Earth First! 29, no. 4
Earth First! 29, no. 4 features articles on the new Wilderness Act, the myth of clean coal, coal in West Virginia, the endangered species wolf and lynx in the United States, and fur farm raids and investigations in Utah.
Earth First! 29, no. 4 features articles on the new Wilderness Act, the myth of clean coal, coal in West Virginia, the endangered species wolf and lynx in the United States, and fur farm raids and investigations in Utah.
Earth First! 29, no. 1 reports on the movement’s victory against the Pacific Lumber Company, the climate and anti-racist camp in Germany, the Northeast Climate Confluence, the international movement of camps and convergences for climate action, and repression against animal activists in Austria.
Earth First! 28, no. 1 features reports on governmental and jurisdictional sanctions against activists, forest defense in Indiana state forests, and climate action in the UK, the northwest and the southeast US.
Earth First! 27, no. 5 features topics such as the true bioregional way, New York City’s community gardens, the G8 summit in Heiligendamm, Germany, unsustainable activism, and a safe traveling culture for activists.
Earth First! 25, no. 2 features articles on anti-nuclear activists on both sides of the Atlantic and the liberation of over 400 animals in Iowa, and features a special Earth First! primer in English and Spanish.
Earth First! 25, no. 1 features articles on dam fights in California, southern Mexico, and Paraguay, presents an interview with activist Allison Lance Watson, and targets nanotech.
In Earth First! Journal 23, no. 3 Tim Ream reflects on human induced weather changes, Jade gives an update on the struggle against Chevron Texaco in Ecuador, and Samantha and Ryan Simmons analyze the environmental consequences of militarism.
Earth First! Journal 22, no. 7 presents news on Darryl Cherney’s case FBI against EF!, as well as essays on treesitting in the US, coal mining in New Mexico, and the presentation of a zero-emission vehicle at the Earth Summit in Johannesburg, South Africa.
This film criticizes the socioeconomic system of the Washington Consensus as being insufficient for overcoming global poverty, and argues that it is based on centuries of exploitation.
After some years of absence, I found myself again active in the Australian conservation movement. A forest was to be razed, not far from where this is being written, for a relatively small yield of saw-planks…