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PDF September/October 2005
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e-mail August 15, 2005
 

 

SEPTEMBER 2005
Democracy Breaks Out
Highlights from Sierra Summit
Taking Money from Criminals
   
  WHO WE ARE
John Swingle
Betsy Bennet
Larry Fahn
 
AUGUST 2005
Hot or Not?
Judgement Day at Hand for Arctic Refuge
Designing the 'Next Industrial Revolution'
Exxpose Exxon
What Would John Muir Drive?
Maybe This SUV?
Happy Birthday Alaska Wildlands
Big Box Boondoggle on the Ropes
Save the Great Bear Rainforest
 
  WHO WE ARE
Mark Johnston
Joni Bosh
Gordon Nipp
   
From the Editor: Paper to Pixels
ClubBeat
 
  JULY 2005
Protecting the Environment is Patriotic
Tilting At Windmills
The Ultimate Bad Hair Day
Meet the New Sierra Club President
Lucky Seven—One-on-One with Six Summit Speakers and One Delegate
From the Editor
Who We Are
ClubBeat
   
PDF July/August 2005
   
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Back Issues
   

 

The Planet

TODAY’S TOP STORIES

Why we know global warming is here and
how industry has created the illusion of ‘uncertainty’

How is it that all the top climate scientists agree that global warming is real, but the story that keeps getting told is that there's uncertainty?

In an interview with the Planet's Timothy Lesle, climatologist Steven Schneider explains that the uncertainty stems partly from the way the media covers science like politics—where they “balance” two sides. But in science, says Schneider, “there aren’t two sides.” MORE


Judgement Day at Hand for Arctic Refuge

Tight vote expected as Club targets Republican moderates

Maine’s two senators, Susan Collins and Olympia Snowe, consider themselves champions of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. They have voted several times against Arctic drilling and they joined the filibuster against it in 2003.

But Maine Sierra Club organizer Maureen Drouin says that because Bush administration allies in Congress snuck projected revenues from Arctic drilling into the $2.5 trillion budget reconciliation bill—which also includes provisions affecting Maine’s struggling shipbuilding industry and medicare program—Collins and Snowe could end up tipping the balance in favor of drilling. MORE


Playing the ‘Infinite Game’ —
the Game We Get to Play Forever

Visionary designer Bill McDonough thinks big and small

Sierra Summit 2005 master speaker Bill McDonough thinks big: he's designing seven new cities in China. McDonough also thinks small: he's designing “cradle-to-cradle” packaging for bread.

Cities, bread—they're not so different to him. They're all part of what he calls the “Next Industrial Revolution,” which includes projects like textile factories where the water coming out is cleaner than the water coming in, and sewage treatment plants that generate revenue by becoming fertilizer factories. MORE



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