| On November 3rd, Step It Up is organizing global warming rallies in a number of cities throughout the United States. The organization's primary goal is to get Congress to agree to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 80% by 2050. The November campaign also aims for a moratorium on the construction of coal burning power plants. |
| Recommended Reading: July 29, 2008 |
| Written by Eben Esterhuizen | |||
| Tuesday, 29 July 2008 03:23 | |||
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Links, links, links...
"The only good thing to come from soaring oil prices is that they have spurred innovator/investors, successful in other fields, to move into clean energy with a mad-as-hell, can-do ambition to replace oil with renewable power," writes Thomas Friedman at The New York Times.
Politicians reap higher electoral benefits from doling out disaster relief money than they do from spending money beforehand on disaster prevention, writes The Freakenomics blog. According to a new paper by Andrew Healy, an economist at Loyola Marymount University, that creates an incentive for governments to underprepare for natural disasters. "We interrupt regular programming to announce that the United States of America has defaulted," writes Satyajit Das. This is a pretty good (but lengthy) summary of the doom and gloom argument. Click here to read part 1 and click here to read part 2. Martin Feldstein channels Milton Friedman in a column on the dollar. What cannot go on forever will not go on forever, and what we've borrowed, we'll ultimately have to pay back, says Mr Feldstein. Ultimately, America will need to have a trade surplus, and the dollar will go as low as it needs to to bring about that state of affairs. The news that 4 people had been arrested in Iowa while trying to perform a citizen's arrest on Karl Rove got Nathan Robinson wondering: Can we arrest Bush administration officials ourselves?
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| Last Updated on Tuesday, 29 July 2008 08:53 |