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  • Spite of the Living Dead

    Interior Department official disparages endangered-species recommendations If Julie MacDonald had a farm (e-i-e-i-o), all the animals would die. At least six times since 2004, MacDonald — deputy assistant secretary of the Interior Department — has rejected staff recommendations to protect susceptible flora and fauna under the Endangered Species Act, documents show. The Interior Department’s inspector […]

  • Hauntingly Familiar

    Groundbreaking climate report inspires predictable political responses World reaction to yesterday’s U.K. report linking climate change with possible economic ruin has been swift — and painfully predictable. While British Prime Minister Tony Blair and his likely successor Gordon Brown hailed the findings, Kyoto-resisters Australia and the U.S. offered more lukewarm responses. Australian Prime Minister John […]

  • There are many

    As y'all are no doubt aware, the mid-term elections are rapidly approaching. For the big-picture state of the election, I refer you to insider's insider Charlie Cook:

    With the election just eight days away, there are no signs that this wave is abating. Barring a dramatic event, we are looking at the prospect of GOP losses in the House of at least 20 to 35 seats, possibly more, and at least four in the Senate, with five or six most likely.

    Also, don't miss our own Amanda's articles on the elections here, here, and here.

    Of particular interest to us green types is the unusual prominence of eco-issues in a variety of campaigns, from the obvious (Calif. gubernatorial) to the not-so-obvious (Nevada senate).

  • Celebs stump for progressives in Calif.

    The Pombo race is coming down to the wire. The national party has sent Laura "The Republican People Still Like" Bush out to pull Pombo's fat out of the fire.

    The Dems are pulling out their big guns too -- their big Hollywood Elite Liberal Latte-Sipping Homo Heathen guns, that is. Ben Affleck and Jennifer Garner -- Bennifer II, proud parents of a beautiful 11-month-old girl -- are out in California and will appear Saturday at a Defenders of Wildlife event on behalf of Jerry "Not Pombo" McNerney. Can victory be far behind?

    In other news, damn Garner's looking good for a new mother, is all I'm saying.

  • It’s a poor indicator of progress on global warming

    A recent news article about the Stern Report contained the following gem from a Bush administration spokeswoman:

    The statement from spokeswoman Kristen Hellmer said the United States is "well on track to meet the president's goal to reduce greenhouse gas intensity of our economy 18 percent by 2012."

    This statement makes it sound like the Bush administration is taking on the problem of climate change head-on, with an aggressive program to reduce emissions.

    But it ain't so.

  • A question re: fire lines and wild fires

    The recent wild fires in Calif. make me wonder why fire lines (areas of land cleared of vegetation) aren't actively maintained around areas where there is housing, and even in different areas of the forest. Does it require that too much land be cleared? The labor involved has got to be less than the labor needed to fight a fire, and perhaps it could prevent firefighters from losing their lives protecting property. Does anybody know why this isn't done?

  • Help ’em out

    WorldchangingTomorrow (Wednesday), our compatriots over at Worldchanging will be officially publishing their book, with 600 pages worth of innovative solutions to the world's most pressing environmental and social problems. It's a good book, worthy of wide dissemination and discussion, filled with stories, ideas, and images that just might give you hope that humanity isn't going to commit collective suicide. Who couldn't use a little hope these days?

    The publishing industry, like the movie industry, focuses intensely on the first few days' sales. If a book starts off strong, it receives media attention and publisher support. If not, it likely sinks into obscurity. The WCers have no marketing budget to speak of, so they rely on their social network for support.

  • More research on what kind of diet makes people healthy

    Sir Robert McCarrison is not a household name, but in the 1920s this honorary physician to the King, head of post-graduate medical education at Oxford and proponent of nutrition, played an influential role in the birth of the organic food movement in Britain -- and perhaps in contemporary nutrition research as well.

  • ‘One record year is not global warming’–Luckily, there are plenty more years to consider

    (Part of the How to Talk to a Global Warming Skeptic guide)

    Objection: So 2005 was a record year. Records are set all the time. One really warm year is not global warming.

    Answer: This is actually not an unreasonable point -- single years taken by themselves can not establish or refute a trend. So 2005 being the hottest globally averaged temperature on record is not convincing. Then how about:

  • A review (and a preview) of the documentary The Great Warming

    The Great Warming aims to do what other climate-change books, TV shows, and films haven’t. In lieu of purely scientific or data-based persuasion, it appeals to viewers’ sense of spiritual and moral responsibility. On that level, it succeeds. Debuting in American theaters on Nov. 3 but already making the rounds in the country’s churches, the […]