In his interview with two 30-something environmentalists who have challenged the movement's status quo, Contributing Editor Adam Werbach asks if the baby boomers are to blame for the sad state of affairs. "What should these leaders do now?" he asks. "Die?" No blood need be [RETURN TO ARTICLE]
FOLLOW US
Also by Jessica Clark
-
The New Cartographers
What does it mean to map everything all the time?
MORE » -
iPower to the People
The perils and promise of point-and-click politics
MORE » -
Blogs Up, Hacks Down
The appearance of seven Democratic presidential contenders at the YearlyKos convention demonstrated that the Kossacks and fellow A-listers--along with what the Liberal Blog Advertising Network calls their 3 million daily readers--are now ensconced as political players
MORE »
SUPPORT INDEPENDENT MEDIA
Invest in the news you need. In These Times is a nonprofit, reader-supported magazine and website.
subscribe today for $19.95!
SAVE 53% OFFTHE NEWSSTAND PRICE!
MOST READ
- Why Conservatives Can’t Fix Poverty
- The Girl’s Guide to Staying Safe Online
- Siri and the High-Tech Gender Gap
- It’s the Stupid Republicans, Stupid
- True Crime Finance Stories
- Is the Federal Government Helping to Bust Unions?
- Anger Sowing Seeds of a New Consumer Movement
- What Can Labor Learn?
- Marching Off the Cliff
- New Eden, Old Devils

Reader Comments
Was there anything actually being said in this article? Lots of labels being thrown around, but what are you supposed to take home from this? A bunch of labels?
And as for the working class, what would the working class do with this article—or most of this magazine, for that matter?
register a new account »Posting Security