Posts

Why Supermarket Tomatoes Suck

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By Barry Estabrook - 6/13/11 ON E ARTH     a survival guide for the planet Excerpted from the new book "Tomatoland: How Modern Industrial Agriculture Destroyed Our Most Alluring Fruit" Details here. Organic cherry tomatoes. l.p. photo

Innu, Nalcor Disagree on Impact of Labrador Hydro Dams

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CBC News - Mar 21, 2011 Innu say caribou will be harmed. Details here. Photo courtesy of  "Our Labrador"

Canadian Inspectors Can’t Stop Dangerous Food Imports

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Bob Kingston, Ottawa Citizen 06/14/11 The Canadian Food Inspection Agency might be trying hard to protect Canadian consumers from unsafe imported food. But, the simple fact is… .Details here.

On Environment Week, Government of Canada Missing in Action - Green Party of Canada

8 June 2011 - GPC OTTAWA - Today is World Oceans Day, Canadian National Clean Air Day, and both World Environment Week and Canadian Environment Week. Today the Green Party of Canada is noting the sad irony that the first federal budget to be tabled during Environment Week is also the weakest environmental budget in recent history. Details here.

A Link Between Climate Change and Joplin Tornadoes? Never.

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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xhCY-3XnqS0 Stephen Tomson   Published on Sunday, June 12, 2011 by Plomomedia (via Grist.org) Bill McKibben published a must-read op-ed in The Washington Post last month about the connection between climate change and recent extreme weather events. Now Stephen Thomson has combined McKibben's words with striking footage of the events he writes about. The result is a chilling must-see video:

Manitoba Studies Strategy to Help Flooded Farmland, Address Climate Change

Chinta Puxley, The Canadian Press - 06/12/2011 WINNIPEG - After four soggy years of flooded pastures and ruined crops, the Manitoba government is looking at how to help frustrated farmers cope with climate change in the province's Interlake region. Details here. ==== PLT: It tears my heart out to learn about the damage and human suffering being inflicted on my fellow Manitobans by the bad weather and flooding. So, as one who supports the science of climate change, I'm encouraged that the topic is slowly creeping into the public discourse. But, our policy-makers will simply have to screw up the courage to put it in context, (which the above story sure as Hell does not do)! At some point they are going to have to say, out loud, that climate change IS CAUSED BY HUMANS. What we need, therefore, are meaningful changes in our personal lifestyles and those of business, industry and government; changes which will significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions. If this is not done, it