14 research outputs found

    Tax Shift: How to Help the Economy, Improve the Environment, and Get the Tax Man off Our Backs

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    In the other Washington, there's always talk of scrapping the federal tax code. It's no mystery why. The Internal Revenue Code runs to 7.5 million words and occupies, with regulations, one and one-half feet of shelf space. But complexity is not the worst fault of taxdom. The biggest and least-discussed problem is this: We tax the wrong things. Mostly, we tax things we want more of, such as paychecks and enterprise, not things we want less of, such as pollution and resource depletion. Naturally, we get less money and more messes. Doing the opposite would yield double dividends: cleaner air and flusher bank accounts. "Tax Shift" is a blueprint for a revolt that would get taxes off our backs and onto our side

    The Car and the City: 24 Steps to Safe Streets and Healthy Communities

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    Many people recognize that the increasing number of automobiles is choking our cities--polluting our air, endangering our streets, and isolating us from our communities. This book shows how resurgent cities could make cars work again, and even solve problems ranging from oil wars to urban decay, rising seas to violent crime. Not just an analytic approach to economic and environmental urban concerns, The Car and the City is an offbeat journey through three great metropolises. Seattle, Portland, and Vancouver--by car, train, bicycle, and foot. It's a fascinating conversation with people who are quietly, but radically, rearranging the furniture of the modern city

    Green Collar Jobs: Working in the New Northwest

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    The typical job in the Pacific Northwest is gentler to nature than at any time in decades, thanks to the region's swift uncoupling from timber, mining, and other resource industries. But while jobs are greener, this new economy has a dark side: the gap between rich and poor has widened, and rising consumption is eroding the region's environmental gains. From Ketchikan, AK to Bend, OR to Boonville, CA, the question resonates: If we do what's right for the environment, what is everyone going to do for a living? Green-Collar Jobs takes a close look at timber towns in the Northwest--ground zero in the perceived battle between jobs and the environment

    Misplaced Blame: The Real Roots of Population Growth

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    Misplaced Blame argues that much of the population growth overrunning parts of North America originates from five rarely noted root causes: poverty, sexual abuse, underfunded family planning services, subsidies to domestic migration, and ill-guided immigration policy. Along the way, Misplaced Blame uncovers one revelation after another. Some examples: - The population of the Pacific Northwest is increasing almost 50 percent faster than global population. - 83 percent of American teen mothers come from poor families. - 62 percent of teen mothers have been raped or molested as children. - 36 percent of babies born in the Northwest are conceived by accident. - Long-distance moving is subsidized by taxpayers. - Excessively high national immigration quotas hurt both the North American poor and immigrants' home countries. Read Misplaced Blame and you'll see that when we take care of people, population growth will take care of itself

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