Chinese Government Licenses Living Buddhas, Regulates Reincarnation

The Communist government in China is moving to try to take more control of the practice of Buddhism in the officially atheist country. The legislature in Lhasa, the capital of Tibet, called on living Buddhas to be approved by central government authorities when it met earlier this week, according to the Los Angeles Times.

China has a licensing scheme for living Buddhas already, as the Times reports:

On Jan. 18, authorities published online an official registry of 870 licensed living Buddhas, searchable by name, temple and identity card number or “living-Buddha card number,” to cut down on fraud.

Yet experts say that the system of registering living Buddhas has itself become fertile ground for corruption.

“The thing [authorities] are emphasizing is the database — that’s the new hyped up thing,” said Barnett. “The way it works is permits. You get a permit from the local religious affairs office, saying you’re recognized as a so-called living Buddha. Once you have that system, it means you can pay for it.

“Apparently what that means — and I have several personal sources on this — is that each area has a quota of these to hand out, and the officials in each area just sell their quota,” he continued.

Chinese authorities have been working on controlling the authorities of Buddhism in China for decades, and controlling the process of selection is becoming more urgent for them as the Dalai Lama, Tibet’s spiritual leader, gets older.

At the legislature, the deputy Communist Party chief in Tibet insisted the Dalai Lama hadn’t been a religious leader since leaving Tibet in 1959, when he renounced a previous agreement forced on the autonomous Tibetan government by the invading People’s Liberation Army when the Dalai Lama was 20. He is now 80 years old.

He could return to China as a religious leader, the deputy chief said, if he renounced independence for Tibet and called it as well as Taiwan “inseparable parts of China” whose only legitimate government was the People’s Republic of China.

The Communist government has managed to control Tibet through religious figures approved by them, including those at the Lhasa legislature. The Dalai Lama has condemned China’s efforts at controlling the reincarnation process, calling them outrageous in 2011.

“The enforcement of various inappropriate methods for recognizing reincarnations to eradicate our unique Tibetan cultural traditions is doing damage that will be difficult to repair,” he said back then.

There have been regular protests in Tibet for years, with some of the largest and most violent demonstrations in March 2008, surrounding Tibet Uprising Day, which commemorates the 1959 Tibetn uprising and is celebrated on March 10. China has closed Tibet to foreign tourists every March since the 2008 unrest.

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The Fed’s Got A Problem

Submitted by Lance Roberts via RealInvestmentAdvice.com,

The Fed’s Got A Problem

The most recent employment report sent the financial market pundits abuzz claiming that the economy was on solid footing with no recession in sight. The problem, for anyone willing to actually look at the data, was the underlying data was mostly disappointing.

While the BLS trumpeted 242,000 new jobs in February, wages declined 0.1% and the average workweek fell by 0.2 hours along with aggregate hours worked falling a hefty 0.4%. Furthermore, part-time work soared in February while full-time job growth was mediocre.

But even stranger was that out of the 242,000 jobs, retailing saw a massive jump of 55,000 jobs. This is in a month when stores are not hiring a lot of part-time work to deal with a shopping season. Jeffrey Snider at Alhambra Partners picked up on this by pointing out the differential between actual retail sales and “hiring.”

Starting April 2015, overall retail sales (again, including auto sales) fell below 3% on a 6-month average basis (meaning more than a one-month drop in growth rate) – and have remained closer to 2% than even 3%. In past cycles, that has meant initiation of contraction in retail trade employment and widespread recession. Not this time, however, as the BLS gives us a remarkable +313k gain (including February 2016) over the last 11 months. That equates to an astounding 28.5k per month.”

Alhambra-RetailTrade-Employment-030916

Pretty amazing.  This is even more confounding when you look at the NFIB’s Small Business Survey which shows real retail sales and expectations of sales both on the decline.

NFIB-Retail-Sales-030916

But it is not just in “retail trade” that employment gains are an issue but rather throughout the entirety of the report. The obfuscation of the data is coming from the mathematical “seasonal adjustments” along with the “birth/death” adjustment which are adding jobs that aren’t actually there.

Think about it this way. If the unemployment rate were truly 4.9%, and jobs were actually being created at the fast clip since the 90’s, then labor force participation rates, along with wage growth, should be at similar levels. Right? Uhm....

Employment-Population-16-54-030916

Of course, the reason that labor force participation rates remain so low is that job creation has failed to exceed the growth rate of the working-age population. With the population growing faster than employment, the number of unemployed living in the shadows continues to swell.

Employment-Population-NetChange-030916

Of course, herein lies the problem for the Federal Reserve, who remains intent on further rate hikes this year, which could lead to a major policy error. The Fed’s own Labor Market Conditions Index, which has now declined into contraction, also suggests that something is very wrong with the employment data over the last several months.

LMCI-FedFunds-030916

If the employment gains were indeed as strong as the Fed, and the BLS, currently suggest; the labor force participation rate should be rising strongly. This has been the case during every other period in history where employment growth increased. Since the financial crisis, despite employment gains, the labor force participation rate has continued to fall.

This suggests that at some point in the future, we will likely see negative revisions to the employment data showing weaker growth than currently thought. 

The issue for the Fed is by fully committing to hiking interest rates, and promoting the economic recovery meme, changing direction now would lead to a loss of confidence and a more dramatic swoon in the financial markets. Such an event would create the very recession they are trying to avoid.

Oil – This Ain’t 2009

I live in Houston where oil is literally the life-blood of the economy. My wife works in the oil field related sales, my friends work for oil companies as well as my clients who are working and saving for their retirement. I would love nothing more than oil prices to go much higher as it would make my life immeasurably simpler.

Over the last couple of weeks, the rally in oil has gotten the financial media and analysts all stirred up with predictions the “bottom in oil is in” and “$70/bbl oil is on its way by summer.” These views are based on the assumption that the decline in oil prices today is much like what we saw during the “dot.com bust” and during the “financial crisis.”

It’s not.

This morning Liz Ann Sonders from Schwab sent out the following tweet:

This misses the main problem with oil which is not going to be resolved anytime soon. The chart below shows the current supply of oil versus demand. Given that prices over the long-term are a reflection of the supply/demand dynamic, the current problem is quite apparent.

OIl-Supply-Demand-030916

This supply/demand imbalance is not going to be resolved my a mild stabilization in supply but rather a rapid decline in production. However, such a swift decline can not feasibly occur due to the need by oil companies to generate income to continue operations, make debt payments, and generate a profit, albeit at much lower levels, for shareholders. As shown in the chart above, the oversupply of oil was eventually reversed but over a very long period of time.

When the supply/demand imbalance became inverted it paved the way for massive oil price rallies in 2005 and 2009 (highlighted circles in the chart below) as “peak oil” became the prevailing fear.

Oil-Price-1980-Present-030916

With oil supplies once again exceeding demand, particularly in a weak global economy, oil companies will once again have to balance reducing supply against maintaining operations and profitability. Therefore, we are once again in position for a long, slow, decline in supply which will lead to sustained lower trading ranges for oil prices. Consequently, this will lead to lower reported profit margins for energy companies for the foreseeable future.

The point here is simple: “This ain’t 2009.”  

Yes, there will terrific trading opportunities for energy-related companies in the future. But first we need to work through the shake out of marginal companies that will file for bankruptcy, consolidation of weaker but stable players and reversions of pipelines back into parent companies. These actions will likely keep action volatile in the sector for a while and there will be significant money lost on speculative bets that go bust.

None of this is a bad thing, it is just the consequence of excess being reverted to a healthier and strong state.

If only Central Bankers understood the same.

The NFIB’s Un-optimistic View

While the media continues to jump on every government skewed statistic to spin into a positive headline, a recent survey of “boots on the ground” companies suggest something else is going on in the economy.

The National Federation of Independent Business recently released their latest survey of small businesses for February. The results were less than optimistic as shown by the sharp decline in their overall outlook over the last couple of months.

NFIB-Optimism-Index-030916

As Bill Dunkleberg, Chief Economist for the NFIB, stated:

“Monthly management of monetary policy using data subject to substantial revision is inconsistent with the acknowledged lags in policy and not supportive of real growth which requires more policy consistency. Financial markets, of course, thrive on the variability such policies produce and support a zero-interest-rate policy (ZIRP).

 

Meanwhile, compared to 2009, consumer interest income is down cumulatively over $3 trillion dollars, an unhappy side effect of Fed policies. Low interest rates are great if they occur in an economy that presents investment opportunities. This happens when the economy is exhibiting solid growth which it has not done in this expansion. The 1983 expansion averaged 650,000 new jobs each quarter compared to 450,000 in this expansion with a labor force 30 percent larger.

 

NFIB data indicate slow growth in the first quarter following the 1 percent growth rate for the fourth quarter of 2015. The GDPNow forecast from the Atlanta Fed is about 2 percent and the NFIB data basically agree. Owners are very pessimistic about business conditions in the coming months and spending and hiring plans have softened.”

Despite the always optimistic view of the media and Wall Street, businesses that ACTUALLY OPERATE in the economy have a much different view. Not surprisingly, the correlation between NFIB expectations and economic growth are fairly correlated which suggest that the economy is likely weaker than headlines suggest. 

NFIB-Expections-GDP-030916

As shown above, the decline in actual and planned sales would also suggest weaker hiring. Not surprisingly, the number of firms increasing employment last quarter also declined which again brings into question the accuracy of recent employment reports. 

NFIB-Expectations-Employment-030916

Of course, if things were as good economically as we are told by Wall Street and the mainstream media, would the ECB really be needing to drop further into negative interest rate territory and boost QE? 

Just some things to think about.


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Wish India’s Commie Students Good Luck: New at Reason

India elected Prime Minister Narendra Modi in a landslide more than two years ago to usher in free markets and raise Kanhaiyaliving standards. But instead of doing that—his latest budget is long on freebies and short on market-based reforms—he is unleashing his inner Hindu nationalist and cracking down on campus activists demanding social justice and criminal justice reforms.

He dusted off India’s sedition laws and arrested many students on a local campus in New Delhi, including the firebrand student union leader, Kanhaiya. But within hours of being released, Kanhaiya delivered a blistering speech against Modi, demanding azadi or freedom.

Given that successful market liberal polities have spillover benefits beyond their borders, notes Reason Foundation Senior Analyst Shikha Dalmia, for the sake of both India and its nuclear-armed Muslim neighbor, Pakistan, everyone should hope that Kanhaiya forces Modi to make a course correction.

View this article.

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Harry Potter and the Pointless Outrage: J.K. Rowling Accused of Appropriating Native American Culture

PotterThis story might make you want to point a wand at your computer screen and shout Avada Kedavra: Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling has come under fire for appropriating Native American culture in recently released stories that build on the mythology she created. 

Some background: the Harry Potter novels take place in Great Britain, and provide scant details regarding magical life outside of Europe. But now Rowling has begun releasing short stories on her website, Pottermore, that expand the scope of her books by providing information about wizarding communities in other parts of the world. 

A recent entry examined the history of magic in North America. Rowling drew on Native American legends, practices, and cultural beliefs to accomplish this, which is hardly surprising. The British witches and wizards of the Harry Potter universe are similarly inspired by real-world depictions of witches and wizards in European stories. 

Is something wrong with this? No. There is an entire genre of fiction, in fact, built around “secret histories,” where author’s use real historical events or legends but retell them with revisionist or fantastical elements. 

But Rowling has run afoul of the people who shout “cultural appropriation” whenever someone borrows from an ethnic tradition to which they do not belong. As was the case with Renee Bierbaum—the yoga instructor who was shut down by the county government after a Native American activist accused her of culture theft—a militant defender of Native traditions is asserting that Rowling is taking “a living tradition of a marginalized people.” 

“That’s straight up colonialism/appropriation,” wrote Dr. Adrienne Keene, an academic and member of the Cherokee Nation, on Twitter. 

Keene was particularly perturbed that Rowling had referenced “skin walkers,” an actual Native American legend. In Rowling’s fictional universe, skin walkers were just normal magical folk who could turn into animals. Non-magical people created myths about evil skin walkers in attempt to demonize the magical community. 

Here was Keene’s response

I had a long phone call with one of my friends/mentors today, who is Navajo, asking her about the concepts Rowling is drawing upon here, and discussing how to best talk about this in a culturally appropriate way that can help you (the reader, and maybe Rowling) understand the depths to the harm this causes, while not crossing boundaries and taboos of culture. What did I decide? That you don’t need to know. It’s not for you to know. I am performing a refusal. 

In Keene’s mind, not only are non-Natives forbidden from adapting Native stories, but they should be kept in the dark about their ignorance! 

Rowling noted on Twitter that she was only explaining Native American magical traditions in the context of her world, to which Keene responded, “It’s not ‘your’ world. It’s our (real) Native world.” 

Keep in mind: they’re arguing over the details of a story that features a magic boy who talks to snakes and rides a broomstick and battles dragons. 

It would be one thing if Rowling’s depictions of Native Americans were offensive, or racist. But merely drawing inspiration from Native American culture is not the same thing as marginalizing it. 

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Global Liquidity Collapses To 2008 Crisis Levels

The last time that global liquidity conditions contracted at this pace was March 2008 (right as stocks dead-cat-bounced on the back of The Fed’s guarantee of Bear Stearns’ sale to JPMorgan)… and things escalated rather quickly thereafter.

Liquidity conditions also contracted (though not as severely as the current conditions) in Dec 2011… which prompted Bernanke to unleash QE2…

h/t financialsense.com

Bloomberg defines BofAML’s Global Liquidity Tracker as follows:

Our real-time Global Liquidity Tracker (GLT) is a composite indicator of liquidity conditions in emerging and developed economies. To estimate our GLT indicator, we employ a dynamic factor model used by global central banks. Our Liquidity Tracker extracts a common unobserved factor reflecting the greatest common variation among market spreads, asset prices, monetary and credit data across different frequencies. We combine our US, Euro area, Japan and EM Liquidity trackers into a global composite using financial weights reflecting the average relevance of an economy in terms of market capitalization and private sector credit.  

 

All of this allows us to produce timely estimates of liquidity conditions in an effort to asses the state of the global economy. A reading of zero indicates liquidity at its long-run average while activity between -3 and +3 represents the standard deviation from this average.

Most worryingly – if it wasn’t already obvious, given the world’s stock markets’ total and utter devotion and dependence on central bank-provided liquidity – we have seen this pattern before…

 

And it did not end well.


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Are Stocks Heading For a 1937-Type Meltdown?

It’s literally 1937 all over again.

Many analysts have called for the Fed not to repeat its mistake of 1937.

That mistake?

Raising rates when the economy was already weak. Doing this prolonged the Great Depression.

However, few commentators point out WHY the Fed raised rates in 1937.

The reason?

CPI hit 3.7%.

Notice that by raising rates the Fed kicked off another terrible round of deflation with CPI falling from 3.7% to -2.0% in JUST ONE YEAR.

Fast forward to today. The US’s inflation rate is moving vertical…

Core inflation is already ABOVE 2%.

The Fed is cornered. If core inflation continues to rise the Fed will be forced to raise rates, kicking off another market meltdown. In 1937 when the Fed hiked rates during a weak economy, stocks plunged 40% in the following 12 months.

Buckle up, it’s coming.

If you’ve yet to prepare for a bear market in stocks we just published a 21-page investment report titled Stock Market Crash Survival Guide.

In it, we outline precisely how the crash will unfold as well as which investments will perform best during a stock market crash.

We are giving away just 100 copies for FREE to the public.

To pick up yours, swing by:

http://ift.tt/1HW1LSz

Best Regards

Graham Summers

Chief Market Strategist

Phoenix Capital Research

 

 


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China Is Now In Control Of Global Silver Prices

Submitted by Dave Forrest via OilPrice.com,

China has been an unofficial price-setter for most metals over the past decade. And this week, the country became an official participant in setting prices for one of the world’s most important precious metals markets.

That’s the London Bullion Market silver price. Where one of China’s largest banks just became a member of an elite group of players that controls fluctuations in this key metal.

CME Group, which runs the process for price setting of silver in London, said Sunday that China Construction Bank will officially join as a member of the silver price process. Putting it alongside existing participants HSBC, JPMorgan Chase, The Bank of Nova Scotia, Toronto Dominion Bank, and UBS.

These groups will now participate in price bids that go into setting the official London silver price. The first time that China will have direct influence on this process.

The expansion into China in itself is significant. And the entry of China Construction Bank into the market could also have some other important consequences for precious metals.

Especially when it comes to currencies. With the Chinese bank having said it will support the development of renminbi-denominated futures contracts for physical delivery in London.

Such products would represent the first time that physical silver can be bought and sold here in China’s home currency. A move that could reduce the longstanding relationship between the U.S. dollar and precious metals prices.

This is also a sign that precious metals markets are increasingly going international. Which makes sense, given that the world’s top consumers are places like China, India, Russia and Turkey.

This could be the start of further moves to increase metals markets influence in these parts of the world. Watch for more announcements, and for a possible breakdown in the USD/silver correlation as the renminbi contracts get going.

Here’s to a silver line-up…

 


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“I’m Out” – Bulls Dropping Like Flies After Evercore Says Tactical Bull Is Over, “Buy Gold”

All it takes to find out just how much conviction so called bulls have in this rigged, centrally-planned market and short squeeze, which only goes on as long as faith in central planning still exists, is a major intraday reversal, coupled with a surge in gold. Like the one today in the aftermath of Draghi’s abysmal press conference. The result: first Goldman saying “the recent relief rally might be short-lived”, and now here is Evercore ISI’s Rich Ross with a note in which he once again expected the S&P to plunge to 1,670 in a note titled simply enough…

I’m Out.

My Bullish tactical call is over. While we have repeatedly highlighted 2030 as our upside target, the rapid post ECB reversals in the cross asset technicals dictates that we abandon our tactical view at this time in favor of a far more defensive posture. Our structural Bear Market call with downside to 1,670 remains intact. We would sell Global Equities and Commodity Currencies (BRL, CAD, RUB) on the back of recent countertrend strength and buy Gold

 

I do not expect the world to end overnight, but I do feel strongly that the countertrend rally in risky assets has likely run its course and that the risk/reward to continue to play for tactical upside is simply not acceptable given the current macro technical backdrop.    

* * *

Expect many more formerly bullish flip-floppers now that faith in central planning is shaken to the core.


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After Six Years, All Charges Dropped Against ‘Somali Sex-Trafficking Gang’ That Wasn’t

Federal prosecutors in Nashville announced this week that all charges related to an alleged Somali sex-trafficking ring had been dropped. The decision to drop the charges against 16 remaining defendants comes in the wake of a federal appeals court ruling that three men previously prosecuted as part of the case had been wrongly convicted, owing to the fact that the entire case was a sham.

“We’ve conducted a thorough review of the 6th Circuit’s recent opinions and … after much consideration, we have determined that the best course of action is to dismiss the charges against all remaining defendants,” said David Boling, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office in Nashville. 

Some of the defendents—almost all young, Muslim immigrants from Somalia—have been in jail for years, despite not being convicted of a single sex crime.

As detailed by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, prosecutors’ case against these so-called sex traffickers was based entirely on the faulty testimony of two victims, both of whom were caught in multiple contradictions and lies, and of a Minnesota police officer who was also found to be fabricating facts. And though the case had been billed and prosecuted as one of “child sex trafficking,” one of the allegedly underage victims—intitially described as a 15-year-old—had a falsified birth certificate. It was determined likely that the “minor,” Jane Doe 2, was actually 19-years-old during the time period in question. 

At every step of the case, however, red flags that should have given law enforcement pause were ignored or overlooked. Former-U.S. Attorney Todd Jones, then in Minnesota (where the bulk of the alleged activity had taken place), even declined to prosecute the case based on concerns about its quality. But because several of the alleged sex-trafficking incidents had happened in Tennessee, federal agents were able to take the case to trial in Nashville, where a jury acquitted six defendants and convicted three. A trial judge subsequently acquitted these three defendants, but federal prosecutors appealed. 

In the wake of the appeals court’s ruling, St. Paul police Sgt. Heather Weyker—deteremined to have “likely exaggerated or fabricated important aspects” of Jane Doe 2’s story, to have lied to the grand jury, and to have lied on an application to a victim’s compensation fund—was placed on paid leave from the St. Paul Police Department. A spokesman said an internal affairs investigation had been completed, and she was now back on duty, although country prosecutors are taking a second look at other cases she has worked on. 

Maki Haberfeld, a professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, called Weyker’s a case of “‘noble cause’ corruption”—a situation “in which police officers are tempted to fabricate facts in order to move their case forward, because if they don’t, then an otherwise guilty person” might go free. “We see this in police culture very frequently,” Haberfeld told the Duluth News Tribune

As a member of a Justice Department human-trafficking task force, Weyker was likely primed by her experience to see sex trafficking where there was none, if not outright encouraged by colleagues to take a broad view of it. But while she’s the only one accused of direct corruption in this case, she was far from the only one intimately involved. Officials from the Department of Homeland Security, the FBI, and the Nashville Attorney General’s office all worked on the investigation and prosecution, even after finding out facts such as the faked birth certificate and adult status of their star “child victim.”

“The (St. Paul police) chief was told numerous times what a great job she was doing,” Steve Linders, a spokesman for the St. Paul Police Department, told the Tribune. “So the chief is curious how one officer working so closely with a federal agency can be solely responsible for a case of this magnitude falling apart.”

That one seems pretty easy: she’s the lowest on the totem pole here. By focusing on the role Weyker played in corrupting the case, along with the troubled status of the two teen accusers (one of whom is described in court documents as having significant, untreated mental health problems of an unspecified variety), federal agents can distance themselves from their active and ongoing participation in the investigation and prosecution of this case. As the six-year saga comes to a close, it looks like no one in government will actually pay for wasting an untold fortune of public money and years worth of official resources, reinforcing anti-immigrant sentiment, feeding the sex-trafficking hysteria machine, and the upending the lives of over two dozen men of color. 

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Leaking Beachfront Nuclear Reactor Near Miami Threatening Florida Everglades

Submitted by Claire Bernish via TheAntiMedia.org,

According to a study released by Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez on Monday, the waters of Biscayne Bay measured 215 times the level of radioactive tritium as is found in normal ocean water.

Tritium is a radioactive isotope traceable to nuclear plant cooling tower operations. In this case, the leak appears to be emanating from the aging canals in the Turkey Point Nuclear Generating Station located nearby.

“This is one of several things we were very worried about,” said South Miami Mayor and biological sciences professor, Philip Stoddard, as the Miami New Times reported. “You would have to work hard to find a worse place to put a nuclear plant, right between two national parks and subject to hurricanes and storm surge.”

Biscayne Bay harbors one of the largest coral reefs on the planet and is situated near the Everglades. Hot, salty water from the canals appears to be flowing back into both national parks, which has caused concern among environmentalists and others from the time Turkey Point planned to expand its reactors in 2013.

“They argued the canals were a closed system, but that’s not how water works in South Florida,” Stoddard remarked.

“How much damage is that cooling canal system causing the bay is a question to be answered,” Everglades Law Center Attorney Julie Dick told the Miami Herald prior to reviewing the report. “There are a lot more unknowns than knowns and it just shows how much more attention we need to be paying to that cooling canal system.”

Tritium, a hydrogen isotope, is considered a precursor indication of leaks from nuclear plants, as it ‘travels’ or spreads faster than, and often precedes, other radioactive agents.

“While the tritium levels far fall below levels experts consider dangerous, the telltale tracer provided the critical link that high levels of ammonia and phosphorus in sections of bay bottom — pollution that is more damaging to marine life — likely came from the canals,” the Herald explained. Samples for the county monitoring study were gathered during December and January — and the tritium levels seem to show Florida Power & Light in violation of both local water laws and federal operating permits.

 FPL, which operates Turkey Point, will likely receive another violation due to the leak — the county issued a citation in October for tainted groundwater — to force FPL to bring the plant into compliance, the Herald reported Tuesday.

After news of the report made headlines, critics, including environmentalists, nearby rock miners, and Rep. Jose Javier Rodriguez, came forward in full force calling for the Environmental Protection Agency to intervene in the matter.

“For years our state regulators have failed to take seriously the threat to our public safety, to our drinking water, and to our environment posed by FP&L’s actions at Turkey Point,” Rodriguez asserted, according to the New Times.“Evidence revealed this week of radioactive material in Biscayne Bay is the last straw and I join those calling on the U.S. EPA to step in and do what our state regulators have so far refused to do — protect the public.”

The leak also serves as possible confirmation for environmentalists who have suspected radioactive leaks from Turkey Point as the cause of algae blooms appearing in the bay for years.

“Biscayne Bay has not traditionally had algae blooms,” explained executive director for Miami Waterkeeper Rachel Silverstein, reported the Herald. “That’s from pollution. From sewers, septic tanks and now we know, cooling canals.”

Indeed, though FPL claims it continues to protect the health of the bay, as the Herald noted, Turkey Point has created issues for the waterways since the facility began producing more energy three years ago. “When you look at the big picture,” FPL environmental director, Matt Raffenberg, insisted, the canals “are not impacting Biscayne Bay.”

At a meeting on Tuesday, county commissioners discussed the imperative need to bring FPL and Turkey point into compliance with the law.

“We’ve had stop gap measures we’ve approved,” Gimenez said. “So far they’ve not proved to be the solution.”

Referencing the last time FPL was forced to implement changes following a lawsuit in the 1970s, he added, “It’s time we enter the 21st century.”

FPL’s continued problems with Turkey Point might have finally crossed the legal line by violating the federal Clean Water Act.

“There’s a certain validation to critics in seeing this result in the study,” Stoddard said. “But more important, it’s now crossed the threshold of federal law here.”


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