The Limits of Neuro-Talk – The New Atlantis https://t.co/wTOgeNcu7H
— Root Simple (@rootsimple) September 20, 2018
When the last tree Is cut down
the last fish eaten
and the last stream poisonedYou will realize that you cannot eat bitcoinhttps://t.co/shrn6PSEQ8
— Peter Kalmus (@ClimateHuman) September 19, 2018
“The automobile city is the anti-city which annihilates the city wherever it collides with it.”—Lewis Mumford, The City in History. pic.twitter.com/huBKAcenIm
— Taras Grescoe (@grescoe) September 17, 2018
Walking and biking will lower emissions faster, yet mayors keep pushing electric vehicles as a climate change solution. My report from #GCAS2018 https://t.co/pD1Ar2GjFr pic.twitter.com/W2AyBucTRU
— Alissa Walker (@awalkerinLA) September 18, 2018
Methodist Urbanism: Ocean Grove https://t.co/Pqbp0HRNQk via @wordpressdotcom
— Root Simple (@rootsimple) September 22, 2018
On the Dissing of “Ornamental Plants” https://t.co/3iLS4cd9cq via @Garden Rant
— Root Simple (@rootsimple) September 22, 2018
From the Head https://t.co/7ZRVQuVfbh via @rudemechanic
— Root Simple (@rootsimple) September 22, 2018
To make a coiled basket of plastic you can use a simple technique found all over the world. You will need a lot of plastic bags, some sort of plastic string and a crochet hook. #diy #plastic #bags #recycled #upcycled #instructions #croche https://t.co/pM8X2D3bEa via @iRecyclart
— Root Simple (@rootsimple) September 22, 2018
As Animal-Assisted Therapy Thrives, Enter the Cats https://t.co/Fz72h8w6vl
— Root Simple (@rootsimple) September 22, 2018
Weekend Plan
[Abbeville, MS 16, 15th c.] pic.twitter.com/FdGL9oROG7— Damien Kempf (@DamienKempf) September 22, 2018
Support Root Simple
One Part Plant: A Simple Guide to Eating Real, One Meal at a Time. In One Part Plant, Jessica has a friendly request: that you eat just one meal plant-based meal each day. There’s no crazy diet plan with an anxiety-inducing list of forbidden foods. Or pages filled with unattainable goals based on an eating philosophy that leaves you feeling hungry and deprived. Instead, Jessica offers you the tools to easily and deliciously make plants the star of your plate—no matter how much junk food occupies it now.