Author Archives: Merv Carlson

Report: Most Tax-Based College Aid Goes to the Least Needy Families

Mother Jones

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The federal government helps to make college affordable in a number of ways, from low-interest student loans to grants for low-income students. It also offers a host of lesser known subsidies for higher education through the tax code, by way of such things as 529 tax-free college savings plans and exemptions for loan interest and college expenses—expenditures that don’t show up as a budget line item the same way Pell Grants do. A new report from the Consortium of Higher Education Tax Reform suggests these tax credits aren’t doing much to increase the number of low-income families who send kids to college. Instead, they’re subsidies to the 20 percent of American households making more than $100,000 a year—people who would send their kids to college even without a 529 plan.

The nation spends $34 billion annually on Pell Grants, which allow lower-income kids to go to college and leave without owing major debt. Meanwhile, the US spends $35 billion on higher education tax breaks, most of which go to people who need them the least. Tax credits in general are poorly targeted at those most in need, but some are worse than others. Take the Exemption for Dependent Students, which allows families to reduce their taxable income by up to $3,900 if they have a dependent student between the ages of 19 and 23. More than half of all these exemptions go to people making over $100,000 a year. Also regressive: the deduction for tuition and fees, half of which goes every year to families making over $100,000. The median income of a family with a 529 college savings plan is $120,000.

One reason tax credits don’t benefit lower-income families as much as they should is the fact that they aren’t refundable, so the money generally isn’t available to families when the college bills are due, only when they file their taxes. The consortium also points out that federal tax breaks are still available to colleges and universities that are doing a poor job of enrolling and graduating low-income students, noting that more than 100 institutions getting federal tax breaks have graduation rates under 20 percent—a serious problem that can leave low-income kids both saddled with college debt and without a degree that might help them earn enough to repay it.

Research shows that financial aid can make a huge difference in whether a low-income kid decides to go to college. It has a miniscule impact on the college attendance rate of upper class kids, who are seven times more likely than low-income students to complete a bachelor’s degree by the age of 24. The consortium recommends some big cuts in higher ed tax breaks for the affluent and a shift in focus to directing aid to where it can do the most good. Among its proposals: ending taxation of Pell Grants; allowing people with drug convictions to access the American Opportunity Tax Credit, one of the few refundable higher ed tax credits; and imposing income limits on college savings plans. All of these things seem reasonable and something both parties ought to be able to get behind, but it’s hard to see middle-class families giving up all this aid without a huge fight.

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Report: Most Tax-Based College Aid Goes to the Least Needy Families

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If You Distrust Vaccines, You’re More Likely to Think NASA Faked the Moon Landings

Mother Jones

Do you believe that a covert group called the New World Order is planning to take over the planet and impose a single world government?

Do you think the moon landings were staged in a Hollywood studio?

What about 9/11—do you suspect the US government deliberately allowed the World Trade Center and Pentagon attacks to happen in order to concoct an excuse for war?

If you believe these sorts of things, you’re a conspiracy theorist. That much goes without saying. But according to new research, if you believe these sorts of things, you are also more likely to be skeptical of what scientists have to say on three separate issues: vaccinations, genetically modified foods, and climate change.

Psychologist Stephan Lewandowsky, who studies conspiracy theories and how they motivate the denial of science.

The new study, by University of Bristol psychologist Stephan Lewandowsky and his colleagues in the journal PLOS ONE, finds links between conspiratorial thinking and all three of these science-skeptic stances. Notably, the relationship was by far the strongest on the vaccine issue. For geeks: the correlation was .52, an impressive relationship for social science. Another way of translating the finding? “People who tend toward conspiratorial thinking are three times more likely to reject vaccinations,” says Lewandowsky. (By contrast, for climate change denial and GMO resistance, the correlation with conspiratorial beliefs was real but much smaller, .09 and .13, respectively.)

The finding may cast a great deal of light on the strange persistence of anti-vaccine views, which have centered on the claim that childhood vaccines are behind an alleged “epidemic” of autism. This assertion has been rejected by scientists. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Institute of Medicine have both weighed in strongly on the matter; and one chief proponent of the vaccine concerns, Andrew Wakefield, has even seen his original 1998 paper raising concerns about the MMR (measles, mumps, rubella) vaccine retracted by the journal that published it, The Lancet.

Yet vaccine fears have persisted in the face of all scientific refutation (not to mention medical and public health experts saying that the failure to vaccinate is downright dangerous). And if these beliefs are often conspiratorial, that might help explain why. Almost by definition, conspiracy theories are irrefutable; rejections by scientific authorities just become part of the conspiracy. Indeed, several prior analyses of anti-vaccine views, undertaken by analyzing their expression on the web or on YouTube in particular, have found them to be highly conspiratorial in nature.

Lewandowsky’s team conducted the research through an online survey of 1,001 Americans, which asked them a variety of questions about conspiracy theories, and also separate batteries of questions on vaccines, climate change, and genetically modified foods. On vaccines, for instance, survey respondents were asked how much they agree with statements like “The risk of vaccinations to maim and kill children outweighs their health benefits” and “I believe vaccines are a safe and reliable way to help avert the spread of preventable diseases.”

As if the new study won’t provoke enough ire by linking anti-vaccine views to conspiracy theories, Lewandowsky also finds links—albeit much weaker ones—between conspiracy theories and both anti-GMO beliefs and climate change denial. On GMOs, the board of directors of the American Association for the Advancement of Science has stated that “crop improvement by the modern molecular techniques of biotechnology is safe.” Accordingly, Lewandowsky’s survey respondents were asked to react to items like “I believe that because there are so many unknowns, that it is dangerous to manipulate the natural genetic material of plants” and “Genetic modification of food is a safe and reliable technology.”

On climate change, the scientific consensus is strong and enduring—it was just reaffirmed by the leading scientific authority on the matter, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. To think that the world’s scientists are collectively conning us about this is indeed a conspiracy theory, and Lewandowsky has previously published research drawing this connection. Ironically, that in turn led some climate skeptics to see a conspiracy behind Lewandowsky’s studies, charging that the research had been faked or was a “scam,” that its conclusions were “pre-ordained,” and (most elaborately) that the University of Western Australia (where Lewandowsky used to work), the Australian Research Council, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation, and “possibly even the government” were ultimately pulling the strings. (The new research reaffirms that prior study, meaning that critics will now need a still more elaborate conspiracy theory.)

The new study also has some fascinating implications for the longstanding battle over who’s worse when it comes to distorting science: The left, or the right. Addressing this issue was a key motivation behind the research, and the basic upshot is that left-wing science denial was nowhere to be found—at least not in the sense that left-wingers reject established science more frequently than right-wingers on issues like GMOs or vaccines. “I chose GM foods and vaccinations based on the intuition in the media that this is a left wing thing,” Lewandowsky explains. “And as it turns out, I didn’t find a lot of evidence for that.”

When it comes to GM foods, Lewandowsky found no association between left-right political orientation and distrust of these foods’ safety in his American sample. When it comes to vaccines, meanwhile, the study found that two separate political factors seemed to be involved in vaccine resistance, leading to a complex stew. “There’s some evidence that progressives are rejecting vaccinations, but equally there is an association between libertarianism and the rejection of vaccinations,” Lewandowsky explains. Lefties presumably do it because they’re anti-corporate, and Big Pharma is involved in the vaccine business; libertarians presumably do it because they’re anti-government, and the anti-vaccine movement has long levied dubious charges that the government (the CDC in particular) has been hiding the truth on this matter.

Politically speaking, the result is kind of a wash. “Overall, there’s very weak evidence for a liberal war on science,” concludes Lewandowsky. By contrast, the rejection of climate science was associated in the study, as it has been constantly in past research, with political conservatism and free-market beliefs. Conservatives today also have less trust in science in general than liberals do. And then, there’s that whole evolution thing.

What are the implications of these results? First, the study suggests that we need to think about science denial in a new way: It isn’t simply driven by ideology. There appears to be an independent factor, conspiratorial thinking, that is neither left-wing nor right-wing, but that does motivate rejection of what scientists say on a diversity of issues. And that makes sense: “Science is based on looking at all the evidence, rather than focusing in on some abnormality, which is what conspiracy theorists do,” says Lewandowsky.

What does this mean for communicating the importance of vaccinations (or anything else, for that matter)? First of all, Lewandowsky advises against trying to debate conspiracy theorists at all—rather, you should try to communicate to the persuadable. Or if you are going to try to persuade a conspiracy theorist, Lewandowsky advises a multi-pronged approach: Refute multiple separate conspiracy beliefs at once. “It becomes much much harder for a conspiracy theorist to maintain four different crazy conspiracies, when four of them have been debunked,” he says.

The paper is Lewandowsky et al, “The Role of Conspiracist Ideation and Worldviews in Predicting Rejection of Science,” PLOS ONE, October 2, 2013.

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If You Distrust Vaccines, You’re More Likely to Think NASA Faked the Moon Landings

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Al Gore: Gutless media caves to climate deniers

Al Gore: Gutless media caves to climate deniers

CGIAR Climate

Al Gore

Should the media be giving as much ink to fossil fuel-funded shills as it gives to the hundreds of climate scientists who collaborated on reports being published by the United Nations?

As coverage of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s latest assessment report reaches fever pitch, some mainstream media outlets are treating climate science as if it were just an abstract political debate. They are falling into the trap of treating it as a mind-numbing to-and-fro argument with no right and no wrong — instead of something produced through good old-fashioned scientific rigor.

That pisses a lot of people off. One of them is Al Gore.

Gore, the former vice president who should have been president but instead used Powerpoint to put climate change on a lot of regular folks’ radars, is not shy about using his outsized soapbox. He was blunt in sharing his reflections Friday during a talk at the Brookings Institution. Here are some choice quotes, as transcribed by The Hill:

“Here in the U.S., the news media has been intimidated, frightened, and not only frightened, they are vulnerable to distorted news judgments because the line separating news and entertainment has long since been crossed, and ratings have a big influence on the selection of stories that are put on the news.”

“And the deniers of the climate crisis, quite a few of them paid by the large fossil fuel polluters — really it is like a family with an alcoholic father who flies into a rage if anyone mentions alcohol, and so the rest of the family decides to keep the peace by never mentioning the elephant in the room. And many in the news media are exactly in that position.”

“They get swarmed by these deniers online and in letters and pickets and all that if they even mention the word climate, and so they very timidly, they get frightened and they are afraid to mention the word climate.”

“Their purpose is to condition thinking and to prevent the consideration of a price on carbon. It’s just that simple.”

That simplicity is worth keeping in mind the next time you encounter a media outlet playing the old “on the one hand, on the other hand” game with climate science.

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.Find this article interesting? Donate now to support our work.Read more: Climate & Energy

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Al Gore: Gutless media caves to climate deniers

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The Real Reason Kansas Is Running Out of Water

Mother Jones

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Like dot-com moguls in the ’90s and real-estate gurus in the 2000s, farmers in western Kansas are enjoying the fruits of a bubble: their crop yields are borne up by a gusher of soon-to-vanish irrigation water. That’s the message of a new study by Kansas State University researchers. Drawing down their region’s groundwater at more than six times the natural rate of recharge, farmers there have managed to become so productive that the area boasts “the highest total market value of agriculture products” of any Congressional district in the nation,” the authors note. Those products are mainly beef fattened on large feedlots; and the corn used to fatten those beef cows.

But they’re on the verge of essentially sucking dry a large swath of the High Plains Aquifer, one of the United States’ greatest water resources. The researchers found that 30 percent of the region’s groundwater has been tapped out, and if present trends continue, another 39 percent will be gone within 50 years. As the water stock dwindles, of course, pumping what’s left gets more and more expensive—and farming becomes less profitable and ultimately uneconomical. But all isn’t necessarily lost. The authors calculate that if the region’s farmers can act collectively and cut their water use 20 percent now, their farms would produce less and generate lower profits in the short term, but could sustain corn and beef farming in the area into the next century.

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The Real Reason Kansas Is Running Out of Water

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Saving Our Environment With These Green Energy Solutions

There are more and more people deciding to go green these days to protect our environment. In this article, you will be provided with some basic green energy tips that can be applied in your household.

You can choose to install solar powered lights in the yard for outdoor lighting. These lamps use the sun power to light, so they are friendly to the environment. Moreover, it will not break the bank if you install this type of lighting system since it is quite cheap.

Everybody needs to use warm water in the cold days. How can you save energy in the winter? You can still “go green” in the winter if you know how to use warm water in a smart way. The tip is that you should use up all the warm water at a time. You heat the water once per day, and let all your family members take a quick shower at once. Heating the water multiple times in a day will surely increase your energy cost.

These days, many people decide to have solar energy system installed on the roof of their houses. If you live in a sunny region, you can take many benefits from installing this system. By doing this, you save energy, environment and your budget. You can buy a small traditional water heater as an alternative way if you live in a cloudy region.

One more way to live green is to take advantage of the sun and the wind to dry your wet clothes. On sunny days, you should take out all your wet clothes instead of using the dryer. The dryer should be used only on rainy days. The dryer can dry your wet clothes, but it can not bring the fresh smell for your clothes like the way the sun does.

You should also pay attention to the energy star rating when shopping for new appliances. Even if you cannot afford new appliances, you can choose new parts for your old appliances that are much more efficient and will help your old appliances save money and energy like new ones.

Go green on your coffee break by bringing your own cup. If you usually order a Tall Latte at Starbucks, bring a tall re-usable coffee mug with you. Every time you ask your favorite coffee shop to mix your drink in your own cup, you are helping to green your environment.

Conserving energy is one of the single most important things that we all can do to make the world a better place. Keeping the environment in mind is necessary to decrease pollution and make global warming a lesser threat. Remember the tips in this article to make your home greener!

Beside using solar energy, there are many other ways you can do to help protect our environment. Buying voluntary carbon credits by GEOC is one example. For more information about carbon credit business, visit Global Emissions Offset Corporation website.

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An Essential New Otis Redding Collection

Mother Jones

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Otis Redding
The Complete Stax/Volt Singles Collection

Shout! Factory

Is Otis Redding the greatest soul singer of all time? Fans of James Brown or Solomon Burke, among others, might disagree, but the Big O certainly delivered the goods. There’s no better place to explore the legacy of the Georgia great than this irresistible three-disc, 70-track set, which includes every original A- and B-side in its original mono mix (a recent trend in reissues that makes sense, since ’60s singles were targeted to AM radio).

While casual fans may already know “Respect” (which predates Aretha’s cover), Redding’s rowdy version of the Stones’ “Satisfaction” or “(Sittin’ on) The Dock of the Bay,” his biggest hit, released shortly after his death in 1967, there’s a wealth of other down-home R&Br to discover here.

Backed by his ferocious Stax colleagues, including Booker T and the MGs and the horns of the Mar-Keys, Redding always went full-force, whether revamping the Sinatra standard “Try a Little Tenderness,” shouting “Look at the Girl” or sparring playfully with frequent duet partner Carla Thomas on “Tramp.” A compilation of his lesser-known flip-sides alone would have been a godsend. The Complete Stax/Volt Singles Collection is essential.

For a different take on Redding, check out Lonely and Blue: The Deepest Soul of Otis Redding (Stax/Volt), a new compilation intended to look like an old album, that emphasizes his knack for gritty ballads.

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An Essential New Otis Redding Collection

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Seeking To Save The Environment? Adhere To These Green Energy Suggestions

Making your own home more eco-friendly is a wonderful solution to help decrease your bills, whilst helping the planet. The information in this article will assist you to discover how to implement green energy solutions at your house, without the need to spend an arm and a leg on setting up.

Trees can come in handy when trying to save energy in your home. Place them in both your front and backyard when possible. This will assist to shade your home, and therefore it will not get so hot. Also, you may not have to use your air conditioning as much.

You can take full advantage of solar power without investing in high-priced installation. Focusing on window placement, insulation and landscaping will do. Clear away any trees which cast a shadow on your home, add more windows if a room is too dark and add insulation in the walls to retain the solar heat.

Start small. Even when you do not have the resources for a large-scale green energy project, you may still find things you can do. For example, solar chargers for small electronics typically only need the device to be set near a window for a few hours. Do not overlook the strength of a small initial step..

Plant trees around your home. The trees will help provide shading for you home and so will help keep your home cooler in the summer time. It will not require as much air cooling to keep it at your desired temperature. Since trees lose leaves in the winter months, they will still allow the sun to come in and help heat your home during the winter season.

Talk with your electricity company about receiving your electric power from a renewable source. Many urban centers get some of their power from hydroelectric, geothermal, solar, or wind powered plants. Typically, the electric company can merely apply a certain amount of your utility bill to renewable energy without you having to make any other changes..

If your exhaust fans are more than five years old, think about changing them with newer more efficient models. Every year you must check out each exhaust fan in your house for damage and change the filter. A damaged exhaust fan utilizes more energy and replacing the filter permits the fan to function more efficiently.

If you aren’t using something, turn it off. Any rooms in the home that are empty should not have any gadgets or lights left on. Use a power strip so that you can turn off all of your electronics at the same time, instead of letting power be wasted in standby mode.

As you can see, green energy technology isn’t so difficult to implement. Try out some of the tips you just read in your home today, so that you can begin saving energy. Not only will you be doing the earth a big favor, but you’ll save money on your electricity bills.

One more way to get greener is to purchase voluntary carbon credit. If you are not clear about voluntary carbon credit, visit the website.

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4 Easy Ways to Start Composting

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4 Easy Ways to Start Composting

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Inhofe supports tornado aid, says it’s “totally different” from Hurricane Sandy aid

Inhofe supports tornado aid, says it’s “totally different” from Hurricane Sandy aid

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val lawless

Sen. Inhofe rides in on a white horse, shows his constituents he cares.

Sen. James Inhofe (R-Okla.) opposed using federal money to help the victims of Superstorm Sandy rebuild their homes, roads, and tattered lives.

That’s because he’s a fiscal grinch who thinks disaster victims should fend for themselves, Lord of the Flies-style. Right? Well, perhaps not.

Residents of Inhofe’s own state are about to receive a bounty of heartfelt help from the federal government in the wake of Monday’s epic tornado, which killed at least 24 people and leveled buildings across five counties.

And Inhofe is good with that. He has adopted the very reasonable position that aid money should flow in from federal coffers to help rebuild Oklahoma’s shattered neighborhoods.

But this is not some watershed moment wherein, seeing his own people mired in tragedy, the senator suddenly comes to value cooperation and collective action. Rather, Inhofe claims the situation is “totally different” from Sandy because his constituents are more trustworthy and less wasteful than those money-grubbing East Coasters.

Inhofe was questioned on MSNBC about his support for federal aid given his past opposition to the Sandy aid bill, which he had described as a slush fund. In his response, Inhofe displayed startling ignorance about the differences between a tornado, which causes highly localized damage, and a hurricane, which can cause havoc across a whole region.

“That [Sandy aid bill] was totally different,” Inhofe told MSNBC. “That was supposed to be in New Jersey; they had things in the Virgin Islands, they were fixing roads there. They were putting roofs on houses in Washington, D.C. Everyone was getting in and exploiting the tragedy that took place. That won’t happen in Oklahoma.”

Inhofe wasn’t the only Oklahoma lawmaker to oppose the Sandy aid bill; ABC reports that a number of Republicans from the state “may be forced to reckon with their past votes against emergency disaster funding.” From the article:

Oklahoma’s two Republican senators, Jim Inhofe and Tom Coburn, opposed a bill that provided more than $60 billion in emergency aid after Superstorm Sandy devastated the East Coast. In addition, three members of Oklahoma’s House delegation joined with most Republicans in opposing the legislation.

Nearly all of the lawmakers have pledged that whatever assistance Oklahomans need will be provided, but the devil will be in the details.

Salon‘s Joan Walsh weighs in on the apparent Republican hypocrisy:

There’s something so typical about today’s GOP in the way Inhofe can dismiss comparisons between tornado aid and Sandy aid while Coburn grandstands for his long-term demand that new spending, even on disaster relief, must be “offset” by cuts elsewhere. Meanwhile, the notion that a new disaster relief bill should include funding to cope with future disasters isn’t lauded as common sense, it’s derided as pork. Like Inhofe, Coburn objected to the Sandy bill’s including funding for future disaster relief. …

Just as modern conservatism helped create categories of “deserving” and “undeserving” poor, we now apparently have deserving and undeserving disasters. When tragedy strikes, most Americans tend to want to pull together, but many Republicans look to pull us apart, placing their own constituents’ needs above everyone else’s.

As far as these lawmakers are concerned, it should be everybody for themselves — except for the voters in their districts. Perhaps the support that the rest of the country provides for Oklahomans in their time of need will help these politicians see things in a new light. But don’t bet on it.

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who

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Inhofe supports tornado aid, says it’s “totally different” from Hurricane Sandy aid

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Raising Your Environmental Awareness

Environmental awareness has become a bigger focus for several years now; in the marketplace, the news and more than likely in your everyday life. Teaching children in early school life about how to protect the environment by reducing, reusing and recycling is a great step people has made in an effort to preserve our environment. Every effort made to live a cleaner, greener and lower impact life is important. What is there left to do to get greener when you feel like you’re doing it all? Humans keep on progressing. The past century has seen the introduction and reliance on unsustainable energy and fuel use. Rather than turning back time, we can take steps to modify our lifestyle and reduce our impact.

The Products

Cutting out the unnecessary products in your life is a great way to reduce the impact you have. A quick scrutiny of the products you use in your daily routine can be an easy first step to greening up. In the morning do you use seven different hair products, 6 shower gels and then apply several treatments to your teeth? Harmful ingredients in these hair and body products can cause allergies to humans and pollute the environment. By cutting down on the number you use, you can reduce the energy spent producing them, cut down on your exposure to less than healthy ingredients and have more money in your pocket.

When it comes to cleaning your home, it seems that there is a different product to buy for every task you need to do. Do not forget to choose the eco cleaners instead of buying the conventional cleaning products. Even still – you will have 12 different eco cleaners in your cupboard. Did your grandparents cleaning cupboard contain 12 different bottles? Don’t think so. Making the cleaning products yourself is not a bad idea if you want to go greener. You can easily make your own cleaning product by combing things in your kitchen such as vinegar, baking soda and lemons. When you are purchasing fewer products you cut back on cost and packaging waste.

The larger more energy consumptive products people tend to purchase are appliances. Appliances can be named as refrigerators, deep freezers, washing machines, dryers as well as various electronics. These appliances consume a huge amount of electricity every hour, so make sure you just use the needed appliances. What are unnecessary appliances? For example, you will not need a heavy duty dryer if you live alone; or you do not need a bar fridge if your family has only 5 members. Plan your purchase and choose wisely.

The Food Routine

There is much more to food than consumption. The production, transport, purchase and preparation are all crucial parts getting food onto the plate. Thinking of the way your food gets onto your plate and making adjustments to that process can reduce the impact your eating habits might have. Production of meat is a resource intensive process. Eating out of season vegetables depends on the transport of products across continents. Planting a garden so that you can produce your own fresh vegetables is an additional solution. Taking in less meat can reduce the impact your eating routine have, just as ingesting locally grown & produced foods can.

While adjusting ways of eating is usually a severe and difficult choice for some people, food store routine is a bit easier to improve. Bringing your own recycleable bags is a wonderful alternative to the plastic option provided in lots of grocery stores. Taking your own reusable bags for vegetables and fruits is a second way to reduce the plastics. Sanitary, reusable plastic or glass containers could be used to pick up meat or deli products. Plastic recycling programs are becoming better, but making sure any plastic which you do pick up in the food store can be re-cycled locally cuts down the waste you produce. We depend upon food to power our bodies. We can’t eliminate impact that food creates but we are able to try to decrease that impact.

The Waste

Disposable is never good for the environment – landfills are a commonly accepted solution to societies waste production. They are unsustainable but seemingly unavoidable solution. This problem can be solved by you buying long-lasting products, cutting down on using heavily packaged items and being aware of what you throw away. Transforming waste into soil at your own backyard is also an excellent way to go green. Wastes which are organic can be transformed, such as kitchen scraps, yard waste, pet waste and certain paper products. Vermicomposting is an in home way that depends upon the appetite of worms to absorb kitchen scraps. Carefully classifying recyclables and being a part of creating complex recycling programs in your area can be a fantastic way to divert waste from landfills.

The Carbon

People are unconsciously producing carbon dioxide everyday. Every human breath expels carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. The creation of food, appliances, electricity and essentially every man created product has a corresponding output of greenhouse gases to the environment. Driving vehicles, taking flights even heating your house; it all has a carbon output. Some websites provide the calculators so that a person can calculate the carbon footprint himself. By doing the calculator yourself, you will be more aware of how much carbon you should be responsible for. Reducing or neutralizing your carbon footprint is necessary after you have found out how much carbon footprint you make. You can go green easily by exercising outside, buying less and even avoiding fossil fuel by choosing the eco-friendly transportation modes. We all understand that carbon outputs are unavoidable. However, you can become carbon neutral by buying carbon credits. Purchasing carbon credits mean you are responsible for what you cause to the environment. Some of the popular carbon sinks which help absorb carbon from the atmosphere are trees, soil and oceans. Compliance and voluntary carbon credits are 2 typical types of carbon credits which are being sold to industry, business and individuals. Buyers can totally rest assured because all the carbon credits are verified. The carbon credit cost is very reasonable, only 25 dollars per tonne. A terrifically eco conscious way to spend the money saved by greening up other aspects of your life.

Purchasing the carbon credits yourself is very important. If every individual is aware of the carbon output he makes and tries to offset it, this can lead to transformation of the environmental consciousness of the whole countries. The environmental awareness is an important part of being a responsible citizen of the Earth. In summary, to protect our Mother Earth, you should consume thoughtfully, purchase products wisely and join the activities of carbon credits markets.

If you want to read more about Carbon Credit Aggregation, then visit this site Global Emissions Offset Corp. (GEOC).

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