Showing results for: Climate Change (page 53)
Confronting the gun lobby’s biggest myth
Nina Vinik
We must move past the myth that guns make us safer
US support for nuclear power soars to highest level in a decade
Akielly Hu
As the country looks to decarbonize, nuclear’s popularity continues to climb
What’s the latest on GMOs and gene-edited foods — and what are the concerns?
Karen Massel
"What are GMOs and gene-edited foods? And how are they shaping the future of our food systems?"
Not your grandfather’s military-industrial complex: Experts say new Pentagon stats are “stunning”
Ben Freeman, William Hartung
Military-industrial complex uses unprecedented influence to corrupt D.C. and starve funding for everything else
Chile’s national lithium strategy raises questions about the environmental and social costs of EVs
Tushar Khurana
Critics want the move to protect ecosystems and communities from unnecessary extraction
Our tropical fruits are vulnerable to climate change. Can we make them resilient in time?
Rajeev Varshney, Abhishek Bohra
Bananas, passionfruit and pineapples are some of the most popular fruits. How will climate change affect this?
7 animals we could lose forever due to climate change
Matthew Rozsa
From flying foxes to corals, the world will never look the same if carbon emissions continue apace
These four challenges will shape the next farm bill — and how the US eats
Kathleen Merrigan
What long-term effects will the next farm bill have on our eating habits at large?
Workplace bullies come in four distinct “types.” Here’s how to deal with each of them
Mary Elizabeth Williams
Megan Carle, workplace bullying expert and author of "Walk Away to Win," explains how to deal with office tyrants
The water brokers
Jake Bittle
A small Nevada company spent decades buying water. As the West dries up, it’s cashing out
This 25-year-old sci-fi disaster movie is still lauded by scientists — here’s why
Matthew Rozsa
Salon spoke with scientists who praised "Deep Impact" — and with others who helped make it
Despite what you may think, ethanol isn’t dead yet
Max Graham
The biofuel's bipartisan support isn't about science, but politics
“Charles: In His Own Words” director: “He plays a very long game, especially with his own family”
Mary Elizabeth Williams
Director Tom Jennings on what he learned about the new king from making "Charles: In His Own Words"
“We’re all weirdos”: A new documentary explores how Americans got so anxious
Matthew Rozsa
"Anxious Nation" chronicles anxiety among American youth — and everyone else
This is what the world will look like in 100 years if we do nothing to stop climate change
Matthew Rozsa
Climate change experts forecast our ecological future if humanity continues polluting at the current rate
Electrify everything, California says — including trucks and trains
Kate Yoder
The unprecedented regulations will tackle air pollution and carbon emissions at the same time
What a pending Supreme Court ruling could mean for Biden’s new clean water protections
Max Graham
The fate of millions of acres of wetlands hinges on five vague words in the Clean Water Act
In the wake of historic storms, Māori leaders call for disaster relief and rights
Joseph Lee
The Māori say New Zealand must center Indigenous peoples in climate disaster plans
UN: Protecting Indigenous health also protects the environment
Pauly Denetclaw
A growing body of research ties the health of Indigenous communities to the environment
“Good, honest folks”: 20 years later, controversial “Dogville” has become frightening prophecy
Kyle Turner
Lars von Trier's portrait of a town that takes in a fugitive Nicole Kidman is less a provocation than a reflection
Bring me to life: Evanescence helped me find my trans voice
Stacy Jane Grover
The album "Fallen" released 20 years ago. Each track named a chasm in my life and paved a path out of it
Political “polarization” isn’t the real problem in America: One pole is a lot worse than the other
Paul Rosenberg
Political research is all about the dangers of polarization. But what if one pole is cynical and dangerous?
Everything we thought we knew about Mars’ moon Deimos could be wrong
Matthew Rozsa
New data from the probe Hope reveals that Deimos may not be a captured asteroid at all
How LA’s teachers are making good on their promise to support community schools
Jeff Bryant
LA teachers went on strike in 2019. Four years later, they can point to the evidence of what went right
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