Showing results for: Climate Change (page 235)
How the “guerrilla archivists” saved history – and are doing it again under Trump
Morgan Currie, Britt S. Paris
Ordinary people smuggled, copied or collected materials in the fear that ideas might be lost
Steve Bannon says Trump’s Cabinet of billionaires has been “selected for a reason . . . deconstruction”
Matthew Rozsa
Bannon confirmed that Trump's Cabinet appointments aren't there to govern. They're there to destroy
Red, rural America acts on climate change – without calling it climate change
Rebecca J. Romsdahl
Small town strategies can provide insights into how to make progress on climate policy with Trump in office
Oscars 2017: How to piss off Trump and influence people
Max Cea
Will winners use their Oscar acceptance speech to the great political ends?
Scott Pruitt’s first EPA address: “We can be both pro-energy and jobs and pro-environment”
Rachel Leah
The highly controversial EPA director offered vague plans for the future
Will blazing a low-carbon path pay off for California?
Matthew Kahn
California Governor Jerry Brown said the state will not waver from its decade-long push to fight climate change
How is rapid warming in the Arctic affecting animals adapted to cold? Scientists track muskoxen to find out
Joel Berger
A wildlife biologist is using many techniques to find out how animals adapt to the cold
When laughing matters: Late-night comedy gets serious in an absurdist era of governance
Melanie McFarland
UPDATED: Salon talks to writers from "Late Night with Seth Meyers," "The Daily Show" and "Full Frontal"
Are fossil fuel companies telling investors enough about the risks of climate change? Probably not, but it’s complicated
Paul Griffin, Amy Myers Jaffe
Trump could reverse a recent push to require oil companies to disclose more information about climate change risks
Growing change: Homegrown food is one safety net in a less stable world for Native Americans
Amy McDermott
Indigenous peoples are already central in the fights for clean water and against global warming — food may be next
Viva la difference: Runaway inequality helped elect Trump — but it can also help defeat him
Les Leopold
The bottom half of U.S. earners saw their incomes declined by 1 percent, while the top 1 percent saw a rise of 198
America comes in third: Trump’s foreign policy is looking more and more like “China First,” “Russia Second”
Michael T. Klare
President Donald Trump is giving the phrase “multipolar world” an entirely new meaning
Big kahuna of climate indicators: This January was the third warmest on record globally
Brian Kahn
The disappearance of Arctic sea ice is one indicator of how climate change is altering natural systems
Republicans are creating legislation that would weaken Endangered Species Act
Matthew Rozsa
Republicans want to significantly weaken the Endangered Species Act in the name of business profits
Scott Pruitt may sound reasonable on TV — but Trump’s EPA nominee is essentially a climate change denier
Amanda Marcotte
Trump's pick to safeguard the environment may seem more normal than his boss but he still holds anti-science views
Congress protects coasts from climate change with mud
John Upton
The bill was sponsored by Republicans and explicitly mentions sea level rise in a handful of places
Silencing the civil service: Republicans crack down on federal workers’ communication
Sophia Tesfaye
Fearing a Trump crackdown, some federal workers at the EPA turned to encryption apps to communicate
Politicians think they know better than scientists and it’s broadly dangerous
Elizabeth Suhay
Institutional challenges to scientific integrity and Trump’s willingness to disregard evidence has broad impacts
Paul Krugman dissects the staggering ignorance of the Trump White House
Janet Allon
Is the Trump White House evil or just stupid?
Intense girlhood friendships are “excellent practice for surviving the heartbreak … of future love affairs”
Miranda Beverly-Whittemore, Robin Wasserman
The authors of "Girls on Fire" and "June" discuss obsessive friend-love and womanhood in the age of Trump
An independent California isn’t that wacky of an Idea
Maegan Carberry
Political scientists suspend their disbelief to explain how secession might play out for the Golden State
Why disasters repeat themselves: We ignore the lessons of the past at our own expense
Robert Meyer, Howard Kunreuther
Our memories are short — even when the consequences have already proven deadly
Officials hate each other: 5 disturbing revelations about what’s happening inside Trump’s White House
Jacob Sugarman
"Morale is low, factionalism is rampant and exhaustion is running high"
Noam Chomsky’s “Responsibility of Intellectuals” after 50 years: It’s an even heavier responsibility now
Jay Parini
Written amid rising opposition to the Vietnam War, Chomsky's greatest essay has added resonance in the age of Trump
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