10 Advances for the Environment I'm Grateful For This Thanksgiving

This Thanksgiving week I’m reflecting on 10 advances environmental advocates and organizers have won this year for a cleaner, greener healthier future. There’s a lot to be thankful for — from historic progress on climate to groundbreaking environmental laws that can serve as a model for the rest of the nation. Behind each of these accomplishments was grassroots activism, engaged citizens, and committed individuals who just didn’t give up; and it’s that kind of people power that I’m most grateful for this holiday season.

1. Action on Climate. President Barack Obama is clearly staking part of his legacy on action to solve the climate crisis. To wit, his Environmental Protection Agency proposed the Clean Power Plan in June, the largest step the U.S. has ever proposed to cut global warming pollution. This month he announced an historic agreement with China to cut greenhouse gas emissions. We can’t avert climate catastrophe with only these steps, but without them we’re not even close.

2. Biggest step for clean water in over a decade. Since 2006, a pair of polluter-driven Supreme Court decisions has left 2 million miles of rivers and streams — more than 60 percent of American waterways — without guaranteed protections under the Clean Water Act. In March the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency proposed to change that once and for all. More than 800,000 Americans have commented in favor the long-awaited proposal.

3. New York is still frack-free. Since 2008, growing numbers of activists and New York towns have pushed state leaders to reject this dangerous drilling practice. Gov. Andrew Cuomo hasn’t yet acted definitively, but the fact that he’s delayed the decision on fracking this long is a testament to the determination of all those who want their drinking water to remain nonflammable.

4. Fracking banned in the belly of the beast. In more encouraging fracking news, on November 4 fracking bans were approved in four localities, including ground-zero: Denton, TX.

5. Amazing landscapes — and seascapes — safeguarded forever. Using the Antiquities Act, President Obama has protected the jagged peaks of New Mexico’s Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks from development; expanded the California Coastal National Monument to include the wetlands, trails and beaches of the Stornetta Public Lands; ensured that the San Gabriel Mountains in southern California will provide wildlife habitat and a place to hike, camp, and fish for generations to come; and created the largest marine preserve in the world. Not too shabby for one year.

6. Stopping Tar Sands. Twice Big Oil eked out a victory against citizen activists working to stop an ExxonMobil tar sands terminal in Maine, but the third time and an awful lot of hard work was the charm for environmentalists in July, when the South Portland city council voted overwhelmingly to block the terminal.

7. Bag, banned. Nothing we use for a few minutes should pollute the environment for hundreds of years. Yet plastic outweighs plankton 6 to 1 in some parts of the Pacific, and still-composed plastic bags have been found in the bellies of whales and sea turtles. More than 100 California communities had already banned single-use plastic bags; the entire state followed suit this fall, the first in the country to do so.

8. Meet George Jetson. The cars aren’t flying yet, but they are, increasingly, 100 percent electric. California passed a law in September to require 1 million electric cars on the state’s roads by 2023. Earlier in the year, eight other states adopted their own rules to ensure the deployment of more than 3 million electric cars, which are 50 percent cleaner than conventional cars, even when you consider that our power grids aren’t yet much fueled by clean, renewable energy.

9. Speaking of wind energy. It’s tripled since 2008, and this year saw real progress toward the first U.S. offshore wind farm, now scheduled to be built in 2015.

10. And don’t forget solar. Solar’s costs have been declining rapidly, and now they are competitive with the cost of power generated by coal, oil, and natural gas. That helps explain why solar has grown 77 percent in the last three years alone. In the first half of this year, solar made up more than half of all new installed energy capacity, bringing us ever closer to the 100 percent clean renewable energy future we deserve.

Hexoskin Arctic biometric smart shirt offers winter upgrade

Last year the Hexoskin smart shirt was successfully funded on Indiegogo, something that spawned a wearable apparel alternative to wristbands and similar fitness trackers. That shirt, however, has a sleeveless vest design that isn’t tailored to the colder months now gripping many states, and so the company has introduced a new model called Arctic. As its name suggests, Arctic is … Continue reading

Daredevil walks on a narrow beam over a 900-foot tall giant hole

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The 900-foot deep hole is actually a 900-foot tall giant chimney which actually makes this stunt even crazier because Flaviu Cernescu, the daredevil strolling over the hole, actually has to free solo climb the entire thing before he can walk. It’s like risking your life only to risk your life even more.

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Consuming two kinds of potatoes in the presence of loved ones calls for a holiday-appropriate movie. You could load up the heartwarming Planes, Trains and Automobiles, or dive right into Christmas season with It’s a Wonderful Life. Well, here’s a film about Thanksgiving and family you should really not gather the generations together to watch: The Ice Storm.

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Formerly Gay and for Rent

I suppose a few falling leaves, over time, are to be expected — but when the tree is nearly bare and the wind-chill factor climbs higher than the age of that street-corner twink you’re angling to hook, change becomes something to resent.

It’s a cold day indeed when you find yourself huddled against what used to be the Rawhide bar, bitterly surveying a vanilla-speckled permafrost of banks and franchises and chain stores.

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Good gravy, Mary.

Is it not enough that the pharmacies and Starbucks outnumber the sex shops and watering holes, and have for quite some time? Assimilated and defeated, many of our old-guard gays have had little choice but to “come out of the shadows and get right with the law” by trading in their whippets for wedding bands, their Boy Butter for baby carriages. It’s no wonder so many of the queer homesteaders who made Chelsea what it was have taken their balls to other playgrounds, or simply let the air out and called it a day.

If that sounds just a tad dramatic, consider this:

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From 14th to 23rd Streets, three gay-centric storefront businesses with a combined presence of over nine decades on Eighth Avenue have stood empty for months — “For Rent” signs starting to weather, and no sign that what replaces chic clothing store Camouflage, (1976-2014), playful lifestyle emporium Rainbows & Triangles (1994-2014) and the reliably cruisy Rawhide bar (1980-2013) will cater to anything other than bland choices and desexualized tastes.

And who can afford the asking price that forced contemporary men’s retail store Universal Gear (2001-2014) to forego its lease renewal and move 20 blocks uptown to Hell’s Kitchen?

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Just Salad, that’s who. How they’ll make their monthly rent by pimping roughage is not my concern. I’m more interested in the cold, hard fact that as more lavender-leaning merchants disappear, recent arrivals like juice joint Liquiteria and yogurt emporium 16 Handles further drain Eighth Avenue of its libido-friendly pluck.

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We had another end-of-an-era scare recently when they gutted Rainbow Station — but the 24/7 sex shop was soon back: two doors down, directly across from archrival The Blue and better positioned to fight for its share of dwindling foot traffic. Three blocks away, savvy marketing has eluded Rainbow Station’s sister space.

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Opened in late 2013, it briefly toyed with the name “Splash” — a nod to the West 17th Street mega-bar of the same name, whose 1991-to-2013 existence parallels Chelsea’s own shelf life as a viable gayborhood.

Sadly, Splosh has achieved only one of the promises spattered across its boastful exterior signage (“Bar & Lounge * Café * Sexy Boutique”). The dream of inserting a social/sexual business model into increasingly prudish Chelsea was deferred by vocal opposition, a liquor license that didn’t materialize, and customers who never warmed up to the notion of eating a $10 steak dinner in close proximity to lube, poppers and fetish gear.

Well, at least they tried. The Sexy Boutique’s still there, though for how long is anybody’s guess — and it’s here that an unmotivated customer base must take its place alongside skyrocketing rents when tracking the real cause of Eighth Avenue’s eroding gay integrity. That bitter truth had the co-owner of Rainbows & Triangles seeing red, shortly before closing his doors after two decades on the block.

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Men who hadn’t been regulars for years, he told me, saw the “SALE” sign in the window and tried to squeeze him for an even more generous discount on top of the steals and deals he was already offering. Faced with that scenario, he decided that what remained on the final day would be put in storage or given to charity. Good for him. Chelsea may not be as gay as it was, but a few of us still have some pride.

Be Thankful For These Five Turkey Day Fitness And Sports Products

Thanksgiving–that time of year when we give thanks for the turkey, stuffing and pumpkin pie with which we stuff our faces. It’s a time for family and friends and celebrating all of the awesomeness in our lives. It’s also a time for football and for contemplating how to counter the effects of an excess intake of calories. These five products honor this great American holiday and the sports and fitness fans who celebrate it.

Kim Kardashian's sex tape is now the #1 porn video of all time

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At well over 93 million views, Kim Kardashian sex tape has become the most watched porn video in history after the release of her shiny naked pictures in Paper Magazine (NSFW). That event destroyed all records in PornHub, with Kim Kardashian searches surging 629 percent and putting her at #1.

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When Glacier National Park was dedicated in 1910, this stunning span of the Rocky Mountains on the Montana-Canadian border counted over 150 thick, morphing ice sheets that gave the park its name. One very warm century later, there are only 26 glaciers here. And by 2030, scientists warn, that number could be zero.

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No matter your budget, you have some great opportunities to score a new action cam this holiday season.

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This year, I am thankful for Chance the Rapper. Chance, whose 2013 mixtape Acid Rap had some of the best music of last year , hasn’t released a debut LP yet, but his side projects are producing some good results.

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