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Daily Loaf

Your daily source for the best in blog.


Review of The Age Of Stupid: A docu-drama about climate change and our possible future

Posted by Eric Haase on Sep. 22, 2009, at 12:30 pm

age-of-stupid_cal[Tampa, FL-  Sept.21, 2009]  Tonight I attended the global premiere of the film The Age of Stupid. I was invited to this event by my friend Ingrid Esteves, a French national who doesn’t understand how the U.S. could back out of the Kyoto Treaty, or why we’d want to be as stupid as Napoleon and start wars on two fronts at the same time. Yes, there’s lots of ’stupid’ to discuss in our age, but let’s talk about this outstanding film first. This film is ambitious in several respects. Firstly, there’s the way it premiered.

The film opened globally tonight in synch with a star-studded live screening event in New York. Before the film began audiences were able to watch VIPs arrive at the Manhattan premiere by bike, rickshaw, electric car and sail boat via a satellite link that broadcast the event to 700 cinemas in 50+ countries. The celebrities then walked a green carpet (made from recycled soda bottles) to a solar powered cinema tent in downtown New York.
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Tags: climate change, consumerism, docu-drama, eco films, oil, Politics, the age of stupid, war
Posted in Green Community, Movie Review, News |



The Green Community week in review: World’s first solar-powered city, redesigning suburbia, green pledges and more

Posted by Katie M. on Aug. 23, 2009, at 12:51 pm

What’s the buzz on the latest issues in the Green Community? Check out what you may have missed this last week:

Fixing sprawl and redesigning suburbia- Grant Rimbey CNU explores a possible strategy towards improving existing sprawl. Fixing the sprawl that we have, along with sprawl demolition and recycling, are strategies that could be employed in the future as a new green industry.

Nation’s largest solar facility to be in DeSoto County by next year- Florida Power and Light is currently building the nation’s largest photovoltaic plant in DeSoto County, a $173.5 million, 25 megawatt solar generating facility.

Fresh: New Thinking About What We’re Eating screening – What’s wrong with the mega-industrial food industry- Struggling small farms, problems with food safety rules and the mega-industrial food industry, and a film about all of the above.
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Tags: 2009 school year, acre city, alan snitow, amp light, arcadia, audubon, babcock ranch, back to school, back to school clothes, bike to school, biking, cafeteria, car chargers, car pool, carpool, china, city of tomorrow, clean energy, climate change, climate change as a threat to national security, clothesline, cna study, composting, consumerism, deborah kaufman, design competition, desoto county, DeSoto Next Generation Solar Energy Center, dog toys, drought, dwell magazine, E. O. Wilson, E.O. Wilson, eco-friendly pet, electrical car, electricity, elementary school, energy, energy efficient, energy waste at school, environmentally friendly, EPA, family, farmers, farming, floods, Florida, florida power and light, foreign oil, fpl, free inquiry, Fresh, ft myers fl, Galina Tahchieva, garage sale, garden, global warming, goals, green architecture, green back to school, Green building, green business, Green Community, Green Jobs, green networking, Green planning, green pledges, green roofs, green school, greenhouse gas, greenhouse gas emissions, greenhouse gases, healthy school lunch, high school, india, inhabitat.com, IPCC, jason green, kids, kitson, locally grown, lunch box, mead recycled notebooks, megawatt, michael fox, middle school, national security, natural conservation, new leaf paper, New York Times, oil, organic, organic farming, overpopulation, paper margins, parrish, pbs documentary, peak oil, pesticides, photovoltaic panels, photovoltaic power plant, photovoltaic solar, plastic bag, plastic water bottles, pledges, power amp, real estate investment, reburbia, recycle, recycled paper, recycled pencils, refillable pens, right to dry, Saturday Morning Market, school bus, school garden, school recycling, school waste, Sierra Club, social networking, solar, solar collectors, solar energy, solar energy facility, solar energy panels, solar facility, solar generating facility, solar panels, solar power, solar power in florida, solar thermal facility, southwest florida, soylent green, spc, st petersburg college, St. Pete College, state economy, street lamps, Student, Studio@620, sustainability, sustainabilty, sustainable back to school, sustainable farming, sustainable water management, tampa bay green drinks, Tampa-Bay, the creation: an appeal to save life on earth, the roosevelt, thrift store, U.S. Census Bureau, united states environmental protection agency, us epa, vegetarian, volunteer work, walk to school, water bottles, Ybor
Posted in Green Community, Green Jobs, Green Living, Green Policy |



Is it too late to save this planet? Plus green pledges to try to make a difference

Posted by Effie Dimitria Trihas on Aug. 22, 2009, at 8:30 am

Scattered about me are books and magazines. On one the poster child of the climate change movement, the polar bear swimming in icy clear water. Audubon chose the title Sink or Swim: Another Assault on the Arctic and How You Can Help Stop It. In all honesty, I think it’s too late. We are currently witnessing the fifth or is it the sixth mass extinction since life first emerged from the slime or rocks or whatever that latest scientific findings happens to suggest. But remember when compared to our life spans this extinction will take an insanely long time. So the urgency just doesn’t seem to be there, because if it did, then we would all be in the streets marching on Washington, D.C. and the United Nations demanding that something be done yesterday.

Another magazine, the April/May 2009 issue of Free Inquiry, has a time bomb on its cover. The number on the clock 6,790,064,816. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, as of August 16, 2009, at my time of 10:15 a.m., the human population is 6,845,146,634.  In 1960, it was 3 billion. By 2044, 9 billion. That’s a 6 billion jump in less than 100 years. For me, this is the number one problem plaguing Homo sapiens. There are just too many of us, which leads to greater and greater demands on water and food, both quite finite. And the energy demand will only increase GHGs if viable alternatives are not found – think China and India. If human population growth does not slow down, we will not have the resources to feed everyone. I have to smile when I think about the town hall meetings and the misinformation being propagated with end-of-life issues and death squads. If we don’t stop breeding who knows. Sounds like a great story for a movie, though. Oh wait! It’s already been done - Soylent Green.
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Tags: alan snitow, audubon, biking, car pool, china, composting, consumerism, deborah kaufman, E. O. Wilson, energy efficient, farming, free inquiry, goals, green pledges, greenhouse gas, greenhouse gas emissions, india, michael fox, organic farming, overpopulation, pbs documentary, pesticides, plastic bag, plastic water bottles, pledges, recycle, soylent green, U.S. Census Bureau, vegetarian, volunteer work, water bottles
Posted in Activism, Green Community, Green Living |



The Green Community: Week in review

Posted by Katie M. on Jun. 13, 2009, at 8:00 am

What’s the buzz on the latest issues in the Green Community? Check out what you may have missed this past week:

Cool-N-Save: An eco-friendly energy saver for your air conditioning unit (Video): Jennifer Meier writes about how the Cool-n-SaveTM system affixes to the top of most home air conditioning units, resulting in a substantial drop in ambient temperature of up to 30 degrees Fahrenheit. The Cool-N-Save(TM) system has also been rated by the US Department of Energy and EPA as an Energy Star Partner.

Signs of hope: are our environmental efforts making a difference?: Linda Taylor shows us an example of how environmental efforts can make a difference, even if they take years to come to fruition.
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Tags: air conditioner, air conditioning unit, air france, alan shapiro, ale, algalita marine research institute, american craft beer, asia, atlantic ocean, Bartlett Park Community Garden, beer, beer review, biodegradable, birds, bison beer, Bison Brewing, bison collaboration, california, captain charles moore, china, collaboration beer, community gardens, conservation, consumerism, cool-n-save, craft beer, crime reduction, Daniel Del Grande, double white, eco friendly, ed begley jr., energy conservation, Environment, fish stock, Florida Aquarium, florida native plants, foodscape, garbage, gogreenitems, Going Green, Good Morning America, grass roots campaign, Green Community, Green Florida, gun violence, hard cider, hawaii, Hope, horseshoe crabs, Jersey shore, limited beer, marine ecosystem, marine science, mise en place, myeloma, Nature, new urbansim, non-biodegradable, North America, ocean conservancy, oceans, offshore drilling, oil, oil drilling, open space, organic beer, pacific ocean, Paris Whitehead-Hamilton, permaculture, permanent culture, pete slosberg, pete'r wicked, photodegrade, plastic, ponds, recreational fishing, red knot, reunion beer, reunion red rye, Rick Kriseman, rye beer, sbs imports, senate 360, Shuffleboard, special release beer, sustainable seafood, Tampa, Tampa-Bay, terrapin bison collaboration, terrapin collaboration, the great pacific garbage patch, transition town, trash, urban agriculture, virginia mclean, volunteer work
Posted in Green Community, Green Jobs, Green Living, Green Policy |



Transitioning Tampa Bay into sustainable communities and creating a new culture

Posted by Eric Stewart on Jun. 11, 2009, at 1:00 pm

As a young man growing up in this wonderful state I’ve seen the growth of the local area around me. I still recall the farmlands when I first moved to Pasco county nearly 10 years ago. Now they are all gone, replaced by rolled out lawns of Bermuda grass, cul de sacs, and neat rows of similar looking houses. I recall as a young man building some of those homes: installing windows, replacing dishwashers with custom brand new dishwashers, adding water softeners to neighborhoods far away from any development, with the closest road being I-75. Yes I grew up in the boom that was the post 9/11 years.

I’m 24 years old now, recalling the remarkable growth that I’ve seen over those years working on the growth in Pasco gives me reflection. Reflection on George W. Bush’s speech where he mentioned for America to go shopping. Yes I, too, got caught up into the fantasy of an easily accessible credit card line and a brand new plasma screen TV. We Americans consumed to our hearts content on easily borrowed money, second mortgages, and home equity loans. I don’t know how many times I’ve recalled seeing ads for debt consolidating or a new book proclaiming how to get out of debt. Easy money creates easy consuming. Now looking back I notice the hypocrisy. We are still currently at war in two nations for a greater length of time than even World War II. Yet at home, we bought up brand new homes and filled them with brand new things only to turn around and get rid of them when a brand new thing of another product came out. We became gluttonous as a nation.
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Tags: consumerism, foodscape, new urbansim, open space, permaculture, permanent culture, senate 360, transition town
Posted in Activism, Green Community, Green Jobs, Green Living, Green Policy |

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