Showing results for: Climate Change (page 308)
The ominous reason voter turnout was so low this election cycle
David Sirota
Just 36 percent of the electorate showed up to cast their ballots. Millennial apathy only tells half the story
Community Discussion: Who should take responsibility for our growing population?
Salon Staff
The population is growing and aging. How should we handle it?
Stephen Colbert is fearful of a potential chocolate shortage
Sarah Gray
In what is surely one of Colbert's last "Threat Down" segments, he worries about chocolate, sexiness and Columbus
One of the nation’s largest energy companies just pledged to slash its emissions by 90%
Lindsay Abrams
Through a mix of renewables and carbon capture, NRG is pursuing a bold new energy plan
Global warming’s winter warfare: Why climate deniers are reigniting their bogus cold-weather crusade
Lindsay Abrams
It's been freezing in parts of America this week, which can only mean one thing: More fighting about global warming
Fill up at the planet’s risk: Climate change warning labels are coming to Berkeley’s gas pumps
Lindsay Abrams
The fossil fuel-condemning measure is the city's latest gambit to fight global warming
How to trounce Scott Walker: Courage, unions and Democrats’ identity problem
Elias Isquith
Party leaders trying to understand how they got trounced this year should take a look at Wisconsin. Here's why
Why climate change could mean the end of chocolate
Sara Yasin
Start hiding your Hershey bars. Experts predict a cocoa shortage as soon as 2020
The surprisingly large carbon paw print of your beloved pet
Larry Schwartz
Humans are far from the only animals soiling the planet. Dogs alone are responsible for 10 million tons of waste
Countdown to climate catastrophe: World must reach zero net emissions by 2070, U.N. warns
Lindsay Abrams
Recent climate pledges aren't nearly enough to avoid dangerous warming, a new report finds
How the political media is poisoning American discourse
Marty Kaplan
By treating news as entertainment, mainstream journalists are making things inestimably worse
Why a Republican Congress might actually be the end of the world
Michael Klare
Keystone XL may be dead for now, but it's only one of several measures that would put the planet in grave danger
Keystone XL bill dies in the Senate
Lindsay Abrams
With 41 "no" votes, the issue's been put to rest until next year
Sorry, Lindsey Graham, but the GOP already has an environmental policy: To destroy it
Jim Newell
The senator believes his party needs to develop an "environmental policy." This is unlikely!
David Brooks’ latest embarrassment: When a “reasonable” conservative is just a right-wing hack
Luke Brinker
The columnist's latest work is a spectacular display of intellectual dishonesty and cheap analysis
The 9 times Neil deGrasse Tyson dropped knowledge on “The Colbert Report”
Sarah Gray
There are only 14 more episodes of "The Colbert Report." Here's a look at one of his best guests
Boehner: Keystone veto would be like calling Americans stupid
Lindsay Abrams
If the Senate approves Keystone, a veto from the president would be insulting to voters, the House speaker said
Top GOP senator admits human role in climate change, still doesn’t want to do anything to fix it
Joanna Rothkopf
Er ... progress?
Alaska’s polar bears are disappearing at an alarming rate
Lindsay Abrams
The Beaufort Sea population declined 40 percent in ten years, a new report finds
Paul Krugman has good news — and the GOP doesn’t want you to hear it
Luke Brinker
Remember the right's favorite anti-government horror stories? Paul Krugman reveals why they're pure bunk
DC pundit takes troll game to new level: Ron Fournier’s strange history of Obamacare
Jim Newell
Fournier wants the exact policies Democrats have put forth. But he continues to blame both sides for inaction
Thomas Frank on Ronald Reagan’s secret tragedy: How ’70s and ’80s cynicism poisoned Democrats and America
Thomas Frank
Nixon's lies and Reagan's charms created the space for Clinton, Carter and Obama to redefine (and gut) liberalism
Death should be optional
John G. Messerly
As we march into the technological frontier, new possibilities for humanity are emerging — along with new questions
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