2006
Announcing Project Bridge the Gap- Crashing the Gate, December 18, 2006
Envagelical Christianity Preaching Environmentalism
George Lakoff: Building on the Progressive Victory. December 13, 2006
"Blue Planet Award" to be given to Chelsea Green author Diane Wilson
Queens Ledger Reports on, "Green Brooklyn Conference" November 16, 2006
Seattlepi.com Election Commentary
War Crimes Filed Against Donald Rumsfeld, November 9
Hunger Strike Against Texas Coal, November 3
Hunger Strike, November 2, 2006
God's Green Earth, October 29, 2006
Lakoff: Staying the Course Right Over a Cliff, October 27, 2006
Bioneers Conferences 2006
NY Times: Bioneers Conference, October 24, 2006
Folks, it's time to pray, October 18, 2006
The Vegetable-Industrial Complex, October 15, 2006
Lakoff: A Call for Progressive Unity, October 12, 2006
Markos Moulitsas Profile, October 4, 2006
NY Times on Artisan Cheese, October 4, 2006
Confessions of an Apple Snob, October 1, 2006
Keep the Great Writ Alive, September 26, 2006
Peter Laufer Testifies on Capitol Hill, September 26, 2006
CGP adds Kids' Imprint, September 25, 2006
Faith and Environmentalism, September 20, 2006
Michael Ratner on Democracy Now, September 19, 2006
Wilson Plans for Peace Day, September 19, 2006
The Gospel of Green, September 19, 2006
King Filthy Rat Bastard Speaks, September 13, 2006
Community Renewable Energy, September 11, 2006
Lakoff: Drop War Metaphor, September 11, 2006
Slow Food Nation, September 9, 2006
Rummy Scores, September 2, 2006
Katrina One Year Later, August 28, 2006
Laufer: Wouldn't Catch me Dead in Iraq, August 27, 2006
Laufer: And Now They Send More, August 23, 2006
First Responder, August 17, 2006
Laufer: Not Shooting Our Heros, August 17, 2006
GI Resistance Grows, August 17, 2006
Gene-Altered Crops Denounced, August 16, 2006
Zero-Waste Publishing, August 14, 2006
A Spirit Renewed, August 13, 2006
Laufer: Soldiers No One's Counting, August 11, 2006
Where the Bombs Fell, August 11, 2006
Chelsea Green Crashes 'Crashing', August 10, 2006
Fasters Meet Iraqi Parliament, August 10, 2006
Beirut, August 10, 2006
Iraq Is Dying, August 9, 2006
Laufer: U.S. Army Theme Park, August 9, 2006
The Road to Beirut, August 7, 2006
Glasnost for the U.S., August 7, 2006
Diane Wilson Meets Iraqi Parliament, August 6, 2006
Thousands Refuse to Fight, August 5, 2006
Laufer: Let the Soldiers Testify, August 4, 2006
A Letter from Diane Wilson, August 2, 2006
Hunger Strikers to Break Fast, August 1, 2006
Fasters to Meet with Iraqi Parliament, August 1, 2006
Laufer: What If They Say No?, July 31, 2006
Publishing for the Green Lifestyle, July 31, 2004
Sleeth: God Vital to Saving Earth, July 29, 2006
Diane Wilson Arrested, July 29, 2006
Laufer: O'Reilly and Me, July 28, 2006
Laufer: The Citizen Draft, July 26, 2006
Laufer: Deseter Pushes the Envelope, July 24, 2006
Laufer: Damage Behind the Damage, July 24, 2006
Minimum Wage War, July 24, 2006
Fasting in Protest, July 20, 2006
Ratner Fights Bush & Co., July 19, 2005
Laufer: Assume Mic Is On, July 18, 2006
IRS: Some Churches too Political, July 18, 2006
George Lakoff's Freedom Frame, July 18, 2006
Going Green, July 17, 2006
Christians and Climate Change, July 16, 2006
Food Not Lawns, July 13, 2006
Soil Vs. Oil, July 12, 2006
Michael Ratner on Guantanamo Ruling, July 12, 2006
Wilson: Day 9, July 12, 2006
Geneva Rights Apply, July 11, 2006
Wilson on Hunger Strike, July 7, 2006
An American in Berlin, July 6, 2006
Wilson: Day 2, July 5, 2006
An Inconvenient Truth About Iraq, July 5, 2006
Fasting for Peace, July 3, 2006
The Politics of Language, July 1, 2006
High Court Blocks Guantanamo Tribulans, June 29, 2006
Bush's Baghdad Is No Budapest, June 28, 2006
Bring the Troops Home Fast, June 27, 2006
Bush Is Not Incompetent, June 26, 2006
White House Plans to Gut Protections, June 25, 2006
A Call for Impeachment, June 25, 2006
International Conference on Peak Oil, June 23, 2006
The Poverty Draft, June 23, 2006
Rot Runs Deep, June 22, 2006
Lt. Watada Refuses Orders, June 22, 2006
More Soldiers Resist Deployment, June 21, 2006
Ratner named to elite list, June 19, 2006
US Hid Guantanamo Suicides, June 18, 2006
Lt. Ehren Watada, June 18, 2006
A Father Speaks Out, June 17, 2006
LA Farms Plowed Under, June 16, 2006
YearlyKos Convention, June 14, 2006
Trust: Core Principle of Progressives, June 13, 2004
Silencing Gutenberg? June 11, 2006
Framing Vs. Spin, June 9, 2006
YearlyKos Keynote, June 9, 2006
Spilling the Beans, June 5, 2006
Mass Natural, June 4, 2006
The Moon of Making Fat, June 1, 2006
Hunger Strike for Peace, May 26, 2006
Framing Immigration, May 22, 2006
CGP Authors Wow DC Crowd, May 19, 2006
South Africa and China, May 16, 2006
Energy Crash, May 10, 2006
Kos: Hillary too much of Clinton Dem, May 7, 2006
The New Milk Moon, May 1, 2006
Shortchanging Wounded Veterans, April 27 2006
No Bar Code, April 26, 2006
Community Supported Agriculture, April 13, 2006
Fasting for Bhopal Victims, April 12, 2006
Crash Campaign, April 6, 2006
Lawsuit Filed Against Formosa Plastics, March 31, 2006
Chelsea Green's National Impact, March 15, 2006
Good Fats in Grass-Fed Beef, March 7, 2006
Impeaching Bush, March 6, 2006
Indie Publishers, March 6, 2006
The Soldiers Speak, February, 28, 2006
What Is Wrong with Progressives, January 28, 2006
Chelsea Green Banks Left, January 23, 2006
The New Red, White and Blue, January 6, 2006
Gaia Matters: review of Animate Earth, Dec. 2006
Special Offers

NY Times: Bioneers Conference, October 24, 2006

At This Gathering, the Only Alternative Is to Be Alternative

The New York Times
By Patricia leigh Brown
October 24, 2006

SAN RAFAEL, Calif., Oct. 21 — Along with Santa Ana winds and ripe persimmons, fall here brings with it a migratory phenomenon known as the Bioneers, a three-day pep rally for environmentalists, lefty political activists and young people with “Renewable Energy Is Homeland Security” bumper stickers that transforms the Marin Civic Center into something of a megachurch for the Prius set.

For some 3,200 true believers, and about 10,000 others who were beamed in by satellite from simultaneous conferences in Logan, Utah; Honolulu; and other far-flung places, the Bioneers is part tribal gathering and part support group, encouraging adherents to connect with their inner Al Gore. (The name is a play on biodiversity and pioneers.)

Students, organic farmers, architects, advocates for Pacific dolphins and a growing number of entrepreneurs looking to invest in green technology come to hear the latest thinking on global warming (code word: Katrina) and how to keep the food supply safe (buzzword: spinach). Alternative energy, Bioremediation and environmental justice, once-fringy issues, have over the course of the conference’s 17-year history become part of the national dialogue.

“It’s biology as a metaphor for social change,” said Paul Hawken, an author and a founder of Smith & Hawken, the outdoor supply company. Mr. Hawken double-dipped, speaking at a satellite conference in Marion, Mass., then flying back to Marin. “It’s a parallel universe,” he said.

It’s a universe unto its own, all right. Paul E. Stamets, a mycologist and the founder of Fungi Perfecti, a mail-order mushroom business, lectured on “myco-remediation,” or using fungi to restore toxic waste sites. Mr. Stamets also announced a patent for a household pesticide that uses the mold state of the Cordyceps mushroom to kill 100,000 to 200,000 species of insects — a new eco-spin on the old Roach Motel.

Mr. Stamets shared the stage with Jay Harman, a naturalist who is now the chief executive of Pax Scientific, an engineering company rooted in “biomimicry,” a fledgling science that takes its inspiration from nature’s designs and processes.

Mr. Harman showed a small device capable of circulating five million gallons of water, using only a light bulb’s worth of electricity. “It’s all about flow,” he said, adding that the technology could be applied to aircraft, fans, pumps and water circulators for reservoirs.

Activists talking about the environmental exploitation of native lands for oil and gas development — or what Clayton Thomas-Muller, a Canadian organizer for the Indigenous Environmental Network, called “energy genocide” — communed with vendors from the Elixir Café who were doling out $2 hits of Lavender Bliss, a viscous purple liquid billed as a decongestant for “blocked energy.”

The conference is the brainchild of Kenny Ausubel, a 57-year-old writer and filmmaker who was co-founder of the organic seed company Seeds of Change, and Nina Simons, the former president of the company and a former marketing director for Odwalla. Since 1990, they have operated from an old schoolhouse in Lamy, N.M., outside Santa Fe. They credit their experience with Seeds of Change, since sold, with convincing them that a fledgling political movement could be forged from issues like sustainable agriculture and green technology — fields, Mr. Ausubel said, “that in 1990 were like talking about U.F.O.’s.”

Since then, the culture has in some ways caught up. For instance, Mr. Ausubel has been an adviser to the actor Leonardo DiCaprio, whose coming feature-length documentary on global warming, “The 11th Hour,” was filmed extensively at last year’s Bioneers conference.

“The issues they were raising a decade ago, from local food to rooftop power, have moved into the mainstream,” said Bill McKibben, a writer who spoke at last year’s conference. “The Bioneers has been consistently ahead of the curve. It began as a gathering place for a fairly small number of like-minded people but is now a hatchery for the next wave of important ideas that five years hence people will be talking about in Rotary Clubs.”

The ground troops of the environmental movement, Mr. Harman said, “are not business-savvy — they want to make a difference but don’t know how to do it.”

So they came to learn sophisticated tactics from people like Tzeporah Berman, the program director of ForestEthics, a nonprofit organization founded in 1994 to protect endangered forests. It successfully pressured Office Depot and Staples to phase out supply paper made from endangered old-growth forests and persuaded Ikea not to use wood from the temperate rain forest now known as Great Bear, in British Columbia.

John Maus, a 67-year-old contractor from Littleton, Colo., who builds Starbucks stores — which he defended as “meeting places” — came to the conference for the latest intelligence on green building. “The industry is slow to change and uses huge amounts of natural resources,” Mr. Maus said. “We need to develop a conscience.”

Despite its mantra of biodiversity, the conclave can sometimes feel a bit like a monoculture, a love-fest between graying activists and youthful idealists with blond dreadlocks and veggie-fueled cars, most of them Caucasian. “It’s a conference of privilege,” said Brennan Manoakeesick, 28, an Oji-cree from Winnipeg who is working with low-income neighborhoods. “We’re here to provide a context, to give face to the faceless.”

William Casey, an eye surgeon and olive grower from St. Helena in the Napa Valley, stood out in a button-down shirt. He came with his wife, Rachel, to keep tabs on the latest trends in integrative pest management. Inspired by last year’s Bioneers, they put up songbird houses and added carnivorous plants to their olive groves to control the olive fruit fly. South African guinea fowl now roam the premises destroying larvae.

“We get tremendous energy from it,” Mr. Casey said of the gathering. “It’s like the Big Bang.”