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Tuesday, December 23, 2008
Grist's Eco-villian of 2008
http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2008/12/18/134750/22?source=daily
Here is what Grist has to say about him:
In addition to his customary pursuits -- violating mine safety laws, bullying politicians and regulators, bribing state Supreme Court judges, blowing the tops off mountains -- this spring the CEO of coal giant Massey Energy was caught on tape threatening to shoot a reporter (like, with a gun). Perhaps to distract attention from that savvy PR move, he was caught on tape in November saying climate change isn't real, "greeniacs" are "crazies," mass transit will destroy capitalism, and his media critics are "communists" and "atheists." Gives mustaches a bad name.
Saturday, December 20, 2008
As if we didn't have enough bad news
TOP STORY
The Needle and the Damage Done
Images of oil addiction in Canada's tar sands
Pop quiz: After Saudi Arabia, which country has the most proven oil reserves? Wrong. Not only wrong, but wrong part of the world. Unless you guessed Canada -- in which case, congratulations! Big old Canada is screwing up the planet big time with a big drilling operation. Forest Ethics head Todd Paglia describes a recent visit, and explains how to fight back.
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new in Grist: The Needle and the Damage Done-Colin
Tuesday, December 16, 2008
Coal grows in the ground or something...
Please share it with as many people as possible. Here is the Youtube link:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=71kckb8hhOQ
Friday, December 12, 2008
Clean Coal Carolers!
This left me at a loss for words. Essentially, I laughed, I cried, I got sick to my stomach.
Thursday, December 4, 2008
From Andrew Wingfield: short video: Obama addresses governors' climate summit
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvG2XptIEJk
Food article from Andrew Wingfield: Real Food Challenge connects over 300 schools, engages students
Real Food Challenge connects over 300 schools, engages students
Xarissa Holdaway
November 25, 2008
"Uniting students for just and sustainable food" is the motto of the Real Food Challenge, a network of students and activists working to bring ethically-produced, environmentally-sustainable food to campuses. This fall, a national campaign engaged students at more than 300 schools.
With an Advisory Committee made up of such heavyweights as Michael Pollan, Vandana Shiva, and Anna Lappé, and Steering Committee members from UC-Santa Cruz, Iowa State, and Brown University, it's a distinguished group that advocates "beyond the supermarket labels" of organic, green, or local.
According to Marissa Grossman, National Programs Coordinator, the term "Real Food" encompasses every stage of food, from the farm to the plate. She says, "We're talking about our entire food system, from the biodiversity of the land where we grow, to the social justice aspect of who is getting healthy food and who isn't."
While talk of local, sustainable agriculture is nothing new, this is the first concerted effort to make it a priority on college campuses, and use students as the drivers. The RFC's first major campaign, Real Food Now, ran from mid-September to mid-October of 2008, and encouraged students to host events, start projects and report back, with RFC providing advice, networking capabilities and a collection of publications and resources. Students responded by hosting more than 200 events all over the country.
Most projects focused on raising awareness on the campus, such as ISU's Real Food picnic, which used local apples and musicians to draw people to the event, where they could learn about food systems and local agriculture. The program dovetailed with Iowa State's Student Agriculture Farm and food purchasing policies that favor local and organic choices.
Other groups highlighted the connection between food systems and climate change, like Radishes and Rubbish, a two-student team from NYU that takes students on "field trips" to local food producers and waste management facilities to describe where specific items come from, how they are processed, how food gets wasted, and the impact that food has on climate and people.
And of course, the social justice element played a large role at many schools. Berea College, which hosted an "Eat-In," invited representatives from Oxfam and Bereans for Appalachia to table and speak to students about fair trade, local economics and global equality issues.
Grossman says, "It's quite extraordinary. Thousands of students are working very hard to make sure that their schools commit to a real food economy. And if that means they have to get their hands dirty--I mean literally in the dirt--that's what they're going to do."
Campus Ecology...It takes a big step to make a smaller footprint. |