1. A HAGUE SENSE OF UNEASE A feeling of resignation seems to be spreading through the climate change talks now entering their second week in The Hague, Netherlands, as if the rest of the world has begun to concede that efforts to curb global warming will be watered down by the U.S, writes Bill McKibben from The Hague in Grist. American negotiators are looking for ways to get the Kyoto treaty on climate change ratified in the U.S. Senate -- and that means making it as painless as possible for the U.S. to cut its greenhouse gas emissions. Thousands of demonstrators outside the negotiating sessions are protesting the U.S. position, and some world leaders such as the French President Jacques Chirac have urged the U.S., which releases about a third of the world's greenhouse gases, to take the lead on making sharp domestic emissions cuts. But so far the protests seem to be falling on deaf ears. Would a watered-down Kyoto treaty be better than no treaty at all? Read more on the Grist Magazine website. read it only in Grist Magazine: On-the-scene reporting from The Hague -- by Bill McKibben <http://www.gristmagazine.com/grist/maindish/mckibben112000.stm> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - For SC email list T-and-C, send: GET TERMS-AND-CONDITIONS.CURRENT to [log in to unmask]