David T. Hines, 29, got nearly $4 million in PPP funding and spent part of it on a car valued at $318,000, officials said.
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Scooped by
The Swarm
onto Operation Deimos July 29, 2020 9:57 PM
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David T. Hines, 29, got nearly $4 million in PPP funding and spent part of it on a car valued at $318,000, officials said.
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No servant can serve two masters: for either he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he will hold to the one, and despise the other. Ye cannot serve God and mammon. Luke 16:13 (KJV)
You shall not steal; you shall not deal falsely; you shall not lie to one another. Leviticus 19:11 (ESV)
Wealth is treacherous, and the arrogant are never at rest. They open their mouths as wide as the grave, and like death, they are never satisfied. In their greed they have gathered up many nations and swallowed many peoples. Habakkuk 2:5 (NLT)
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"Hosting a fundraiser with Big Oil CEOs while we're still counting the bodies from Hurricane Helene is like hosting a fundraiser with the NRA in the midst of a school shooting," said climate campaigner Jamie Henn.
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From
oilprice
The two biggest oil and gas projects approved for development in the UK’s North Sea over the past two years could be delayed or never completed as the hurdles to oil and gas drilling in Britain are becoming higher.
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From
time
The Planetary Health Check is a key monitor of earth's vital signs—and will guide action for a more sustainable world.
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Japan had its second-hottest September since records began with some regions the warmest yet, the weather agency said, in a year likely to become the warmest in human history.
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From
phys
Across the Southeastern United States, hundreds of roads are closed, power outages continue to be reported and catastrophic flooding devastated mountain towns as the fallout from Hurricane Helene swept through parts of Georgia, the Carolinas and Virginia this weekend.
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"Private equity firms and their executives are making billions by investing public employees' retirement money into planet-destroying fossil fuel assets," said one researcher.
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The country’s final coal-fired power plant just shut down, marking a major milestone for the notoriously polluting fossil fuel.
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For the sake of the planet, we needed to transition away from fossil fuels, writes James Moore. But we must remember the enormous debt paid by coal-mining communities
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The Science-based Target Initiative (SBTi) has for the first time tabled explicit limits on financing fossil fuels and there are good reasons why this has taken so long, says the NGO’s finance lead Nate Aden.
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The lassitude that distinguishes our moment is born of sorrow and buried rage. We act like colonial subjects because, in effect, that’s what we are
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Hurricane Helene's massive rains and flooding is a major health and safety risk for residents exposed to potential waterborne illnesses and other dangers.
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Estimates of insured losses from Hurricane Helene continue to range around $5 billion, not including flood insurance losses, as the death toll in the Southeast continued to rise, reaching 107 by Monday morning. |
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From
www
Three wildlife guides face federal charges for allegedly running an illegal hunting enterprise that left mountain lions dead in Idaho and Wyoming.
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Greenpeace USA's response to the devastating impacts of Hurricane Helene.
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European policymakers are sabotaging their own climate goals by subsidizing fossil fuels. Climate experts demand action to redirect funds towards climate solutions. Will the E.U. choose the planet over profit?
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Climate change is allowing for extreme heat to last longer into fall, as record-breaking temperatures for the month of October blanket much of the West.
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From
phys
As climate change rapidly transforms Arctic marine systems, the dramatic image of a polar bear struggling on a melting ice floe has become symbolic of the region's environmental crisis. But...
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The country’s final coal-fired power station was desynced from the grid on 30 September, bringing an end to 142 years of burning coal for electricity.
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Taiwan closed schools and evacuated thousands of people in the south of the island Tuesday ahead of the arrival of Super Typhoon Krathon, with the president warning it was likely to cause "catastrophic damage".Krathon -- packing sustained winds of 198 kilometers per hour (123 miles per hour)... |