A final draft seen by the BBC will say nations can protect the climate, but only if they make policies to halt the global growth in emissions by 2030.
The draft refers to stabilising emissions between 450 and 550 parts per million of CO2 in the atmosphere.
Anything less is unrealistic, economists believe.
But America and China are alarmed by any discussions of a safe limit because it increases pressure to curb their pollution.
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Monday, April 30
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 30 Apr 2007 02:32 AM EDT
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 30 Apr 2007 02:17 AM EDT
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 30 Apr 2007 02:16 AM EDT
This has me wondering if a similar analysis has been done of GTA nabeblogs. In reference to the lede, I found myself at Dovercourt and College about a year ago. The Starbucks had recently opened, and a yuppie couple was out pushing a stroller that likely cost more than many peoples' cars (price of child not included; maybe they were just strolling with the stroller -- I don't even remember seeing a kid). And I thought, "'There goes the neighbourhood!'" :) But note this from an April 20 G&M story:
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 30 Apr 2007 02:10 AM EDT
From the NYT story on the new Viagra campaign (only in Canada!):
Where's my manners? The headline should have come first:
Sunday, April 29
by
Bill Doskoch
on Sun 29 Apr 2007 03:18 AM EDT
The NYT's Frank Rich takes a look at the sorry spectacle of the White House Correspondents' Association dinner. more »Friday, April 27
by
Bill Doskoch
on Fri 27 Apr 2007 02:22 AM EDT
Got cable? Then watch PBS at 9 p.m. EDT today for Bill Moyers' Journal. "Also on the program: Josh Marshall, blogger and publisher of the influential talkingpointsmemo.com, gives his perspective on the role of politics in the recent firings of federal prosecutors; and Carlo Bonini, Italy's foremost investigative reporter." In the preview video, Stewart talked about the recent performance of U.S. Attorney General Alberto "I can't remember a damned thing" Gonzales, Dubya's praise of Gonzales and compared it a scene from Goodfellas (possibly the greatest gangster movie ever made!):
Gonzales said nothing (see Daily Show highlights here; also analysis from John Oliver. The Oliver piece has Bush's reaction, plus some horrifying footage of Rich Little's performance at the White House Correspondents' Association dinner).
FWIW, here's a snippet from the screenplay:
by
Bill Doskoch
on Fri 27 Apr 2007 02:13 AM EDT
Well, to the company that does online marketing questionnaires through NYT.com. To their knowledge, I was born in 1914 and am a female U.S. independent financial advisor who lives in the 90210 zip code. However, I have never heard of most of the major investment companies in the United States, despite the fact I have an exclusively boomer clientele with portfolios in the US$5 million or higher range. I was relatively modest about my income, claiming to be merely in the US$150,000 to $199,999 range. Frankly, I think I'm doing pretty good to still be working at my age. :) Why lie like a rug? I can think of no better answer than because these people pissed me off mightily. I ponied up US$49.95 for the TimesSelect package, which allows me access to columnists and 100 archived articles per month (getting the Sunday Times alone through my Globe and Mail subscription would cost $20 per month). One would think that would isolate one from irritants like having to make a stopover at a marketing questionnaire page every third clickthrough. Maybe it actually makes me more of a target. In any event, I thought maybe if I finally fill out one of these and was completely absurdist about it, they would figure it out and never bother me again. We shall see if my instincts are correct. Update They weren't. The very next clickthrough, I got hit with exactly the same quiz! Agghh!!!! Thursday, April 26
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 26 Apr 2007 02:46 AM EDT
Bill Moyers was press secretary to U.S. President Lyndon Baines Johnson in the early days of the escalation of the Vietnam War. He describes the impact that then-NYT reporter David Halberstam's reporting had on him, even given his insider's perch, and what it taught him about journalism. more »
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 26 Apr 2007 02:38 AM EDT
Bill Moyers is returning to PBS, and he talked to Democracy Now! about his lead-off effort -- 'Buying the War,' which looks at how the U.S. news media bought what the Bushies were selling on Iraq. more »
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 26 Apr 2007 01:43 AM EDT
Shabab (Youth) News aims to reach the 50 per cent of the regional population that's under age 18. more »
by
Bill Doskoch
on Thu 26 Apr 2007 01:29 AM EDT
Tuesday, April 24
by
Bill Doskoch
on Tue 24 Apr 2007 02:23 AM EDT
The Washington Post on how Greenpeace and McDonald's came together to fight Brazilian rainforest deforestation. more »
by
Bill Doskoch
on Tue 24 Apr 2007 02:08 AM EDT
Once upon a time, the Bush administration liked to talk about the "war on terror," then a long war against Islamist extremism. The new head of U.S. Central Command -- which covers the area between Europe and the Pacific -- doesn't much like the "long war" phrase. more »
by
Bill Doskoch
on Tue 24 Apr 2007 01:46 AM EDT
David Halberstam, the Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author who made his name as a young reporter covering the Vietnam War, died Monday in a car crash in Menlo Park, California. He was 73. more »Monday, April 23
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 23 Apr 2007 03:19 AM EDT
The Santa Barbara News-Press newspaper, owned by the eccentric Wendy P. McCaw, ran an un-bylined story accusing former editor Jerry Roberts, who resigned last year, of having kiddie porn on his work computer. more »
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 23 Apr 2007 03:14 AM EDT
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 23 Apr 2007 03:10 AM EDT
Advertising executive and entrepreneur Brian P. Tierney bought the Philadelphia Inquirer nine months ago. Many readers are impressed, but employees are paying the price, and accommodating advertisers has become a bit easier under the new regime. more »
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 23 Apr 2007 03:00 AM EDT
Strangely (or not so strangely), I can't find the video on YouTube. At the Boston.com website, a search on 'YouTube' found no reference to Fitzgerald. The one story I saw posted was from AP. Very odd. If you do have a link, please shoot it over. Right now, I'm wondering about this story. * C'mon, children of the 1970s: Name the song and group that inspired my headline! :)
by
Bill Doskoch
on Mon 23 Apr 2007 02:07 AM EDT
A strange development: Le Journal de Quebec, a paper that's reportedly known labour peace since 1967, finds 140 unionized staff locked out by Sun Media. And why? Apparently to force adaptation to the changing multimedia world. more »Sunday, April 22
by
Bill Doskoch
on Sun 22 Apr 2007 01:37 PM EDT
The Toronto Star's Geoff Pevere on the proliferation of the first-person doc, something not invented by Michael Moore, but someone who did give it commercial legs. And he did it all, say his critics, by putting compelling story before truth. more »
by
Bill Doskoch
on Sun 22 Apr 2007 12:38 PM EDT
When the Virginia Tech shooting occurred, a number of major news organizations went to Google and Yahoo! and immediately bought keywords relating to it, paying up to 20 cents per clickthrough. more »
by
Bill Doskoch
on Sun 22 Apr 2007 11:51 AM EDT
I want it to be in Hickman, Kentucky. Here's why.
by
Bill Doskoch
on Sun 22 Apr 2007 03:33 AM EDT
Allies of Russia's President Vladimir Putin are setting out some ground rules for their newly-acquired Russian News Service. more »
by
Bill Doskoch
on Sun 22 Apr 2007 02:41 AM EDT
Globeandmail.com has soft-launched its new look. The official launch date for the redesigned newspaper is Monday, April 23. First, here's a look at globeandmail.com's old design (reconstructed from archive.org's May 30, 2006 capture): more » |
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