hurricanes have increased since the early 1980s. The frequency of the strongest storms—category 4 and 5 hurricanes—has increased too."

https://insideclimatenews.org/news/06092017/hurricane-irma-harvey-climate-change-warm-atlantic-ocean-questions

https://insideclimatenews.org/news/06092017/hurricane-irma-harvey-climate-change-warm-atlantic-ocean-questions

Right now, the world is about 2.1 degrees F (1.2 degrees C) warmer than it was during preindustrial times, deMenocal said. The 144 countries participating in the 2016 Paris Agreement announced that the world should limit the global increase in this century to 2.7 degrees F (1.5 degrees C), a stricter limit than the former goal of a 3.6 degrees F (2 degrees C) increase.

To put 2.7 degrees F into perspective, just about 9 degrees F (5 degrees C) separates the modern world from the last ice age, which ended about 15,000 years ago, deMenocal said. During that time, sea levels were about 350 feet (106 meters) lower than they are today, because an extensive amount of water was stored as ice at the poles, he said. During that ice age, about 32 percent of Earth was covered in ice, compared to just about 10 percent today, according to the National Snow and Ice Data Center.

All of these threats are just around the corner, deMenocal said. The Earth is anticipated to exceed the 2.7 degrees F (1.5 degrees C) milestone in about 15 years — between 2032 and 2039, deMenocal said. The planet is expected to surpass the 3.6 degrees F (2 degrees C) benchmark between 2050 and 2100, he said.
"If we're on our current emissions scenario, it's even sooner than that," he said. "Even over the last 8,000 years, we haven't seen a temperature extreme this rapid and this fast and large.

https://www.livescience.com/58891-why-2-degrees-celsius-increase-matters.html

“The rainforests of the sea, coral reefs play vital roles in the health of the ocean. But as a new study makes clear, humans’ influence on Earth’s climate is pushing them to the brink.”
“The analysis, published on Thursday in Science, takes a fresh look at the health of 100 coral reefs from around the world, stitching together a record from 1980 to 2016 from government documents, scientific studies, and media reports.”
“This approach corrects for the biases found in other, more spottily maintained databases—and paints a grim picture. On average, the study finds that the amount of time between severe bleaching events, which gravely wound coral reefs, has shrunk by a factor of five.”
“In the 1980s, coral reefs could expect about 25 to 30 years of recovery time between stressful episodes. But now, abnormally warm waters come once every six years on average. That’s simply not enough time for corals to cope, scientists warn. “Even the fastest-growing corals need at least 10 to 15 years to fully recover from severe bleaching. Entire reefs need decades to heal.”
“This carnage has dire implications. More than a quarter of all known marine species spend at least some of their lifecycle in coral reefs, says Eakin. In addition, more than 500 million people depend on coral reefs for food or fishing income. Even more still rely on corals to protect their shorelines from unchecked erosion and to fuel local tourism industries.”
“In all, the new analysis finds that of the 100 reefs studied, more than half saw more than 30 percent of their corals bleach in 2015 or 2016.”

THE EXTINCTION CRISIS
“It's frightening but true: Our planet is now in the midst of its sixth mass extinction of plants and animals — the sixth wave of extinctions in the past half-billion years. We're currently experiencing the worst spate of species die-offs since the loss of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago. Although extinction is a natural phenomenon, it occurs at a natural “background” rate of about one to five species per year. Scientists estimate we're now losing species at 1,000 to 10,000 times the background rate, with literally dozens going extinct every day [1]. It could be a scary future indeed, with as many as 30 to 50 percent of all species possibly heading toward extinction by mid-century.”
“In the past 500 years, we know of approximately 1,000 species that have gone extinct, from the woodland bison of West Virginia and Arizona's Merriam's elk to the Rocky Mountain grasshopper, passenger pigeon and Puerto Rico's Culebra parrot — but this doesn't account for thousands of species that disappeared before scientists had a chance to describe them [4]. Nobody really knows how many species are in danger of becoming extinct. Noted conservation scientist David Wilcove estimates that there are 14,000 to 35,000 endangered species in the United States, which is 7 to 18 percent of U.S. flora and fauna. The IUCN has assessed roughly 3 percent of described species and identified 16,928 species worldwide as being threatened with extinction, or roughly 38 percent of those assessed. In its latest four-year endangered species assessment, the IUCN reports that the world won't meet a goal of reversing the extinction trend toward species depletion by 2010.”
“What's clear is that many thousands of species are at risk of disappearing forever in the coming decades.”

“Communities and nations of the 21st century face a great challenge: to protect people from the harm caused by an increasingly volatile climate.”
“The damaging impacts of climate change will grow as the climate changes and adaptation fails to keep pace, unless societies take steps to increase their resilience through aggressive action on both climate mitigation and adaptation.”
“This report focuses on adaptation, where choosing among possible actions is often not straightforward or intuitive, and highlights 15 principles for decision makers to use to prioritize investments in climate change adaptation.”

I believe that is too late for climate mitigation. It is time for acknowledgement and adaptation. Study up on climate change. Change your investments.  Evaluate where you live in light of environmental changes and risks. Lobby your idiot government representatives to acknowledge that our time is up. Natural disasters will dominate and prevail, changing life as we know it. Yet we have Senators throwing snowballs in Congress as proof against global warming, oblivious that a snowball in Washington D.C. is proof of the extreme weather events associated with climate change. This will affect the poor the most. They have limited resources to change their income sources or move to safer ground. If changes are not made, we will see great loss of life among the most vulnerable populations; the homeless and the poor.  Read up. Educate. Lobby.

Tarin Ann Vincent
Copyright July 30, 2018

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