Latest Articles
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Questions = disloyalty
From Ron Suskind's new piece in New York Times Magazine:
A writ of infallibility -- a premise beneath the powerful Bushian certainty that has, in many ways, moved mountains -- is not just for public consumption: it has guided the inner life of the White House. As [Christine Todd] Whitman told me on the day in May 2003 that she announced her resignation as administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency: ''In meetings, I'd ask if there were any facts to support our case. And for that, I was accused of disloyalty!'' (Whitman, whose faith in Bush has since been renewed, denies making these remarks and is now a leader of the president's re-election effort in New Jersey.)
Revealing on so many levels ... -
Pork-laden corporate tax bill socks it to the environment
Oink, oink. The monstrous corporate tax legislation that recently sailed through Congress — passing in the Senate 69-17 last Monday, only days after it passed in the House — has given the environmental community a terrible case of Coulda-Been-Worse Syndrome. “We’re well aware that this bill reflects the kind of sausage-making, vote-building, pigs-at-the-trough mentality that […]
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I heart Seth Borenstein
When it comes to the environment (and foreign policy, incidentally), scrappy little Knight Ridder kicks Reuters' and AP's ass. How? By telling it like it is, without a flabby layer of "balance" obscuring the truth. The mainstream media is increasingly crippled by its own conventions. No matter how outrageous the charge, or clear the facts, the media feels duty bound to present every issue as "he said, she said." This practice, as many folks have suggested, benefits the people who lie. Every lie is presented on equal footing with the truth. It gives readers the impression that nothing is a plain matter of fact, that everything -- the temperature of our atmosphere, the condition of Iraq, the beneficiaries of the tax cut -- is simply a matter of partisan spin. But of course, with all due respect to Derrida (R.I.P.), there are facts, and real journalists should not be afraid simply to state them.
With that said, I give you Seth Borenstein of Knight Ridder.
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Ban Ban
Federal judge repeals Clinton snowmobile ban The latest chapter has opened in what has become a sort of mini-Iliad for our times: the battle over snowmobiles in Yellowstone and Grand Teton national parks. On Friday, a federal judge in Wyoming, Clarence Brimmer, struck down the ban on snowmobiles in the parks put in place toward […]
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Grateful Deadlock
Congressional paralysis dooms environmental legislation Partisan bickering and electioneering in Washington, D.C., have led to an impasse on nearly all environmental legislation in Congress the past two years — bills that enviros love as well as ones they hate. Other than the “Healthy Forests” initiative and a piece of brownfields funding, Congress has been deadlocked […]
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Sky Captain and the World of Tomorrow
Airlines start cutting emissions and raising efficiency Once considered burdensome headaches, techniques to cut pollution and increase efficiency are now being embraced by many large airlines. Why? “It turns out that good environmental behavior is also cost-effective,” said Bengt-Olov Nas of Norway’s Scandinavian Airlines System. The principal driver is rising fuel costs: The price of […]
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We Feel Pretty, Oh So Pretty
Grist unveils new site and blog, acts like it’s not seeking compliments Regular readers will no doubt have noticed that Grist recently unveiled an all-new website design, with a better search engine, better navigation, and lots of pretty colors. We worked long and hard on it and hope you like it as much as we […]
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Pegeen Hanrahan, mayor of Gainesville, Fla., answers questions
Pegeen Hanrahan What work do you do? Earlier this year I was elected to serve as mayor of Gainesville, Fla., for the next three years. Gainesville is a beautiful and diverse city of about 117,000, often called “the city in the forest” because of our heavy tree cover. Gainesville is the home of the University […]
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MDGs: You make the call
Now is your chance to have a say at the U.N.
Jeff Sachs' Millennium Project has produced a draft report of its Global Plan to Achieve the Millennium Development Goals and it is open for public comment until Nov. 1. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and U.N. Development Programme chief Mark Mallach Brown asked Sachs to honcho ten task forces with 250 experts to formulate a game plan for achieving the eight ambitious MDGs by 2015. The final report is to be delivered to the SG in January.
Although the MDGs have gained little political traction in Washington, many outside the United States are utilizing the education, health, environment, poverty, hunger, and governance targets to set agendas, leverage resources, and in the case of some NGOs, hold national governments accountable for the targets they signed up for at the 2000 Millennium Summit. Not many are optimistic about meeting goals like halving the proportion of people without access to clean water by 2015. But we lose nothing by trying, so bring it on.
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Umbra on lead pipes and drinking water
Dear Umbra, I live in New York City, which is reputed to have some of the best drinking water in the U.S. But I also happen to live in an old building that probably has lead pipes, so I buy Poland Spring water in five-gallon jugs each month. I’d prefer to drink tap water, but […]