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<title>Has Progressivism Ruined Environmental Science? (Where&#x26;#x27;s the diversity, tolerance, etc.?)</title>
<link>https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2767311/posts</link>
<description>In my thirty years of work in the science arena, as a government scientist, an industry consultant, and an academician, I have witnessed an increasingly adverse influence of progressivism on the practice of science. This influence has been especially visible in my specialty, environmental science (with a focus on air-pollution meteorology). From the start of the modern environmental movement with the publication of Silent Spring by Rachel Carson in 1962 followed by The Population Bomb by Paul Ehrlich in 1968, the science of the environment became overly contentious. Certainly, diversity of opinion and positions in the scientific community is desirable...</description>
<author>American Thinker</author>
<comments>https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2767311/posts#comment</comments>
<pubDate>Mon, 22 Aug 2011 16:14:44 GMT</pubDate>
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<title>In East Texas, Residents Take On a Lake-Eating Monster</title>
<link>https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1874060/posts</link>
<description>UNCERTAIN, Tex., July 25 &#x26;#x2014; How this one-time steamboat landing on Caddo Lake got its name is, well, uncertain &#x26;#x2014; as uncertain as the fate that now clouds this natural wonder, often called the state&#x26;#x2019;s only honest lake. With more submerged acreage than Minnesota, Texas has just 166 bodies of water commonly considered lakes. All but one of them, according to the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, are artificial reservoirs, most created in the 1950s to fend off drought. Now that one, Caddo Lake, a mystical preserve of centuries-old mossy cypress breaks, teeming fisheries and waterfowl habitats, is under siege...</description>
<author>NY Times</author>
<comments>https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1874060/posts#comment</comments>
<pubDate>Tue, 31 Jul 2007 05:46:26 GMT</pubDate>
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