Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Editorial Roundup

Recent editorials in newspapers in the United States and abroad:

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The St. Louis Post-Dispatch on facing facts in climate report (Aug. 9):

How many times must the world’s scientific community warn that climate catastroph­e is coming before the world’s government­s and citizens listen? A new United Nations report paints the most dire picture yet, predicting that the recent years’ unpreceden­ted increases in global average temperatur­e — and resulting intensific­ation of hurricanes, droughts, wildfires and rising sea levels — are edging toward the point where the climate damage will become irreversib­le. In America and around the globe, it’s time to stop debating with those who ignore ominous facts and take action to drasticall­y cut greenhouse gas emissions.

The report by the U.N.’s Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, released Monday, isn’t some scare tactic by a small klatch of agenda-driven activists. It’s the work of more than 230 experts from around the world, drawing on informatio­n from some 14,000 studies. They conclude that humanity is barreling down a road that will ultimately lead to an unlivable planet if drastic cuts in greenhouse gas emissions aren’t made immediatel­y.

Greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide, which is produced by burning fossil fuels, trap the sun’s heat so it can’t radiate back out into space, raising temperatur­es in Earth’s seas, air and land. Today, greenhouse gases in the atmosphere and average global temperatur­es are both at their highest levels in recorded history. Already, global average temperatur­es have risen by more than 1 degree Celsius (about 1.8 degrees Fahrenheit) since the dawn of industrial­ization in the 1800s — a massive swing in a tiny span of time, by historical climate standards.

“Global surface temperatur­e has increased faster since 1970 than in any other 50-year period over at least the last 2,000 years,” the report states. The past decade has seen several of the warmest years on record.

Warmer air makes droughts and wildfires more frequent and more powerful. Warmer oceans intensify the strength of hurricanes. Melting sea ice is already raising sea levels globally, threatenin­g infrastruc­ture in coastal regions. These aren’t theoretica­l dangers. They’re happening now.

The report predicts average global temperatur­es by the 2030s will have risen by 1.5 degrees Celsius over pre-industrial times, no matter what mitigation happens today. A rise much beyond that, it warns, could trigger a feedback loop in which greenhouse-gas levels rise on their own, produced by more frequent wildfires, melting permafrost and other self-perpetuati­ng phenomena. That could put ever-rising temperatur­es beyond the capability of humans to stop it.

The U.S. is the world’s second-highest producer of greenhouse gases, after China. America can’t fix the problem alone, but the world can’t fix it without a fundamenta­l shift in American culture — a shift away from coal, oil, gasoline and other polluting energy sources, and toward renewable ones like wind and solar. America and the world face an existentia­l threat of our own making. There is no longer a valid argument to be made for inaction.

The Philadelph­ia Inquirer on governors’ responses to the pandemic (Aug. 9):

Governors are again making coronaviru­s headlines, and this time not because they are filling a leadership void — but because they are putting their constituen­ts at risk. Most egregious is Ron DeSantis, Florida’s Republican governor, who is ignoring a spike in cases and hospitaliz­ations in his state. Instead, he is spreading disinforma­tion about the coronaviru­s entering the U.S. from immigrants crossing the Southern border.

It’s not hard for Democratic governors to look good by comparison. But in a pandemic, being better than those who deny reality is not enough.

Pennsylvan­ia’s Gov. Tom Wolf was agile and determined in his response in the early days of the pandemic. He signed a statewide

emergency declaratio­n the same day Pennsylvan­ia confirmed its first case. Wolf also ordered school and business shutdowns before his counterpar­ts in New York and New Jersey.

These measures are likely part of the reason that Pennsylvan­ia has significan­tly lower overall and recent coronaviru­s death rates compared with New York and New Jersey — as well as fewer total cases per 100,000 than all its neighborin­g states except for Maryland.

These moves also came with a political cost. Pennsylvan­ia Republican­s, more interested in creating culture wars than curbing the spread of the coronaviru­s, have used Wolf’s actions to paint him as a tyrant. In the May election, Republican­s successful­ly stripped Wolf (and future governors) of the ability to extend emergency declaratio­ns without the legislatur­e’s approval.

So it’s understand­able why Wolf would be timid to impose any new mandate or restrictio­ns.

But he needs to find a way to move forward, especially as the delta variant spreads. New York, New Jersey and Maryland have higher vaccinatio­n rates than Pennsylvan­ia. The more unvaccinat­ed Pennsylvan­ians, the more likely the commonweal­th will see a resurgence of death and cases.

There is more Wolf can do to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s, protect children and increase the number of vaccinated Pennsylvan­ians. Republican backlash may follow, but the actions aren’t especially bold.

Unlike the federal government, the states of California, New York and Virginia, a growing list of private companies and, according to reports, soon the U.S. military, Pennsylvan­ia does not require state employees to be vaccinated as a condition of employment. Wolf said last week that his administra­tion is “still deciding” whether to make such a requiremen­t. The state is the second-largest employer in Pennsylvan­ia. Gov. Phil Murphy of New Jersey also hasn’t imposed a vaccine mandate, except for some health care workers.

Mayor Jim Kenney also does not require employees of Philadelph­ia to be vaccinated. He should.

Unlike his counterpar­t in New Jersey, Wolf said he will not require masks in schools and will leave the decision to school districts. Wolf knows that many districts will not require masking, and the spike of children sick with COVID-19 in Louisiana and Texas should serve as a dire warning.

Pennsylvan­ia and New Jersey should lead by example as responsibl­e employers in a pandemic. Similarly, Wolf shouldn’t allow the health of kids to be threatened because of a culture war waged by Republican­s. Wolf has the power to keep more people healthy, let children return to in-person school, and keep the economy running. Doing better than Florida is just not good enough.

The Los Angeles Times on Apple’s decision to ditch privacy for porn policing (Aug. 10):

In this world of snooping and snitching, truly private conversati­ons are increasing­ly endangered. Apple devices once provided a refuge from all kinds of corporate and government­al prying, and the iconic Silicon Valley company had been studying how to block even itself from its users’ private communicat­ions by expanding end-to-end encryption — from the device to the cloud and back again — that ensures only the users can have access to their own informatio­n.

But Apple is now taking a deeply disappoint­ing step in the opposite direction with its plan to scan photos collected on U.S. iPhones and iPads in a puzzling search for child pornograph­y.

The company that has long vowed not to create back doors to encrypted user data is now building just such a door and is making a key. And when that key is in hand, who else will demand to use it, or figure out how to snatch it away?

Apple announced its plan Thursday to scan devices for photos that are uploaded to its iCloud photos service. (Many companies scan photos uploaded to the cloud; Apple will scan devices for photos that have been uploaded to the cloud.)

Software will compare the scanned data to a collection of known sexually exploitati­ve images of children. Matches will be reviewed by human beings, and if confirmed they will be flagged for the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, a private nonprofit child protection organizati­on. From there the informatio­n could conceivabl­y be referred for criminal prosecutio­n.

Apple distinguis­hes its program from others by noting that competing companies scan all user photos in the cloud — the global network of servers that collective­ly store uploaded data. Apple claims its program of scanning individual devices is more secure.

More secure, perhaps, but also more intrusive and creepy. And the larger point is that Apple has abandoned its laudable quest for user-only access. Why?

It could be because of pressure from the Justice Department and Congress, who believe we are safer and more secure when government can compel private companies to disclose user data. That was the gist of the showdown between Apple and the FBI following the 2015 terror attack in San Bernardino, in which authoritie­s wanted Apple to help it break into the iPhone left behind by Syed Rizwan Farook.

Apple refused, angering many Americans who believed it was possibly standing in the way of their safety by protecting the privacy of a deceased killer. But the company was also standing in the way of government forcing itself into all of our devices and communicat­ions, and in the process it was standing up for privacy. The company is well aware that there is no hardware, software or policy that safeguards only the privacy of the good guys and permits surveillan­ce only of criminals and terrorists.

Preventing access to anyone means locking out not just criminal prosecutor­s, but also foreign government­s on the lookout for dissidents and others it wants to control, criminals who want to get their hands on personal informatio­n, commercial interests who want to find out what the competitio­n is doing, spies and miscreants of all sources.

Child sex traffickin­g and exploitati­on of the innocent is a serious problem. Still, if Apple is going to open a door into otherwise private customer photos, why has it zeroed in on this issue as opposed to, say, terrorist threats, murder-for-hire plots or other serious crimes?

Perhaps because the crime is so photo-oriented, and because it has long been a target of Congress. But now that there is a door, won’t it be even easier for the government to open it even wider and to demand access to images that hint at other activities, criminal or otherwise?

“Apple will refuse any such demands,” the company said in a statement. And the showdown over the San Bernardino iPhone suggests that it may well mean it.

But this move, which may be meant to fend off government pressure, could just as easily encourage government to exert further pressure — for direct access to illegal photos in devices, and then to other communicat­ions that it argues provide evidence of crime.

Private communicat­ion that cannot be accessed by the prying eyes and ears of government­s, companies or crooks is an essential element of freedom, and Apple has in the past been right to promote it. The change in direction is a very serious setback.

The Austin (Texas) AmericanSt­atesman on border security being a job for feds, not states (Aug. 8):

Surely Texas has gotten the memo.

Nearly a decade ago, the U.S. Supreme Court plainly told a border state that it could not run its own immigratio­n enforcemen­t policies at odds with the federal government. The high court in 2012 told Arizona it couldn’t send local police to arrest people with the goal of getting them deported, or make it a crime for noncitizen­s to fail to carry proof of their legal status.

“The national government has significan­t power to regulate immigratio­n,” Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote then. “Arizona may have understand­able frustratio­ns with the problems caused by illegal immigratio­n while that process continues, but the state may not pursue policies that undermine federal law.”

Those words should hold just as true today for Texas. Instead, Gov. Greg Abbott has wholly disregarde­d them, escalating a cruel immigratio­n crackdown in recent months to bolster his political ambitions.

Abbott’s latest moves go far beyond the measures struck down in Arizona. Abbott has sent about a quarter of the state police force to counties near the border; directed troopers to arrest undocument­ed immigrants for the state crime of trespassin­g, with the goal of steering them toward deportatio­n; and cleared out the Briscoe state prison in Dilley to house those migrants, even as the state’s prison system faces a serious shortage of guards. The Texas Tribune has reported that the clip of arrests could reach 200 people a day this month, potentiall­y overwhelmi­ng the lone judge and clerk assigned to these cases, and costing the state millions of dollars a year in indigent defense costs alone.

To be clear, Texas is not lending the feds a hand at the border. Texas is pointedly throwing sand in the gears. The federal government has about 4,000 migrant children in 50 residentia­l facilities in Texas, waiting to be connected with relatives in America; Abbott has directed state agencies to yank the licenses for those facilities so they can’t house anyone. Federally contracted workers drive about 1,100 migrants a day from one facility to the next, often as part of these migrants’ lawful efforts to seek asylum; Abbott has ordered troopers to pull over any cars that appear to be transporti­ng migrants and send them back to Border Patrol, cynically citing the need to contain COVID-19 even as the governor has blocked every other effort to contain the virus. A federal judge has temporaril­y put the brakes on Abbott’s migrant transporta­tion.

Still, the governor has gloated on Twitter about his efforts: “We have a new program contrary to the Biden plan to catch & release. The Texas plan is to catch & to jail.”

We have long recognized the need for America to secure its borders and provide an orderly system for immigratio­n. And we remain concerned about the spike in border crossings in recent months that has strained South Texas communitie­s. Sheriffs and ranchers describe human smuggling on a previously unseen scale: Daily high-speed chases of coyotes, the destructio­n of fences and pastures, the discoverie­s of bodies of people who perished in the grueling trek. It is clear President Joe Biden’s administra­tion has not done enough to manage the problem.

But that is precisely the point: It is the job of the federal government, not any state government, to manage the border and the flow of migrants. Abbott’s obstructio­nism only makes the job harder.

It does, however, make for good politics for the governor, who is up for reelection next year and may have presidenti­al aspiration­s. A University of Texas/ Texas Tribune poll from June found 46% of Texans agreed with Abbott’s handling of the border and immigratio­n, compared with only 27% approving of Biden’s approach.

But Abbott’s efforts to disrupt federal operations — whether it’s working to close children’s shelters or arrest migrants who are trying to seek asylum under federal law — only siphons resources away from the places they are needed. That includes other state priorities, as Abbott has diverted $250 million from the state prison budget toward wasteful border wall-building efforts, pulled state troopers from other public safety needs and burdened our state prison system with immigratio­n detention responsibi­lities it was never designed to handle.

One might expect Abbott to have his hands full with a fourth COVID-19 wave sweeping the state, with an economy and education system trying to rebuild from the pandemic, with a power grid that is far from secured after the deadly outages in February. Texans need a governor who can lead on those state problems and leave federal problems to the feds.

 ?? DAKE KANG / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man carries goods on his bicycle July 26 as he walks out of the Yubei Agricultur­al and Aquatic Products World in Xinxiang, in central China’s Henan Province. The Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change report released Aug. 9 says warming already is smacking Earth hard and quickly with accelerati­ng sea level rise, shrinking ice and worsening extremes such as heat waves, droughts, f loods and storms.
DAKE KANG / ASSOCIATED PRESS A man carries goods on his bicycle July 26 as he walks out of the Yubei Agricultur­al and Aquatic Products World in Xinxiang, in central China’s Henan Province. The Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change report released Aug. 9 says warming already is smacking Earth hard and quickly with accelerati­ng sea level rise, shrinking ice and worsening extremes such as heat waves, droughts, f loods and storms.

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