Thursday Night Open Thread: What Is It About Australia?

Scientists Just Discovered 3 New Kinds of Carnivorous Sponge in The Deep Ocean

sciencealert.com | Jan. 18,2021 | Jacinta Bowler

“Carnivorous sea sponges” still sound like something from a sci-fi movie. And yet, researchers just announced the discovery of three new such species off the coast of Australia.

Out-of-Control Australian Bushfire Threatens Perth Homes

Phys.org | Jan. 16, 2021

“Like Finding Life on Mars”: Why the Underground Orchid Is Australia’s Strangest, Most Mysterious Flower

Phys.org | Dec. 29. 2020

Australia Signals Shift Away From Climate Credit “Cheating”
Phys.org | Nov. 20, 2020

Australia’s prime minister said the country may no longer rely on a much-criticised accounting tactic to meet its emissions targets, stepping away from an approach international partners had labelled “cheating”.

Conservative leader Scott Morrison said targets under the Paris climate accord could be met without using so-called “carryover” credits—a mechanism that reduces current emissions on paper but not in the atmosphere.

Do you have something you’d like to share? A link? A joke? Some words of wisdom? A topic to discuss? It’s our nightly Open Thread, and you have the floor.

Just a Reminder — We’ve Been Through All Sorts of Lawlessness Before, and We Might As Well Get Used To It

Biden Cannot Legally Get Us Back Into the Paris Climate Accords; Here’s Why
PJ Media | Jan. 19, 2021 | Matt Margolis

Joe Biden has made no secret of his intention to get us back into the Paris climate accords. It’s high up there on his laundry list of things to do upon taking office—even though the United States leads the world in reducing carbon emissions, despite not being a part of it anymore.

But the truth is, the United States was never actually legally a part of the Paris climate accords. The United Nations describes it as “a legally binding international treaty on climate change,” and it also meets the definition of a treaty under the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, which states that a treaty is “an international agreement concluded between [two or more] States in written form and governed by international law.”

And what does the United States Constitution say about treaties?

It says that the president “shall have Power, by and with the Advice and Consent of the Senate, to make Treaties, provided two-thirds of the Senators present concur.” It’s right there in Article II, Section 2, Clause 2.

Yes, Obama unilaterally signed the United States into the treaty in the final months of his presidency, which was a very telling move. Nearly 200 countries signed the treaty on December 12, 2015, but Obama didn’t sign it until nearly a year later, during the final stretch of the 2016 presidential election.

Obama, who fancied himself a constitutional scholar, never even attempted to go to the Senate for ratification. Instead, he avoided referring to the agreement as a treaty publicly, in order to argue that Senate ratification wasn’t constitutionally mandated.

Just Putting It Out There

Alcohols Exhibit Quantum Effects

Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology | 1/18/21

Skoltech scientists and their colleagues from the Russian Quantum Center revealed a significant role of nuclear quantum effects in the polarization of alcohol in an external electric field. Their research findings are published in The Journal of Physical Chemistry.

Does that explain the good-looking babe at the end of the bar?

Oh . . . those would be quandam effects . . .

Straight Line of the Day: Our Long National Nightmare May Soon Be Over — How Will Kamala Ditch Biden?

Gumbeaux, before he naturally disappears, has offered two suggestions:

. . . tell Harris to stop spreading the rumor that Xiden is about to go public with evidence against Hillary . . .

Biden: “God, maybe it’s me, but Kamala’s hair is increasingly smelling like rat poison . . .”

So:

Straight Line of the Day: Our long, national nightmare may soon be over — how will Kamala ditch Biden?