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  • Some ideas for green resolutions that are achievable, meaningful, and maybe even novel

    New Year's resolutions, as we all know, are almost entirely pointless -- made in one breath, forgotten in the next. So in that spirit of general futility, I offer a few ideas for green resolutions that, either through novelty or just ease of use, may inspire more than a passing commitment. Please leave your own ideas below.

    Idea #1: help make "livable streets" a reality in your community

    All politics is local, said Tip O'Neill, but most of us still don't pay much attention to local politics. Issues at a community level are often driven by the triumvirate of homeowners, business owners and car owners -- good people, no doubt, but narrow in their interests.

    This won't change if you don't help make it change. Happily, a thriving network of community organizers is doing great work to promote a people- and environment-centered development agenda, ranging from this new bus system in Cleveland to this bike-sharing program in Tulsa to this massive street festival in New York.

    Support their good work! A few ideas for getting involved:

    1. Get smarter about development issues by spending some time with the great resources at the Livable Streets Network. Subscribe to their blog, subscribe to an affiliated blog focused on your community, watch their films, or read and contribute to their wiki.
    2. Find or start a local group using the Livable Street Network's online tools.
    3. Get involved with a local organization like Transportation Alternatives (based in New York). Or support them financially by attending some of their fun events.

    Idea #2: eat more plants

  • The book of green

    Fox News on the "green bible":

  • Eco-buzzwords make annual banned words list

    Hush your mouth, eco-child: That green buzzword you were about to utter is probably on Lake Superior State University's annual list of banned words. "Green" itself topped the list, with it or "going green" garnering the most nominations. True that. Please, no more press releases titled "Midwives/Fighter Jets/Port-o-Potties Go Green!"

    "Carbon footprint" also made the 34th annual List of Words to Be Banished from the Queen's English for Mis-use, Over-use and General Uselessness. And as for "staycation," Dan Muldoon of Omaha, Nebraska, commented with his nomination, "Let's send this word on a slow boat to nowhere."

  • Au revoir, 2008

    Well, here we are on the last day of 2008. I feel like I should do some kind of valedictory post, a look back over the year, or predictions for next year, or some kind of list, or ... something. Everybody else is.

    But I got nothin'. It's funny, at the end of a year when the world seemed to get faster and crazier -- the epic drama of the election, shriller and shriller warnings from scientists about global warming, the biggest economic crash in a half-century -- I find myself preoccupied with with the small-scale and domestic. My strongest memories of this year will mostly be of moments laughing around the dinner table; my three year old's passionate-if-incoherent stories about the adventures of the "Minium Falcon"; my five year old's first attempts to sound out written words; reading the Narnia books at night, my older boy's head on my shoulder, the little one blinking hazily against sleep.

    Thank goodness for the bubble of joy and calm I've got up here in North Seattle. 'Cause it's been an intense year, and next year -- nay, the next decade -- is shaping up to be a white-knuckle roller coaster ride. I'll jump back on it next week, but for now, I'm enjoying the quiet.

    Peace and, as always, many thanks to all Grist's readers for their support, knowledge, passion, and participation.

    [Postscript: check out Grist's top green stories of 2008.]

  • Oprah gained weight and confused the public about renewable energy

    If I weren’t on vacation, I wouldn’t have read Oprah magazine. No really. But then I would have missed a piece of misinformation gratuitously foisted on her readers. For her legion upon legion upon legion of fans, the big news is the O has recently been losing her battle with weight (one legion does not […]

  • WALL-E takes top honor and Quantum of Solace disappoints

    The best eco-movie of the year is Disney/Pixar’s Wall-E — easily one of the best movie dystopias ever. It ranks with Blade Runner, Brazil, A Clockwork Orange, Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome, the Matrix, Planet of the Apes, Soylent Green, and the first two Terminator movies. Yes, Hollywood loves dystopias. Perhaps because it is one (OK, […]

  • Umbra on eco-actions for kids

    Dear Umbra, In my city, environmental awareness might as well be some late-night, budget infomercial that nobody thinks about except to laugh at. I’m trying to organize a series of interactive presentations in area schools to educate and engage kids in a more progressive approach to greening up our lives and our city. Many of […]

  • Deep Christmas thought

    Watching my kids’ absolute, uncontainable delight as they play with cheesy, old, used Star Wars toys that my wife and I Santa got off eBay, a thought occurred to me. I’ve argued before that “materialism” isn’t really the right word for what plagues affluent developed countries. We don’t seem to care about material — that […]

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    Goodbye to the clamshell?

    I rarely buy be-clamshelled merchandise any more, but I remember it with horror, so this seems like excellent news: