Earth First! 25, no. 2
Keywords:
activism, biotechnology, journalism, conservation, deforestation, nanotechnology, nonviolent resistance, political ecology, protests, wildernessAbstract
Lenny, Luthien, Mike, Turtle, and Vic Garlic, eds., Earth First! 25, no. 2 (1 January 2005). Republished by the Environment & Society Portal, Multimedia Library. http://www.environmentandsociety.org/node/7208.
INNARDS- RESISTANCE TO NANOTECH GROWS
- PROTESTING PLUTONIUM ON BOTH SIDES OF THE ATLANTIC
- ACCIDENT ON THE RAILS
- LA COCASE DEFIENDE: HERBICIDE AND GENOCIDE IN PERÚ
- WINGS OVER ARIZONA: CEF! TAKES ON CRANE HUNTERS
- ALF RAIDS UNIVERSITY OF IOWA: RELEASES 401 AN!MALS
- IN DEFENSE OFTHE SEALS IN LA JOLLA
- BACK TO THE GRASSROOTS: DEMONSTRATIONS AGAINST HLS
- EXXON SHACKLES GREENPEACE
- FIRE AND ICE: A POLAR SNAPSHOT OF OUR FUTURE
- TOXIC CIRCLE
- CHEMICAL COCKTAIL MIXES WITH POLITICIANS’ BLOOD
- BANANA PICKERS SUE CORPORATE GIANTS
- TOXIC CHEMICALS TO BE TESTED ON CHILDREN!
- VICTORIA’S DIRTY SECRET
- WILDLY SUCCESSFUL IN THE KLAMATH-SISKIYOU
- MILDLY SUCCESSFUL AT THE BISCUIT
- THE STRANGE CASE OF NATIONAL COAL
- ACTIVIST TRAGEDY IN APPALACHIA
- RESERVEAMERICA SUCKED THE JOY OUT OF CAMPING
- CAN’T SEE THE FOREST FOR THE FEES
- WE ARE THE PEOPLE WHO FEAR NOTHING
- BILLY COTTRELL TURNS SNITCH, FOUND GUILTY
- BRITISH CIVIL SERVANT SENTENCED FOR ABUSE OF OFFICE
- EF! ORGANIZERS’ CONFERENCE 2005
- ANN COULTER FED A HEAPING HELPING OF HUMILITY
We humans destroy, and then we conveniently forget. We have forgotten that white beluga whales once swam free in Long Island Sound. We have forgotten that the great California condor once glided on the thermals over this great state. We have forgotten so much as we have steadily adapted to diminishment. In the not-too-distant future, will we also forget the seals of the wild and the places that were their homes? Will the seals exist only in places like Sea World and on the sterile pages of children’s books?
— Captain Paul Watson
The Rachel Carson Center’s Environment & Society Portal makes archival materials openly accessible for purposes of research and education. Views expressed in these materials do not necessarily reflect the views or positions of the Rachel Carson Center or its partners.