Deceleration Founder/Managing Editor Greg Harman is an independent journalist who has written about environmental health and justice issues since the late 1990s.
Progress under Obama had been marginal, but the shock of this moment offers us a possible ‘slingshot.’
Tom Athanasiou/EcoEquity
Trump’s election was a catastrophe. Coming on top of
Detail of Liza Donovan’s Women’s March poster. More available for free download at the Amplifier Foundation.
More than 600 marches are set to take place in 57 countries.
Lease agreement with U.S. General Services Administration prohibits closing access.
The Trump International Hotel in Washington has banned the press from its premises for inauguration week, Politico reports Wednesday.
Here’s a unique way of organizing in resistance to the incoming administration.
Via Paige West and JC Salyer
In the wake of the 2016 US presidential election scholars across
EDITOR’S NOTE: In the late 1990’s, I started writing about social and environmental justice in West Texas. Sure, there were the livestock shows, balloon festivals, prison deaths, and
But That’s No Reason Not to Fight Oil & Gas Development on Both Sides of the Rio Grande.
Trampling of landowner rights. Failure to consult native tribes. Soiling a
How did we just elect the most unqualified man to the presidency?
Donald Trump proved (again) this week that he is totally uninterested—or, worse, incapable of—representing all America.
Zuckerberg’s problem is more complicated than fake news
R. Kelly Garrett
In the wake of Donald Trump’s unexpected victory, many questions have been raised about Facebook’s role
How the international community is failing to protect the Rohingya people
Ashraful Azad
Via Open Democracy
At this moment, a genocide is happening in Myanmar of which most of the
Consistently, one of the most trafficked pages on Deceleration is a reprint of an article I wrote about the poisoning of the people of Gulfport, Miss., by Agent Orange chemicals
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KQABdYYILno&w=560&h=315]
Dozens of self-described water protectors flooded a construction site in Far West Texas this morning, shutting