By: Terence Burlij and Christina Bellantoni The Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge (Dean J. Koepfler/Tacoma News Tribune/MCT via Getty Images)The prospects for a quick resolution to the shutdown dimmed Tuesday as neither side in the fight over funding…
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Wednesday, October 2, 2013
Congress No Closer to Ending the Shutdown on Day 2
Tuesday, October 1, 2013
Think This is The First Government Shutdown in 17 Years? Think Again...
Robert Nelson is blogger-in-chief at Dude, Sustainable!. Find us on Google+ or on Facebook.
Sunday, September 29, 2013
New Blog: After Academia!
Robert Nelson is blogger-in-chief at Dude, Sustainable!. Find us on Google+ or on Facebook.
Friday, September 20, 2013
Meeting The Challenge of Climate Change
In June, President Obama laid out the case for action on climate change, and the steps his Administration will take to address it. In his Climate Action Plan, the President announced steps to cut the emissions of carbon pollution, prepare the United…
Monday, September 16, 2013
How Disqus Blows Outbrain Out of the Water for Blog Contents, Content Discovery and Social Networking
Recently, I've been experimenting with different models for social interaction, content marketing and monetization for my humble blog, but until recently, those three have been distinctly separate enterprises. That is, until I discovered Disqus comments…
Wednesday, September 11, 2013
Top 9 Cliches About American Soccer and the USMNT
- Soccer is the world's most famous sport, and it's finally catching on in the United States
- Such words have been uttered since the early '90s, some might even say the '70s NY Cosmos era).
- Fair point, but great action is to be found elsewhere, and unlike, say hockey, the scoring is rarely out of the blue. We don't fault NFL teams for good defense and a solid running game, so why should we fault soccer as a sport for its focus on tactics and ball control.
- The American talent pool is vast and untapped
- I agree, but it's becoming less untapped day-by-day
- But wait, who are all these foreigners playing for the national team?
- In the interest of objectivity, I'm half Icelandic and spent a great deal of time in Germany, so I'm rooting wholeheartedly for Aaron Johansson, Jermaine Jones, John Anthony Brooks, Timmy Chandler and of course, the inveterate Jurgen Klinsmann who was a star in the first World Cup I ever watched in 1990.
- Jurgen Klinsmann was a talented, passionate player who doesn't know how to manage
- Can we put this one to rest?
- Jurgen Klinsmann is a genius
- Too soon?
- We can't expect the US to perform against international sides from Europe and South America
- Ah, now here's an interesting one. CONCACAF certainly gives the US a relatively easy road to the World Cup, but anyone would have to admit that it's an ascendant federation. The recent demise of the Mexican national team should be enough to demonstrate the growing strength of formerly second-tier sides like Costa Rica, Honduras and Panama.
- Can the US compete day in, day out with the likes of Spain, Germany, Brazil or Argentina? My gut says no, but recent history shows that the USMNT can compete with anyone when they're on their game. Emphasis on that last sentence couldn't be stronger. We're a talented bunch, and when we click, we're hard to stop, and all you need is a good run in the World Cup to end up hoisting the gothic globe.
- Landon Donovan is soft, Clint Dempsey is tough
- I don't really care about this one. Each is a talented and accomplished player who has performed his role in different ways over the course of his career.
- American Soccer is about evening rec leagues, SUVs and orange slices whereas the rest of the world sees it as a street game that breeds passion and toughness
- Can't argue so much about the American side, although living in the Bay Area has introduced me to the local park where Latino men gather en-masse to push each other around and occasionally kick a ball. They're grown men, however, and you rarely see this kind of gathering among kids and aspiring professional footballers. It would be hard to argue, though, that some of the talent pool coming from the middle and upper-middle class reaches of British and European countries are streetballers at hear. I think the European talent pool is open to interpretation.
Robert Nelson is blogger-in-chief at Dude, Sustainable!. Find us on Google+ or on Facebook.
Tuesday, September 10, 2013
The Sustainable Dude Now Using Disqus Comments
Infographic - Syria and its Allies
Explore more infographics like this one on the web's largest information design community - Visually.
Robert Nelson is blogger-in-chief at Dude, Sustainable!. Find us on Google+ or on Facebook.
Monday, September 9, 2013
PBS Newshour: Congress Returns as Obama Lobbies for Syria Strikes
By: Christina Bellantoni and Terence Burlij Protesters march in Los Angeles Saturday to urge Congress to vote against a military strike on Syria (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)Editor's note: There was a technical issue with today's Morning Line.…
Thursday, September 5, 2013
Just Back from the Big Sur Coast
Robert Nelson is blogger-in-chief at Dude, Sustainable!. Find us on Google+ or on Facebook.
Thursday, August 29, 2013
Recently on Dude, Sustainable!
On Facebook, we asked bloggers to weigh-in on what their favorite Reddit "subreddit" for the environment was. The answer, at least according to me, was the /r/environment page for its scope and diversity.
Robert Nelson is blogger-in-chief at Dude, Sustainable!. Find us on Google+ or on Facebook.
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
Sustainability Degrees at Harvard Online College
As part of our ongoing effort to identify, evaluate and publicize online degree programs in sustainability, today we will be looking at the Harvard Extension School Sustainability and Environmental Management Graduate Degree Programs. The Harvard Extension…
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Is Dentistry a Medieval Practice?
At the very least, the dentist who saw me this morning was a young person who didn't try to talk to me about some TV show in which vampires and zombies travel through time fighting crime. She actually asked me about my daughter while she attacked my gums with a metal hook. But the good news...great teeth. Again. Any thoughts, let me know!
Robert Nelson is blogger-in-chief at Dude, Sustainable!. Find us on Google+ or on Facebook.
Monday, August 26, 2013
The Making of the Modern World in the Long Eighteenth Century
The Making of the Modern World
- What is modernity, and did it ever exist?
- If so, is it a teleological error to look for the roots of modernity in any particular time frame, especially in an age that was in many ways unlike our own?
- Furthermore, given that both Brewer and Porter have a relatively narrow focus of what created the modern world and broke from the old, what then is the significance of other developments, such as the economic developments associated with capitalism or the development of industry?
- Is the upheaval of the long eighteenth century described by Porter and Brewer sufficient as a prologue to the development of modernity?
- Both Clark and Porter believe that enlightened thinking in Britain largely proceeded within the framework of the Protestant church; how then, do Porter and Clark reconcile their differences with respect to the British Enlightenment? Is Clark’s “confessional state” and Porter’s British Enlightenment mutually exclusive?
- Was there such a thing as the British Enlightenment?
- Does Porter’s generally positive treatment of enlightened thinkers gloss over potentially negative consequences of the Enlightenment?
- Does Porter overestimate the degree to which the British polity were aware of the intellectual developments of their day?
- How does Porter’s practical and pragmatic Enlightenment compare to the more theoretical Enlightenment of the continent?
- Does Brewer adequately differentiate institutional change in Britain with institutional change on the continent?
Saturday, August 24, 2013
Starbucks at 6am on Saturday
Hope you're all having a wonderful Saturday!
Friday, August 23, 2013
Catching Up On Last Season of "The West Wing"
That's right...every season of Aaron Sorkin's The West Wing is up on Netflix to be browsed at your leisure. Currently, I'm on the final season, Season 7, watching the "live" debate between Congressman Matt Santos and Senator Arnold Vinick. It's odd, because the issues they raise (healthcare, gun control, tax policy) are spoken about in terms that are still very much relevant today. It's only been six or so years since this season was released, but seriously, how many bigger issues do we have facing us today? Climate Change, to be sure, has grown leaps and bounds in the consciousness of mankind, but we're still rehearsing the same debates they were presenting so many years ago. One, it's a testament to how good of a show it was, but on the other hand, it's a little sad that we couldn't come to more definitive conclusions on the issues important during the waning years of Bush II.
Thursday, August 22, 2013
About the Sustainable Dude
Hi, I'm Robert, the editor-in-chief, blogger-in-chief, and really, the main guy behind the curtain at dudesustainable.com. I decided, as a diversion (and because I love blogging so much) that I would start my own personal blog. Hence, sustainable dude. Because it's different from Dude, Sustainable! Or is it?
Come visit our parent site, Dude, Sustainable! We blog about green issues and topics in sustainability. The environment, global warming and online colleges who offer degrees in sustainability! Here's what's trending now!Green living and green blogging. This is the most important thing we do! We specialize in bringing together environmentalists and social network users to share their message and network with their friends, family and colleagues on important issues! Why? Because the green movement was born of organization, and the internet has a capacity to dramatically amplify our message, but it's also atomized us to an extent. Name one environmental site with the reach of a CNN or Fox News. You can't. You can only name the thousands to hundreds of thousands of independent bloggers plugging away. Let's take a page from someone who once said, "Workers of the World Unite!" and become "Environmentalists of the World Wide Web, Unite!"
Build Your Own Greenhouse! We love to blog about gardening. We have a very special post, my own personal experience with building my own greenhouse. Helps you garden year-round, and best of all, live a sustainable life! Why? Because you should care about where your food comes from, and if it comes from your back yard, then you know exactly where it came from, how it was grown, and significantly, what's in it!
Strawberry - Inspired by an NPR story, we'd like to start hunting down heirloom fruits, starting with the little-known heirloom strawberry! Why the strawberry? Because it's delicious, that's why!
Go Green at home, on the road and everywhere you go! Use this guide to going green, our "Easy steps to go green" resource page to structure your life around sustainable practices. We're going to transform those articles into e-books within a matter of a few weeks, so stay tuned and open your wallets a little to support our cause!
Be Green with our sustainable living resources page. So my site isn't for you? These ones certainly will be! The best environmental blogs and news sites out there, green living blogs, government resources and fun things to do! Come check it out!
We'd love to have you visit Dude, Sustainable! Just one click away!