Progressives Launch Anti-Keystone XL Pipeline Ad Campaign

Tuesday, October 25, 2011
WASHINGTON -- Progressives fighting to stop the construction of TransCanada's Keystone XL pipeline found a new outlet for their message this week with the launch of a national ad campaign pushing President Obama to halt "a crime in progress." Paid for by advocacy group Tar Sands Action, the ad will run in The New York Times and Washington Post print editions, as well as a handful of online publications including Politico and CNN.com.
Chris Paine: Recharging Hope In Electric Cars
Upper Big Branch Mine Conditions Were 'Industrial Homicide,' Union Alleges
Crashed Satellite Location Determined; Major Cities Avoided Dangerous Collision
Last Javan Rhino In Vietnam Killed By Poachers, Group Says
WATCH: Mark Ruffalo Pushes Pipeline Protests At Occupy Wall Street
BLOG POSTS
Matt Stoller: The Federal Reserve of Oil
It seems like our foreign policy is made without regard for democratic debate. And this is truly how oil corrupts our politics, by subverting democracy, by subverting our control over our government.
Kelly Rigg: The War Against Climate Science Unravels
For those who have ever put the skeptic arguments to the test, it has always been clear their criticisms rarely stand up to even the most basic level of academic rigor. But last week's study delivered a decisive blow to the edifice of climate skepticism.
Dr. Reese Halter: The Insatiable Bark Beetle and the Northern Rockies
An overheating climate has enabled mountain pine beetles -- nature's emissary of massive ecological change to march north and east like never before in modern or prehistoric times.
Liz Neumark: I Was a CSA Junkie
So what's it like to go from member to provider? Even though I was an ardent member of my CSA, I had no idea of the complexity involved in executing the process or products.
James Turner: New Zealand's Oil Disaster: Black Swans and Human Errors
The same governments that express their shock when events like this happen are the same who refuse to consider them as signals to change course.
Advertisement

Comments