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jayesty11

Chris Hedges: Why I'm Voting Green - Chris Hedges' Columns - Truthdig - 0 views

  • Why I’m Voting Green Email    Print    Share x RSS Feed Digg Facebook TwitThis StumbleUpon Reddit YahooBuzz Email BlinkList del.icio.us Fark Furl Google LinkedIn Mixx MyShare NewsVine Propeller SphereIt Technorati YahooMyWeb
haleywiggs

The E.P.A.'s Keystone Report Card - 1 views

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    In the bland, formal language of interagency correspondence, the Environmental Protection Agency has written a trenchant review of the State Department's most recent effort to assess the consequences of building the Keystone XL pipeline. The E.P.A'.s letter, issued Monday, at the end of the public comment period on the department's latest draft environmental impact statement, is hardly a favorable report card.
jayesty11

Amy Goodman: Now the Work of Movements Begins - Truthdig - 0 views

  • Now the Work of Movements Begins Email    Print    Share x RSS Feed Digg Facebook TwitThis StumbleUpon Reddit YahooBuzz Email BlinkList del.icio.us Fark Furl Google LinkedIn Mixx MyShare NewsVine Propeller SphereIt Technorati http://myweb2.search.yahoo.com/myre
jayesty11

As The Debates Approach, We Must Break The Candidates' Silence On Climate Change | Thin... - 0 views

  • To help the candidates answer a “what will you do about the climate” question, the Presidential Climate Action Project will release the latest of its reports next week on what the President and his Administration can do, with or without Congress.  Among its proposals will be how the next Administration can launch America’s deliberate and historic transition to an advanced energy economy. The bottom line is this: The American people are finding they can’t run and can’t hide from the insidious impacts of global warming. Political candidates should not be allowed to hide from the issue, either.
leahgreenwood

Plastic Not-So-Fantastic: How the Versatile Material Harms the Environment and Human He... - 0 views

  • Since its mass production began in the 1940s, plastic’s wide range of unique properties has propelled it to an essential status in society. Next year, more than 300 million tons will be produced worldwide. The amount of plastic manufactured in the first ten years of this century will approach the total produced in the entire last century, according to the report.
jayesty11

U.S Military Buys 1,500 Chevy Volt Hybrids - Solar Feeds - 0 views

  • the U.S. military that is trying desperately to reduce its reliance on oil. According to a recent article in gas2.org, writer Christopher Demorro reports that the military has placed an order of 1,500 plug-in vehicles. A large majority of them are Chevy Volts.
jayesty11

Effects of climate change increase risk of storms' impacts - Metro - The Boston Globe - 0 views

  • For example, rising sea levels in the Northeast, which are increasing three to four times faster than global rates, according to federal statistics, will bring more flooding and damaging storm surges that ride atop high seas. Warmer air can hold more water vapor, meaning storms could drop more precipitation. New England has seen more erratic precipitation in recent years with extreme rain and snowfall events increasing by 85 percent since 1948, according to a climate report issued last week by US Representative Ed Markey, called “The New New England.”
jayesty11

Climate and Security 101: Why the U.S. National Security Establishment Takes ... - 0 views

  • Climate and Security 101: Why the U.S. National Security Establishment Takes Climate Change Seriously April 25, 2012 by Francesco Femia & Caitlin Werrell In a 2007 report by the CNA Military Advisory Board, General Gordon R. Sullivan stated: “People are saying they want to be perfectly convinced about climate science projections…But speaking as a soldier, we never have 100 percent certainty. If you wait until you have 100 percent certainty, something bad is going to happen on the battlefield.” The national security establishment in the United States, including the U.S. military and the U.S. intelligence community, understand that climate change is a national security threat, and that we cannot wait for 100% certainty before acting to mitigate and adapt to its effects. But not only do they understand it, they plan for it – considering it’s implications in strategic documents like the Quadrennial Defense Review, and setting up an office within the CIA called the Center for Climate Change and National Security. But why? Why do those organs of government that the public normally associates with fighting wars, devote time and effort to an issue that is branded as hogwash by many on the right of the political spectrum, and the exclusive domain of environmental activists on the left? The simple answer: climate change is, actually, a national security threat.
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