Skip to content
Grist home
All donations doubled!

Uncategorized

All Stories

  • A poll!

    You may have noticed that I can't bring myself to post about anything serious today. It's Friday, for chrissake, and the sun's finally out in Seattle. Instead, how about a stoopid poll. Vote below the fold.

  • The glossy backlash

    Yesterday I took a few potshots at the Wired green issue.

    Now the glossy backlash continues, with a DailyKos diarist going postal on the Vanity Fair green issue:

    Every pathology of the overripe zenith of American hyperconsumerism and narcissism, proudly flaunted in one shiny, garishly overcoloured, borderline-porno, pretty-shiny-toxic package.  What an experience.

    Bitchy is the new green!

  • Amen

    Oh my goodness:

    WASHINGTON, April 26 (UPI) -- A U.S. Christian group has grown tired of escalating gasoline prices and is set to stage a national prayer rally to lower the numbers at the pumps.

    Various Christian clergy from around the country will convene around a Washington, D.C., gas station Thursday at noon to pray. For those who can't attend, a live Internet site and toll-free prayer line have been established.

    In a release, the Pray Live group said many people are "overlooking the power of prayer when it comes to resolving this energy crisis."

    Apart from sending a message to God, the rally had a message for humanity, said Wenda Royster, the group's founder.

    "It is our hope that seeing and hearing some of the nation's most powerful preachers gathered around a gas station and the United States capital as a backdrop, will remind everyone who is really in charge of our world -- God," Royster said.

    The Web site is at praylive.com. The toll-free phone number is 888-PRAYLIVE.

    S'pose it has as much chance of working as this stuff.

    (via EnergyBulletin)

  • Tarcísio Feitosa da Silva fights illegal logging in the Amazon

    In the northern Brazilian state of Pará, where the mouth of the Amazon cuts into the continent, illegal logging, industrial farming, and a human-driven cycle of massive wildfires are destroying the tropical forests. Since he was a teenager, Tarcísio Feitosa da Silva has considered it his mission to help protect these forests, and the isolated […]

  • Worth 1000 words

    Classic.

    Update [2006-4-28 14:37:38 by David Roberts]: Ooh, Yahoo has a whole photo montage. Worth 10,000 words!

  • Pollute Suit Riot

    States sue EPA for not regulating CO2 Ten states have filed a lawsuit against the U.S. EPA over what has become a central point of contention between the feds and … people who have to live on the planet for the next 50 years: whether or not the agency has the authority to regulate planet-warming […]

  • Hypocrisy yet again

    I really really really wish everyone would go read this post by Matt Yglesias, and then read it again. He's making a point that I've made many times before: the monomaniacal focus of pundits and (many) activists on hypocrisy makes neither substantive nor tactical sense.

  • More on Chafee, believe it or not

    At the risk of beating a dead horse, let me return to this Chafee question one more time, from a slightly different angle. Yes, it will bore you.

  • Me and Al Gore

    Next Tuesday, May 2, I'll be sitting down for a conversation with Al Gore, a man who, as they say in the biz, needs no introduction. We'll be speaking about his new movie, An Inconvenient Truth, and related matters.

    What should I ask him?

  • Chariots of Fire

    After the pre-screening of An Inconvenient Truth last night in Washington, Al Gore told a crowd of think-tank denizens, activists, and media types that change in American history moves at two speeds: "slow and lightning." Recalling the Civil Rights era, he added, "When we see something as a moral issue, a lot of change can happen quickly."

    Grappling with the implications of climate change as a moral issue is becoming more common. Earlier this year, the Evangelical Climate Initative issued their call to action, proclaiming, "Millions of people could die in this century because of climate change, most of them our poorest global neighbors." More recently, in March, John Podesta struck a similar note in a speech at Harvard on clean energy and global warming(PDF): "Beyond the price and the politics that are necessitating change, we, in the United States, have a moral obligation to change."

    On different paradigm question, Gore made a key distinction after the film: The movie's animated clip of greenhouse-gas thugs pounding Mr. Sunbeam originated with Futurama, not the Simpsons.