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Showing results for: Climate Change (page 105)

Joe Manchin and Donald Trump: The two men who threaten it all

Heather Digby Parton
Biden's Democratic agenda remains hobbled by Sen. Joe Manchin while Trump's overseen a hostile takeover of the GOP

GOP Rep. Louie Gohmert mocked after asking if National Forest Service can alter Earth’s orbit

Zachary Petrizzo
"Anything the National Forest Service or BLM can do to change the course of the moon's orbit?" he also asked

Eric Bana on making Aussie thriller “The Dry” in his hometown and escaping “the comedy straitjacket”

Alli Joseph
The actor appeared on "Salon Talks" to discuss shooting the hit indie film amid the drought & his career trajectory

It’s not just your imagination — ticks are out of control this year

Zoya Teirstein
Here's why, and what climate change has to do with it

That “Sweet Tooth” shocking twist is a critique of misguided eco-fascism

Kylie Cheung
Netflix's dystopian fantasy challenges the idea that "nature is healing" through retribution on humanity

We need a people’s vaccine — not just to fight the virus but to fight for global economic justice

Nicolas J.S. Davies
For 3% of the U.S. military budget, we could vaccinate the entire world — before lethal new variants spread wider

How restaurants are tackling waste

Katherine Sacks
The cost of food waste is inconceivable and irreversible

You can join Jeff Bezos on his 11-minute space trip for just $2.8 million!

Kylie Cheung
Bezos follows a long line of exorbitantly wealthy men lusting for space travel

Western fires are burning higher in the mountains at unprecedented rates

Mojtaba Sadegh, John Abatzoglou, Mohammad Reza Alizadeh
Heat and dryness are leaving high mountain areas more vulnerable to forest fires

Oil companies are going all-in on petrochemicals — and green chemistry needs help to compete

Constance B. Bailey
As global oil consumption drops, oil companies are pivoting to petrochemicals

A slowing current system in the Atlantic Ocean spells trouble for Earth

Matthew Rozsa
The potential disruption of an Atlantic current system marks a "big gamble at planetary scale"

Big Oil is awash in rainbows for Pride Month

Kate Yoder
Forget "greenwashing." Oil companies are going all Roy G. Biv

COVID turned public health experts into celebrities. Not all of them are comfortable with the change

Matthew Rozsa
Public health wasn't a field that meant attention and social status. Then COVID-19 happened.

Politicized science drove lunar exploration — but polarized scientific views are worse than ever

Liv Grjebine
Political needs have acted as key scientific accelerators but have also at times stifled scientific progress

When the bison come back, will the ecosystem follow?

Louise Johns
An effort to bring wild bison to the Great Plains aims to restore one of the world’s most endangered ecosystems

How many people has climate change killed already?

Nathanael Johnson
A first-of-its-kind study says hotter temperatures have already killed thousands

Humans are causing mass extinction at a rate not seen since the last major extinction event

Matthew Rozsa
A new study suggests that we are entering a period of mass extinction comparable to the one 66 million years ago

Embracing hopelessness: Getting over our faith in reason is the only path forward

Robert Burton
It's disheartening to accept that "reason" is largely an illusion — paradoxically, it offers hope for the future

Food waste is heating up the planet. Is dumpster-diving by app a solution?

Kate Yoder
38 million people are buying "mystery bags" to curb climate change

Why the Pentagon budget never goes down

Mandy Smithberger
Joe Biden's first 100 days were a Pentagon prize

Climate tipping point? ExxonMobil’s shareholder revolt and the end of the line for fossil fuels

Carl Pope
ExxonMobil shareholders fight back in a stunning week that makes clear the market for fossil fuels is winding down

Moby is happily boring now: “I look at the desperation that I had … I don’t glorify the past”

Mary Elizabeth Williams
The influential artist appeared on "Salon Talks" to discuss his unconventional "Moby Doc" & his true life's calling

Unknown number of farmers’ markets expected to permanently close due to pandemic hardships

Bridget Shirvell
Not only are they the heart of many communities but they serve as a vital part of many farmer's business models

Global warming is boiling our testicles, suggesting a new animal fertility crisis looms

Matthew Rozsa
Scientists say overheating could render animals — including humans — increasingly infertile
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