
Melissa Goldberg is the mother of two young boys and lives in New York/New Jersey metropolitan area. She is a committed environmentalist, who has decided to change her life and her community by changing the way she lives.
Melissa has her graduate degree in energy and environmental studies from Boston University and has spent the last 20 years of her life learning to become an effective communicator and advocate. Her passions run towards family, food and fitness. She is new to "blogging" but has been thinking about, talking about and acting on environmental and food issues for her entire adult life. A Greeniac¹s World is her stand, her statements about what she is learning and doing to make her family¹s world a better one.
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by Melissa Goldberg
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Thursday, 15 May 2008 |
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My husband and I are not big drinkers but recently we both wanted a beer. In trying to make our home, and lives, greener we decided to try an organic beer. On a recommendation from a Whole Foods employee, we bought Peaks Organic Amber Ale. The beer was tasty and a great alternative to our favorite non-organic beer Sam Adams. |
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Last Updated ( Thursday, 15 May 2008 )
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by Melissa Goldberg
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Monday, 12 May 2008 |
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So I think I have used up my allotment of fossil fuels for at least the remainder of this year or more likely the next decade. Why? My husband surprised me with a birthday trip to Paris last weekend. |
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Last Updated ( Monday, 12 May 2008 )
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by Melissa Goldberg
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Thursday, 01 May 2008 |
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We have a guest blogger today, Shannon Hayes, a sustainable farmer in Upstate New York, who I wrote about a couple weeks back in my post entitled "Grass-Fed Meat." Shannon has a wealth of information on today's food issues and I thought you all might enjoy what she has to say about global warming, eating meat and the importance of the local farm movement. I hope you find it has informative and timely as I did. |
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Last Updated ( Thursday, 01 May 2008 )
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by Melissa Goldberg
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Tuesday, 29 April 2008 |
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Corn: it makes us fat, makes our cows sick, degrades our land and now it is causing a food crisis. How can one crop cause both obesity and starvation? Can a plant be evil?
Well, as we all know, and I as I wrote about in my " King Corn" post, corn is the basic building block of most of our food. But with mountains of corn, all that processed food and high fructose corn syrup, how can there be global a food crisis? Think about this, there are people RIOTING in the streets because there is not enough food to eat!
(pump image by Kiichiro Sato, AP) |
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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 30 April 2008 )
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by Melissa Goldberg
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Thursday, 24 April 2008 |
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I was watching Real Time with Bill Maher the other night with my husband, and the hot discussion was global warming. Bill and his guests were talking about how the current adminstation has done nothing. Basically addressing global warming has been put on hold because Bush wants the next President to make the hard choices required to deal with it. Richard Clarke, the counter terrorism czar, was on the panel and he said something that really stuck in my head. |
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Last Updated ( Thursday, 24 April 2008 )
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