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  • A nice little TV clip

    Hey, this is cool. Check out a segment from Global TV news hour featuring Jim Hoggan, founder of DeSmogBlog, wherein he talks about the fossil-fuel-funded climate skeptic crowd.

  • Western ballot measures would gut environmental protections

    A couple of weeks ago, while hurrying to a favorite trout stream, I was pulled over for speeding in a small town. I must have been fried from months of research and writing on the so-called "property rights" movement, because it suddenly occurred to me that the current system is backward.

    So I said* to the officer: "Listen, if The Man wants me to obey his laws to keep this town safe, then he should pay me for my time."

    Now if my reasoning with the cop sounds ridiculous to you,then you may have difficulty grasping the thinking behind the rash of ballot measures spreading across the West like ... well, like a rash.

    But there you have it: there's a well-funded and highly ideological campaign with national marching orders. In 2006, they've landed initiatives on the ballot in Arizona, California, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, and Washington. All the initiatives have the same aim: to force communities to pay property owners to obey land-use laws. And if communities can't pay, they must grant waivers from the law.

    (Don't live in one of these states? There's one headed your way soon. Live in Europe? You're next.)

  • We’re giving away two free tickets (and seeking volunteers to help at our booth)

    Grist will be at the Green Festival in San Francisco on Nov. 10-12. Wanna come? The Green Festival folks have given us two free tickets to hand out to lucky readers. Email us at emailE=('volunteer@' + 'grist.org') document.write('' + emailE + '') with "pick me!" in the subject line by 5 p.m. PST on Nov. 2 for a chance to win.

    Green Festival is the largest sustainability event in the U.S., with speakers, how-to workshops, music, organic eats and drinks, and displays from eco-friendly businesses and nonprofits (including, of course, Grist). Progressive luminaries strutting their stuff onsite will include Ben Cohen (of Ben & Jerry's fame), Amy Goodman, Hunter Lovins, John Robbins, David Suzuki, and Alice Walker. (Check out the full schedule for details.) The whole shebang will be carbon-neutral. About 30,000 people attended last year's Green Festival in San Francisco.

    If you aren't one of the ticket winners, we can still get you in free if you volunteer to work a shift at the Grist booth. Email emailE=('volunteer@' + 'grist.org') document.write('' + emailE + '') for more info.

    And, if you're going to be in the Bay Area on Nov. 10, be sure to come to our reader party in San Francisco. Organic booze, door prizes, witty banter -- pun will be had by all.

  • About oil and foreign policy

    In his typically understated fashion, Kevin Drum draws attention to remarks from George W. Bush's interview with Rush Limbaugh today. Amidst all the usual BS, there was this:

    Give me a second here, Rush, because I want to share something with you. I am deeply concerned about a country, the United States, leaving the Middle East. I am worried that rival forms of extremists will battle for power, obviously creating incredible damage if they do so; that they will topple modern governments, that they will be in a position to use oil as a tool to blackmail the West. People say, "What do you mean by that?" I say, "If they control oil resources, then they pull oil off the market in order to run the price up, and they will do so unless we abandon Israel, for example, or unless we abandon allies.

    Speaks for itself, doesn't it?

  • State boosts renewable standards to 15% by 2025

    Yesterday, by a vote of 4-1, the Arizona Corporation Commission voted to expand the state's renewable energy standard to 15% by 2025, with 30% of that to come from distributed generation technologies. We're talking support for up to 2,000 MW of solar.

    We'll take that over a sack of tootsie rolls and candy corn any day.

  • In B.C., a landmark rainforest-protection agreement was just the beginning

    It took 10 years of work to protect British Columbia’s Great Bear Rainforest. Photos: Gregory Dicum The Great Bear Rainforest, stretching from Vancouver Island to the Alaska Panhandle on the wild, rugged coast of British Columbia, is that rarest of things: an unvarnished environmental victory. But as the groundbreaking agreement signed to protect it comes […]

  • You Can’t Spell Lobotomy Without “EPA”

    As feds close EPA libraries, researchers and others protest Gagging didn’t work, so the feds are trying something new. The U.S. EPA has closed four of its research libraries and cut hours at seven more. The agency says materials will still be available digitally, but many worry that the shift will stymie scientists seeking data […]

  • You Say Tobago, and I Say No Thanks

    Island activists battle plans for new aluminum smelters Put on your sixth-grade geography cap, because a battle over aluminum smelters is heating up in, of all places, the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago. Residents of the tiny Caribbean nation have spent nearly two years fighting plans for two new smelters put forth by a Trinidadian […]

  • Two Florida icons facing extinction

    The sad news out of Florida is that the iconic pink plastic flamingo, resident of many Florida front lawns since the 1950s, is about to become extinct.

    The last flamingo was produced in June, and the parent company is going out of business today -- a mere seven months before the icons were to celebrate their 50th birthday.

  • Should we eat them?

    Michael Ruhlman, a food writer who has penned books with the likes of Thomas Keller (The French Laundry), has an interesting thread on his blog about cooking balls (yes, the ones between legs). I haven't put a lot of thought into the ethics of eating balls, or castrating for that matter, or whether these bits demand their own particular consideration vis-a-vis the rest of the animal. But the recipe-intensive discussion is amusing, so click ahead (as long as you're not a vegetarian).