Blog Archive

  • Walmart: No more divide and conquer

    Walmart: No more divide and conquer

    Over the past several years, Walmart — the largest retailer in the United States by a factor of, well, a lot — has paraded out a series of sustainability initiatives, from energy efficient lighting in its stores to, more recently, a much-touted effort to bring fresh food to urban areas….

     
    posted by Michael O'Heaney
    February 29, 2012
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  • Doug Koplow: Communicating Arcane Subsidies to a General Audience

    Originally Posted at EarthTrack, which works to make government subsidies that harm the environment easier to see, value, and eliminate.

    Like implant dentists or utility accountants, subsidy wonks go to trade meetings (yes, meetings on natural resource subsidies do exist) to find people who talk our language.  In that “safe” space, we can be met with a knowing nod as we wax poetic on the difference between revenue loss and outlay equivalents, or what is missing from a price gap estimate….

     
    posted by Michael O'Heaney
    November 8, 2011
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  • We’ve got the scoop for all you teachers…Loop Scoops!

    We are thrilled to announce that our friends at WGBH’s Loop Scoops have just launched a whole new set of lessons plans to accompany their Stuff-focused, kid-friendly videos.  Targeted at grades 1-4, the Loop Scoops lessons plans and videos encourage kids to think more deeply and creatively about the Stuff in their lives and its connection to the environment.

    Available to download for free on Teachers Domain, these media-rich lessons can work as stand alone units or can be bundled together in series.

    And now we need your help!…

     
    posted by Allison Cook
    February 3, 2011
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  • Honoring the Spirit of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Through Action

    If you haven’t yet read “Parting the Waters: America in the King Years 1954-63,” I recommend it highly. I’m about half way through this incredible account of the emergence of the civil rights movement right now.

    There’s a moment described in the book where  E.D. Nixon – an African-American civil rights leader and union organizer in Montgomery – calls Martin Luther King Jr. on the phone.  It was 1955, Rosa Parks had just been arrested for refusing to vacate her bus seat and the idea for bus boycott was hatching. After working frantically to secure Parks’ release from jail, Nixon started rushing through a long list of people to call to recruit. At 5:00 am, he called King, told him about the arrest and the plans for a bus boycott. Nixon asked him to endorse the plan and get involved.  King replied: “Brother Nixon, let me think about it and you call me back.” When they next spoke later that morning, King not only endorsed the plan but jumped right in to help with the rest of calls.  He was soon chosen to lead the organization formed to coordinate the Montgomery Bus Boycott and the rest is history.

     

     
    posted by Annie Leonard
    January 17, 2011
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  • Geeks (and Optimists) Unite!

    It’s probably one of the most common questions that we get asked at the Story of Stuff Project:   “How do you all stay so positive in the face of (insert horrifying ecological or social problem here)?”

    In Annie’s case, we think it might be chemical, but for the rest of the Story of Stuff crew, a huge reason we keep coming to the office everyday is the opportunity to connect with people around the world who are inventing Another Way. Let’s face it; it’s hard to be Debbie Downer when the folks around you are so inspiring.

    My most recent brush with solutions has me all a flutter (in addition to confirming that I am an absolute and total geek).

    This July I spent the better part of a week in Lowell, Massachusetts at the Lowell Center’s Sustainability Action Summer Institute. The training was a gathering of a special kind of nerd (myself included) who is fascinated by the toxicity of various chemical compounds in cleaning products and thinks that brominated flame retardants in cell phones makes for stimulating dinner conversation. Needless to say, I had a great time.

    I think I found the week so nourishing mainly because the entire meeting was solutions oriented. Here was a room full of policy wonks, academics, scientists, foundation representatives, and sustainability advocates who really understand the disastrous consequences of our super toxic, chemical-laden culture for people and the planet.  If ever there was a group of people who could tell you how x-chemical causes cancer and y-chemical is killing off all the fish and z-chemical results in birth defects this was it.

    Yet for the five days that I was in Lowell, the conversation was almost exclusively about what was being done to change the landscape and bring us closer to the kind of future we want:  debriefs on state and national policies—like the Safer Chemicals Act—to regulate the use of toxic chemicals; an orientation on the Pharos database that helps activists study up on toxic chemicals and helps green builders make safer and more sustainable materials choices; talking through frameworks for sustainable products and alternatives assessments; and exploring the groundbreaking work being done to green the electronics industry.

    One real highlight was a dinner with John Warner, one of the fathers of green chemistry. Warner inspired me with the incredible possibility that creativity and innovation hold for transforming entire industries to be safer and more sustainable. Even if less geeky sectors of the population may not be as enthralled as I am by the possibility of dry chemicals reactions or a database comparing the most sustainable, least toxic resilient flooring options, I think that we can all agree that creativity and innovation are captivating.

    To borrow from one of the Lowell Center’s slogans “Natural resources are finite, ideas are not.”  And that is a very good thing.

     
    posted by Allison Cook
    July 12, 2010
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  • Why I am not offering "10 simple steps" to get involved.

    I just saw this wonderful short video that some high school kids at Woodside Priory School’s Global Issues Class made about Story of Stuff:

     
    posted by Annie Leonard
    January 14, 2008
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