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Keyword: eco

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  • How your pet is killing the planet (Enviro-nuts say dog = SUV)

    10/26/2009 8:51:16 AM PDT · by Callahan · 88 replies · 2,075+ views
    Salon ^ | 10/26/09 | Andrew Leonard
    New book -- "Time to Eat the Dog" -- claims golden retrievers have the same carbon footprint as SUVs As provocative titles go, "Time to Eat the Dog: The Real Guide to Sustainable Living," is a doozy, guaranteed to ensure outrage and oodles of provocative blog post headlines. As summarized in The Telegraph, New Zealand-based authors Robert and Brenda Vale have calculated the carbon footprint of pet-ownership and arrived at some disturbing conclusions. A medium-sized dog has the same impact as a Toyota Land Cruiser driven 6,000 miles a year, while a cat is equivalent to a Volkswagen Golf.... [The...
  • Can America Afford to 'Go Green'?

    04/24/2009 4:05:33 AM PDT · by rmarley · 21 replies · 769+ views
    ABC News ^ | April 22, 2009 | DAN HARRIS
    Strange-looking synthetic trees that suck carbon dioxide out of the air. Algae that can turn into gas. A candy factory fueled by methane from a local dump. At an Earth Day celebration in Newton, Iowa, today, President Obama said the United States must lead the world in renewable energy. He said his energy plan would simultaneously help the environment and the economy.
  • Police warn of growing threat from eco-terrorists

    11/19/2008 12:55:59 PM PST · by george76 · 20 replies · 757+ views
    The Observer ^ | November 9 2008 | Mark Townsend and Nick Denning
    Fear of deadly attack by lone maverick as officers alert major firms to danger of green extremism. Police have warned of the growing threat of eco-terrorism after revealing they are investigating a group which has supporters who believe that reducing the Earth's population by four-fifths will help to protect the planet. Officers from a specialist unit dedicated to tackling domestic terrorism are monitoring an eco-movement called Earth First! which has advocates who state that cutting the Earth's population by 80 per cent will ease pressure on other species. Officers are concerned a 'lone maverick' eco-extremist may attempt a terrorist attack...
  • A biologist reviews an evolution textbook from the ID camp

    09/26/2008 1:51:12 AM PDT · by Soliton · 6 replies · 416+ views
    Ars Tecnica ^ | September 24, 2008 | John Timmer
    The Discovery Institute, as indicated by its wedge document, wishes to eliminate science's focus on natural causes. The group views this focus as the source of society's increasing materialism, which makes it anathema in the belief system of Discovery's members. Stephen C. Meyer, the lead author of EE, heads the Discovery Institute and is mentioned by name in the wedge document, as is coauthor Paul Nelson. Evolution has been singled out for special ire by Discovery, as it provides an explanation for the origin of humanity based solely on natural processes. Although the ID movement has not developed a research...
  • Ecotowns: for and against...British "slum estates of the future..."

    06/15/2008 7:30:42 AM PDT · by Bean Counter · 14 replies · 487+ views
    The Times of London ^ | June 15, 2008 | Richard Girling
    This is how it will be. Across the fair face of Albion, to the ringing of bells and the soft murmur of doves, appears a leafy flush of eco-towns. They are sun-dappled utopias, urban dreamworlds in which no human need is unfulfilled. Wildlife romps through bird-loud glades. People work at home or in business parks to which they can stroll or cycle. Public transport is swift, efficient and free, so cars are not needed. Community sports hubs, leisure and cultural facilities are so abundant that nobody wants to leave the town anyway. Children walk safely to schools in which the...
  • Eco-Crap: Paper versus reusable plates/cups???

    04/25/2008 2:37:31 PM PDT · by agooga · 33 replies · 1,137+ views
    me
    Does anyone have a link, example or opinion about the "eco costs" associated with eating off of paper plates versus porcelain ones in the work place? Pretty fine-tuned debate, I know, but a co-worker was making a big point today of not eating lunch at work off the provided paper plates. I mentioned that it might actually be less "damaging" to the environment not to have everyone standing in line at the sink with the hot water running washing their plates after lunch. She was not buying it, but hell, I don't know if I was either. Your thoughts?
  • FBI: Eco-Terrorism Remains No. 1 Domestic Terror Threat

    04/01/2008 4:35:40 PM PDT · by BGHater · 24 replies · 153+ views
    Fox News ^ | 31 Mar 2008 | Fox News
    For nearly seven years, the nation has turned its terror focus on Al Qaeda and the hunt for Usama bin Laden. But there is a domestic terror threat that federal officials still consider priority No. 1 — eco-terrorism. The torching of luxury homes in the swank Seattle suburb of Woodinville earlier this month served as a reminder that the decades-long war with militant environmentalists on American soil has not ended. "It remains what we would probably consider the No. 1 domestic terrorism threat, because they have successfully continued to conduct different types of attacks in and around the country," said...
  • Lawn-watering spat leads to death

    11/01/2007 3:27:45 AM PDT · by martyboy · 27 replies · 78+ views
    CNN ^ | Oct 31 2007 | CNN
    See story...
  • Duluth Enacts Civic Ecology(becomes an "Eco Municipality.")

    06/28/2006 1:41:34 PM PDT · by Rakkasan1 · 16 replies · 352+ views
    WCCO.com ^ | 6-27-06 | ap
    Duluth, Minn. Duluth has become the third U.S. city to become an Eco Municipality. Ashland and Washburn enacted the Swedish-born sustainability program last year. The Duluth City Council passed a resolution last month pledging to move toward four basic principles of sustainability: use fewer natural resources, use fewer man-made or synthetic chemicals, cause no additional degradation to the Earth and meet all human needs.
  • Photo latest fuel in Churchill flap ( Ward got caught stealing, again )

    05/16/2006 8:04:31 AM PDT · by george76 · 29 replies · 1,958+ views
    Rocky Mountain News ^ | May 16, 2006 | Berny Morson
    Author says CU prof used picture of hers without permission... The photograph of a child's grave in University of Colorado ethnic studies professor Ward Churchill's 2004 book about Indian boarding schools jumped out at Brenda Child. That's because Child, a member of the Red Lake Ojibwa tribe, took the picture and published it in 1998 in her own award-winning book on the same subject. "I was surprised that was there because he's never sought my permission to use it and it appeared without my knowing that it would be in his book," said Child, a University of Minnesota faculty member...
  • Violinist mom charged with being US environmental terrorist

    04/01/2006 6:23:44 PM PST · by wjersey · 193 replies · 5,104+ views
    Breitbart (AFP) ^ | 4/1/2006 | Staff
    A mother that gives violin lessons will face trial in the northwestern US state of Washington on charges she was an environmental terrorist, prosecutors said. Briana Waters, 30, of the famously liberal California city of Berkeley, has pleaded innocent in a Seattle federal court that she that fire bombed a horticulture center in 2001. A US district court judge allowed Waters to remain free pending the start of her trial in June, but ordered that she turn in her passport and have her whereabouts monitored electronically. Waters was the first person charged in connection with an attack that destroyed the...
  • CA: Three sentenced in firebombing attempts in Sierra foothills - ELF eco-terrorists

    03/17/2006 6:24:00 PM PST · by NormsRevenge · 30 replies · 1,026+ views
    Three eco-terrorists were sentenced Friday to federal prison for a series of firebombings that put towns in the Sierra foothills on edge. Ryan Daniel Lewis, 22, the alleged leader of the group, was sentenced to six years, and two sisters - Eva Rose Holland, 26, and Lili Marie Holland, 21 - were each handed two-year prison terms. Prosecutors alleged Lewis recruited the Holland sisters and Jeremiah Dean Colcleasure, 24, on Christmas Eve 2004 to help him burn down two unoccupied upscale homes in Lincoln, a Sacramento suburb, in the name of the Earth Liberation Front. The FBI calls the ELF...
  • Eco-Terrorism's War on Man

    01/25/2006 7:55:35 PM PST · by AZ_Cowboy · 9 replies · 553+ views
    FrontPage ^ | January 25, 2006 | Onkar Ghate
    The good news: a federal grand jury in Eugene, Oregon, has indicted 11 people on charges that they committed acts of domestic terrorism on behalf of the Earth Liberation Front and the Animal Liberation Front. Moreover, now one of the FBI's "highest domestic terrorism priorities," according to director Robert S. Mueller III, is to prosecute people who commit crimes "in the name of animal rights or the environment." Nevertheless, it remains worrisome that we still dismiss such terrorists as deranged individuals who pervert the ideology of environmentalism. Even more worrisome is that few of us intellectually grasp, and then rise...
  • Eco-friendly subdivisions may save more than the planet

    11/03/2005 1:10:10 PM PST · by GreenFreeper · 59 replies · 1,405+ views
    The Beacon News ^ | 11/3/2005 | Matthew DeFour
    For years, environmentalists have petitioned government officials about preserving open space and designing eco-friendly neighborhoods, but it turns out that cost-conscious developers should be the ones advocating change. New research reveals that building "conservation communities" can be 15 to 54 percent cheaper than traditional suburban developments, according to Wisconsin-based Applied Ecological Services (AES). The difference between traditional and conservational development is in the design principles. Typical subdivisions tend to have wider streets, turf lawns, gutters and storm sewers, but those cause less water to be absorbed into the ground and more runoff, which can erode soil and pollute local water...
  • Eco-Imperialism and the Drive to Destroy the Free Market

    10/27/2005 2:04:13 PM PDT · by GreenFreeper · 11 replies · 518+ views
    Axcess News ^ | October 27, 2005 | Tom DeWeese
    AXcess News) Washington - Max Keiser is a new kind of terrorist. He uses the Internet and boycotts to manipulate stock prices. In that way he forces corporations to comply with his brand of radical environmentalism and Sustainable Development. He puts his hands around corporate throats and squeezes until they comply with his demands. Max Keiser and his ilk hate business and they hate free enterprise and are using these tactics to redistribute wealth and cause chaos in the market place. Keiser's operation is called "KarmaBanque." That new age-focused name alone should give readers an idea of the wacky worldview...
  • Endangered Species Act Is a Failure

    10/26/2005 5:38:23 PM PDT · by GreenFreeper · 11 replies · 724+ views
    The Ledger Online ^ | Published Monday, October 24, 2005 | Rep. Ginny Brown-Waite
    In 1973, the American bald eagle population had drastically declined. Populations of American alligators, humpback whales and other landmark species were also diminishing, and America needed to act. In response, Congress passed the Endangered Species Act of 1973. The law was supposed to protect imperiled species on the brink of extinction. However, more than three decades later, the Endangered Species Act has failed to live up to its noble expectations. Today, nearly 1,300 species have been afforded the law's protections, yet, just 10 species have been taken off the list due to recovery. The truth be known, not one single...
  • Fishing: Public health expert examining catches for heavy metals

    10/24/2005 8:56:50 AM PDT · by GreenFreeper · 24 replies · 511+ views
    Pittsburg Post Gazette ^ | Sunday, October 23, 2005 | Deborah Weisberg
    It was a first for veteran anglers at one of the Allegheny River's hottest spots. They were being asked to donate their fish to science. On a recent Saturday, a cadre of fishermen at the Highland Park Dam filled buckets with white bass and channel catfish so that Dan Volz, a public health expert, can tell them someday soon whether what they catch is loaded with heavy metals and estrogen-like compounds, or chemicals that mimic the effect of estrogen, a hormone produced by the body and needed for the development and growth of female sex organs. snip While there are...
  • Agency would cut murrelet from list (Endangered Species Act Alert!)

    10/21/2005 10:00:44 AM PDT · by GreenFreeper · 13 replies · 492+ views
    The Seattle Times ^ | Friday, October 21, 2005 | Jeff Barnard
    GRANTS PASS, Ore. — The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service confirmed yesterday that it will propose removing threatened-species protection from the marbled murrelet, a small seabird at the center of battles over logging in the Northwest. The proposal, to be formally made by the end of the year, will start a yearlong evaluation of the status of the bird. The marbled murrelet lives its life at sea but uses big old trees near the coast for nesting, laying a single egg in a mossy depression on a large branch. The proposal is based on the idea that the 17,000 to...
  • Regional vegetation die-off in response to global-change-type drought

    10/19/2005 11:24:05 AM PDT · by GreenFreeper · 6 replies · 347+ views
    Proceedings of the National Academy of Science ^ | October 10, 2005 | David D. Breshears a, b, Neil S. Cobb c, Paul M. Rich d, Kevin P. Price e, f, Craig D. Allen g, Rand
    Future drought is projected to occur under warmer temperature conditions as climate change progresses, referred to here as global-change-type drought, yet quantitative assessments of the triggers and potential extent of drought-induced vegetation die-off remain pivotal uncertainties in assessing climate-change impacts. Of particular concern is regional-scale mortality of overstory trees, which rapidly alters ecosystem type, associated ecosystem properties, and land surface conditions for decades. Here, we quantify regional-scale vegetation die-off across southwestern North American woodlands in 2002-2003 in response to drought and associated bark beetle infestations. At an intensively studied site within the region, we quantified that after 15 months of...
  • Researchers look to Native history to gather ideas about forests and flames (Fire Ecology)

    10/17/2005 8:28:17 AM PDT · by GreenFreeper · 15 replies · 461+ views
    The Missoulian ^ | Monday, October 17 2005 | Michael Jamison
    POLSON - Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1792: Traveling the borderland between modern Montana and the endless expanse of what's now known as southern Alberta. Still smoking all around, the explorer notes: ”grass having been lately burnt,“ ”grass nearly all burnt,“ ”grass yet burning.“ For days, his journals are filled with fire, no end in sight. Yet there hadn't been a lightning strike in who knows how many weeks. When Hudson's Bay Co. fur trader Peter Fidler first laid eyes on the wide wild West, it seemed to him a pristine wilderness, a garden shaped from on high and never yet bent...