The Chicago Tribune went out into the Chicagoland area (which is what they call, you know, the area around Chicago) to find the Chicagoan with the lowest carbon footprint, and they came up with Ken Dunn, a 65-year old who is so green his carbon footprint is only about ten percent that of your average American.
Let’s go down the list of what makes Dunn such a lean green fighting machine, minus the fighting. And the machine. But the article litearlly does call him “very lean” and “green.” So anyway.
He rides a bike instead of driving. He air-dries all his clothes. He grows his own vegetables. He heats his home with a wood-burning furnace. He eats expired and discarded food he gets from his job as a recycler.
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Japan is launching an ambitiously green scheme to get companies to start putting carbon footprint labels on their products in an effort to inspire producers and consumers to lower their CO2 emissions. The labels will appear on a variety of products including food packaging, electrical appliances, and even detergent.
I know that, throughout the ages, there has been one question that has plagued us, and given us a mind puzzle, an awesome mind puzzle, that we may never unravel: did the characters in 

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