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Photos by Andre Lambertson A journey deep into Brazil’s brutal and lawless interior, where tens of thousands of men are still enslaved – and where any attempt to escape ends in an unmarked grave. Rolling Stone, 8 Sept. 2005. |
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| The Farmer Goes to
Sea
Forty feet below the surface and two miles offshore of Oahu, Hawaii, one hundred thousand fish swim in a cage the size of a four-story building. Is Open Ocean Aquaculture the hope of the future for a protein-hunger planet, as supporters claim? Or is it the unsustainable, ecocatastrophe-in-waiting that opponents maintain? The definitive answer is: it depends. Popular Science, April 2006. |
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| Hung
Out to Dry: Toxic Gumbo For All
Everyone knows the floodwaters in New Orleans were dangerous. What they don't know is that their own local waters are probably in bad shape, too. Grist, 11 October 2005. |
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The White House is trying to achieve what Ronald Reagan only dreamed of: revoking the basic rules protecting workers, consumers and the environment. Rolling Stone, 5 May 2005. |
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| Contract
to Torture
A rare look at the entire Abu Ghraib report reveals that inexperienced, under-supervised private-sector employees actively took part in prisoner abuse. Salon, 9 August 2004. (View as pdf file) |
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The Secret Files of Abu Ghraib New evidence obtained by the author provides insight into the abuse and torture of detainees at the Iraqi prison. Rolling Stone, August 2004. (The 106 files that served as a foundation for this article were turned over to the Center for Public Integrity, and can be viewed on their Website.) |
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| A Wrong Turn in the Desert
The story of Pfc. Lori Ann Piestewa, killed in Iraq, the first Native American woman to die in combat on foreign soil. Rolling Stone, 27 May 2004. |
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| The
Alaska Chainsaw Massacre
Plundering the Tongass National Forest. Rolling Stone, 5 February 2004. |
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| Dirty
Secrets
Bush's stealth attack on the environment. Mother Jones, September/October 2003. |