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Articles by David Roberts

David Roberts was a staff writer for Grist. You can follow him on Twitter, if you're into that sort of thing.

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  • Which of these four is not like the other?

    Far be it from me to criticize content on our very own site, but this piece makes no sense to me.

    For one thing, the four cited cases -- Pat Robertson accepting global warming, Frank Luntz accepting global warming, Wal-Mart greening its operations, and the Sierra Club endorsing Lincoln Chafee -- have very little in common, politically, economically, or culturally. There's no reason a position on one would imply a position on another.

    For another, just who are these reactionary, progress-inhibiting progressives? It's telling that not a single person or statement is cited.

    For another, how is it possible that environmentalists are both losing miserably and failing to acknowledge their many victories? Which is it?

    The whole thing reads like a bank-shot defense of the Sierra Club's endorsement of Chafee. But if Renstrom and Perkowitz want to defend that, they should defend it directly, as Carl Pope does here and here. I don't agree with it, but it's worth discussing.

    Simply lumping those who oppose the endorsement in with some vaguely defined set of anti-progress progressives doesn't do much to advance that discussion.

  • Supreme Court CO2 case

    Gack! I'm so far behind on blogging I don't know where to begin.

    Here's something: A while back I was casting about for good commentary on the upcoming Supreme Court CO2 case. This piece on Seed isn't great, but it does have some insight, like so:

    A victory for the environmentalists would give the federal government the power to regulate CO2 emissions -- and the power to decide how strictly or loosely to do so. On the other hand, an EPA victory hands this power back to the states, including the petitioners -- who would then have the authority to set their own standards. Paradoxically, a ruling against the petitioners might ultimately result in the major emissions restrictions they seek.

  • Kerry op-ed on global warming

    Presidential hopeful (though, as my granddad used to say, you can hope in one hand and pee in the other and see which one fills up first) John Kerry has an op-ed in the San Francisco Chronicle today, full of his usual baroque, mildly dolorous phrasing (he always sounds like he's imitating JFK, but the flop sweat shows, even in print). It's about climate change, how Bush sucks on it, and what we need to do about it. It's basically a capsule version of the longer energy speech he gave earlier this year.

  • Michigan 7th

    With all the Liebermania, another primary went under the radar, but it's an interesting one for greens.

    Rep. Joe Schwarz, a moderate Michigan Republican, lost a primary challenge to far-right bomb-thrower Tim Walberg, who -- backed by out-of-state money from the right-wing Club for Growth -- bashed Schwarz for his sane heretical views on abortion and stem-cell research. (Schwarz is an old-school fiscally conservative, socially moderate Republican.)

    So in November, Walberg will face off against Sharon Renier, an organic farmer, musician, and long-time enviro: