Category: HaulTail

  • The Debates Showed America Still Doesn’t Know How to Talk About Climate Change

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    By Ryan Johnson If you want to understand just how badly climate change was handled in the Democratic debates, start by looking at a good answer on another subject. When former HUD Secretary Julián Castro was asked about immigration during the first night of this week’s debates, he went full force, giving an overview of […]

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  • Hidden Plastics: Glitter Gum and the Air we Breath

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    By Christopher Thompson The plastic contamination of the natural world flows from three main sources: complacency, apathy and ignorance, a poisonous trinity that is itself the result of a narrow and destructive approach to living. While there are signs of a shift in attitudes among many people, resistance to changing the lifestyle habits that feed […]

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  • Reduce, reuse, recycle: Eco-friendly alternatives to start using today

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    By Ryan Johnson Approximately 12.7 million tons of plastic pollute the ocean each year, with reportedly 5 trillion pieces of plastic floating around altogether — that’s enough plastic to wrap around the planet more than 400 times. Since only roughly 9 percent of plastic is actually recycled, it’s crucial that we do our part in […]

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  • Arizona Fourth of July celebrations: Where to see fireworks in Flagstaff, Prescott, Payson

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    By Ryan Johnson Summer holidays are a great excuse to hit the road and get out of the Phoenix-area heat. This year July 4 falls on a Thursday, which creates lots of extended weekend getaway opportunities if you can also get Friday off. Extreme drought conditions in 2018 caused some Arizona cities to cancel their fireworks. But a relatively […]

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  • California was warned about climate change 30 years ago. Now it’s feeling the effects

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    By Ryan Johnson Back in 1989, Californians received a sobering warning: The accumulation of heat-trapping gases in the atmosphere would likely bring more droughts, floods, fires, and heat waves to the state. In the thirty years since, those projections of what would happen in a warming world have proven to be remarkably prescient. “We’ve already […]

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  • How Do You Talk to Children About Climate Change?

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    By Ryan Johnson Hollywood has produced quite a few fictionalized depictions of dramatic climate change. Scores of people die after Manhattan freezes in 2004’s “The Day After Tomorrow.” In “Geostorm,” released in 2017, the weather goes haywire after satellites malfunction. Realistic scenarios, though, have been less frequent. Yet Sunday’s episode of “Big Little Lies,” the […]

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  • We can’t recycle black plastic, but now we can use its carbon for renewable energy

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    By Ryan Johnson The big problem with plastics is that though they last for a very long time, most are thrown away after only one use. Since plastics were invented in the 1950s, about 8,300m metric tonnes (Mt) have been made, but over half (4,900 Mt) is already in landfill or has been lost to […]

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  • Although climate change is global, its importance is not viewed globally

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    By Ryan Johnson Climate change is global in nature, and is creeping higher in surveys of voter concerns. In some countries it’s at or near the top, but it’s not regarded with the same urgency the world over. Wildfires in California and Siberia. Floods wiping out grain harvests in Argentina. Droughts forcing water restrictions in Capetown […]

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  • Health impact from smoke rises with more intense U.S. wildfires amid climate change

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    By Ryan Johnson Climate change in the Western U.S. means more intense and frequent wildfires churning out waves of smoke that scientists say will sweep across the continent to affect tens of millions of people and cause a spike in premature deaths. That emerging reality is prompting people in cities and rural areas alike to […]

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  • Three ways your environment affects your intelligence

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    By Ryan Johnson You can be born with good genes and study hard and still not meet your potential. Your environment has a lot to do with how smart you are. Euthenics refers to the practice of improving humanity’s environment in order to maximize its potential. Throughout history, we’ve tweaked our surroundings in such a […]

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