File:Hansen-testimony-1988.jpg
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James Hansen’s groundbreaking testimony on global climate change
On June 23, 1988, in the sweltering heat, Hansen told a U.S. Senate committee he was 99 percent certain that the year’s record temperatures were not the result of natural variation. It was the first time a lead scientist drew a connection between human activities, the growing concentration of atmospheric pollutants, and a warming climate.
James Hansen testifies in 1988: Ten Years After the Establishment of the National Climate Program Act
“It’s time to stop waffling so much and say that the evidence is pretty strong that the greenhouse effect is here,” Hansen told reporters.
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Thirty years after Dr. James Hansen's testimony, on June 23, 2018
A retrospective look... "A Prophet of Doom Was Right About the Climate"
File:James Hansen - NY Times Opinion - June 23, 2018.pdf
https://www.greenpolicy360.net/mw/images/James_Hansen_-_NY_Times_Opinion_-_June_23%2C_2018.pdf
New Definitions of National Security
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- Setting the Scientific Groundwork in Place
Energy and Climate Report
Congressman George E. Brown / Science Committee and the National Climate Program Act of 1978
National Climate Program Act - Public Law 95-367
SJS / GreenPolicy Siterunner:
On the House science committee for over 30 years George Brown led an array of science and environmental initiatives, including one that greens look to as prescient -- he drafted legislation establishing 'the first federal climate change research program' via the Federal Climate Program Act of 1978.
I was fortunate, as a high school student to be introduced to politics by George Brown in East Los Angeles in the 1960s and to know him and work with him, on environmental, science, anti-nuke and non-proliferation issues on which both of us cared greatly, until his passing of a heart attack in 1999.
The Congressman's accomplishments are especially missed in the current era as the U.S. enters the third decade of the 21st century and as anti-science positions and climate change denial in the U.S. Congress threaten national and global security...
SJS / GreenPolicy Siterunner / June 2, 2016
The Beginnings of the Modern Climate Change Movement within the US Congress
In 1977-78, the National Academy of Sciences (NAS) produced a first-of-its-type scientific study of climate change issues. Congressman George E. Brown from East Los Angeles in California was a leader in science initiatives in Congress and took up the climate policy cause. This is decade prior to the historic testimony of Jim Hansen before Congress in June 1988.
Throughout the 1960s and 70s, and until his passing in 1999, George Brown was a mentor and friend to your GreenPolicy siterunner. The Congressman encouraged by political and environmental work and at the University of Southern California, he often participated in our anti-war efforts and our student transition to environmental efforts, especially via "teach-ins" including the first Earth Day "teach-in" on April 22, 1970, organized with the assistance of Gaylord Nelson who spoke on campus the day after the first Earth Day, was the first of what has now become a global effort. Our student teach-in idea has grown far beyond what we initially hoped for...
Currently, to continue George's work of encouragement and to highlight his setting up the first Federal study by the US government of climate change, I'm corresponding with a Wikipedia editor to update George E Brown's online biography -- some changes have been made and the addition below is now under consideration.
The Congressman's central role in proposing and drafting key initiatives and legislation at the beginning of the modern environmental movement, included drafting the statute that originated the Federal climate change research program in 1978, a profound accomplishment -- https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/STATUTE-92/pdf/STATUTE-92-Pg601.pdf
Here are a few lines I've written to the Wikipedia editor:
>The Congressman served for more than 30 years on the House Science Committee. See last paragraph here, a NY Times citation - http://www.nytimes.com/1999/03/09/science/a-conversation-with-george-e-brown-jr-the-congressman-who-loved-science.html
>Also note and consider this quote from the NY Times (a few months before his death in 1999) >He was an author of legislation creating the Environmental Protection Agency, a prime mover behind efforts to include ozone layer protections in the Clean Air Act and an advocate of restructuring the national weapons laboratories to meet the needs of a peacetime economy.
>Also re the current Wikipedia bio wording >Among some of his many accomplishments during his service on the House Science Committee:
>>Established the first federal climate change research program in the Federal Climate Program Act of 1978.
>In fact George Brown was the principal author of the initial legislation and leader on this climate change/policy issue...
>Skip Stiles (the Congressman's chief of staff) writes of this period of service on Capitol Hill -- Congressman Brown was the author of legislation in 1977-78 that established the first federal program of research on climate change --
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