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The cover story of the latest issue of Green Pages details how the Florida Greens are working with other anti-nuclear activists to prevent the licensing of three new reactors. With a pro-nuclear President in the White House, it’s critical that Greens work with activists around the country to defeat the idea that the answer to climate change is additional nuclear reactors.
In From Hopenhagen to Nopenhagen Brian Tokar of the Institute for Social Ecology states “After the 2007 climate summit in Bali, Indonesia, the Bush administration tried to initiate an alternate track of negotiations on climate policy that involved only a select handful of the more compliant countries … Now that the Obama administration has adopted essentially the same approach …”
Also included are articles on the upcoming mid-term elections and obituaries for Bob Long and Dennis Brutus. As always; read, comment, distribute.
Winter 2010
Features
Florida faces nuclear threat
by Michael Canney
Arizona Greens triumph in federal court
by Claudia Ellquist
Robert “Bob” Long, Green Pioneer (1917-2010)
by Mike Feinstein
Berkeley Peace and Justice Commission follows Ten Key Values
by Bob Meola
Cynthia McKinney receives international peace award
Elections
Fairfax, California’s Town Council: The Green Party Majority
by Mimi Newton
Green-Rainbow Party Sets Sights on 2010 Races
by Dave England
Dozens of candidates file for the Green Party primary in Illinois
World
Green Ideology and Its Relation to Modernity: Including a Case Study of the Green Party of Sweden by Michael Moon
Reviewed by Angela Aylward, Green Party of Sweden (Miljöpartiet de gröna)
From Hopenhagen to Nopenhagen
by Mike Feinstein
Opinion
A vision for the midterm
by Brent McMillan
A tale of party oppression at the local level
by Deyva Arthur, New York State Green Party
Evergreen
Poetic obituary for Dennis Brutus
Stone Hammered to Gravel by Martin Espada
Poetry Corner
Overtime by Jackie Sheeler
Green Music by Tom
by Barbara Rodgers-Hendricks
A summary review of Forever Pleasure, a utopian novel by Theodore R. Eastman
by Barbara Rodgers-Hendricks
Reports
About the logo on the cover illustration
With radiating waves, a skull and crossbones and a running person, a new ionizing radiation warning symbol is being introduced to supplement the traditional international symbol for radiation, the three cornered trefoil.
The new symbol is being launched today by the IAEA and the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) to help reduce needless deaths and serious injuries from accidental exposure to large radioactive sources. It will serve as a supplementary warning to the trefoil, which has no intuitive meaning and little recognition beyond those educated in its significance.
International Atomic Energy Agency press release
The views expressed belong to the individual authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the Green Pages Editorial Board, nor of the GP-US. Those with opinions about any of the articles are encouraged to post comments. All comments are first reviewed to screen out spam, not content.






