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The New York Times’ Readers Want to Re-Write the Paper’s Gloomy Narrative on Population Decline

The New York Times can make a claim to be the nation’s most influential newspaper. With over 5 million subscribers, it has wide influence not only on the decisions of policymakers, but in setting cultural trends and serving as a weathervane for its readership, which skews younger than other print media. 91% of Times readers are Democrats, vs. 7% who are Republican.1
Although the paper’s famous slogan is “All the News That’s Fit to Print,” there are some perspectives which…

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New UN Report Outlines Troubled Future for the Planet

Climate Change continues to destroy our fragile planet, according to a new report from the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.  Sadly, the findings of this new report are no better than the last assessment by this panel, consisting of 195 governments.  More than 14,000 peer-reviewed studies were analyzed in order to develop the full report, according to a …

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Water Crisis in the West: One Community’s Rise to Face Water Challenges

The Effects of Summer’s Relentless Drought in Healdsburg, California In California, in the middle of wine country, there is a city named Healdsburg. With a population of 11,845, this Sonoma County community has taken new measures to ensure responsible, sustainable usage of the area’s extremely limited water supply. In a statement released by the city, they explain the urgency of …

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Don’t Call It a Crisis: The Natural Explanation Behind Collapsing Birth Rates

Americans are having far fewer children than in the past, as a recent report by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control (CDC) shows. The media has declared this a “crisis” that demands government attention. In reality, the plummeting birth rate is a natural and inevitable result of overpopulation and overcrowding. Science has already proven this. Therefore, the only correct action U.S. policymakers should take is no action whatsoever.

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National parks are overwhelmed with visitors and it’s not just affecting the parks!

June 22, 2021 National Parks and Many Small Towns Struggle with Huge Numbers of Visitors Officially organized under one umbrella with the passage of the National Park Service Organic Act, the U.S. National Park System is made up of hundreds of National Historic Sites, National Lakeshores, National Scenic Trails, and National Monuments.  Included in this system, and likely among the …

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