Sentences with phrase «how dirty their industries»

Not exact matches

Roscheisen explains how his company is cleaning up a dirty industry — while designing some very chic jewelry.
Which is probably a good thing, because if you don't do something different from what everybody else is doing, how on earth can you hope to succeed in a down - and - dirty industry like cardboard boxes?
She aims to educate on the dirty practices of the food industry and how to eat healthy, with real food!
This advice comes from Phil Sexton's «Dirty Little Secrets: Learn How the Publishing Industry Really Works to Become a More Successful Author» session.
One of the most rewarding sessions is Sexton's own «Dirty Little Secrets: Learn How the Publishing Industry Really Works in Order to Become a More Successful Author.»
But his new seminar for authors was as long on sharp, unvarnished advice as it is on title: «Dirty Little Secrets: Learn How the Publishing Industry Really Works in Order To Become a More Successful Author.»
Would ask how would anyone in their right mind want to work for such a company when so much of their dirty laundry has been exposed, but then, by all real counts the general industry including the west isn't much better.
Dirty Energy Dominance: Dependent on Denial — How the U.S. Fossil Fuel Industry Depends on Subsidies and Climate Denial
Complimenting the grassroots struggles, it looks at how we can change the rules of the game to help us, while building the public support for campaigns against dirty industry and making sure their PR machines don't succeed in rebranding coal, gas and oil as part of the solution.
What hasn't been reported is the complementary role of the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), which has peddled laws written by corporate lobbyists through state legislatures that make it easy for its dirty energy members, such as Exxon, Koch Industries and Peabody coal, to influence how climate science is presented to students.
American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), which has peddled laws written by corporate lobbyists through state legislatures that make it easy for its dirty energy members, such as Exxon, Koch Industries and Peabody coal, to influence how climate science is presented to students.
Denying it is just propaganda and marketing by an industry that doesn't like being reminded of how dirty it is.
Last week we brought you the story of how the nation's largest utility holding company — and historically one of the industry's biggest coal consumers — is pivoting away from the dirtiest carbon - based fuel and focusing more on renewable generation at its regulated utilities.
At the heart of philosophical debate of how we can best mobilize industry to deal with climate change lies one single dirty fuel source: coal.
Lead Levels in Lipstick Much Higher Than Previously Reported, Says FDA More on Better Products: How to Go Green: Natural Skin Care No More Dirty Looks: The Truth About Beauty Products Natural Beauty Book Authors Reveal Shocking Truths About Cosmetics 5 Greenwashed Myths of the Beauty Industry (And How Not to Fall For Them) More on Better Regulations: Seventh Generation CIP Jeffrey Hollender Speaks Out on Chemical Reform Should Manufacturers Disclose Secret Chemical Ingredients?
Some of the attention given SRLs is perhaps better spent addressing mechanisms for how behavioural transgressions by functionaries within the court system are best policed, the lack of which has been a dirty secret of the legal industry long before SRLs showed up.
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