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A 66 million-year-old mystery behind how our planet transformed from a tropical greenhouse to the ice-capped world of today has been unraveled by scientists. Their new study has revealed that Earth's massive drop in temperature after the dinosaurs went extinct could have been caused by a large decrease in calcium levels in the ocean.


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Living walls—structures housing flowers and plants fitted to the outside of new and old buildings—can significantly enhance the biodiversity within urban environments, a new study has shown.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

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University of Queensland researchers say the discovery of a new stress reduction role for a naturally occurring molecule in the body could lead to new drugs and treatment for metabolic disorders and aging.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

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Despite being one of the most cooperative species on the planet, humans routinely fail to manage shared resources sustainably. We overfish from the oceans, burn fossil fuels, and over-prescribe antibiotics; behaviors that offer individualistic short-term benefits, but result in long-term collective negative outcomes. Studying our closest living relatives, the non-human great apes, can help us understand how human cooperation has evolved, and under which conditions cooperative sustainability tends to succeed and fail.


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Prototaxites are something of a prehistoric mystery. They were the first giant organisms on land, towering over ancient landscapes at heights of up to 8 meters. They had smooth trunk-like pillars and no branches, leaves or flowers. And unlike trees, they had no true root system. Instead, they may have been anchored to the ground by a simple bulbous base.


From Biology News - Evolution, Cell theory, Gene theory, Microbiology, Biotechnology via This RSS Feed.

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For 450 million years, plants and soil fungi have been trading partners. The fungi weave through plant roots, delivering phosphorus and other soil minerals in exchange for sugars and fats produced by the plant through photosynthesis. This ancient collaboration supports roughly 80% of Earth's plant species—including corn, wheat, and other crops that feed billions of people.


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A critique from a team led by Utah State University ecologist Dan MacNulty and published in Forest Ecology and Management has prompted a formal correction to a high-profile study on aspen recovery while raising broader questions about how scientific conclusions are drawn and defended in complex ecological systems.


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Mary Annette Pember
ICT

Roberta Romero struggles to speak about the death of her sons.

She talks softly, in hushed tones, pausing sometimes as she describes how her eldest son, Lionel Sandoval, died in 2022 while trying to shake his addiction in one of Arizona’s sober living homes.

Her youngest, Ty, died by suicide in 2024 in what she believes was in response, at least in part, to his brother’s mysterious death.

Grieving the loss of her only children, she is left grasping for ways to go on while still seeking justice for Lionel’s death.

“I am all alone now,” Romero, Diné, told ICT by phone from her home in Farmington, New Mexico, on the eastern edge of the Navajo Nation.

Romero believes that Sandoval was among thousands of victims of a massive, multibillion-dollar sober living fraud scheme in Arizona and beyond that targeted mostly Native Americans by making false promises of addiction treatments that were never delivered.

More than 100 people, several companies and at least one church have been charged as part of a state and federal crackdown on Medicaid fraud and unlicensed sober living homes. In May 2025, Arizona officials charged another 20 people, accusing them of stealing $60 million in a sweeping fraud scheme that siphoned money from the state’s Medicaid program.

Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs and Attorney General Kris Mayes have called the scandal a  “humanitarian crisis” and a “stunning failure of the government.”

Seeking justice

Romero filed a lawsuit in October against the state, the Salvation Army and the sober living home in Phoenix where Sandoval was living when he died in September 2022 at the age of 30.

The state of Arizona asked a judge to dismiss Romero’s lawsuit, claiming it fell outside the state’s six-month statute of limitations for wrongful death claims, but the Superior Court of Arizona in removedpa County denied the state’s motion in August 2025.

A billboard in Scottsdale, Arizona on June 10, 2023, sits near the health care facility of the Salt River Pima-removedpa Indian Community, which has been affected by what is believed to be a sweeping Medicaid fraud scheme involving sober living homes that promised help to Native Americans seeking to kick alcohol and other addictions. Credit: AP Photo/Anita Snow, File

Romero is represented by Jonodev Chaudhuri, a former chief justice for the Muscogee (Creek) Nation, with assistance from his wife, Mary Kathryn Nagle, a well-known Cherokee attorney.

The suit accuses the state of withholding victims’ records until the statute of limitations had passed.

“It’s insane to expect these victims to file claims within six months,” Nagle told ICT. “We said that the six-month window doesn’t apply here because of fraudulent concealment.”

A class-action lawsuit was also filed in December 2024 by the BrewerWood law firm against the state of Arizona for negligence and misconduct. The lawsuit contends that fraudulent billings to Medicaid had grown to $2.8 billion by 2023, with about 7,000 people victimized.

Officials say the fraud is ongoing in Arizona and in other states, and may be contributing to the rising numbers of missing and murdered Indigenous peoples. The number of deaths are unknown, though some reports put the deaths at more than 1,000.

Many of the victims and their families, like Romero, are struggling with daily survival, according to Nagle and Chaudhuri.

“If victims managed to escape the sober living homes, how can they be expected to find an attorney and file a lawsuit within six months?” Nagle asked. “A lawsuit isn’t always at the top of peoples’ minds when they are struggling to feed themselves.”

The two attorneys have been working with families to piece events together.

“Many of the people we spoke to were horribly traumatized,” Chaudhuri said. “They couldn’t recall where the homes were located; they reported being taken off the street, denied contact with family, and even given drugs at the homes.”

Ready to get sober

Sandoval was full of energy and always liked to help people, his mother told ICT.

“He loved cooking and building stuff,” she said.

But trouble started for him during his first year at San Juan College in Farmington, where he studied building and trades. He began isolating from others and his drinking escalated.

“He said, ‘I’m so tired, Mom. I really need some help,’” Romero said.

Initially, Sandoval was excited to begin treatment in Phoenix at a facility operated by the Salvation Army. “He completed treatment and was doing good but then they moved him to a sober living home,” Romero said.

Grassroots advocate Reva Stewart walks outside the headquarters at Drumbeat Indian Arts in Phoenix on July 31, 2023, where she and others were working to find Native Americans who may have been victims of a Medicaid fraud scheme involving sober living homes. Credit: AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin

According to the lawsuit, Sandoval did not receive treatment services or support at the sober living home operated by Falcons Care and related companies. The lawsuit accuses the operators and the Salvation Army of colluding to exploit Sandoval by fraudulently gaining access to his Arizona Health Care Cost Containment System and the  American Indian Health Program benefits.

“He called me in September and said, ‘Mom, I just want to come home,’” she said. “I could tell he was teary-eyed. He wouldn’t tell me what was wrong; he seemed afraid.”

Romero told her son she would drive down to Phoenix, an eight-hour drive from Farmington, in a couple of days to pick him up. But two days later, she received a call from a doctor at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Phoenix urging her to come immediately; Lionel was in a coma after experiencing seizures at the home.

Romero arrived at the hospital early the next morning. Sandoval never woke up, and died soon after she arrived.

“I saw my son unconscious underneath all these wires going everywhere,” she said.

She said she repeatedly called the sober living home seeking details about what happened, but said no one ever called her back. Finally, joined by two nephews, she went to the home in person.

“I had a lot of questions and asked for his records,” she said.

Sandoval had no history of seizures or other health problems, Romero said. A woman who appeared to run the home informed Romero she needed to request Sandoval’s records in writing from the state of Arizona.

“As soon as they heard that Lionel had died, they stopped communicating with me,” Romero said.

At the urging of her nephews, Romero reached out to Chaudhuri and Nagle. When she finally received Sandoval’s autopsy report, Romero learned that her son had methanol in his blood.

Methanol, a simple form of alcohol, is the key ingredient in antifreeze. Highly toxic, it causes blindness or death when ingested. Romero couldn’t imagine that he would knowingly drink poison, and is wondering how it got into his system.

Growing numbers

Other victims of the sober living scam report similar stories in Arizona. Several victims have reported being kidnapped off the streets on reservations and towns by sober home recruiters.  There have been reports of violence, of clients being force-fed drugs to keep them compliant, and of other deaths.

The state of Arizona began investigating the homes and cracking down on fraudulent operations in 2023. In June 2024, the U.S. Department of Justice launched an investigation into substance abuse treatment fraud against the Arizona Medicaid Program and the American Indian Health Plan. Some of the homes collected thousands of dollars a day in federal funds for bogus or shoddy services, according to officials.

Arizona State Sen. Theresa Hatathlie talks during a news conference on Friday, May 19, 2023, outlining the steps the Navajo Nation is taking to find and get care for tribal members being displaced by fraudulent sober living homes under investigation by the Arizona Attorney General’s Kris Mayes, far right. On the left is Rhonda Tuni, executive director of the Navajo Department of Health. Credit: AP Photo/Anita Snow

But the state and federal government have been too slow in taking action, according to victims and advocates such as Reva Stewart of the Navajo Nation.

In an interview with reporter Shondiin Silversmith of the AZ Mirror, Stewart said the state has known for years about the problems.

“I want them to be held accountable,” she said. “I want accountability for every single person that was affected by this.”

Stewart’s business, Drumbeat Indian Arts, is located catty-corner from the Phoenix Indian Medical Center. In 2021, she began noticing white vans picking up people off the streets and decided to investigate.

Asking around the Native community, she learned that sober living homes were recruiting people, especially among the homeless, to participate in treatment.

About the same time, she noticed that reports of missing and murdered Indigenous peoples began skyrocketing. Stewart is involved with advocacy surrounding missing and murdered Indigenous people, and has for years kept a standing bulletin board outside her business on which people place posters seeking information about MMIP.

Responding to requests from community members, she has since expanded to more than a half-dozen boards to accommodate the posters.

Stewart and other members of the community began putting the pieces together as Native people from as far away as Montana, Alaska and Minnesota began showing up on Phoenix streets.

“They told us they’d been recruited for treatment and ended up getting stranded when the sober living homes kicked them out,” she told ICT.

As advocates from throughout the country contacted her nonprofit organization, Turtle Island Women Warriors, she began advising them to find out if the missing people they were seeking might have been recruited to participate in treatment.

Indeed, Navajo police began warning tribal citizens about sober living recruiters as reports of missing persons increased.

“We’re in 2026 now and we’re still on this hamster wheel;,” Stewart said. “No one is being held accountable for it.”

She reported that she has counted nearly 2,000 deaths related to the fraud and knows that number will only go up.

Spreading across the US

The sober living homes have now expanded into other locations throughout Indian Country,  according to Stewart, Nagle and Chaudhuri, with Indigenous people from New Mexico and South Dakota also believed to have been targeted in the scam.

In December 2025, the Minnesota Indian Women’s Center issued a safety alert about recruiters for sober living homes targeting the state’s Indigenous population. Several Native people reported being approached by men claiming to represent a treatment center and sober living facility in San Francisco, offering them immediate transportation, according to Ruth Buffalo, a citizen of the Mandan Hidatsa Arikara Nation and president of the center.

The men also visited the women’s center, dropping off flyers about the California facilities. But they were evasive when workers asked for details. It’s unclear how many people may have agreed to go to California with the men.

There are many unhoused Native people in the Twin Cities, some of whom would be vulnerable to promises to get them into treatment within 24 hours.

“There’s a lot of people who want to get off the streets and out of active addiction,” Buffalo said. “When some people hear they can get immediate access to treatment, housing and food out in California, they are likely to say, ‘Sure.’”

Buffalo and the center are cautioning the public to verify any offers of treatment, especially those that include transportation.

“We have some good organizations here that offer treatment, including the Native American Community Clinic and providers from the White Earth reservation,” she said.

Seeking justice

Chaudhuri and Nagle have chosen to include the fraudulent homes in Romero’s and other clients’ lawsuits mostly as a matter of principle.

“There’s not a lot of money there, most of the homes were part of shell corporations that were set up specifically to commit fraud,” Nagle said. “The people who took the money mostly live overseas, have no assets or insurance, so naming them in the suit won’t result in any real payments for our clients.”

But they hope that naming them in the lawsuit will deter predatory action by others in the future. “We want to do everything we can to have a chilling effect on bad actors who want to take advantage of our communities,” Nagle said.

Romero, meanwhile, has been struggling with depression since the deaths of her sons.

“Sometimes I hide out in my room and just sleep, that’s my escape,” she said.

She was fired from her job in retail shortly after Lionel’s death. “I kept breaking down and walking out so they stopped working with me,” Romero said.

But she was recently hired by another retailer and spends her down time reading books about how parents survive the deaths of their children. Romero hopes her lawsuit will help stop the fraud and predation for others.

“There are so many of us out there,” she said, pausing briefly before continuing.

“All I can do is get up everyday and hope for the best.”

The Associated Press contributed to this story.

The post ‘Humanitarian crisis’: Sober living home scandal widens with criminal charges, lawsuits appeared first on ICT.


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Aqqaluk Lynge was 19 years old when an American B-52 bomber carrying four thermonuclear weapons as well as conventional bombs crashed off the northwest coast of Greenland, the island where Lynge was born and raised. That was January 1968, and the plane was headed to Thule Air Force Base, a U.S. military installation in Greenland, now known as Pituffik Space Base. When the plane hit the Arctic waters, the conventional bombs detonated but the nuclear weapons did not.

Six American military personnel parachuted from the plane before it crashed, shivering on the frozen ground before Inuit dog sled teams found them and saved their lives. One service member trapped on floating ice 6 miles from Thule survived the negative 21-degree Fahrenheit weather by wrapping himself in his parachute.

Now, aged 78, Lynge wonders if the United States remembers that Inuit dogsleds saved American lives. Or the fact that Greenlanders fought for the U.S. in Afghanistan as enlisted members of the Danish military, dying at the second-highest rate of any country besides the U.S. That U.S. Air Force base is still operational and 150 American military personnel are currently stationed there. “Why should a friend for so many years be treated like this?” Lynge said. “We need support from democratic-minded people in the United States.”

An Inuit dog team stands on frozen Baffin Bay near site of crash of a U.S. B52 nuclear bomber on January 21, 1968.

An Inuit dog team stands on frozen Baffin Bay near site of crash of a U.S. B52 nuclear bomber on January 21, 1968. Bettmann via Getty Images

American military survivors of a B52 crash in Greenland smile for a photo in 1968.

American military survivors of a B52 crash in Greenland smile for a photo in 1968. Keystone-France / Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images

President Donald Trump has demanded that the United States acquire Greenland and said that control of the island is necessary for national and international security. He has threatened European allies with tariffs and even hinted at seizing Greenland by force. On Wednesday, Trump backtracked on both threats and said he’d reached a “framework of a future deal with respect to Greenland” without giving any details; however Trump’s behavior over the island has already undermined America’s relationship with Europe by threatening longstanding alliances.

Less publicized is how Trump’s threats have refocused attention on the United States’ relationship and history with Indigenous peoples: Greenland is 90 percent Inuit and has maintained its traditions, language, knowledge, and land despite centuries of colonial rule, and is viewed as a model of Indigenous self-determination and sovereignty.

Lynge, who is Inuit, is part of that history. He co-founded the Inuit Ataqatigiit, a democratic socialist party in Greenland that advocates for independence. He helped lead the Inuit Circumpolar Council, an organization that represents Indigenous peoples in the Arctic. And he’s a former member of the Greenlandic Parliament, as well as the U.N. Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, which helps advise the U.N. Economic and Social Council on issues related to Indigenous peoples.

Greenland is still part of the Kingdom of Denmark, a colonial relationship that’s existed since the 18th century, but thanks to the work of people like Lynge, the island has achieved a level of political independence that many Indigenous peoples aspire to. “The extensive self-governance of Greenland is an inspiring example of the implementation of Indigenous self-determination for many Indigenous Peoples worldwide,” said the United Nations special rapporteur on the rights of Indigenous peoples, José Francisco Calí Tzay, in 2023.

Aqqaluk Lynge, left, sits at a table and listens during a press conference on the Inuit Circumpolar Council on the effects of climate change in 2009.

Aqqaluk Lynge, left, listens during a 2009 press conference on the Inuit Circumpolar Council on the effects of climate change. Casper Christoffersen / AFP via Getty Images

Yet despite the still-strong presence of Inuit peoples in Greenland, Stefan Aune, a historian and the author of the book Indian Wars Everywhere, said he’s been struck by how much Trump’s threats have been framed as conflict between the U.S. and Denmark or the U.S. and European countries, ignoring the presence of Indigenous peoples. “This really kind of evokes the way the history of North America often gets narrated, which is a kind of imperial squabble between the British, the French, and the Spanish, and then later the United States, despite the fact that there’s all these different Native nations that play a really equally important role in the war, the politics, the economics, and the diplomacy on the continent,” Aune said. “So there’s definitely a parallel there.”

Aune is among many experts who see Trump’s policies and rhetoric as echoes of historical entitlement to Native land reframed as a defensive struggle against Indigenous nations or other threats. “The iconic image of this is the surrounded wagon train, which you can see in all kinds of art, paintings, and then later movies and television and video games,” Aune said. “Settler colonialism consistently gets reframed as a defensive struggle rather than an invasion.”

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Peter Mancall, a historian and author of the book Contested Continent, said he was struck by how quickly Trump pivoted from the security reasons to capture Venezuela’s president to his plans to sell 50 million barrels of Venezuelan oil. “The rapid pivot from the pretext of the invasion to the extraction of resources [in Venezuela] was quicker than anything I had seen in the early American period,” he said. “We’ve seen this before, and it has often had catastrophic consequences for Indigenous peoples as well as deleterious impacts on various environments.”

Jonathan Kamakawiwoʻole Osorio, the dean of Hawaiʻinuiākea School of Hawaiian Knowledge at the University of Hawaiʻi, sees parallels to the U.S. overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom, which he wrote about in his book Dismembering Lāhui. In the late 1800s, the U.S. was motivated to annex Hawai’i in order to cement economic control over the islands’ sugar plantations and to establish military control over Pearl Harbor.

“The fact that the president of the United States no longer feels that it’s necessary to justify imperialism in any other way except that ‘We need it’ is deeply revealing and clarifying,” Osorio said. “When you remove all of the pretext and you realize that all this has ever been about has been the acquisition of opportunities and other peoples and other peoples’ countries … it’s never been any different.”

Greenland is three times the size of Texas and home to about 56,000 people. The island has 39 of the 50 minerals that the U.S. considers to be critical for military technology and the U.S. economy, many of which are used for clean energy technology like electric vehicle batteries. Investors are hoping that melting ice caps due to climate change will make it easier for companies to mine minerals like gallium, which can be used to create computer chips.

A banner that says "Decolonize Don't Recolonize" seen during a demonstration against the Trump administration in Copenhagen in 2025.

A banner says “Decolonize Don’t Recolonize,” seen during a demonstration against the Trump administration in Copenhagen in 2025.
Kristian Tuxen Ladegaard Berg / SOPA Images / LightRocket via Getty Images

But Paul Bierman, a geoscientist who has studied ice sheets in Greenland, is skeptical. He said melting permafrost has led to cratering on U.S. Air Force runways and thinks mining infrastructure would face similar challenges. “If you’ve ever stood next to a melting glacier, you’re not putting a mine there. The ice is literally melting below your feet. It’s crumbling, it’s collapsing,” he said. “The idea that we’re going to walk in and in a year, start up mines and have minerals coming out and be rich, it’s a complete and utter fantasy. It doesn’t match the reality of being on the ground.”

That hasn’t stopped wealthy investors from yearning to profit from Greenland, from billionaire Ronald Lauder to Peter Thiel. Bierman said the greater risk to humanity is allowing climate change — which Trump has called a hoax — to continue to melt ice caps and inundate low-lying cities like Jakarta, eventually dislocating an anticipated half a billion people. “Compared to the value of strategic minerals in Greenland, it’s orders of magnitude more in damages from letting the ice melt,” said Bierman, who wrote a book on Greenland called When The Ice Is Gone.

Denmark has recognized Greenland as self-governing with a right to its own mineral resources, and Greenlanders have been extremely clear about their desire to maintain their sovereignty, as well as their affiliation with Denmark. “It is our country,” Lynge said. “No one can take it.”

Since World War II, Greenland has been a close military ally of the U.S., hosting not just Pituffik Space Base — which displaced an Inuit village — but also more than 20 American military bases that were eventually abandoned. Treaties dating back to 1941 give the U.S. enormous sway over what its military can do on the island and prevents other militaries from operating there, even though Trump has repeatedly claimed that Russia and China are doing so.

“[According to an] agreement from 1951, the United States is free to do what they want, and from 2014, they can do that by talking to us and the Danes,” said Lynge from Greenland. “The U.S. is the only military presence here in Greenland, so what’s the problem?”

Greenland residents and political leaders have publicly rejected suggestions by U.S. President Donald Trump that the Arctic island could become part of the United States. Greenland, an autonomous territory within the Kingdom of Denmark, has emphasized that its future will be decided by its own people, with officials stating that the island is not for sale and does not wish to become American. Lokman Vural Elibol / Anadolu via Getty Images

After two centuries of colonial rule, in the 1960s, Denmark began taking steps to limit Inuit population growth by inserting intrauterine devices in about 4,500 women, including girls as young as 12 years old. The Danish government apologized last year and agreed to compensate the women who sued, arguing the government violated their human rights. The population limitation process was extremely effective, dropping birth rates substantially among Indigenous families and causing permanent infertility among some women. Denmark also has a decades-long history of removing Inuit children from their homes against their parents’ will, with research as recent as 2022 showing that Inuit children are seven times more likely to be removed from their parents’ homes than Danish children. In 2023, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples issued a report on the status of Greenland that said Denmark needs to implement many reforms to fully respect Indigenous rights, including embracing a reconciliation process to address historical trauma.

Despite these traumas, and perhaps motivated by them, Greenland’s independence movement has gained ground in recent decades, securing several major wins. In 1979, more than 70 percent of Greenland’s mostly Inuit residents voted in favor of more independence from Denmark. The referendum made the island a “constituent country” of the Kingdom of Denmark, rather than just a colony, and gave Greenlanders control over domestic policies such as their education, environment, health, and fisheries. The law also established the Greenlandic Parliament.

Protesters wave Greenland flags during a demonstration under the slogans 'hands off Greenland' and 'Greenland for Greenlanders' at City Hall Square in Copenhagen, Denmark, on January 17, 2026.

Protesters wave Greenland flags during a demonstration with the slogans “hands off Greenland” and “Greenland for Greenlanders” at City Hall Square in Copenhagen, Denmark, on January 17, 2026.
Kristian Tuxen Ladegaard Berg / NurPhoto via Getty Images

In 2008, more than three-fourths of Greenlanders again voted in favor of self-governance, expanding their control over the police and courts and giving Greenland more of a say over foreign policy. The law also made Kalaallisut, an Inuit language of Greenland, the official language of the country, and restored Greenland’s control over its mineral and oil revenue, with provisions for remitting some funding to Denmark. It also established a pathway to full independence, without a specific timeline, as the move would require support from both Greenland and Denmark.

Political leaders in Greenland have continued to explore the possibility of full independence, drafting a potential constitution as recently as 2023, and last year, polls showed that most people in Greenland wanted independence from Denmark, although voters differed on how and when it should happen. The vast majority, 85 percent, oppose any type of union with the U.S.

“They serve as a model for how to practice self-governance,” said Gunn-Britt Retter, the head of the Arctic and environmental unit of the Saami Council, which represents Indigenous Saami people in Europe. The council has come out in support of Greenland against Trump’s threats, and has been a longtime ally of theirs in the fight for climate action and Indigenous rights internationally. She added that the idea of the U.S. buying Greenland from Denmark makes no sense. “You can’t buy something that is stolen.”

To Lynge, Trump’s threats are not only misinformed, but also threaten the political autonomy that he has spent his lifetime building. And he doesn’t think Greenlanders are the only people at risk.

“We are in the middle of a situation in the world where small nations like us would be crushed if we don’t do anything,” Lynge said. “If the world allows what is happening right now, it will continue and destroy the world order as we know it.”

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline Greenland is a global model for Indigenous self-governance. Trump’s demands for the island threaten that. on Jan 22, 2026.


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If there's one material that defines modern life more than any other, it's plastic: present from the moment we're born in newborn stool, in product packaging, in the soil beneath our feet and the air we breathe.


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The Village of Sauget in St. Clair County, Illinois, was founded in order to be polluted. Incorporated in 1926 by a group of Monsanto Chemical Company executives (and initially named “Monsanto”) it was and is an industry town: with deliberately lax manufacturing and emissions law, it’s played host to companies like ExxonMobil, Clayton Chemical, Gavilon Fertilizer, Eastman Chemical, and Veolia North America.

The 134 residents of Sauget — and the 700,000 people in the greater East St. Louis metro area that surrounds it — have often seen their needs come second to those of their corporate neighbors. In the 1990s, according to the last longitudinal EPA study done in the area, they inhaled high levels of lead, volatile organic compounds, and sulfur dioxide, compounds which can increase the risk of cancer and respiratory illness.

“We were basically incorporated to be a sewer,” the town’s mayor, Rich Sauget, told the Wall Street Journal in 2006.

Since 1999, one well-known local polluter has been Veolia Environmental Services, a subsidiary of a French company that runs an incinerator, which stores and burns hazardous waste. The company is certified to burn toxic substances like PFAS, and people in the area have long complained of acrid or sewage-like smells near the facility.

Darnell Tingle, who leads United Congregations of Metro-East, or UCM — a group of faith communities working to address environmental and social justice issues in the area — says congregants at the half-a-dozen Illinois churches within 10 miles of Veolia often wonder if the incinerator is what’s making them sick.

“We have some of the worst air quality in the country,” Tingle said. Children in East St. Louis suffer from asthma at much higher rates than the national average. But it’s hard for the 878 people who live within a mile of Veolia’s incinerator to prove anything. So, in 2023, UCM proposed a solution: they would install air quality monitoring stations on half-a-dozen local churches, pay scientists to analyze that data, and finance the whole thing with $500,000 in Community Change Grant funding, a landmark program of Joe Biden’s EPA.

Soon, Tingle hoped, they’d have the answers they were looking for. But in early 2025, his promised grant money was abruptly withdrawn by the newly inaugurated Trump administration — along with 105 similar grants, totaling at least $1.6 billion, from Alaska to Florida. The EPA’s new administrator Lee Zeldin declared the grants “unnecessary,” and with the help of Elon Musk’s now-decommissioned DOGE, froze the money and closed the Office of Environmental Justice, amounting to losses of at least $37 billion.

Only two of the six planned air-quality monitors were installed in East St. Louis before the grants were terminated, Tingle said — and Tingle’s organization doesn’t have the money to pay scientists to analyze the data those monitors generate. In May, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention completed an air quality study in Sauget, the main conclusion of which was that, because the EPA has not done adequate data collection, the CDC could not say much about the incinerator’s health impacts. In particular, the agency said, they were unable to conclude whether or not the volatile organic compound levels in the air were hurting people. So the community is still left with poor health effects and lots of suspicions about where they come from — but without concrete proof.

This Community Change Grant program was unique in the realm of federal funding, said Zealan Hoover, former senior advisor to Biden’s EPA administrator Michael Regan. “Most EPA funding flows through the states, and that is a model that works well,” Hoover said. “But at the same time, money that flows top down through states takes longer to reach communities and is not always as responsive as grants directly to the frontline communities that have a very clear, well-defined scope of what they need to do.”

Zeldin and Trump asserted that freezing these grants — which, organizers say, happened without any forewarning from the EPA, sometimes in the middle of grant disbursal and sometimes without communities seeing any money at all — was justified as a way to end the “green new scam” and “eliminate funding for the globalist climate agenda while unleashing American energy production,” according to a White House fact sheet.

A year later, many other communities beyond Sauget are also experiencing the grant terminations in starker terms. In Pocatello, Idaho, some of the town’s unsewered neighborhoods still face the unsanitary hardships of nitrate contamination from septic systems in their drinking water source. In the South Bronx, New York, one community remains vulnerable to extreme flooding, in part because their plan to revitalizing a dilapidated waterfront park has been defunded. And in South Dakota, the Flandreau Santee Sioux Tribe’s plan to use $19.9 million in grant funding to (among other things) rebuild a long-unusable bridge, build resilience hubs, weatherize buildings, and install solar panels on the homes of community elders remains just a plan.

More on Trump’s first year back in office

“For many communities, they’ve been going through the stages of grief,” said Hoover. “First was disbelief, because they know the merits of these projects. They know how badly it’s needed by the community. That has evolved over time into disappointment that the agency has been unwilling to reconsider, even after seeing cases like Kipnuk, Alaska, where EPA terminated a grant for flood prevention and then the town was washed away in a flood.”

The communities and organizations around the country who lost funding have responded in a variety of ways. Some, like United Congregations of Metro-East in East St. Louis, are hopeful that other forms of funding will turn up — and are refocusing on other projects. Other municipalities and nonprofits are still involved in litigation against the EPA, hoping to recoup some of the losses they’ve sustained in money and in time.

In South Dakota, rather than making an appeal, the town of Flandreau ended up closing its application for a grant to bring solar power to the homes of some Flandreau Santee Sioux Nation members, according to Rhonda Conn, the associate director of Native Sun Community Power Development, the nonprofit which hoped to work with the town and tribe.

Native Sun has pushed on to seek funding sources for its other work. The organization secured some local and private funding, but nothing at the scale of the EPA Community Change money has materialized, Conn said. In the process, Native Sun has been forced to work on a very lean budget — no permanent office space, few workers, and few plans to expand. These days, they’re spending more time working on renewable energy workforce development with the state of Minnesota, as opposed to taking big, costly swings at new infrastructure projects.

“For us, the infrastructure stuff is not going to go away,” Conn said. “It’s just about where we’re balancing our energy right now.”

In green energy and disaster resilience work, organizations are competing under higher pressure for less money. “There are still some grant and loan programs operating at lower levels across the government, there are still sources of state, local, and private funding,” Hoover said. “But there are not multi-billion dollar sources of funding commensurate with what the Trump administration terminated.”

“It’s very stressful,” Conn said. “Because everybody now is scrambling for the same pot of money, and there isn’t enough of it.”

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline The Trump EPA ended the ‘green new scam.’ A year later, communities are still paying the price. on Jan 22, 2026.


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One year ago, with one of the first strokes of his presidential Sharpie, President Donald Trump signed an executive order declaring a “national energy emergency,” making good on a campaign promise to “drill, baby, drill.” It was the first of many such orders, signaling that the championing of fossil fuels would be a cornerstone of the new administration: A subsequent order pledged to revitalize America’s waning coal industry, eliminate subsidies for electric vehicles approved by Congress under former president Joe Biden, and loosen regulations for domestic producers of fossil fuels. Yet another executive order withdrew the U.S. from the Paris Agreement, the nearly unanimously-adopted international treaty that coordinates the global fight against climate change. He resumed liquefied natural gas permitting paused by his predecessor and reopened United States coastlines to drilling.

In the days following his inauguration, Trump killed a climate jobs training program, closed off millions of acres of federal water designated for offshore wind development, reopened U.S. coastlines to drilling, and scrubbed mentions of climate change from some federal agency websites. To many observers, it looked like the most comprehensive reorientation of the executive branch’s environmental and climate priorities in American history.

On paper, it certainly appears as though Trump has continued to make good on these early promises. He pushed Congress to pass the so-called Big Beautiful Bill, which phases out an extensive set of tax credits — for wind and solar energy, electric vehicles, and other decarbonization tools — that were responsible for much of the progress the U.S. was expected to make toward its Paris Agreement commitments. (That move has already led some companies to abandon new clean energy projects.) Trump’s attacks on the nation’s offshore wind industry, which he recently called “so pathetic and so bad,” have been unrelenting, culminating in a blanket ban on offshore leases last month. A few weeks ago, he upped the ante on his earlier withdrawal from the Paris Agreement by severing ties with the United Nations framework that facilitates international cooperation on matters of climate change, environmental health, and resilience — a treaty that was ratified unanimously by the U.S. Senate in 1992.

“It has been an extraordinarily destructive year,” said Rachel Cleetus, climate and energy policy director at the nonprofit Union of Concerned Scientists. It’s not hard to find specific moves that have already done tangible harm to the climate: The EPA, for instance, delayed a requirement that oil and gas operators reduce emissions of methane, an ultra-potent and fast-acting greenhouse gas, for a full year. The Interior Department announced a $625 million investment to “reinvigorate and expand America’s coal industry” and directed a costly Michigan coal plant on the verge of closure to stay open.

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Grist staff

However, while these moves have been effective in sowing panic and uncertainty, their long-term effects on the country’s climate policy framework are far from certain. Indeed, only a small fraction of the climate damage threatened by Trump is truly permanent, experts told Grist. That’s not only because many of Trump’s moves may ultimately be ruled illegal — federal judges in Rhode Island and New York, for instance, allowed offshore wind farms in those states to resume construction just last week — but also because executive actions can be reversed by a future president. And the president has not shown much interest in passing energy- or climate-related legislation, a far more durable form of policymaking than executive decree. Despite claims to the contrary, Trump has signed fewer bills than any president since Dwight D. Eisenhower.

“He is not changing law,” said Elaine Kamarck, who worked in the Clinton administration and is the founding director of the Brookings Institution’s Center for Effective Public Management. “He is changing practice.”

Even something as unprecedented as the EPA’s moves to relinquish its own authority to regulate the emissions that affect human health — a responsibility that comprises a core tenet part of the agency’s mission and is therefore widely regarded as unlikely to hold up in court — could be unraveled by a future administration even if it’s ruled to be legal, though that process would take years.

“You can’t make up for the lost time, the increased emissions, and the extent that new areas are opened up for [fossil fuel] exploration,” said Michael Burger, executive director of the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law at Columbia University. “But from a regulatory perspective, what this administration is doing to EPA and the other agencies are all executive actions that can be undone in the same way they were done.”

The major exception is the GOP’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act, or OBBBA. If a future administration wants to restore expansive tax credits for wind and solar energy, that president will have to push Congress to pass new climate legislation. But the climate-relevant portions of OBBBA are noteworthy for being subtractive rather than additive — and are perhaps more accurately viewed as a representation of Trump’s quest to refute former President Biden’s legacy than a desire to radically alter U.S. energy law. Indeed, the new law left in place tax credits for other sources of carbon-free energy, including nuclear and geothermal — something that more moderate Republicans who do not share the president’s dismissal of climate science have been quick to note.

“We like to point out that the baseload clean energy credits were maintained,” said Luke Bolar, head of external affairs and communications at ClearPath, a think tank that develops conservative climate policies. Sean Casten, a Democratic U.S. Representative from Illinois, said that the goal of the Biden-era climate legislation — ensuring that U.S. clean energy can be built in a cost-competitive way —  has largely been achieved even if specific parts of the law have been repealed.

“Every single zero-carbon power source … is still cheaper on the margin than a fuel energy source,” he said.

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Zoya Teirstein

The relative fragility of Trump’s assault on bedrock environmental and climate laws could be a product of the president’s prioritization of political dominance over lasting change, said Josh Freed, senior vice president for climate and energy at the think tank Third Way.

For example, the administration has taken steps to shield the American coal industry from the punishing blows of competition, environmental regulation, and the rising costs of mining. Trump has signed an executive order aimed at “reinvigorating America’s beautiful clean coal industry,” granted coal-fired power plants temporary exemptions from emissions limits, and ended a federal moratorium on coal leasing. But those interventions will do little in the long run to reverse a decline driven mainly by economics: The nation’s aging coal plants are becoming increasingly expensive to run while natural gas and solar energy have only gotten cheaper. And they certainly don’t help the president’s stated goal of reducing household energy costs.

To attempt to make sense of the president’s crusade to save coal is to assume there is a larger political strategy at play — which may not be the case, Freed said.

“There’s no reason to bring back coal other than to show that the administration can bring back coal,” he said. “It’s not like there’s this huge lobbying effort or donor base that will be of significant benefit to MAGA or Republicans if they do it.”

A style of governance motivated by political dominance is a good way to make headlines, but it’s not a particularly effective way to build a lasting legacy. Trump’s efforts to buoy coal may help the industry in the short term, but experts are broadly in agreement that coal can’t be “saved” without sustained support from the federal government. And an industry that can only survive with a coal-friendly Republican in the Oval Office isn’t exactly thriving.

“When you have to get the government to step in to put its thumb on the scale in order to help your industry,” Sean Feaster, an energy analyst at the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, told my colleagues earlier this week, “it’s a sign that you’re not particularly competitive, right?”

For decades now, the pendulum of U.S. climate policy has swung left and right, reflecting the priorities of the sitting president. Trump’s climate blitzkrieg may be the starkest example yet of the benefits and drawbacks of that model. But despite his best efforts to stand out from the pack, the president’s first year back in office fits a well-worn pattern. As a result, his victories may not last much longer than his presidency.

This story was originally published by Grist with the headline How permanent is Trump’s assault on climate action? on Jan 22, 2026.


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The asteroid that struck the Earth 66 million years ago devastated life across the planet, wiping out the dinosaurs and other organisms in a hail of fire and catastrophic climate change. But new research shows that it also set the stage for life to rebound astonishingly quickly.


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Researchers from the University of Cape Town (UCT), working with international collaborators, have shown that people in northern Mozambique use regionally distinct "dialects" when communicating with honeyguide birds, revealing a striking parallel to the way human languages diversify.


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Global average temperature increases could pass the 1.5 degrees Celsius threshold outlined in the Paris Agreement by the end of the decade, according to the EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service, putting the world at greater risk of never-seen-before extreme weather events.


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In most forests, a visitor’s eye is trained on what can be reached. The trunk can be measured. The leaves can be plucked. A specimen can be pressed, labeled, and filed away. Yet the largest share of life in a tropical rainforest is suspended overhead, in a zone of light, wind, and constant exchange. For much of the 20th century, that upper world remained a blank on the map of biology, less from lack of curiosity than from a practical problem: it was hard to work where you could not stand. Science often advances when someone treats a logistical obstacle as an intellectual one. In the 1980s, a group of researchers and engineers devised a way to bring a laboratory to the canopy itself. A balloon could lift a platform, set it down on the crowns of trees, and allow botanists to move and observe without felling what they came to study. The method was unglamorous in its intent, even if the image was memorable: a raft perched in the treetops. It opened a layer of forest that had been described more than it had been examined. The botanist at the center of this project had little taste for grand titles. Asked if he was an explorer, he waved it away. “No, no, no, botanist is more than enough for me.” he said. “Life is too short for a botanist,” he added, as if the subject could never be finished. The remark was not a pose. It reflected a view…This article was originally published on Mongabay


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This story was originally published by WyoFile.

Katie Klingsporn
WyoFile

FORT WASHAKIE—Closure notices were posted on the darkened Eastern Shoshone Business Council office doors Monday, Jan. 12, two days after a special tribal council meeting threw the leadership panel into upheaval.

“The Eastern Shoshone Business Council (ESBC) is shutting down the tribal offices effective on January 12th, 2026, until the Non-Sanctioned Eastern Shoshone Council Meeting Actions are resolved through tribal court,” the hot-pink notice read.

The business council governs the tribe, one of two on the Wind River Reservation, overseeing tasks such as enacting tribal law and managing resources for the Eastern Shoshone people.

Because the office was closed, no individuals were available to answer questions.

But notices and comments posted on the tribe’s Facebook account indicate all six members of the business council were removed by a vote of the general council during Saturday’s special meeting. The validity of that meeting and vote are now being challenged.

Going into the meeting, current members on the panel included Chairman Wayland Large, along with Clinton Glick, Gloria St. Clair, Gus Thayer, Stanford Ware and Latonna Snyder.

An agenda shared on the Eastern Shoshone Tribe’s Facebook Page on Dec. 30 listed as business items: “nepotism,” “mismanagement of Shoshone Rose Casino & Hotel” and “removal of all (6) current Shoshone Business Council Members.”

General council meetings are open to all enrolled members who are 18 or older. A quorum of 75 must be met within a certain time and all members vote. Roughly 4,000 enrolled Eastern Shoshone tribal members live on the reservation, according to the Interior Department.

According to Facebook chatter on Jan. 12, a quorum did indeed vote to oust the panel and replace it with six new individuals.

However, Monday’s notice on the office door — as well as prior public notices the tribe released — indicate challenges to the procedural validity of the petition at the center of the conflict and describe Saturday’s meeting actions as “non-sanctioned.”

All finances and business will be at a standstill as the offices are closed, according to the notice.

“We apologize for any financial inconvenience this may cause you at this time,” the notice read. “We want to reassure you that we are working diligently to resolve these matters in a timely manner.”

WyoFile is an independent nonprofit news organization focused on Wyoming people, places and policy.

The post Eastern Shoshone Business Council upheaval closes tribal government office appeared first on ICT.


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Nine months ago, President Donald Trump signed a presidential memorandum instructing his administration to "achieve maximum speed and efficiency" in moving to block invasive Asian carp from reaching the Great Lakes.


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JAKARTA — The Indonesian government has revoked the permits of 28 companies over environmental violations that authorities say exacerbated the deadly floods and landslides that struck the island of Sumatra in late 2025. The revocations follow an audit carried out by a government task force responsible for forest area enforcement after disasters triggered by Cyclone Senyar in November 2025, which killed about 1,200 people across Indonesia’s main western island. The audit found that the 28 companies had violated various rules, including the 2009 law on environmental protection, and bore responsibility for environmental damage linked to the disasters. Authorities still haven’t disclose detailed findings or evidence for each case. The audit results were presented to President Prabowo Subianto during an online meeting on Jan. 19. “Based on that report, the president decided to revoke the permits of 28 companies that were proven to have committed violations,” State Secretariat Minister Prasetyo Hadi said at a press conference on Jan. 20, as quoted by CNBC Indonesia. The move signals a shift in how administrative enforcement is framed in Indonesia, with permit sanctions now explicitly justified by post-disaster accountability rather than routine compliance alone. The revoked permits include 22 forest utilization permits (PBPH) for operating in natural and plantation forests, covering a combined area of about 1 million hectares (2.5 million acres) — roughly one-third the size of Belgium — as well as six mining, plantation and timber forest product utilization permits (PBPHHK). Among the affected permit holders is major pulpwood producer PT Toba…This article was originally published on Mongabay


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A new list of threatened mammals in South Africa, Lesotho and Eswatini shows that 11 more species have edged closer to extinction since 2016. Those that have joined the International Union for the Conservation of Nature's regional Red List for mammals at risk are: Lesueur's hairy bat, the laminate vlei rat, the thick-tailed bushbaby, the aardvark and the African straw-colored fruit bat. The Namaqua dune mole-rat showed one of the sharpest declines, jumping from Least Concern to Endangered. Joseph Ogutu is a statistician who researches collapsing wildlife populations in Africa. He explains that of the 336 mammals assessed, 70 are now threatened and 42% of the mammals only found in South Africa are at risk of extinction.


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The death of Renee Macklin Good, the 37-year-old mother of three who was shot and killed in Minneapolis by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officer Jonathan Ross, has brought thousands into the streets across cities in the United States to protest the Trump administration’s lethal immigration enforcement tactics.

Local authorities have file lawsuits and local and national immigrant rights organizations have issued calls to action. United We Dream stated:  “Billions poured into immigration raids for the sake of ripping apart communities in cities like Los Angeles, Chicago and Minneapolis does nothing but lead to irreparable damage, violence and death. We demand an immediate end to this cruelty and for elected leaders at every level to speak out in defense of immigrant communities and our shared safety,”

Good’s tragic murder happened a day after 2,000 federal agents were deployed to Minnesota following President Donald Trump’s repeated attacks on the North Star state’s Somali community. Good had been protesting ICE operations only a few blocks from her home in Central Minneapolis.

In the aftermath of this horrific use of lethal force, President Trump unsurprisingly stated in a social media post that Good “violently, willfully, and viciously ran over the ICE Officer, who seems to have shot her in self-defense,” while also threatening to invoke the Insurrection Act. U.S. Department of Homeland Security Secretary (DHS) Kristi Noem called Good a “domestic terrorist” and Vice President J.D. Vance claimed that Ross, the ICE officer responsible for Good’s death, would have “absolute immunity.

Minnesota Democratic leaders, including Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey and  Governor Tim Walz, pushed back against the administration’s statements. Yet Good is at least the fifth death tied to immigration enforcement activity since President Trump took office and the sixteenth shooting tied to a US immigration agent. Only hours after Good’s death, Luis David Nico Moncada and Yorlenys Betzabeth Zambrano-Contreras were shot by ICE and hospitalized in Portland.

And that’s not counting the  32 people killed in ICE custody in 2025 from overcrowding, unsanitary conditions, food and health care access, making 2025 one of the deadliest for the agency. There is little expectation that in 2026 the numbers will go down. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act gave ICE $45 billion on top of annual appropriations to spend on immigration detention through Fiscal Year 2029. The American Immigration Council estimates that with current levels of funding, ICE could expand the immigration detention system by some 135,000 beds—rivaling the entire federal prison system.

Crunch Time

According to the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), federal immigration agents have carried out roughly 2,500 arrests in the Minneapolis area since the start of “Operation Metro Surge.” In the aftermath of Good’s death, reinforcements have arrived in Minneapolis from New Orleans’ Operation “Catahoula Crunch”.

Citizens, as Good’s murder shows, are not exempt from being caught up in ICE sweeps. In a recent report by Pro Publica, roughly 170 U.S. citizens have “been draggedtackledbeatentased and shot by immigration agents.” But this is not an exact number. It’s an estimate that highlights a reality far different from Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s blithe assertion that citizens shouldn’t be concerned about enforcement activity. When he voted to legalize racial profiling, he wrote in his opinion that even if they were subjected to “brief investigative stops”,  lawful residents would be “promptly” released.

Among those most affected are children. Families have been ripped apart as Trump’s immigration enforcement apparatus rushes to deport parents and children have witnessed traumatizing acts of violence. Twenty U.S.-born children have been detained, two of them undergoing cancer treatment.

In this anti-immigrant crusade, one thing is clear: no one is safe .

The Weight of Words

The Trump administration continues to justify increased enforcement, violence, and impunity against immigrant communities with Orwellian dexterity. Perhaps that’s why it’s important to remember that Good was also a writer who won a prestigious award for a poem published in 2020.

“This is a galvanizing moment by Americans from every corner of the nation to reclaim our constitutional rights, restore trust in law enforcement and reform a terribly broken and outdated immigration system,” read a statement by Vanessa Cardenas, Executive Director of America’s Voice.

Throughout history, writers have roused movements, dreamt of fantastical possibilities for humanity, and directly challenged authoritarian regimes. The list of names of all who have faced punishment, exile, and death from authoritarian governments for expanding reader’s horizons with the written word is long and includes authors ranging from Russia’s Boris Pasternak to Nicaragua’s Gioconda Belli to Spain’s Federico Garcia Lorca.

In the United States, rightwing zealots are banning books, and publishers are coming under fire by the Trump administration. With A.I. and other digital distractions undermining our ability to creatively articulate what we see and experience, it’s no surprise that we’ve started to live in what some deem a Postliterate society, where only 16% of adults in 2023 read for pleasure in the United States on a given day.

However, much of this should feel as if done by design.  “One ought to recognize that the present political chaos is connected with the decay of language, and that one can probably bring about some improvement by starting at the verbal end,” as George Orwell wrote in his book Orwell on Truth.

In our current war on truth, the utility of words and the power of those who wield them through verse, prose, or song is more important than ever. As protests outside federal detention centers and against enforcement tactics in Los Angeles, Portland, Minneapolis, and New Orleans continue, the murder of a poet should move all of us to action, to stop attacks by ICE that go far beyond the brutal assassination that occurred on an icy Minneapolis road. Good’s death captured the attention of the nation and the world because her life was about making truth irresistible and actionable through poetry, in the face of those who know they need to censor words to thwart radical change.

A.M. Castro is a Salvadoran-American writer. You can find some of her work here. Her forthcoming book Monsters Can Also Cry is due on Gnashing Teeth Publishing in early 2027. Her novella Feet First was a finalist for the Stephen Graham Jones Novella Competition.


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For Roy Maimon, hitting the bar stage and working in the scientific laboratory have never been separate worlds. During his Ph.D., the new NYU Tandon biomedical engineering assistant professor would spend his days pipetting samples and his nights playing drums in punk rock bands at local bars.


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BACOLOD CITY, Philippines — For five days last November, the city of Bacolod in the central Philippine province of Negros Occidental became a crossroads of food cultures from across Asia and the Pacific. The aroma of grilled seafood, fermented sauces, roasted coffee and freshly ground spices filled the air as farmers, chefs, food artisans, scientists, fisherfolk, Indigenous leaders, researchers and policymakers gathered to talk about seeds, soil, culture and survival. The event marked the first Asia-Pacific convergence of the global Slow Food movement, bringing together more than 2,000 delegates from 20 countries in Bacolod. The participants were drawn by shared concerns over biodiversity loss, climate change, and the future of food systems across the region. Organized by the international NGO Slow Food, which advocates for good, clean and fair food for all, in collaboration with Philippines partners, the gathering sought to strengthen regional networks around agroecology, a sustainable farming approach that integrates ecology, Indigenous knowledge, and social action, while showcasing food cultures rooted in local ecosystems. “This is a space where communities, ingredients, and ideas come together to shape the future of food,” Edward Mukiibi, president of Slow Food, told Mongabay, describing it as both a cultural platform and a venue for confronting urgent environmental challenges. Myrna Pula, a T’boli Indigenous leader from the southern Philippines, showcases heirloom rice varieties that have sustained her community and culture for generations. Image by Keith Anthony Fabro for Mongabay. Hub for ‘good, clean and fair’ food A key outcome of the gathering was…This article was originally published on Mongabay


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Snow is a defining feature of mountain ranges, and of winter itself for much of the world. But beyond its scenic value, snow plays a vital role in mountain ecosystems, as well as a range of human socioeconomic activity, and it is one of the climatic elements most sensitive to global warming. In recent decades, its quantity, duration and behavior have all changed significantly.


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Carbon dioxide removal technologies are becoming increasingly important for climate action, but their differing storage times matter for policy design. A new study published in Environmental and Resource Economics by the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK) provides guidance based on economic principles. While non-permanent carbon storage plays a valuable role as economies transition away from fossil fuels, its contribution is less valuable than permanent storage; this should be reflected in carbon pricing schemes that aim to incentivize the ramping-up of removals.


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