Brave New Films, Talking Points Memo AlterNet: Environment. August 13, 2008. Altering the perception of the environmental movement among African Americans.
Clayton Dach, Adbusters. October 3, 2007. Whether by choice or harsh necessity, those who came of age during the Great Depression might have a thing or two to teach us about being green.
Annalee Newitz, AlterNet. September 18, 2007. The government is cutting funds to the tools that climate researchers need most -- the satellite and sensor networks that study the way humans are impacting climate change.
Alex Jung, AlterNet: PEEK. September 10, 2007. Alex Jung: Furniture is now on the list of ordinary objects that make the average home a veritable minefield of toxins.
Michael Shank, Foreign Policy in Focus. March 19, 2007. From foreign governments to U.S. mayors to mega-retailers like Wal-Mart, everyone is going "green." When will Congress get on board?
Stacy Malkan, Conscious Choice. March 19, 2007. Health care officials are finally recognizing that a cleaner, greener hospital keeps the whole community well.
Amanda Griscom Little, Grist.org. November 11, 2006. From the defeat of the Rep. Richard Pombo, the most anti-environmental politician in Washington, to the election of greener candidates, election '06 was a great one for enviros.
David Roberts, Grist.org. November 8, 2006. Another reason to get happy: The anti-enviro Rep. Richard 'Dick' Pombo (who embodied the cozy corruption of the 109th Congress) is no more.
Martin John Brown, E Magazine. October 11, 2006. Despite the new trend toward building 'green' McMansions, most of these homes are like hybrid SUVs: efficient only in comparison to other energy-guzzling behemoths.