Michael Grunwald
The Basics
- Name: Michael Grunwald
More About Me
Michael Grunwald, a senior national correspondent at Time Magazine, is the author of The Swamp: The Everglades, Florida, and the Politics of Paradise.
Michael Grunwald’s Posts
Fortune and Flame
Why the Everglades is burning, and how we sucked it dry 9
Posted 1 year, 5 months agoIt's hard to believe, now that it's been overrun by 7 million residents and 7 jillion strip malls, but southern Florida was once America's last frontier. As late as 1880, the census recorded just 257 residents in a county covering most of the region -- because most of the region was a watery wilderness called the Everglades. Mapmakers weren't sure whether to draw it as land or water. Politicians dismissed it as uninhabitable swampland. Explorers described it as a "godforsaken" and "hideous" and "abominable" morass, "suitable only for the haunt of noxious vermin, or the resort of pestilential reptiles."
Read MoreCry Me a River
Journalist Michael Grunwald on the hubris of the Army Corps 0
Posted 1 year, 7 months ago
Dam, that's a pretty lock: the sun sets behind the Corps navigation structure at Alton, Ill.Photo: Mark Hirsch
Imagine the Pentagon had been caught red-handed concocting its justification before launching the invasion of Iraq in 2003. Imagine that after the scandal died down, the Pentagon admitted Saddam didn't really have WMDs -- but proposed an even larger invasion, because there was a remote possibility things might change someday. Then imagine Congress had rewarded this logic with overwhelming… Read More
Rotten to the Corps
The Army Corps of Engineers is the real culprit behind New Orleans' devastation 9
Posted 3 years, 2 months ago
The fate of this navigation channel on the Louisiana coast, shown in 1970 (left) and 2001, offered a glimpse of things to come.
Photos: White House OMB
If an unsafe building collapsed and killed 1,000 people, we wouldn't blame the building's manager, even if he bungled his evacuation plan, or its maintenance crew, even if they had shirked their jobs before the disaster, or the rescue squad, even if it was terribly slow to respond. We wouldn't shrug and blame Mother Nature. And we certainly wouldn't blame the victims --… Read More