Latest Articles
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Are smoking bans fair?
Well, I'd subject you to more TV updates, but I actually went out last night and had a life. Which involved being in a smoke-filled bar for several hours. Which got me to thinking ... yuck.
Seattle's one of the country's healthiest cities, yet it's only just now getting around to considering a smoking-ban referendum. If the effort passes, Seattle will join the growing list of cities (Boston, Minneapolis), states (California, Delaware), and even countries (Ireland, New Zealand, Sweden) that have put butts under wraps.
This public-health progress has come despite agitated protests on business, political, and personal grounds. I have to admit, I didn't have strong feelings about such bans until I lived (pre-Seattle) in a city that instituted one. And then I realized: breathing? It's a good thing.
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Upload your very own enviro-themed videos
Do you blog? Podcast? Post your homemade music or videos on the web? If so, you belong to "Generation C" as coined by the folks at Trendwatching.com who define this group like so:
No, this is not about a new niche generation of youngsters born between March 12, 1988, and April 24, 1993; the C stands for CONTENT, and anyone with even a tiny amount of creative talent can (and probably will) be part of this not-so-exclusive trend.
For perspectives on Generation C, check out WorldChanging and FutureWise.So what is it all about? The GENERATION C phenomenon captures the avalanche of consumer generated "content" that is building on the web, adding tera-peta bytes of new text, images, audio, and video on an ongoing basis.
The two main drivers fueling this trend? (1) The creative urges each consumer undeniably possesses. We're all artists, but until now we neither had the guts nor the means to go all out. (2) The manufacturers of content-creating tools, who relentlessly push us to unleash that creativity using, of course, their ever cheaper, ever more powerful gadgets and gizmos. Instead of asking consumers to watch, to listen, to play, to passively consume, the race is on to get them to create, to produce, and to participate.
Now, to all you enviros who are members of Generation C, wouldn't it be cool if your environmentally themed short films actually appeared on television? Sound too good to be true? Then check out Current TV.
And, according to Wired, this fledgling cable channel needs your help. Nay, your videos.
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EPA loophole could allow pesticide testing on kids
Just take a look at this San Francisco Chronicle headline:
EPA rule loopholes allow pesticide testing on kids
That's right -- if this story is to be believed, the EPA has created a loophole that would allow the pesticide industry to test whether its wares are safe by using real, live kids.
But astonishingly, the real story is actually even uglier than that. According to the Chronicle, the EPA rules -- allegedly designed to protect kids and pregnant women -- specifically allow testing on "children who have been abused and neglected." Just read:
[W]ithin the 30 pages of rules are clear-cut exceptions that permit:
-- Testing of "abused or neglected" children without permission from parents or guardians.
-- "Ethically deficient" human research if it is considered crucial to "protect public health."
-- More than minimal health risk to a subject if there is a "direct benefit" to the child being tested, and the parents or guardians agree.
Read the story -- I'm not making this up.
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What New Orleans could look like the second time around
I heard that George Bush told New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin the city could be remade into “a shining example for the whole world.” If Bush did say that, it surely wasn’t an environmentally sound renaissance he had in mind. But that is precisely what is needed. Call it Eco New Orleans. It should encompass […]
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The Weather Channel’s climate ace chats about Katrina and sexing up global warming
As Hurricane Katrina raged toward the Gulf Coast in late August, more than 4.5 million American homes tuned in to The Weather Channel — many times the network’s average audience. The channel’s bright-eyed climate-change expert, Heidi Cullen, was standing by to address the question that was confounding Americans nationwide: Was Katrina’s horrible wrath intensified by […]
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102nd use for a dead cat
Turn it into biodiesel.
This smells a bit like a hoax. But perhaps it's not: after all, if you can turn turkey guts into biodiesel, why not felines?
And, come to think of it, why stop with cats?
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Feline Groovy
German inventor denies using dead cats to make biodiesel German inventor Christian Koch says he’s patented a way to convert trash into eco-friendly, high-quality biodiesel fuel that costs one-fifth the going price of diesel in his home country. To produce the alternative fuel, Koch claims he uses waste including paper, textiles, and plastics — but […]
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Giving Us the Business
World’s biggest firms give lip service to cutting CO2 but lag on results More than 70 percent of the world’s 500 largest companies by market capitalization volunteered information on how climate change is affecting their businesses for a survey this year, but the info they released is not exactly heartening. According to a new report […]
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Flood Is Thicker Than Water
Assessing toxic hazards in New Orleans challenges the EPA The post-Katrina mess of pollution along the Gulf Coast is “the largest national disaster that we at EPA or, we believe, that the nation has faced,” U.S. EPA Administrator Stephen Johnson said yesterday. Serious health problems threaten the region, he said, including floodwaters tainted with sewage-related […]
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Which airlines are going down?
Two major U.S. airlines, Delta and Northwest, have declared bankruptcy, citing high fuel costs as a reason. "Hurricane Katrina was probably the last straw," said a securities analyst keeping an eye on the proceedings.
Carriers in other countries are also feeling the petroleum pinch: Air China, British Air, and others are increasing the fuel surcharges that pass costs along to customers.
The two U.S. airlines -- the nation's third- and fourth-largest, respectively -- will keep plying the friendly skies. But don't expect extra pretzels.