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Keyword: ecology

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  • Charter school stresses developing a moral compass

    11/24/2008 8:30:19 AM PST · by Sopater · 4 replies · 289+ views
    The Providence Journal ^ | Sunday, November 23, 2008 | Julia Steiny
    Kingstown, a group of kids insisted I see their “fairy-house village.” Together we trooped across the grassy field that doubles as the school’s auditorium and gym, to the edge of the woods. There, a darling neighborhood of small, fragile structures, made entirely of stems, bark and dried flowers, housed fairies. While one fairy nut chatted about the inhabitants, the other kids talked — over each other, of course — about the importance of using natural materials. They love making art out in the woods. “It’s the best art,” squealed one girl. All the kids I met that day are excited...
  • "Loving" Bonobos Seen Killing, Eating Other Primates

    10/18/2008 4:28:19 AM PDT · by Nicholas Conradin · 23 replies · 966+ views
    National Geographic ^ | October 13, 2008 | Matt Kaplan
    A type of chimpanzee known to use sex for greetings, reconciliations, and favors may not be all about peace, love, and understanding after all. A new study reveals that some bonobos—one of humankind's closest genetic relatives—hunt and eat other primates. Groups of the endangered chimpanzee subspecies were observed stalking, chasing, and killing monkeys they later consumed. /* snip */ "The second I read this, I thought: Oh good, finally!" said primatologist Elizabeth Lonsdorf of the Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago. "Bonobos being so peaceful never sat well with me," said Lonsdorf, who was not involved with the study. "We see...
  • Friendly Invaders

    09/09/2008 12:32:29 AM PDT · by neverdem · 3 replies · 214+ views
    NY Times ^ | September 9, 2008 | CARL ZIMMER
    New Zealand is home to 2,065 native plants found nowhere else on Earth. They range from magnificent towering kauri trees to tiny flowers that form tightly packed mounds called vegetable sheep. When Europeans began arriving in New Zealand, they brought with them alien plants — crops, garden plants and stowaway weeds. Today, 22,000 non-native plants grow in New Zealand. Most of them can survive only with the loving care of gardeners and farmers. But 2,069 have become naturalized: they have spread out across the islands on their own. There are more naturalized invasive plant species in New Zealand than native...
  • A Great Lakes Eco 'Catastrophe' That ISN'T

    07/31/2008 6:28:02 AM PDT · by Mobile Vulgus · 13 replies · 147+ views
    publiusforum.com ^ | 07/31/08 | Warner Todd Huston
    The Chicago Tribune posted a story in the July 30 edition that highlights the often absurd hyperbole all too common in the language of environmentalists and eco-watchers. The story detailed the findings of scientists studying Lake Michigan and the ecology of the Great Lakes, one of them saying it is in "catastrophic" shape. Native fish and vegetation are being crowded out by new species and the "Great Lakes are at a tipping point" the Trib warns. It's all presented as some major disaster that should alarm us all, as if Mother Nature is being ruined, presumably by man. But a...
  • Thank God for the EPA -- or, there but for the grace of Nixon

    07/28/2008 5:39:59 AM PDT · by grey_whiskers · 1 replies · 513+ views
    grey_whiskers ^ | 7-28-2008 | grey_whiskers
    One of the favorite targets of conservative pundits (and rightly so) is the liberal tendency to extremes. Oftentimes, a liberal will see a societal problem, and pronounce :”This needs government!” Quite often the liberal will see a real problem, too, but will either end up creating a massive, wasteful bureaucracy (say, Medicare or Social Security), or else use the problem as a excuse for a vastly disproportionate growth in governmental power (say, the IRS). As H. L. Mencken once wrote, “Democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard.”...
  • Sports teams increasingly eco-conscious

    07/15/2008 9:35:34 AM PDT · by Zakeet · 7 replies · 103+ views
    San Diego Union-Tribune ^ | July 15, 2008 | Mike Lee
    When baseball's All-Stars gather for tonight's midsummer classic in Yankee Stadium, they'll participate in what organizers are billing as the “greenest” event in Major League Baseball history. All-Star Game planners are trying to reduce the event's ecological damage and encourage fans to lead eco-friendly lives. Coordinators are doing things such as ordering a giant red carpet made of recycled fibers, handing out reuseable tote bags and sponsoring a playground made largely from recycled materials. Such efforts are all the rage across the sports world. The Olympic planning committee in Vancouver, British Columbia, recently announced that the 2010 Winter Olympics will...
  • Environmentalists Want You to Eat Bugs [i.e. Insects]

    06/18/2008 5:12:36 AM PDT · by Zakeet · 29 replies · 221+ views
    Front Page Magazine ^ | June 18, 2008 | Tom Purcell
    Bugs. They want us to eat bugs. I speak of a recent article in Time that explains why eating bugs is good for the environment. As it goes, bugs require "little room and few resources to grow." Bugs are cold-blooded invertebrates, you see. They are efficient. Much more of the grub they eat is converted into edible bug body parts than is the case with our friends the cows. Cows are warm-blooded vertebrates. They need to consume lots more food just to keep their body temperature steady. Their food is grown on farms. Fossil fuels must be burned to harvest,...
  • Bag Man for Eco-Extremists (Gore)

    06/13/2008 2:22:45 AM PDT · by LegendHasIt · 4 replies · 79+ views
    FRONT PAGE MAGAZINE ^ | June 13, 2008 | Dr. Mark W. Hendrickson
    .....As senator, and then vice president, Gore used his power to channel money toward those who “played ball” and away from those who doubted GW. The latter found that grant money dried up, promotions were denied, and even jobs were terminated. Gore’s colleague, Colorado Senator Timothy Wirth, became Undersecretary of State for Global Affairs in charge of promoting GW theory and international agreements to address the alleged problem. Wirth was quoted as bragging that he could change a lot of minds with a billion dollars per year of State Department money. Indeed, recent estimates are that $50 billion has been...
  • Eco-fashion: Transforming trash into treasures (Purses Made from Candy Wrappers)

    05/13/2008 9:49:41 AM PDT · by rightwingintelligentsia · 7 replies · 133+ views
    CNN.Com ^ | May 13, 2008 | Valerie Streit
    MIAMI, Florida (CNN) -- Fashion designers are giving new life to worthless candy wrappers, newspapers and plastic bags; turning trash into trendy tote bags, purses and jewelry. From "post-consumer and industrial waste" comes durable, funky accessories reportedly worn by celebrities such as Lindsay Lohan, Cameron Diaz and Petra Nemcova. One self-described eco-fashion label, Ecoist, has partnered with Coca-Cola, Luna Bar, and Aveda to create handbags made from misprinted and discontinued packaging. "We tap into that source of waste because it is reliable and unfortunately it's abundant," said Ecoist co-founder Jonathan Marcoschamer. "We believe that for the next few years there's...
  • Eco-fashion: Transforming trash into treasures (Purses Made from Candy Wrappers)

    05/13/2008 9:49:41 AM PDT · by rightwingintelligentsia · 4 replies · 261+ views
    CNN.Com ^ | May 13, 2008 | Valerie Streit
    MIAMI, Florida (CNN) -- Fashion designers are giving new life to worthless candy wrappers, newspapers and plastic bags; turning trash into trendy tote bags, purses and jewelry. From "post-consumer and industrial waste" comes durable, funky accessories reportedly worn by celebrities such as Lindsay Lohan, Cameron Diaz and Petra Nemcova. One self-described eco-fashion label, Ecoist, has partnered with Coca-Cola, Luna Bar, and Aveda to create handbags made from misprinted and discontinued packaging. "We tap into that source of waste because it is reliable and unfortunately it's abundant," said Ecoist co-founder Jonathan Marcoschamer. "We believe that for the next few years there's...
  • The Age of Gullibility

    05/01/2008 9:58:37 AM PDT · by Hank Kerchief · 52 replies · 94+ views
    Independent Individualist ^ | Apr 29, 2008 | Reginald Firehammer
    That this is the age of gullibility is proved by the fact that three of the most absurd frauds in history have become totally accepted and unquestioned in our age. The results of this universal credulity is a social disaster, the affects of which are apparent in every aspect of our culture. If you think something is terribly wrong with the society you live in, but have not been able to identify exactly what it is, this may help you. The Appeal of Science No rational individual either doubts or questions the power of science to discover the truth. Much...
  • Biodiversity's Bonn Boondoggle

    04/28/2008 4:53:07 PM PDT · by kiriath_jearim · 1 replies · 49+ views
    Financial Post ^ | 4/28/08 | Peter Foster
    In my column last Friday – headlined “Bioperversity” – I suggested that a new book, “Sustaining Life,” from the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), which claimed that species loss was threatening medicinal discoveries and thus human health, was a typical alarmist crock. It was intended primarily as propaganda to whip up eco-hysteria ahead of next month’s huge United Nations conflab in Bonn to discuss the floundering Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). As if to prove my point, the IUCN the very next day issued a release about the so called “COP9,” that is, the ninth “Conference of the...
  • Chickenfeedhawks

    04/26/2008 7:18:36 AM PDT · by Former Proud Canadian · 2 replies · 76+ views
    National Review ^ | April 26, 2008 | Mark Steyn
    Last week, Time magazine featured on its cover the iconic photograph of the U.S. Marine Corps raising the flag on Iwo Jima. But with one difference: The flag has been replaced by a tree. The managing editor of Time, Rick Stengel, was very pleased with the lads in graphics for cooking up this cute image and was all over the TV sofas talking up this ingenious visual shorthand for what he regards as the greatest challenge facing mankind: “How To Win The War On Global Warming.” Where to begin? For the last ten years, we have, in fact, been not...
  • Potato heads are talking rot on food

    04/19/2008 5:14:51 PM PDT · by proxy_user · 3 replies · 97+ views
    The Times of London ^ | April 20, 2008 | Jeremy Clarkson
    A sinister government agency called Wrap (We Rape and Pillage) has spent vast lumps of our money to determine that, in Britain alone, we throw away 5.1m potatoes every day. Apparently this is so morally reprehensible that we should all commit suicide. Hmm. So we have one part of the government telling us that if we continue to eat too much we will become fat and everyone will explode. And now we have another part telling us that we have to finish everything on our plates because it’s wrong to throw food away. Is it though? Of course, eco-mentalists argue...
  • Psychoterratic Illness & other such GW buzzwords

    03/24/2008 10:36:48 PM PDT · by CottShop · 14 replies · 559+ views
    WorldChanging Team ^ | March 21, 2008 10:20 AM | Sanjay Khanna
    You can't make this stuff up folks- The latest victim of the supposed 'man-caused global warming' nut-o-rama are our psychological minds. That's right, it seems that some feller named Glenn Albrecht believes that we're all going to suffer from Psychoterratic illness. What is Psychoterratic illness you wonder? Why it's a malady whereby the mind goes psychotic when the terra firma is violated by we evil human beings. But wait- there's more. It seems that we're all about to suffer yet another crippling malady- Solastalgia. Again you ask, what ever can Solastalgia be? I'm surprised at you all. Shame on you!...
  • Perfect Timing: Domino Interviews Spitzer's Wife - Now We Know What Silda's Been Doing While ...

    03/12/2008 3:03:37 PM PDT · by XR7 · 9 replies · 1,820+ views
    AdvertisingAge ^ | 3/12/08 | Nat Ives
    When Eliot Spitzer was New York attorney general, the man seemed to own the press, seizing headlines with every investigation on Wall Street -- or prosecution of high-end prostitutes on Staten Island. Now that The New York Times has reported on Gov. Spitzer's much more amicable relationship with a separate ring of expensive prostitutes, the press will for a time own him. Nor will public life be much better for Silda Wall Spitzer, Mr. Spitzer's wife. So let's take a moment to appreciate the last softball interview Ms. Spitzer is going to have for a while: a video tour, for...
  • Researchers Challenge Water-Flow Model

    01/19/2008 1:08:56 AM PST · by neverdem · 6 replies · 90+ views
    NY Times ^ | January 18, 2008 | CORNELIA DEAN
    Decades ago, when geologists were developing ideas about how water typically flows across land, many of them studied the streams of the Mid-Atlantic States, concluding that they naturally move in ribbonlike channels cut through silty banks. In the years since, ecologists and conservationists have used this model in efforts to restore streams damaged by urbanization. Now, though, researchers at Franklin and Marshall College are challenging it. They say the streams studied by their geological predecessors were not “natural archetypes” but rather the artifacts of 18th- and 19th-century dam building and deforestation. The scientists, Robert C. Walter and Dorothy J. Merritts,...
  • At Man's Expense (NY Times Eco-Stupidity Alert)

    12/27/2007 10:48:31 AM PST · by Zakeet · 7 replies · 126+ views
    Investor's Business Daily ^ | December 26, 2007
    Media: The New York Times blubbers about how Cuba's environment will suffer in a post-U.S. embargo era of increased tourism. Better to preserve a "priceless ecological resource" than to free people from oppression.It is becoming increasingly more difficult to take the environmental movement, and science and environmental reporters, seriously because of stories such as the Christmas Day hand-wringer "Conserving Cuba, After the Embargo." Given great latitude by New York Times editors, reporter Cornelia Dean goes on for more than 2,000 words about "why many scientists are so worried about what will become of (Cuba's environment) after Fidel Castro and his...
  • Archbishop of Canterbury warns greed could wreck the Earth (Environmental Christmas Sermon)

    12/25/2007 6:24:47 AM PST · by Zakeet · 69 replies · 111+ views
    AFP ^ | December 25, 2007
    The leader of the world's Anglicans slammed "human greed" in his Christmas sermon, saying it threatened the Earth's fragile environmental balance. Doctor Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, told worshippers at Canterbury Cathedral in south-east England, that humanity needed to protect the world created by God. People should treat each other and nature with "reverence", the Church of England leader said. "More and more (is) clearly required of us as we grow in awareness of how fragile is the balance of species and environments in the world and just how our greed distorts it. "When we threaten the balance of...
  • European Union Has Doubled Ecological Pressure On Planet In 30 Years, Report Suggests

    11/28/2007 1:32:33 PM PST · by Brilliant · 10 replies · 42+ views
    ScienceDaily ^ | Nov. 28, 2007 | ScienceDaily
    The growing economic strength of the European Union has doubled the ecological pressure on the planet in the past 30 years, according to a WWF report. Despite technological advances, environmental pressure has been growing at a faster rate than the European population, creating a deficit of natural resources for the rest of the world and for future generations. “Just a generation ago much of Europe was an ecological creditor, using fewer resources than it had,” said Tony Long, Director of WWF’s European Policy Office. “But today Europe lives beyond its means. If the world’s citizens lived as Europeans, we would...