Search Results
-
FILTER BY DATEAll Time
-
-
FILTER BY RELEVANCEMost Relevant
-
-
FILTER BY CONTENT TYPEAll Content Types
-
Many environmentalists claim that natural resources are running out, species are being driven to extinction at alarming rates, and, in general, that the state of the environment is spiraling out of control--but are these claims true? Not according to Bjorn Lomborg, a professor of statistics and former member of Greenpeace....
The examples of rigidly enforced conformity could fill several volumes, and no amount of criticism from outside the environmental citadel is likely to break though the walls. So, is there any chance that reform will come from within?
While his Climate Fix sounds like yet another exercise in magical thinking, Pielke unloads one heresy after another.
Sept. 11 depreciated the claim that the ruin of the environment is the single most urgent threat facing civilization, and it deprived them of their favorite whipping boy--the Bush administration.
The Kyoto Protocol, which requires severe cutbacks in carbon-dioxide emissions, is clearly dead.
At an October 12 conference, policymakers considered ways to more effectively deploy limited global environmental resources.
Radical--or, more accurately, reactionary--environmentalism has become a religion, or a religion-substitute.
With Warren Buffett"s largesse added to his own, Bill Gates has about $60 billion to spend on health and development. How should he spend it?



