Showing results for: Climate Change (page 70)
Power, politics and persuasion: Why Democrats don’t win — and how they can fight back
Paul Rosenberg
Anand Giridharadas' new book tackles tough questions: How to challenge dominant narratives — and win elections
Dairy, drought and the drying of the American West
Kai Olson-Sawyer
The Western water crisis may be a wake-up call for the intensive dairy system
Duran Duran’s Nick Rhodes on “Medazzaland” turning 25: “I love the sonic architecture”
Annie Zaleski
Rhodes looks back on the band's transitional 1997 album, continuing without John Taylor, Nirvana's genius and more
Give peace a chance in Ukraine: The chorus rises, around the world and across the spectrum
Medea Benjamin, Nicolas J.S. Davies
Leaders in the global South, former U.S. diplomats and Henry Kissinger (!) agree: It's time to negotiate for real
What killed off billions of Alaska’s snow crabs?
Natalie Jonas
One billion snow crabs disappeared from the Bering Sea. No one is sure why — but climate change is suspect #1
All that plastic in the ocean is a climate change problem, too
Joseph Winters
Researchers worry that microplastics may be messing with an important carbon sequestration process
Report: Human health is ‘at the mercy of fossil fuels’
Zoya Teirstein
Extreme heat and air pollution are taking a deadly toll, but it's not too late to save lives
How sunken basketball courts could protect New Yorkers from the next Superstorm Sandy
Jake Bittle
The city wants to use its public housing developments to soak up extreme rain
NeverTrumper Rick Wilson on the midterms: “Democrats are about to pay a terrible price”
Chauncey DeVega
Republicans will "lie, cheat and steal" to win, says GOP renegade — Democrats will learn that lesson the hard way
Cities want more trees. Drought is complicating their efforts
Blanca Begert
As water resources dwindle, Western communities are investing in new ways to ensure young trees survive.
The Cochise County groundwater wars
Jake Bittle
A thirsty megafarm is driving a libertarian enclave in Arizona to embrace a radical solution: government regulation
“In atheists, they don’t trust”: Why is it so hard for atheists to get voted into Congress?
Phil Zuckerman
Number of nonreligious candidates grows but only one self-identified atheist has ever won a congressional election
In Nevada, a monument to violence built on stolen land
Tristan Ahtone
The art world sees a megasculpture masterpiece; others see a tribute to American colonialism
‘We will all die if we continue like this’: Indigenous people push UN for climate justice
Joseph Lee
As the General Assembly meets, activists protest for Indigenous rights
‘A moral responsibility’: Scotland calls for climate reparations ahead of COP27
Naveena Sadasivam
Prior to COP27, multiple nations call for high-emitting countries to pay climate reparations
Are hypoallergenic pets a real thing?
Matthew Rozsa
Salon asked experts whether you can you really breed a dog or cat to be hypoallergenic
Report: Extreme heat will hit urban poor the hardest, worsening inequality
Brett Marsh
The good news is that prevention is possible
How a Utah utility is helping an Estonian oil company hoard Colorado River water
Naveena Sadasivam
A loophole in Utah law could enable the country’s first commercial oil mining operation
Soup on the van Gogh: The painting’s fine, and the kids are all right
Émile P. Torres
Was the London soup-throwing incident an absurd plea for attention? Absolutely — it was also totally justified
Fiona Apple: “Rings of Power” warrior woman
Alison Stine
The "Tidal" musician, tired of being marketed as a waif, sang in the series’ finale for a reason
Can Tim Ryan save Democrats? The working-class-jobs candidate in the era of resentment
Alec MacGillis
Democrat Tim Ryan has long emphasized manufacturing jobs, a stance his party has lately begun to embrace
The West’s biggest source of renewable energy depends on water. Will it survive the drought?
Emily Pontecorvo
Glen Canyon and the Hoover Dam are “not the whole story"
Exposing the financial costs of climate change – and denial of the climate crisis
Mark Schapiro
As a warming planet brings economic tensions to a boil, following the money can reveal some critical stories
Melting glaciers could spread mysterious pathogens that cause future pandemics, scientists warn
Matthew Rozsa
Rushing water flowing out from glaciers could spread viruses and bacteria at a much faster rate across species
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