A May 15, 2007, posting in the Society of Environmental Journalists (SEJ) website featured an article titled, «Help Keep SEJ And The environment In The Spotlight,» lionizing Borenstein for his loyal service to the ideology espoused by Al Gore, Bill McKibben, and Ross Gelbspan: «Sensational, sordid or even silly stories always seem to crowd out serious coverage of
important issues like climate change, environmental health and sustainability.
Not exact matches
He mentions that
issues like climate change, genocide, fair trade, and peace are becoming more
important to evangelicals and may even affect their how they vote in this election cycle.
«With respect to global
issues like hydrocarbon exploration, fresh water, global
climate change, this is the
important stuff.
There's never been a more urgent time to engage your communities on
important issues like Sustainability, Simplicity, Food Systems, and
Climate Change.
Grist had played an
important role in elevating the
issue during the ensuing years, and we're glad more of our media peers are asking questions about what
climate change really looks
like — and how we're going to deal with it.
As a concept commanding universal support, free speech is in serious retreat, to the point where one of Mann's groupies is happy to argue that, for really
important issues like «
climate change», free speech has to take a hike.
If you're interested in how misinformation makes its way into the public dialogue on
important issues like war in the Middle East or
climate change, then you should get to know David Rose, a «special investigations writer» for the UK's ultra-conservative Mail on Sunday tabloid.
This is an
important question, because (as I have shown in previous research) negativity toward scientists is associated with the rejection of scientific consensus on
issues like climate change.
«But we have faith Americans will contribute to the solution if they take time to understand the connection between our everyday lives as consumers and
important issues like cap and trade being discussed in Copenhagen at the United Nations
climate change conference.»
For Europeans risk belief
issues like climate change, perhaps even the threats which global financial movements pose for individual countries, are much more
important than the threat of terrorism.
Many people might think that addressing global
climate change is critical and that peacefully ending conflicts
like the one in Syria is
important, but how are those two
issues related?
Every week, I'll bring you
important stories from across the country about the impacts and politics of
climate change, the transition from fossil fuels to cleaner energy sources and environmental
issues like water and public lands.