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Showing results for: Climate Change (page 433)

Uncle Sam’s extreme makeover

Joyce McGreevy
There's a bold new spirit in America: Downtrodden workers slaving harder than ever to build a better life for members of the investor class!

The new Cold War

Page Rockwell
Russia and the U.S. remain friendly, but are engaged in a Cold War-style arms race.

Big biz battles for Bush’s bench

Dan Noyes
Last year the Senate rejected former mining and cattle lobbyist William Myers for the Court of Appeals. Now Bush is trying again -- and this time Myers' business pals are waging a multimillion-dollar campaign for him.

America’s forgotten atrocity

Andrew O'Hehir
A unique hybrid people, the Acadians offered a wiser, kinder vision of settling the continent. Instead, they became the victims of North America's first ethnic cleansing campaign.

Desperately seeking gays

Patrick Barkham
The British navy joins forces with an advocacy group to recruit and retain more homosexual sailors.

Transatlantic trip

Nicholas Watts
On his first day in Europe, Bush offers soothing words but no substantive policy changes.

A wimpier shade of green

Amanda Griscom Little
Why aren't environmental groups taking to the streets to protest the U.S.'s snubbing of the Kyoto Protocol?

“Inside Deep Throat”

Andrew O'Hehir
This documentary about the ludicrously bad ur-porno film will test your gag reflex.

Bush’s lean and mean new budget

Julia Scott
For low-income Americans, who will have less money to pay for child care, heating bills, housing and public parks, it will be mostly mean.

Morality play

Rebecca Traister
By acknowledging painful emotional truths about abortion, pro-choice activists have reenergized their movement. But is all the talk about fetuses overshadowing women's rights?

Is it hip to snip?

Dana Hudepohl
Most men who have vasectomies are middle-aged, married, with children. But some are young men who have simply decided they don't want children -- ever. Is society ready for them?

On the right track

Amanda Griscom Little
New Republican leaders emerge in the battle against climate change.

Clear Skies in morning, Bushies take warning

Amanda Griscom Little
The Bush team pushes Clear Skies, but disagreement over carbon dioxide could stymie the bill.

Ballots and bombs in Baghdad

Jill Carroll
The capital is in virtual lockdown as insurgents spread intimidation and fear. The biggest question in Iraq: Is voting worth dying for?

Lobbying for inaction

David Adam
British scientists warn that the U.S. oil industry is funding groups that oppose measures to tackle global warming.

Muckraker

Amanda Griscom Little
In her forthcoming memoir, former EPA chief Christine Todd Whitman takes stock of the GOP's "rightward lurch" under Bush.

“Coach Carter”

Stephanie Zacharek
A high school basketball movie that's not a bunch of dribble!

Dead movement walking?

Katharine Mieszkowski
Roiled by harsh internal criticism and confronting four more years of Bush, environmentalists face a dark night of the soul.

King Kaufman’s Sports Daily

Salon Staff
NFL playoffs: The Colts try again in New England, while the best team vs. New York is that other game, and the Eagles try to turn the motor back on after a month up on blocks.

Are we doomed?

Oliver Broudy
Jared Diamond, author of "Guns, Germs, and Steel" and "Collapse," says that if America doesn't change its ways it'll go the way of the dodo -- no matter what Bill Gates, George Bush or Michael Crichton says.

Dirtying the waters

Amanda Griscom Little
Right-wingers are using the tsunami to attack enviros on global warming. Here's why it doesn't wash.

Chronicle of a flood foretold

Mark Schapiro
For the Maldives, the day after tomorrow is now.

The worst of Times

Andrew O'Hehir
Two new books on the New York Times relive its recent crises. But while the Jayson Blair scandal made for splashy headlines, the real question is how the country's leading newspaper will recover from spreading lies about Iraq's WMD.

Selling the forest for the trees

Rebecca Clarren
In a gift to timber industry patrons, the Bush administration is thinning national forests and cutting down government scientists who stand in the way.
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