Warm Thoughts for Warming

Warm Thoughts for Warming

If you believe global warming is occurring, and the great majority of Americans do, you may be asking yourself, “What do I do?” Here are a few suggestions for coping. First, I urge you to do those energy saving things that bring the most psychic unguent at the least cost to you: replace an incandescent […]

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 Trading Their Way Out of Poverty

Trading Their Way Out of Poverty

Like most of you I take safety, comfort, and a clean environment as givens. A recent trip to Nicaragua reminded me they are not. (Nicaragua is the second poorest country in the western hemisphere. Only Haiti is poorer). My trip offered several take home messages. Here’s one. I have a wristband that reads, “I buy […]

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 Corporate Culture

Corporate Culture

Critics occasionally castigate economists for “knowing the price of everything but the value of nothing.” What economists measure best is not what matters most. (Love is not merely an interdependent utility function.) Because they are handy and comfortable with numbers, economists discount culture, a concept impossible to quantify with precision. Yet, Nobel economist Gary Becker […]

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 Join the Climate Change Crusade?

Join the Climate Change Crusade?

A climate change crusade is underway. We are all being called upon to stop Global Warming’s (GW) assault on Gaia. It’s the biggest Green movement since the first Earth Day in April of 1970. Earth Day has garnered widespread support by incorporating a full spectrum of causes. In Boston, they may rally around “sludge,” dioxins […]

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 Rural Revival

Rural Revival

How do you explain Bozeman’s spectacular boom? My response to this often asked question—“Why are you here?” After a moment of self-reflection, the usual answer provided is, “We decided this would be a great place to live.” Developments around the Gallatin Valley exemplify a national demographic trend: people want to move toward smaller, more “authentic” […]

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 95 Years of Wisdom

95 Years of Wisdom

In a few days, my mother celebrates her 95th birthday. She was born in the Midwest, went to a small Lutheran college near her parents’ farm, and began teaching in a Lutheran elementary school in 1934. She taught fourth grade for over 40 years before retiring to Holland, Michigan, where she still lives today. Throughout […]

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 The Threat of Global Warming

The Threat of Global Warming

The threat of global warming arises on three dimensions: ecological, political, and ideological. Physical changes to ecosystems have adverse impacts, while public policies dictated by politics rather than sound scientific and economic analysis have perverse and regressive consequences. The biggest threat of all, though, may come from ideological fundamentalists who constrain public discourse. We’ve seen […]

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 Montana’s Climate Change Caucus

Montana’s Climate Change Caucus

A Climate Change Caucus in the Montana legislature has been formed by Bozeman Representative Mike Phillips and his colleagues. One of their goals is to explore policy options to address global warming. The Caucus has consulted with local experts, including MSU’s Susan Capalbo, an economist who directs the Big Sky Carbon Sequestration Project. This effort […]

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 Geoengineering & Climate Change

Geoengineering & Climate Change

Those pressing for immediate reductions in carbon dioxide emissions face big problems. Here’s one; the prospect of cooling the planet through geoengineering. The people working on this are serious scientists and analysts, not lackeys of Senator Robert Byrd’s (D-WVA) mountain-top removing, coal industry cronies. Rather, they include Paul Crutzen, winner of the 1995 Nobel Prize […]

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