Energy companies – Sept 9
-Shifting Alliances Define Energy Debate
-British energy firm in the dock over Amazon project
-Arizona firm in deal to spread sun power to China
-Shifting Alliances Define Energy Debate
-British energy firm in the dock over Amazon project
-Arizona firm in deal to spread sun power to China
-The beauty and terror of science
-Human Resource Use: Timing and Implications for Sustainability
-Crisis and Hope
-Oil Spin
-Oil still has us over a barrel
-Maribynong Peak Oil Contingency Plan
-Wanderlusting No. 4: Copenhagen Cycle Culture
-Zipcar – The best new idea in business
-A Hitch For Rail Riders: Getting To Final Destination
-The Transition Towns Movement; its huge significance and a friendly criticism
-Responding to Ted Trainer’s Friendly Criticism of Transition
One national moment-of-nausea this Labor Day weekend struck Sunday morning, when CNN’s John King led off his 10 a.m. State of the Union show with a valentine to ABC’s Diane Sawyer, on her becoming anchor of that network’s evening news. (This was the most important news of the week???) The old legacy networks have taken on the role of dishing out reassurance to an anxious and insecure public as job number one, and the subtext of the Sawyer lede was that a Mommy figure would soon be in place to soothe the multitudes even as the nation free-falls into bankruptcy and disorder.
Low cost health care, or rather medical care as it really is constituted, is not a benefit if healing is not the purpose. “Getting better” perhaps — through treatments purchased — is what’s hoped for, even for the rich. In their case, life is sometimes extended through great expense, but is it worth living hooked up to machines? Democracy has come to mean the poor too are on multiple legal drugs, with side-effects requiring still more drugs.
…I don’t know if Baker’s statement reflects an “eternal truth”, but oil is undoubtedly a very important component of the global economy and energy (along with food) is a key non-discretionary essential without which we couldn’t sustain our current standard of living. Unlike Europe, the US is still addicted to cheap oil, so the impact of price spikes tends to be felt much more acutely here than it does in the EU or UK…
It seems to me that there is a growing momentum of thoughtful debate over the realities of local food production versus industrial agriculture. A book review from Bloomberg news provided the inspiration for a needed discussion on this subject here this week.
-Van Jones’s Ousting: A Wake-Up Call for Green Economy Advocates
-White House Official Resigns After G.O.P. Criticism
-Thank you, Glenn Beck!
-How Bad Will It Get?
-Building the Ownership Society
-China and the buzz of a pending bank default
-States of shock
-Recession moves migration patterns
What is Retail Supported Agriculture? As far as the North American local food movement is concerned, it’s not a concept that has yet been coined in any notable way. The Kootenay Grain CSA (community supported agriculture) project located in the Kootenay region of British Columbia is now changing that.