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The ghost of link dumps past

Posted by David Roberts at 10:28 PM on 03 May 2008

So I was thinking to myself, self, you should do a link dump post so you can close out some of this cluttery crap in your browser. I go to start one, and what do I find? An old link dump post that I'd never published!

So here's an old link dump. Watch for a new one in mere days!

-----

Thanks to the UK Times Online for deeming Gristmill "the green blog from the other side of the pond."

It's a shame this op-ed is relegated to the Billings Gazette. I'd like to see one like it in every paper in the nation. UM professor Tom Power makes the simple point that corporate opponents of climate action try to convince the public that carbon regulations will destroy the economy by building economic models with absurd, pessimistic assumptions:

They begin by implicitly assuming that the efforts to reduce the emissions of greenhouse gases have no real purpose and, therefore, no benefits whatsoever. That allows them to focus exclusively on totaling up the costs associated with such regulation. ... Second, they assume that our economy is a completely nonadaptive system that, when faced with the need to stop doing one thing that is damaging or destructive, can only throw up its arms in despair and just quit. ... Third, they assume that when employment declines in the polluting sectors of our economy, those workers become permanently unemployed. ... Fourth, they spin out big numbers but never put them in any meaningful context that would allow us to understand how disturbed, or not, we should be by them.

Word.

Yale has started a site called See For Yourself, where you can set up economic models using various assumptions, run a cap-and-trade program, and see what the resulting economic impact is. Fascinating stuff.

John Vidal has a long, detailed, and thoughtful look at "the green scare" -- i.e., the hubbub over "eco-terrorism" -- in the U.S. Love the article, but don't love the name. Nobody is genuinely scared; there is no genuine threat. The gov't is using "eco-terrorism" as a pretext for boosting domestic surveillance and police state tactics. It's the oldest story in the book.

People advancing the radical idea that infinite growth is impossible in the context of finite resources are getting a second hearing. Maybe they're onto something!

The Commission for Environmental Cooperation has a new report out showing that "promoting the green design, construction, renovation and operation of buildings could cut North American greenhouse gas emissions that are fueling climate change more deeply, quickly and cheaply than any other available measure."

The scientists in the U.K.'s Royal Society do not like coal.

Did you notice when GM CEO Rick Wagoner backed away from Bob Lutz's "crock of shit" remark?

Because the world does not yet have enough dumbass practices, companies in the U.S. and China are starting to use coal as a feedstock for the chemical industry.

Speaking of horrible ideas, the U.S. Air Force looks set to single-handedly create a market for coal-to-oil fuels. It's wildly expensive, horrendous for the environment, and a terrible investment, but it's good for the coal industry and the military, so what does all that matter?

The latest source of energy? Tornadoes.

Aussie coal companies want free GHG permits too.

A roundup of developments in algae as biofuel feedstock, including the opening of the first commercial-scale algae farm, in Texas.

It's not green, but anyone interested in the media must read Eric Alterman's New Yorker piece on the "death and life of the American newspaper."

From the New Yorker piece

Few believe that newspapers in their current printed form will survive. Newspaper companies are losing advertisers, readers, market value, and, in some cases, their sense of mission at a pace that would have been barely imaginable just four years ago...
...
In a recent episode of "The Simpsons," a cartoon version of Dan Rather introduced a debate panel featuring "Ron Lehar, a print journalist from the Washington Post." This inspired Bart's nemesis Nelson to shout, "Haw haw! Your medium is dying!"

"Nelson!" Principal Skinner admonished the boy.

"But it is!" was the young man's reply.

I'll wager that saddle manufacturers saw the end of their trade coming as well. And where have all of the secretaries gone?

Finally, we need to consider what will become of those people, both at home and abroad, who depend on such journalistic enterprises to keep them safe from various forms of torture, oppression, and injustice.

My guess is that online publications will eventually fill that void.

And so we are about to enter a fractured, chaotic world of news, characterized by superior community conversation but a decidedly diminished level of first-rate journalism.

Oh brother. There is first rate journalism, and there is the other 90% of journalism, which won't be missed. Blogs have a lot of first rate journalism, and a lot of crap. The cream floats to the top.

Beyond the publication of the occasional letter to the editor, the role of the reader was defined as purely passive

Still is and always will be. What we are witnessing is the removal of an information bottleneck.

Journalism works well, Lippmann wrote, when "it can report the score of a game or a transatlantic flight, or the death of a monarch." But where the situation is more complicated, "as for example, in the matter of the success of a policy, or the social conditions among a foreign people--that is to say, where the real answer is neither yes or no, but subtle, and a matter of balanced evidence," journalism "causes no end of derangement, misunderstanding, and even misrepresentation."

That is becoming more and more obvious as readers of blogs start to realize how grossly inadequate newspapers are.

Only nineteen per cent of Americans between the ages of eighteen and thirty-four claim even to look at a daily newspaper. The average age of the American newspaper reader is fifty-five and rising.

I know a lot of people who read papers because they think that doing so is an expression of intellectual acuity. Admittedly, it beats watching sitcoms and the nightly news, but just barely.

Taking its place, of course, is the Internet, which is about to pass newspapers as a source of political news for American readers. For young people, and for the most politically engaged, it has already done so

Many newspapers, in their eagerness to demonstrate a sense of balance and impartiality, do not allow reporters to voice their opinions publicly, march in demonstrations, volunteer in political campaigns, wear political buttons, or attach bumper stickers to their cars.

In private conversation, reporters and editors concede that objectivity is an ideal, an unreachable horizon, but journalists belong to a remarkably thin-skinned fraternity, and few of them will publicly admit to betraying in print even a trace of bias. They discount the notion that their beliefs could interfere with their ability to report a story with perfect balance. As the venerable "dean" of the Washington press corps, David Broder, of the Post, puts it, "There just isn't enough ideology in the average reporter to fill a thimble."

Meanwhile, public trust in newspapers has been slipping at least as quickly as the bottom line. A recent study published by Sacred Heart University found that fewer than twenty per cent of Americans said they could believe "all or most" media reporting, a figure that has fallen from more than twenty-seven per cent just five years ago. "Less than one in five believe what they read in print

That's because about half of everything you read turns out to be bullshit and all you can do is sit there and roll your eyes. Writing letters to editors is a waste of life.

Whereas a newspaper tends to stand by its story on the basis of an editorial process in which professional reporters and editors attempt to vet their sources and check their accuracy before publishing, the blogosphere relies on its readership--its community--for quality control

The problem is that very little vetting appears to actually be going on in newspapers. The blogosphere certainly does rely on its readers for quality control. But knowing everything you write is being scrutinized by thousands of people who can effortlessly search the internet and then come back to tell you where you screwed up, really helps to keep bloggers honest.

"User-generated content is all the rage, but most of it totally sucks," Peretti says. The mullet strategy invites users to "argue and vent on the secondary pages, but professional editors keep the front page looking sharp. The mullet strategy is here to stay, because the best way for Web companies to increase traffic is to let users have control, but the best way to sell advertising is a slick, pretty front page where corporate sponsors can admire their brands."

In other words, instead of having a biased editor (trying to pretend he isn't) filtering the content for you, each reader gets to pick and choose among the comments. Dumb asses are ignored or put in their place by other commenters, aggressive jerks have their accounts yanked.

...traditional journalists  ...tend to dismiss not only most blogosphere-based criticisms but also the messy democratic ferment from which these criticisms emanate. The Chicago Tribune recently felt compelled to shut down comment boards on its Web site for all political news stories. Its public editor, Timothy J. McNulty, complained, not without reason, that "the boards were beginning to read like a community of foul-mouthed bigots."

Sounds familiar. My theory is that foul mouthed bigots compose a lot of newspaper readership and comment pages for politics and religion causes them to centrifuge out.

In the end, it all comes down to biodiversity. Poison Darts--Protecting the biodiversity of our world

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