TV Schedule

Global Climate Crisis

  • Public Topic: Everyone is invited to contribute to Global Climate Crisis

    • Toyota to build Prius in US, stops truck production

      "The company said Thursday it will start producing the Prius in 2010 at a plant it is building in Blue Springs, Miss. Toyota already builds a hybrid version of the Camry sedan in Kentucky, but this will be the first time the Prius, which has been on sale for more than a decade, will be built outside of Asia." -MSNBC

      Toyota is also planning on temporarily stopping US production of its trucks and large SUVs because of declining demand. The plants will either temporarily close or build hybrid SUVs instead.

      This is great news both for the environment and for our economy. It will ultimately result in more jobs for Americans and strengthen the "green-collar" job market. This is evidence of our economy's shift in the right direction.

      What do you think?
      "The company said Thursday it will start producing the Prius in 2010 at a plant it is building in Blue Springs, Miss. Toyota alre... more

      Colonial_Zombie

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      21 hours ago
    • Polar Bears and Rough Ice

      Renowned polar explorer Will Steger, leader of the GlobalWarming101 Ellesmere Island Expedition ( http://www.globalwarming101.com ), expected the Arctic to throw all it had at his team.

      The Arctic delivered.

      See the story of the team and their polar bear encounters as they traveled through the rough ice, littered with seal pups.

      Learn more about the expedition and their eyewitness account of the effects of climate change on the northern Canadian ice shelves at http://www.globalwarming101.com
      Renowned polar explorer Will Steger, leader of the GlobalWarming101 Ellesmere Island Expedition ( http://www.globalwarming101.com ), e... more

      wsfcurrent

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      1 month ago
    • Evaporation tomorrow

      Are we going to burst into flame? I don't think so.

      whytheam

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      33 responses

      1 month ago
    • Al Gore's New Climate Change Campaign

      Al Gore is teaming with The Alliance for Climate Protection on a new effort titled the "We Campaign." The ultimate aim is to halt global warming. Specifically we are educating people in the US and around the world that the climate crisis is both urgent and solvable. Al Gore is teaming with The Alliance for Climate Protection on a new effort titled the "We Campaign." The ultimate aim is to... more

      Future_America

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      2 days ago
    • 2008 Indigenous Earth Day Summit at Northern Michigan University: Proposal deadlin...

      Call for Proposals: NMU 2008 Indigenous Earth Day Summit

      EXTENDED DEADLINE!

      Northern Michigan University is seeking presentation proposals for the 2008 Indigenous Earth Day Summit to be held at NMU April 22-23.

      This summit is made possible by the Center for Native American Studies, the Environmental Science Program and the Office of International Programs.

      This summit will function as a call to action on Indigenous environmental issues in the Great Lakes area, on Turtle Island and around the world.

      An Aboriginal Australian delegation from the Traditional Knowledge Revival Pathways project will be featured as keynote presenters and will provide musical entertainment.
      http://www.tkrp.com.au

      Presentations should ultimately include ideas on how to address Indigenous environmental concerns. Topics include, but are not limited to, the following.

      - Traditional Ecological Knowledge (T.E.K.)

      - Education and Indigenous environmental concerns

      - History of industrialism, industrial threats, Indigenous peoples and the Earth

      - Economic globalization and Indigenous peoples

      - Indigenous languages and the Earth

      - Solutions in Indigenous cultures to environmental problems

      - Indigenous subsistence rights and protection of sacred land

      - Global poisoning and the impact on Indigenous peoples

      - Climate change and its impact on Indigenous peoples

      A variety of presentations are encouraged (music, art, films as well as papers and panels).

      Activists, Native elders and Native community members are strongly encouraged to submit proposals.

      Proposals should be 150-300 words in length. Deadline for submissions has been extended to Monday, March 17, 2008.

      Send to:
      cnas@nmu.edu
      (attachments should only be in Microsoft Word or as a PDF)

      Subject line: Indigenous Earth Day Summit Proposal

      -or-

      Center for Native American Studies

      Northern Michigan University

      1401 Presque Isle Ave

      Marquette, MI 49855

      For more information call 906-227-1397

      http://www.nmu.edu/nativeamericans
      Call for Proposals: NMU 2008 Indigenous Earth Day Summit EXTENDED DEADLINE! ... more

      Yoopernewsman

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      9 hours ago
    • Al Gore's speech - Nobel Peace Prize ceremony, Oslo, DECEMBER 10, 2007 - 2. p...

      In the last few months, it has been harder and harder to misinterpret the signs that our world is spinning out of kilter. Major cities in North and South America, Asia and Australia are nearly out of water due to massive droughts and melting glaciers. Desperate farmers are losing their livelihoods. Peoples in the frozen Arctic and on low-lying Pacific islands are planning evacuations of places they have long called home. Unprecedented wildfires have forced a half million people from their homes in one country and caused a national emergency that almost brought down the government in another. Climate refugees have migrated into areas already inhabited by people with different cultures, religions, and traditions, increasing the potential for conflict. Stronger storms in the Pacific and Atlantic have threatened whole cities. Millions have been displaced by massive flooding in South Asia, Mexico, and 18 countries in Africa. As temperature extremes have increased, tens of thousands have lost their lives. We are recklessly burning and clearing our forests and driving more and more species into extinction. The very web of life on which we depend is being ripped and frayed.

      We never intended to cause all this destruction, just as Alfred Nobel never intended that dynamite be used for waging war. He had hoped his invention would promote human progress. We shared that same worthy goal when we began burning massive quantities of coal, then oil and methane.

      Even in Nobel?s time, there were a few warnings of the likely consequences. One of the very first winners of the Prize in chemistry worried that, ?We are evaporating our coal mines into the air.? After performing 10,000 equations by hand, Svante Arrhenius calculated that the earth?s average temperature would increase by many degrees if we doubled the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere.

      Seventy years later, my teacher, Roger Revelle, and his colleague, Dave Keeling, began to precisely document the increasing CO2 levels day by day.

      But unlike most other forms of pollution, CO2 is invisible, tasteless, and odorless -- which has helped keep the truth about what it is doing to our climate out of sight and out of mind. Moreover, the catastrophe now threatening us is unprecedented ? and we often confuse the unprecedented with the improbable.

      We also find it hard to imagine making the massive changes that are now necessary to solve the crisis. And when large truths are genuinely inconvenient, whole societies can, at least for a time, ignore them. Yet as George Orwell reminds us: ?Sooner or later a false belief bumps up against solid reality, usually on a battlefield.?

      In the years since this prize was first awarded, the entire relationship between humankind and the earth has been radically transformed. And still, we have remained largely oblivious to the impact of our cumulative actions.

      Indeed, without realizing it, we have begun to wage war on the earth itself. Now, we and the earth's climate are locked in a relationship familiar to war planners: "Mutually assured destruction."

      More than two decades ago, scientists calculated that nuclear war could throw so much debris and smoke into the air that it would block life-giving sunlight from our atmosphere, causing a "nuclear winter." Their eloquent warnings here in Oslo helped galvanize the world?s resolve to halt the nuclear arms race.

      Now science is warning us that if we do not quickly reduce the global warming pollution that is trapping so much of the heat our planet normally radiates back out of the atmosphere, we are in danger of creating a permanent ?carbon summer.?

      As the American poet Robert Frost wrote, ?Some say the world will end in fire; some say in ice.? Either, he notes, ?would suffice.?

      But neither need be our fate. It is time to make peace with the planet.
      In the last few months, it has been harder and harder to misinterpret the signs that our world is spinning out of kilter. Major cities... more

      kadartamas

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      1 month ago
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Contributors (36)
Global Climate Crisis

whytheam SubwayEd Future_America teotwawki Colonial_Zombie Inofuilwell stardate Yoopernewsman PlanetWarrior chromehelmet That_one_Guy JoQ Mark701 justjack wsfcurrent kewal91 Enjoy_Cannabis milowangwangzing marcounido Kidryu16 Chloe ocanada IndyOp AliceInWonderland27 CraniOcean Tommygun264 MrEricRodriguez kadartamas fightoffyourdemons jacoblp rj_steinert mdriscoll Zephyrus stevil72 sasquatch88 Clarice