Tag Archives: Culture

EPA Changes Rules For Cement Industry, Cleaning Up Mercury Pollutants

photo via flickr The Obama administration has been on the receiving end of a lot of heat lately, and deservedly so after it chose to let the climate bill whither on the vine. But lost in the shuffle are many of the other positive steps the administration is taking to preserve our environment. Case in point: Today EPA finalized regulations the will require cement kilns to reduce emissions of mercury and other pollutants by more than 90 percent, a step that will save money and improve public health…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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EPA Changes Rules For Cement Industry, Cleaning Up Mercury Pollutants

Your Office Is Where You Are, Unless It Is A Wi-Fi Free Coffee Shop

Downbeat Cafe, Echo Park, before the WIFI ban Some have suggested that the end of the office is nigh, and that the Coffee Shop is a good alternative if you need some social interaction and a jolt of caffeine, some shops are finding that it isn’t necessarily good business and are unplugging the WiFi. According to the LA Times, when the Downbeat Cafe turned it off, “The complaints poured in, but so did the compliments: Lots of customers appreciated a wireless cup of joe.”… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Your Office Is Where You Are, Unless It Is A Wi-Fi Free Coffee Shop

Weekday Vegetarian: Using Up Eggplant from the Garden

Photo: Kelly Rossiter I wrote last week about how well the eggplant is doing in my garden and the eggplant stack I made, and this week my daughter brought a whole bunch more to the cottage. There are so many things you can do with eggplant and so many different flavours it works with. Although I love Asian-style eggplant dishes with soy sauce and hot chilies, I was feeling like making something more Mediterranean. I had some beaut… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Weekday Vegetarian: Using Up Eggplant from the Garden

Full-Sized Urban Bicycle Folds Flat, Nearly Disappears: The ThinBike (Interview, Slideshow)

All images courtesy Graham Hill. Graham Hill, founder of TreeHugger.com, is an insatiable tinkerer/designer who strives for elegant design solutions. His latest foray into problem-solving, a collaboration with bike manufacturer Schindelhauer bikes , has resulted in what he calls the ThinBike — a full-sized urban bicycle that all but disappears when brought indoors. Graham shares with us some of the thinking behind his idea. Love it? Pick up your own via special order through Schindelhauer. TreeHugger: What is about that living in inner city apartments that has focuse… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Full-Sized Urban Bicycle Folds Flat, Nearly Disappears: The ThinBike (Interview, Slideshow)

Oceana Launches Expedition to Learn Long-Term Effects of Gulf Oil Spill

Photo via Southerntabitha As BP pushes hard to shift attention away from the spill itself and on to clean-up and wrap-up efforts , Oceana has launched an expedition that will study the long-term effects of the disaster on the Gulf’s flora and fauna. Hopping aboard the 170-foot Oceana Latitude and using remotely operated vehicles, specialized divers and satellite tags, the team will investigate how the spill is impacting coral, fish, shark and other wi… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Oceana Launches Expedition to Learn Long-Term Effects of Gulf Oil Spill

Round Homes Catching On, But Are They Green?

Buckminster Fuller made his Dymaxion houses round because they were aerodynamic and because a circular house encloses more floor area for a given amount of perimeter material. According to the Ottawa Citizen , people are still doing it, for much the same reasons. But instead of aluminum, Laurie Murray and George Kerr built theirs out of cordwood, a very old fashioned form of construction where one takes foot thick slabs of wood laid on their sides…. Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Round Homes Catching On, But Are They Green?

NY Senate Tells Frackers To Stop While The State Looks At Water Safety

A fracking tower (photo via flickr) The film ” Gas Land ” has woken people up to the dangers of fracking–the drilling technique that uses millions of gallons of pressurized and chemically treated water to fragment rock to get to natural gas. The New York State Senate obviously has questions about fracking after they voted 48 to 9 last Tuesday to issue a temporary moratorium on the practice. … Read the full story on TreeHugger

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NY Senate Tells Frackers To Stop While The State Looks At Water Safety

Amanpour Elevates British Journalist Who Sees ‘Culture of Hate’ in U.S., Time to Divide Up Our ‘Pie’

Christiane Amanpour elevated a liberal British journalist, with little U.S. television experience, to the This Week roundtable where she presumed the government must run the economy and distribute the economic pie while she took pot shots at how the efforts to control illegal immigration proves America’s descent into a “culture of hate.” Gillian Tett , U.S. Managing Editor of the London-based Financial Times newspaper, began by insisting, that to respond to stagnant employment numbers: “The big question now is can the economy keep growing if the government doesn’t keep pumping in money?” Applying a European economic model, Tett fretted “that so much of America in the last few decades has been about trying to focus on growing the pie, not worrying about how to divide it up” as Americans didn’t “worry about social equity and things like that.” But, showing little faith that Obamanomics will work, she ruminated, “if we are entering a period when the pie is stagnant, the question that’s going to be very political is how do you divide that pie up?” In her final remark on unemployment, she warned “you really are starting to see the beginnings of a culture of hate, of finger-pointing, of scape-goating.” Minutes later, however, in a discussion of the proposal to modify the 14th amendment to end automatic citizenship through birth, Tett assumed those dark days have already arrived: “It’s quick fix soundbite politics in this culture of hate and this, you know, scape-goating that’s going on right now.” Others on Amanpour’s panel: Politico’s John Harris, New Yorker’s George Packer and former Bush speechwriter Michael Gerson. Last week, on reviewing Amanpour’s debut: “ Amanpour Slums to Take on U.S. Politics, Flummoxed Pelosi’s Victories Aren’t Better Appreciated ” Comments from Gillian Tett during the roundtable on the August 8 This Week with Christiane Amanpour: > I think it’s important to realize that it illustrates is that the President, right now, is at an important juncture point. For the last year, we’ve had some growth in the American economy, but much of that’s been due to government aid, government spending, or what economists call an inventory rebuild – basically, companies and shops ran down their stocks back in late 2008, they rebuilt them, but that process is kind of finished. And the big question now is can the economy keep growing if the government doesn’t keep pumping in money? > The problem in a way, in a sense the social contract in America., the American dream is starting to fragment because for years America’s prided itself on having an unemployment rate that was a lot lower than Europe’s, but it didn’t have a social safety net like Europe. Now, in a sense, it doesn’t have a social safety net, and yet, shockingly, the unemployment rate is approaching European levels, in some cases actually exceeding it. And that’s a real challenge, not just in an economic sense, but in a political sense too about what is the American dream? > What’s fascinating is that so much of America in the last few decades has been about trying to focus on growing the pie, not worrying about how to divide it up because if you keep growing the pie, through innovation, through private sector enterprise, then you don’t have to worry about social equity and things like that. But if we are entering a period when the pie is stagnant, the question that’s going to be very political is how do you divide that pie up? > And poisonous as well. You really are starting to see the beginnings of a culture of hate, of finger-pointing, of scape-goating. And that could fuel the way for some very nasty, very negative politics going forward.   > [on amending 14th amendment] It’s quick fix soundbite politics in this culture of hate and this, you know, scape-goating that’s going on right now.

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Amanpour Elevates British Journalist Who Sees ‘Culture of Hate’ in U.S., Time to Divide Up Our ‘Pie’

Travis Barker And Fat Joe Freestyle On MTV’s ‘RapFix Live’

The Blink-182 drummer teams up with Joey Crack for an impromptu session. By Mawuse Ziegbe, with reporting by Sway Calloway Travis Barker and Fat Joe Photo: MTV News Fat Joe’s “RapFix Live” interview on Friday (August 6) was heavy on highlights. The Bronx lyricist talked about confronting hip-hop nemesis 50 Cent, his memories of the late Big Pun and his strained relationship with Remy Ma. However, one of the more surprising moments arose when rocker Travis Barker joined the Terror Squad rapper’s sit-down. Barker — at the MTV News offices for a separate interview — warmly greeted Joe, who recalled fond times with Barker’s late pals DJ AM and Lil Chris. While Travis may be best known as the drummer for rock outfits Blink-182 and +44, he’s since branched out, becoming a familiar figure in the hip-hop scene. Barker has remixed songs by stars like Soulja Boy and hit the stage with the likes of Jamie Foxx and T-Pain . Joe even dubbed him “our hip-hop drummer. He gets it in. Ain’t nobody like him.” Barker said that he’s been inspired by both rap and rock for a long time. “Ten years ago … I’d be on tour with Blink or [his band] Transplants, one of my punk rock bands, and they’d be like, ‘What are you listening to?’ They’d be expecting me to say [something] like, ‘I’m listening to Minor Threat or Sex Pistols,’ and I would say … I can’t stop listening to Low End Theory [by] Tribe Called Quest, and they’d be bummed,” Barker revealed. “That stuff changed my life when I was a kid. I’d always be real honest and upfront about it. I listen to everything. I listen to Minor Threat just as much as I listen to Tribe.” In fact, Barker is working on the solo project Give the Drummer Some, which features a major cast of hip-hop talent, including Game, Lil Wayne, Swizz Beatz, Rick Ross and Beanie Sigel. Joe said MCs respect the drummer because he’s blurring the boundaries of hip-hop and rock by bringing the two genres together. “For somebody like Travis to tell Rick Ross or Game, ‘Yo, get in the studio,’ and they get in like this [snaps fingers], it just shows how much they appreciate what he’s doing towards the culture of hip-hop or rock or whatever you wanna call it,” Joe, who recently dropped his The Darkside, Vol. 1, said. Then, the two stars demonstrated what a hip-hop and rock collabo looks like with an impromptu performance. Barker brandished the drumsticks he always keeps on hand and took it back to the schoolyard, thumping out an uptempo beat on a stiff notebook. Joe leaned back in his chair, and with casual swagger, began to rattle off a swift freestyle. “This that genocide talk/ They killing babies again/ And there’s lines around the block/ Like it’s the ’80s again/ Yeah, the dark side and you don’t wanna go to this place/ Where I got special powers/ I could punch a hole through your face,” he rhymed. What did you think of Travis and Joe’s “RapFix Live” freestyle? Tell us in the comments! Related Videos ‘RapFix Live’ With Fat Joe Related Artists Travis Barker Fat Joe

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Travis Barker And Fat Joe Freestyle On MTV’s ‘RapFix Live’

Mammalampa Lamps: Naturally Poetic Lighting from Latvia

Images: Mammalampa Latvia may be a little off the beaten track in terms of tourist destinations, but it’s evident that its newfound psyche has a bit of old-world charm merging with a modern muscularity. Case in point: take a look at these lamps by Mammalampa , a design firm based in the capital of Riga. Their mission: “[to declare] a gentle war [by] making lamps differently without adapting, killing or violently beautifying materials. Our lamps are created in the image of living materials touched by the… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Mammalampa Lamps: Naturally Poetic Lighting from Latvia