Articles by Corey McKrill
Corey is a freelance web designer and Grist alumnus.
All Articles
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Polar bears
As if it wasn't enough that the huge reduction in the polar ice cap has caused polar bears to drown at an alarming rate, now tourists can pay to shoot them in Greenland.
Binky, polar bear of tourist chewing fame at the Anchorage Zoo, was just getting in his last licks while he still could ...
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Drilling in ANWR will hurt the environment! No it won’t! Yes it … *yawn*
A while back I filled out the little form for NRDC's letter-writing campaign to save the Arctic Refuge. It sends a message to your Congressman, urging them oppose oil and gas development in the region. It's probably the tenth one of those things I've submitted regarding the refuge. (It's so easy; just type in your email and click "send." No thought involved.) I often question the usefulness of online campaigns and the implications of such mindless "citizen participation," but that's probably a subject for another post. Point here is, today I received a response from my representative, one Mr. Don "They can kiss my ear" Young (R - Alaska). Full contents of letter below the fold.
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Pharmaceuticals may be saving species
You may have heard that measurable levels of pharmaceuticals have been turning up in water supplies, causing concern about the potential effects on wildlife. But did you hear that they may also help preserve endangered species?
As noted today on Green Media, a recent study shows that, in China at least, widespread availability of Viagra-type drugs has decreased the demand for endangered animal body parts used to treat erectile dysfunction in traditional Chinese medicine. In all, the study names eight animals that stand to benefit from this trend, including seals and green sea turtles.
Sadly, tigers and rhinos are not on the list, because their body parts are used in the treatment of many, many other ailments.
Clearly Pfizer needs to come out with pills to address these other disorders, so that other endangered species can be saved as well. Maybe they could combine effects into one pill, depending on which animals' parts are usually used:
Got arthritis? Suffer from insomnia? Ulcers, rheumatism, epilepsy, hemorrhoids, skin disease? Tooth ache, fever, acne? Alcoholic? Try our little orange-and-black striped pill! It's grrrreat!
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Review of car safety and gas mileage somehow fails to include hybrids
CNN's Gas Gripes page includes a link to a review of "safe" cars that "save on gas." The "safe" label is based on the results of side crash tests, and the article assumes 27.5 mpg on the highway to be "reasonably good." Somehow, neither article includes the word "hybrid" anywhere in it...