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Showing results for: Climate Change (page 50)

“You wanna inhale this stuff? Go ahead”: “The View” is OK if the right denies smoke health risks

Joy Saha
"The View's" Sara Haines is OK if the right denies smoke health risks: "You wanna inhale this stuff? Go ahead"

“These climate extremes are going to continue”: The toxic cloud upon us

Bob Hennelly
The smog fallout downwind has set off air quality alerts for 13 states south of the Canadian border

“There’s no health risk”: Fox Newsers dismiss public health advice amid dangerous wildfire smoke

Tatyana Tandanpolie
"We have this kind of air in India and China all the time, no public health emergency," one pundit declared

Canadian wildfires are choking Americans. Here’s why air quality got so bad and what can be done

Troy Farah
Dust off the pandemic masks — the smoke from Canada's wildfires is going to linger for a while

Climate crisis is on track to push one-third of humanity out of its most livable environment

Abrahm Lustgarten
More than 600 million people are already living outside of a crucial “climate niche”

How understanding plant body clocks could help transform how food is grown

Katharine Hubbard
Yes, even "plants, fungi and even some bacteria" have circadian rhythms, too

Looking for home in an overheating world: If emissions continue, will we all be migrants someday?

Jane Braxton Little
Where will we go to find safety from fire, floods, and extreme storms? Will we ever find home again?

Seduced by war yet again: Why Washington is underwriting violence in Ukraine

Andrew Bacevich
Ukraine has battled courageously — but the U.S. proxy war with Russia has nothing to do with defending democracy

The eczema boom: Air pollution may be to blame

Nicole Karlis
Eczema is on the rise. More people in urban environments are getting diagnosed — but nobody knows exactly why

Fascism, free speech and Cop City: What’s happening in Atlanta and why it matters

Sophia Tesfaye
Clampdown on protests in Atlanta's Cop City isn't an isolated local issue — it's about America in 2023

How food insecurity affects people’s rights to choose whether or not to have children

Jasmine Fledderjohann, Maureen Owino, Sophie Patterson
"If people choose to have children, they should be able to parent them with dignity in safe & healthy environments"

“Reckless hostage-taking”: Progressive Democrats vow to vote against bipartisan debt ceiling deal

Julia Conley
Bernie Sanders was the first senator to come out against the package negotiated by Joe Biden and Kevin McCarthy

A new trade deal ostensibly delivers cheaper foods — but does little to avert climate change

Margaret Young, Georgina Clough
Is the effect of the deal effectively rendered useless due to its environmental impact — or lack thereof?

Discovered in collections, many new species are already gone

Katarina Zimmer
Extinction is "a very common phenomenon and revisiting museum collections

Corporations are planning to mine the deep ocean where 5,000 new species were just discovered

Matthew Rozsa
Deep sea mining in the Clarion-Clipperton Zone may threaten thousands of undiscovered species that live there

“War on the environment”: Samuel Alito just issued a radical rewrite of the Clean Water Act

Bob Hennelly
Even Brett Kavanaugh sided with the court's liberals in the case

“Significant global ecological disruption”: Plastic is destroying Earth — and recycling won’t help

Matthew Rozsa
A new report analyzed previous studies and reached sobering conclusions about the plastic pollution crisis

The millennial anxieties of “Succession” and how each of the Roys tried and failed to cope

Dalton Valette
Overwhelmed and feeling out of control, the Roy siblings struggled to find their path beset by their boomer father

The debate around DEI has got it all wrong

Maureen Dunne
Why confusing the issues around inclusivity hurts everyone

Astrophysics and stale beer: What life is like working at the South Pole

John Messick
Those who live at the South Pole approach the ice with a sense of awe that borders on religious conviction

The COVID pandemic may be “over” — but the pandemic of loneliness is getting worse

Émile P. Torres
We may live in the loneliest society in human history. It's a social problem — and a massive public health crisis

Does immigration really increase crime? Here’s what the science says

Troy Farah
The data from at least 30 countries shows crime doesn't rise with immigration

Universities aren’t doing enough for climate. Here’s what a real sustainability plan would look like

Peter W. Reiners
University leaders should be asking what actual climate action looks like

“Succession”: We have questions about Shiv’s news

Whitney Friedlander
Shiv is a calculated player who'd sooner send her husband to prison than have kids with him – or so we've been told
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