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Showing results for: Climate Change (page 8)

Can we imagine a progressive version of DOGE? Almost: Here’s how it would work

Paul Rosenberg
We can recover from Elon's chainsaw tactics — by making government more responsive, effective and democratic

The new space race is raining more garbage from the sky. We’re not doing enough to stop it

Joanna Thompson
You probably won't get hit by a chunk of falling satellite. But odds are rising that someone will

Trump’s EPA plans to stop collecting greenhouse gas emissions data from most polluters

Sharon Lerner
Climate experts expressed shock and dismay at the move, likening it to turning off a patient's life support monitor

Feeling stuck in your job? Don’t despair — take these steps instead

Keith R. Spencer
You're not alone — 60% of workers say they feel trapped in their current role

Giraffes for peace: Kenya’s Baringo giraffes are bringing warring communities together

Laurel Neme
Restoring these treasured animals to their ancestral land is reducing violence as people find common ground

Trump’s bankrupt empire

Tom Engelhardt
Donald Trump is not only President Bankrupt, but President Decline

“A firewall against erasure”: Jennifer Beals on “The L Word” book fans demanded

Kelly McClure
What began as a gift for cast and crew has become a shared reflection of queer history and connection

Mushrooms, murder and messed-up emotions: Welcome back to “The Last of Us”

Erin Qualey
Refresh your memory on Joel and Ellie’s journey through a fungus-ravaged world just in time for Season 2

An icy new map of Antarctica could help direct the search for alien life

Elizabeth Howell
The Bedmap3 survey is bringing the polar continent into focus, which could help detect life on icy moons

Erasing the stars: Satellite megaconstellations are a mega problem for Earth and sky

Carlyn Zwarenstein
With satellite numbers skyrocketing over the next few years, the time to grasp the implications is now

Amid NOAA cuts, scientists warn of weather and climate risks

Joshua Cohen
Staffing and funding cuts at the federal agency could affect everything from climate science to emergency readiness

A TikTok star says Democrats are “scared of wielding their power.” How would she be different?

Russell Payne
In an interview, Kat Abughazaleh explained why she's running to unseat a fellow a Democrat in Illinois

DEI was never for us anyway

Oneya Fennell Okuwobi
The one crucial component missing from the business case for diversity

“People don’t have to leave”: Under Trump, resistance means promoting trans “visibility and joy”

Tatyana Tandanpolie
Activists are responding to anti-trans bigotry by redoubling their efforts to provide safe and inclusive spaces

The climate movement is talking about carbon all wrong, a new book argues

Kate Yoder
Carbon isn’t an enemy to “combat” or “tackle,” environmentalist Paul Hawken writes, but the animating force of life

Containing multitudes: Why feeling mixed emotions can actually be healthy

Elizabeth Hlavinka
Simultaneous joy and rage aren't contradictions — they're part of a spectrum of emotional intelligence

Doctors raise alarm about rise in “sloth fever” infections linked to birth defects

Troy Farah
The Oropouche virus has been linked to Zika-like outcomes in pregnant people, with cases more than doubling in 2024

“Never a good sign”: After Khalil arrest, a “climate of fear” descends on Columbia University

Russell Payne
"Secret police abducting people in the middle of the night is never a good sign for any minority," one student said

Everything’s permissible and nobody’s accountable now: Welcome to the age of anything goes

Melanie McFarland
Tony Hinchcliffe has a Netflix deal, Andrew Cuomo might be mayor and Mel Gibson may get his guns back. Why not?

Masks off: The lessons we didn’t learn from COVID

Carlyn Zwarenstein
The pandemic accelerated economic disparity, revealing a disturbing acceptance of mass death. Did we learn nothing?

“A fighter and a champion”: Democratic Rep. Grijalva dies after cancer battle

Griffin Eckstein
The former chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus shared a lung cancer diagnosis last year

In Canada, Indigenous advocates argue that mining companies violate the rights of nature

Joseph Winters, Taylar Dawn Stagner
Tribunal judges found the industry guilty of “ongoing ecocide.”

Proposed cuts to SNAP benefits could deepen hunger and hurt local economies, experts warn

Ashlie D. Stevens
SNAP cuts could leave families unable to afford basic meals, worsening food insecurity and local economies

“Just getting started”: We have yet to see the worst of Trump’s “spectocracy”

Chauncey DeVega
During his address to Congress, Trump bragged and threatened that his administration “is just getting started”
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