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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More Wal-Mart
This is funny, but it also plays into another point I want to make about Wal-Mart:
After a long day searching houses in suffocating Iraqi heat, Lance Corporal Mike Wilson of Princeton, Kentucky recalls seeing relief in the distance.
Wilson said that looking through the haze he thought he saw a Wal-Mart and was ready to get some cold water for his men when he discovered it was an illusion.(It's getting up around 125F in Iraq. Why are we there again?)
This average kid, plucked out of Kentucky, wandering through the desert heat ... what does he see when he hallucinates? Wal-Mart.
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Wal-Mart’s devious profit motive
I'm in the midst of writing an op-ed about Wal-Mart's green transformation. One theme that comes up frequently in the commentary is this: Wal-Mart is "only" doing these things because they'll improve the bottom line.
Um ... yeah.
It's a business. It's supposed to make money. As a publicly held corporation, it's required by law to make money. If it went around doing things that deliberately reduced its profits, it would be subject to a shareholder lawsuit.
The whole point of the green business trend is that green makes business sense. Reducing waste is good management. What kind of bizarre message does it send if a business sees the light on this issue only to be told that they get no credit because their motivations are financial?
Sometimes I'm just not sure what greens expect.
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Woe is Gristmill
It seems that August is vacation season here at Grist. My colleague Lisa Hymas has fled town for three weeks, and as she is the secret glue that holds this place together, expect chaos. There are also other editorial staffers taking vacations at various times, so we're all scrambling to cover for each other. In short: expect somewhat lighter blogging for the next few weeks. And more angst.
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A dispatch from Matt Petersen, head of Global Green
Global Green USA -- in partnership with Brad Pitt -- has been running an architectural contest. People from around the world are competing to design the best, cheapest, most efficient, most sustainable 12-unit apartment building, to be built in post-Katrina New Orleans. Hundreds of entries have been winnowed down to six finalists.
Global Green head honcho Matt Petersen sent us this dispatch, discussing the contest and his latest trip to New Orleans. Enjoy.
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I returned to New Orleans last week to meet the six finalists selected by our design jury (with guidance and stringent review from our technical jury, made up of representatives of Global Green USA, AIA, and the U.S. Green Building Council).
It was exciting and edifying to meet the teams. They dedicated so much time and energy to coming up with innovative ideas for the design, meeting aggressive green-building and affordable-housing goals. Some had ideas like a solar barge or river turbines to power the buildings, as the site is adjacent to the Mississippi River.
Now they have to prove that their designs and green features are feasible and affordable.