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Breaking Green

Breaking Green

By: Global Justice Ecology Project / Host Steve Taylor
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Produced by Global Justice Ecology Project, Breaking Green is a podcast that talks with activists and experts to examine the intertwined issues of social, ecological and economic injustice. Breaking Green also explores some of the more outrageous proposals to address climate and environmental crises that are falsely being sold as green.

But we can't do it without you! We accept no corporate sponsors, and rely on people like you to make Breaking Green possible.

If you'd like to donate, text GIVE to 716-257-4187 or donate online at: https://globaljusticeecology.org/Donate-to-Breaking-Green (select apply my donation to "Breaking Green Podcast")

© 2026 Breaking Green
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Episodes
  • AI Power Demands Are Rewriting Nuclear Safety with Peter Jones
    Jun 15 2026

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    In the face of new studies showing increased dangers of exposure to radiation, the Nuclear Regulatory Commission is proposing the repeal of a 50 year old safety regulation known as as low as Reasonably Achievable or Alara. This is being done to fast track small modular reactors. A proposed new nuclear technology, SMR reactors, are seen as a possible answer to the energy bottleneck for the expansion of data centers that feed artificial intelligence.

    SMRs would be smaller but spread out in more communities. They would be less efficient and use a more dangerous nuclear fuel. All of this is being greenwash under the banner of a so-called nuclear renaissance by big tech corporations and some supporters, who claim that it is an answer to climate change. On this episode of Breaking Green, we will speak with Peter Jones.

    Peter Jones is trained as a physicist and as a lawyer, and he is director of nuclear waste policy at the Samuel Lawrence Foundation.

    We track how the NRC’s push to weaken long-standing radiation safeguards lines up with the rush to license small modular reactors marketed as climate solutions. We connect new research on low dose radiation risk to the unresolved nuclear waste crisis and the growing demand for electricity from AI data centers.
    • Why a “nuclear renaissance” narrative is gaining traction
    • How San Onofre illustrates the problem of stranded nuclear waste
    • The missing federal repository problem and the Yucca Mountain dead end
    • How NRC staffing pressure and rushed rulemaking change the regulatory landscape
    • Why data centers and AI are reshaping energy investment and political incentives
    • What recent studies suggest about low dose ionizing radiation and cancer risk
    • Why repealing Alara shifts risk onto workers and nearby communities
    • How SMRs can be less efficient and generate more waste per unit of energy
    • Liability limits, the Price Anderson Act, and gaps for newer reactor categories
    • HALEU fuel, higher enrichment, and increased non-proliferation concerns
    • The danger of reducing security requirements while using hotter fuel
    • Why nuclear contamination is difficult to contain, clean up, and reverse

    If you're enjoying this episode of Breaking Green, please subscribe or follow wherever you get your podcasts. Consider leaving a review and sharing it with friends and colleagues. You can find the full catalog of previous episodes and sign up to have future episodes delivered straight to your inbox at breakinggreen.org.

    To learn more about Global Justice Ecology Project, visit GlobalJusticeEcology.org. Breaking Green is made possible by tax-deductible donations by people like you. Please help us lift up the voices of those working to protect forest, defend human rights, and expose all solutions. Simply text GIVE to 716 257 4187. That's 1 716 257 4187.

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    38 mins
  • Data Centers And Industrial Farming Are Fueling A Groundwater Crisis, with Kaleb Lay
    Apr 27 2026

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    We talk with Kaleb Lay from Oregon Rural Action about how people living in a rural Oregon “sacrifice zone” end up with poisoned well water, and a widening wealth gap. We explore environmentalist claims that industrial farming, combined with a rapid build-out of Amazon data centers is compounding deadly nitrate contamination while communities fight for testing, transparency, and accountability.


    • what Oregon Rural Action does across immigration justice and pollution work in Northeast Oregon
    • why the Lower Umatilla Basin is described as a sacrifice zone
    • how industrial scale agriculture drives nitrate groundwater contamination
    • what nitrate does in the body, from blue baby syndrome to links with cancers and thyroid dysfunction
    • how door to door well testing exposed widespread unsafe drinking water after decades of state inaction
    • what retaliation can look like when organizers challenge powerful industries
    • what Amazon says about liability and what a $20.5M settlement does and does not change
    • why exascale projects raise alarms on water use, electricity demand, and rate impacts
    • how transparency gaps and inflated job numbers shape local decision making
    • why PFAS testing and disclosure matter for data center waste streams

    Kaleb Lay is a fifth-generation eastern Oregonian and former journalist who now serves as Director of Policy & Research with Oregon Rural Action, a nonprofit organization that works with frontline communities in rural northeast Oregon. He is a leading expert in pollution issues in Oregon’s Lower Umatilla Basin, which is both one of the most polluted places in the Pacific Northwest and one of the fastest-growing data center hubs in the United States. He’s also an avid outdoorsman, and gardener


    If you're enjoying this episode of Breaking Green, please subscribe or follow wherever you get your podcasts. Consider leaving a review and sharing it with friends and colleagues. You can find the full catalog of previous episodes and sign up to have future episodes delivered straight to your inbox at breakinggreen.org.

    To learn more about Global Justice Ecology Project, visit GlobalJusticeEcology.org. Breaking Green is made possible by tax-deductible donations by people like you. Please help us lift up the voices of those working to protect forest, defend human rights, and expose all solutions. Simply text GIVE to 716 257 4187. That's 1 716 257 4187.


    Support the show

    Show More Show Less
    39 mins
  • Armageddon Briefings: US Commanders Said Iran War to Bring Armageddon - with Jonathan Larsen
    Mar 18 2026

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    Some US service members say they were told a war with Iran wouldn’t just be strategic—it would be biblical.

    According to complaints gathered by the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, certain US commanders allegedly framed the conflict as part of God’s plan: a step toward Armageddon and the return of Jesus.

    If true, that raises urgent questions about how religious ideology may be shaping military culture—and potentially influencing decisions with global consequences.

    In this episode of Breaking Green, we speak with journalist Jonathan Larsen about what troops are reporting, why the Pentagon’s silence matters, and what this reveals about the growing influence of religious nationalism in US policy.

    On this episode:

    • Why the Pentagon didn’t deny this
    • What the Armageddon messaging looked like in a combat preparation context
    • How religious framing of war can amplify danger and widen perceived enemies
    • How end-times beliefs can influence real-world military and foreign policy decisions
    • Why corporate media rarely investigates religion’s influence on geopolitics
    • Who The Family is, how the National Prayer Breakfast fits in, and what “ministering to power” means
    • Why we should avoid conspiratorial thinking and focus on systems and incentives

    Jonathan Larsen is a veteran reporter and former executive producer at MSNBC, where he worked on shows including Up with Chris Hayes and Countdown with Keith Olbermann. He has also reported for United Press International and Al Jazeera America.

    Find more on Jonathan Larsen at: JonathanLarsen.substack.com
    thefuckingnews.substack.com

    If you’re enjoying this episode of Breaking Green, please subscribe or follow wherever you get your podcasts. The interviews heard here are often ignored by mainstream media, and without your support, these stories would not be covered. Consider leaving a review and sharing it with friends and colleagues. You can find the full catalog of previous episodes and sign up to have future episodes delivered straight to your inbox at breakinggreen.org.

    Or find us on Substack at https://gjep.substack.com

    Please help us lift up the voices of those working to protect forests, defend human rights, and expose false solutions
    Simply text Give G I V E to 1716 257 4187


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    Show More Show Less
    43 mins
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