California Water and Infrastructure Report For June 18, 2020

California Water and Infrastructure Report For June 18, 2020

www.californiadroughtupdate.org/20200618-California-Water-and-Infrastructure-Report.pdf?_t=1592531729

“Forget the nonsense you hear spouted by the talking heads on tv, and the Congress critters owned by the financiers. For a real economic recovery, we must return to the scientific principles of economics of Leibniz, which were adopted by America’s Founding Fathers, were further advanced by Lyndon LaRouche, and are today embodied in the LaRouchePAC “Plan to Reopen the Economy.” Join us now to implement this plan!”

A Note To Readers

The civilizational breakdown crisis shows no sign of ending soon. That makes it all the more necessary that the full program presented in The LaRouche Plan to Reopen the U.S. Economy: The World Needs 1.5 Billion New, Productive Jobs.” be implemented now.

The Feature this week continues our serialization of that pamphlet with Chapters 4 and 5 included.

Also in this week’s report:

We begin with a ten minute video presenting the principles of real physical economy, not the speculative parasitical one that dominates today.

The U.S. Drought Monitor shows no increase in the severity of drought in California from last week. But, that is not unexpected, even in very dry weather. We have seen over the years a sudden one week large jump in drought severity.

Wildfires have joined drought now as summer has begun, with the most serious in the Southwest, mainly in Arizona, though some are now burning in California.

This week’s report includes also reports on how the “Coronavirus pandemic has affected state’s food, agriculture and environment,”

PG&E is again in the news, pleading guilty to 84 counts of involuntary manslaughter from the Paradise fire of 2018, just as the company is about to come out of bankruptcy. Eighty-four counts of murder and no one goes to jail.

A new Trump administration policy enabling U.S. government financing for nuclear energy projects abroad could help accelerate the use of smaller reactors and put the U.S. back in the nuclear power business. And without nuclear power stopping pandemics is impossible.

That is followed by an article entitled, “You Can’t Stop Having Pandemics without Nuclear Power.”

The Feature concludes this week’s report.

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