Showing results for: Climate Change (page 150)
“Our house is on fire!” Why Greta Thunberg infuriates conservatives
Simon Dalby
Thunberg has upended climate politics & posed the key question of who are the real radicals in current discussions
How One America News sells an altered reality to voters who dream of wealth
Melanie McFarland
OAN's calm misinformation campaign sells Trump as a rich, brave hero under siege to viewers aspiring to be like him
The food system needs whistleblowers, too
Amanda Hitt
The USDA implemented a new rule that will to do away with some of the most important whistleblowers in the system
Protecting the children on a Trumpian planet
Frida Berrigan
Which would mean no future for my three kids
Donald Trump and dog-whistle politics: How to beat him — and build long-term progressive victory
Paul Rosenberg
Ian Haney López on how a "race-class narrative" that includes white people can transform democracy in America
“Trump supporter” who ranted about “eating babies” at AOC event is member of LaRouche fringe group
Igor Derysh
Woman who confronted Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez at town hall apparently linked to LaRouche fringe group
Why the yellow cedar is a bellwether for humanity’s survival
Nicole Karlis
Lauren Oakes spent six years studying a tree that ties together the climate crisis in all its dimensions
“Collisions” star Jesse Garcia: Deportation family stories have “always been relevant”
Gary M. Kramer
“If people of color want their story to be told, they need to put in the work and produce their own material.”
Is red meat bad for you? Climate change sure is.
Zoya Teirstein
Agriculture is a big slice of America’s emissions pie
From fat bears to “Nature”: TV displays our complicated feelings about the natural world
Melanie McFarland
In our era of environmental crisis, "Octopus: Making Contact" proposes better understanding nature through intimacy
Google searches for “climate change” finally beat out “Game of Thrones”
Kate Yoder
According to your Google searches, September was climate change’s biggest month of all time
California polluters may soon buy carbon “offsets” from the Amazon — is that ethical?
Maron Greenleaf
California's new plan to fight global climate change is innovative, but it raises tricky ethical questions
New research warns severe climate-related droughts could threaten 60% of global wheat crop by 2100
Jessica Corbett
Wheat accounts for about 20% of all calories consumed by humans worldwide
Greta Thunberg’s radical climate change fairy tale is exactly the story we need
Jennifer Ellen Good
Greta Thunberg dares to tell the world’s leaders that the “fairy tales of eternal economic growth” must end.
Damaged Missouri River levees may take years to repair and rebuild
Sarah Okeson
The levees, not built for such extreme weather, need to be built to new standards in an era of climate disruption
What Amazon, Walmart employees risk when they use the workplace for activism
Elizabeth C. Tippett
There's no First Amendment in the workplace, which leaves worker activists at the whim of their employers.
“Ad Astra” feels like ruling class propaganda
Keith A. Spencer
The film has a nostalgia for the kinds of big government engineering projects that neoliberalism made impossible
A veteran in a world of never-ending wars and improvised explosive devices
Danny Sjursen
Just when I thought it couldn't get any worse…
How a rural women’s network in sub-Saharan Africa became a model for fighting the climate crisis
Nicole Karlis
The United Nations just awarded the UN Global Climate Action Award to this sub-Saharan women's education NGO
Could climate change fuel the rise of right-wing nationalism?
Joshua Conrad Jackson, Michele Gelfand
When people feel threatened, they’re more receptive to politicians who espouse xenophobic rhetoric.
A political movement for food systems change takes hold in the Midwest
Charlie Mitchell
The People's Forum marked the first of several events aimed at engaging candidates on a range of progressive issues
Hunter Biden’s great Ukrainian Gas adventure
Bob Hennelly
Fossil fuel cronyism is bogging down the Biden bandwagon
Beware of defense secretaries pledging reform
William D. Hartung, Mandy Smithberger
Esper’s promises to streamline the spending machine should be taken with more than the usual grain of salt
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