Latest Articles
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The plot to destroy America
Suppose you knew about a plot whose inevitable outcome would be to undermine the health and well-being of your children, their children, and the next 50 generations. Yes, hundreds of educated people -- mostly Americans -- are assembling in New York right now for just two purposes:- Sharing the techniques needed to block vital action that could save billions of people from suffering and misery.
- Spreading long-debunked disinformation while masquerading as experts who believe in the scientific method.
Well, of course, if you were Fox News, you'd be celebrating the event.
What can the rest of us do about this dangerous plot? Three things:
- Get the facts from real climate scientists at RealClimate.
- Keep a watchful eye on the conspirators with the help of DeSmogBlog.
- Give your children an extra hug tonight.
Remember, it's all about the children! If you don't stand up for them, who will?
This post was created for ClimateProgress.org, a project of the Center for American Progress Action Fund.
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Encyclopedia of Life up, but empty
A tip from Canis sent me to the Encyclopedia of Life, which came online last week. I posted on this project about nine months ago. I was skeptical that it would amount to much back then, so I was curious to see if I had missed the mark (as usual). I typed in a bunch of species and found nothing but placeholders for them. The site is still an empty shell, about 99.999 percent short of its goal. They have the categories in place, ready for armies of professional, hand-selected curators with nothing better to do than volunteer their free time to fill in the information.
Yes, I'm still skeptical. The whole idea behind Wikipedia is bottom-up data acquisition. In a sense, it is analogous to a free market: iterative and imperfect, but productive and useful. If every article in Wikipedia had to pass muster from an appointed expert on each subject, there would be no Wikipedia. The EOL will never see the success of Wikipedia with its present top-down, command-and-control structure.
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Climate skeptics hold conference in New York City
A conference of climate-change skeptics gathered in New York City this week to congratulate each other for daring to challenge the accepted science of global warming. A range of high-profile deniers painted themselves as put-upon independent thinkers branded as heretics by the church of climate-change dogma. Films were shown. Speeches were made. Al Gore jokes […]
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Nine Nobelists on the big problems
Saw a good DVD this evening, after what seemed like several weeks where all the worst things were unfolding faster and faster and I was looking for something not quite so grim as the current headlines.Nobelity is worth a look. Two ideas of special note for Gristies.
The film starts off with a discussion with physicist Steven Weinberg of the University of Texas, whose Nobel was for figuring out the electroweak force that unified two of the four fundamental forces in nature. He talks about (among other things) climate change. In a very matter of fact way, he makes a hugely important point that pertains to all the so-called skeptics (paraphrase):
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Border wall brings peace in the Middle East
Fighting the border wall, that is.
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Listen to ‘Ohio’ by Damien Jurado
Listen Play “Ohio,” by Damien Jurado While we all wait.
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Oil and the status of women in the Middle East
I'm not sure this falls under my "campus news" beat for Grist, but I heard it at a seminar at a college campus, and it's compelling enough that I'm going to say that because it falls within academia, it counts. Michael Ross is a political scientist at UCLA who was published in the February 2008 American Political Science Review with the assertion (PDF) that much of the gender inequality in the Middle East relative to the rest of the world can be explained not by traditional Islam, but by the presence of oil.
Photo: iStockphotoThe quick version is that Ross makes a strong case that women are hurt by a previously unappreciated effect of the infamous "resource curse" that imperils democracy in countries with abundant fossil fuels.
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EPA attempt to ban bird-killing pesticide runs into opposition
The U.S. EPA has proposed a ban on a pesticide lethal to birds, but is running into resistance from the company that produces the chemical. The pesticide, carbofuran, is typically used on crops such as corn, alfalfa, and potatoes, and has been linked to the dieoff of 558 separate bird flocks since 1972. A manager […]
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View the winners of the ’60 Seconds to Save the Earth’ ecospot contest
The Alliance for Climate Protection and Current TV had a contest for provocative ecospots: short video messages to motivate friends, community, and government to get involved in solving the climate crisis. The winner created a great visual metaphor: