Latest Articles
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Kia ads: ‘Save the greenbacks’
The problem with these Kia ads is not that they mock environmentalists -- the world needs more mockery, not less -- the problem is that they're not funny.
(via desmogblog)
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Philosophical musings.
Since I am cut off from the news, I thought I'd discuss some philosophical issues.
Environmentalism is shot through with the same dualisms that have confused Western philosophy from the beginning, and the practical effect (philosophy does too have practical effects!) is to confuse environmental discourse and strategy.
It's probably too much to get into in a single blog post, but let's just think for a moment: What do we mean when we refer to "nature"?
Of course there's the colloquial meaning, i.e., trees and streams and stuff. But follow it up a little. What is nature? Or, phrasing it another way, what isn't nature? What separates nature from not-nature?
One common line of thinking contrasts the natural to the supernatural. Nature is the material world, and then there's the immaterial world inhabited by God, souls, angels, ghosts, and what have you.
A related and sometimes overlapping school of thought contrasts nature with humanity.
The contrast might be positive: Nature is violent, insensate, and irrational (red in tooth and claw), while human beings are unique in virtue of possessing rationality. This has been the default approach for most of Western history.
Or it might be negative: Nature as a kind of harmonious, balanced, holistic system ("Gaia"), while human beings are a cancer on the planet, either unaware or dismissive of any "natural" limits. This is a more recent way of thinking, bound up with the social upheavals of the 60s and 70s, frequently found among those who profess "deep ecology."
Now, if you believe in the supernatural -- i.e., God -- then there's no need to trouble your mind. Usually the picture is pretty clear: God "gave" nature to us, his most special creatures, to take care of (dominate or tend lovingly, depending on your predilections). Or, if you're of a certain persuasion, nature is basically disposable, since the Rapture's on the way.
The Enlightenment project has been to either bracket the supernatural or dismiss it entirely. For secularists, then, it's a little more complicated: How do we conceive of nature and humanity, environmentalism itself, without the supernatural?
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Don’t let catastrophic visions get you down … well, not all of them
We greens spend a lot of time obsessing about how life as we know it is likely to end: in a slow, painful miasma of greenhouse gases; in the violent cross fire of a nuclear gang war; in mass ignominy, dead and bug-eyed in our folding chairs after endless rounds of fruitless policy discussions. But […]
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Grist Dashboard widget now available
While you may only account for about 10 percent of our site's visitors, we love you no less than your Windows (and Linux!) counterparts. And to show you our gratitude, we've released the Grist Dashboard widget, which will deliver Daily Grist headlines directly to your desktop.
What is a Dashboard widget exactly? I'll let Apple explain:
Dashboard is home to widgets: mini-applications that let you perform common tasks and provide you with fast access to information. With a single click, Dashboard appears, complete with widgets that bring you a world of information -- real-time weather, stock tickers, flight information, and more -- instantly. Dashboard disappears just as easily, so you can get back to what you were doing.
Please note that the widget will only work for Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger) users.
If you do download our widget, please let us know what you think in comments. And feel free to share ideas for other widget applications, like a climate tracker.
Thanks to Advenio LLC who was instrumental in the development of our widget.
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Ape of Good Hope
King Kong director campaigns to save wild gorillas The original 1933 King Kong gave gorillas a bad rep and inspired an upsurge in gorilla hunting, but the director of the 2005 remake hopes to use his blockbuster’s appeal to help keep the apes from going extinct. Peter Jackson is backing efforts by the International Gorilla […]
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You Be Spillin’
China faces two more toxic river crises Two new toxic spills have hit rivers in central China. Last week, cadmium seeped out of silt dredged in a cleanup effort on the industrialized Xiangjiang River, contaminating a 60-odd mile stretch of the waterway, and a broken pipe at a power plant dumped six tons of diesel […]
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Forest Trump
Judge halts more than 140 Northwest timber sales to protect rare species U.S. District Judge Marsha Pechman has reinstated the “look before logging” rule on federal lands in the Pacific Northwest — abolished in 2004 by the Bush administration — and ordered a halt to 144 timber sales in California, Oregon, and Washington that might […]
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Been There, Bumped That
Whaling and protest ships collide in Antarctic waters Japanese officials are claiming that a Greenpeace ship intentionally hit a whaling ship in the Southern Ocean on Sunday. But crewmembers of the protest vessel say the whaler rammed their smaller ship, and they’ve posted video of the incident on the Greenpeace blog. The collision left a […]
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Jury duty
Greetings from jury duty in
miserable and blightedlovely Kent, Washington. I'm writing this on a dinky little laptop, using glacially slow (but free!) wi-fi here at the Regional Justice Center. I'm cut off from my usual workflow and, most importantly, my RSS feeds. So I have no idea what's going on out in the world.To boot, at any moment my number could come up and I could be called away to determine some poor schlub's guilt or innocence.
So ... posting will be light today.
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An internal audit exposes the USDA’s lax oversight of GM crop tests.
In a press release last June, the anti-GMO watchdog group Center for Food Safety questioned the USDA's oversight of tests involving genetically altered crops. The agency had just greenlighted a biotech company's proposal to grow test plots of rice containing human genes on 270 acres in North Carolina and Missouri, right in the middle of large-scale conventional rice production. The press release quotes a CFS scientist thusly:
With this approval, USDA has signaled that it thinks it's okay to grow drug-producing crops near food crops of the same type, despite the threat of contamination ... There have already been numerous examples of contamination of food crops by biotech crops, including pharmaceutical crops. Over time, such contamination of our food is virtually inevitable under the conditions allowed by USDA.
The USDA brushed aside this complaint and plunged forward, asserting that it monitors such tests with all due care.According to a recently released internal USDA audit, though, the CFS had a point.