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Our aim is to educate, inform and inspire individuals to consider the environmental impact of their decisions and how good earth stewardship at the family, community, county, state and federal levels can ensure a future where humans, animals, and other biodiversity thrive.

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  • Wooldridge Delivers the Overpopulation Message for the 21st Century – Will We Listen this Time? Wooldridge Delivers the Overpopulation Message for the 21st Century – Will We Listen this Time?
    As soon as the reader digs into Frosty Wooldridge’s “America’s Overpopulation Predicament: Blindsiding Future Generations,” s/he is hit with a staggering amount of stats on issues that, unless one lives in media isolation, should be somewhat familiar – peak oil, species/biodiversity extinction, consumption, pollution and the underpinning escalating all these crises, too many people. In ...
  • The American Southwest: Twice the people, half the water? The American Southwest: Twice the people, half the water?
    Colorado River Showing reservoirs, including iconic Lake Mead at Hoover Dam, shrunk to a fraction of their intended size, national news media is reporting that the American Southwest is in the worst 20-year drought in 1,200 years. Yet, no one asked why President Biden is hellbent on increasing immigration – which has exploded the U.S. population by ...
  • Calif. Gov., Feds Agree on Wildfire Management Plan Calif. Gov., Feds Agree on Wildfire Management Plan
      Two years ago, California’s Little Hoover Commission warned that unless the state took immediate streps to limit wildfire probabilities, death and destruction were a near-certainty. The Little Hoover Commission, created in 1962, is an independent California state oversight agency modeled after the Hoover Commission – President Herbert, not FBI director J. Edgar – that investigates ...
  • Newsom and the Internal Combustion Engine Ban Newsom and the Internal Combustion Engine Ban
    About a decade ago , as I was reading Jared Diamond’s “Collapse,” the questions most prominent in my mind were: How did entire societies of human beings continue over-consuming until they died? Why did a change to a more moderate lifestyle never take hold?” Of course these questions are the stuff that keeps thinking people up ...
  • America’s West Coast is on Fire America’s West Coast is on Fire
    The forests and chaparral of California, Oregon and Washington are on fire. Our Brilliant-in-Dogma governors have declared this is due to Global Warming. It isn’t. It’s due to bad policy. It used to be that state governments allowed proscribed burns and timber harvest of dead trees. These were not ideas borne of European Imperialism or Capitalism ...
  • More Americans = Less Wilderness More Americans = Less Wilderness
    For decades, federal immigration laws have been a hot-button issue. Nearly 55 years ago, on October 3, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965. Although few could have imagined it at the time, the ensuing decades would be rife with contentious debates about immigration and its impact on U.S. society. Both ...
  • Overpopulation Sparks Calif. Wildfires Overpopulation Sparks Calif. Wildfires
    California is once again in the news. As always, bad news puts the state’s latest crisis above the daily newspaper’s fold. Instead of stories about homelessness throughout the state, particularly acute in San Francisco and Los Angeles, or Gov. Gavin Newsom’s mandated COVID-19 shutdown that affects most of California, this time the headlines screech about ...
  • World Population Nears 8 Billion World Population Nears 8 Billion
      World Population Day, created by the United Nations “to focus attention on the urgency and importance of population issues,” came and passed this month. The top news results in a quick Google search on the day were all from India. And as the weekend passed, there was barely any acknowledgement in the United States of ...
  • Celebrate the 50th Anniversary of Earth Day Virtually
    With much of the U.S. on lockdown due to the coronavirus pandemic, the momentous physical celebration planned to celebrate the 50th Anniversary of Earth Day and the start of the national movement to promote environmental protection has gone virtual.
  • Practice the Five Rs to Lower U.S. Carbon Footprint Practice the Five Rs to Lower U.S. Carbon Footprint
    For the first time in decades, Americans living in the nation’s major urban areas have a sense of what less populated metropolises could be like. Coronavirus has led to nationwide stay-at-home orders which in turn have spawned empty streets, ample parking, less crowded public transportation and cleaner air.
  • Hawaii’s Earth Day Challenge: Balance Tourism with Environmental Practices Hawaii’s Earth Day Challenge: Balance Tourism with Environmental Practices
    Having just spent the better part of three months in Hawaii, I found the state doing what it can to encourage environmentally sound practices. There are numerous organizations working to protect native plants, animals, ecosystems and cultural sites. Effective July 2018, the Department of Environmental Services imposed a 15-cent per recyclable bag fee that retailers ...
  • We could put everyone in the world in an area the size of Texas, but they would be dead within a week We could   put everyone in the world in an area the size of Texas, but they would be dead within a week
    “If every member of the United States lived in an area with the population density of Brooklyn, New York, all 327 million of us could fit into New Hampshire,” wrote Jennifer Wright in a recent article in Harper’s Bazaar. (The current U.S. population actually is 330 million.) Similar nonsensical pieces have made similar claims – everyone ...
  • Human Vs. Wildlife On Planet Earth Human Vs. Wildlife On Planet Earth
  • Elon Musk Might Be Right About a Global Population Collapse, But for the Wrong Reason Elon Musk Might Be Right About a Global Population Collapse, But for the Wrong Reason
    For some time, Tesla CEO Elon Musk has been using his ample platform to sound off about population: not the world’s continuing, disastrous human population boom, but what he foresees as an impending population collapse. At a time when the Earth continues to add more than 80 million people annually – year in, year out – ...
  • What is the Greatest Threat to Endangered Species? Hint: It’s Not Trump’s New Rules What is the Greatest Threat to Endangered Species? Hint: It’s Not Trump’s New Rules
    The Trump administration is about to implement new rules that it claims will “modernize” and “improve” the Endangered Species Act (ESA). All too predictably, certain industries in Trump’s favor approve of this imminent overhaul, while environmentalists are in an uproar. Yet neither the Trump administration nor its most vociferous environmental critics is willing to address or ...
  • World Population Day 2019 World Population Day 2019
    Made with Visme Infographic Maker
  • IFSPP @ EarthX 2019 IFSPP @ EarthX 2019
    As in prior years, IFSPP had the opportunity to participate in EarthX 2019, in Dallas, TX. Attendance at our booth was high and the staff was busy answer questions from wanting to learn more about the connection between population, immigration, and the environment. As you will see, EarthX is chock-full of events, exhibitions, and opportunities ...
  • Earth Day 2019: Since Neil Armstrong Walked on the Moon Population Doubled Earth Day 2019: Since Neil Armstrong Walked on the Moon Population Doubled
    Fifty years ago, in 1969 when astronaut Neil Armstrong became the first person to walk on the moon, the world’s population was 3.6 billion; in 2019, it’s 7.7 billion. A half a century ago, the U.S. population stood at 208 million; today, it’s 329 million and growing at the unsustainable rate of one net person ...
  • We Are Scheduled to Attend EarthX in Dallas
    DALLAS (April 21, 2019) – Increasing awareness of damage done to the environment by human impact in the 20th century, spurred by works such as Rachel Carson’s “Silent Spring” in 1962 and Paul and Anne Ehrlich’s “The Population Bomb,” along with the 1969 Cuyahoga River fire in Ohio and a huge oil spill off the ...
  • The Green New Deal – Line By Line The Green New Deal - Line By Line
    Steven Lamb and Kevin Lynn separate fact from fiction with regard to House Resolution 109 – The New Green Deal