Tuesday, December 18, 2007
Hitting People In The Gut
A doctor who led the study summarized the results quite well: "Vegetables and fruits are rapidly becoming luxury goods."
And throughout the world, where junk food isn't yet as readily available, people are facing a similar problem – World Food Supply Is Shrinking, U.N. Agency Warns. The U.N. Food and Agricultural Organization's food price index increased more than 40% over the previous year. And last year's increase had already been 9% over the previous year. Storage supplies are dwindling for all varieties of staples.
The article attempts to put much of the blame on global warming. In some sense, this begins to explain why it is that governments are now being vocal about climate change – it makes an excellent scapegoat. The article avoids a serious discussion of food speculation, which has been egged on by pushing crops into biofuel creation. It also avoids any discussion of the agricultural industry, which favors monocultures that are highly vulnerable to changes in conditions as well as dependent upon fertilizer imports and continual seed purchases.
Research of historical peasant conditions demonstrates that droughts don't kill people, the concentration of food wealth to a centralized elite does. Famine can only happen in an isolated bubble, and under modern conditions, this isolation is imposed upon people. There has not been a shortage of food for at least a couple hundred years, simply a refusal to redistribute food to meet human needs.
Wednesday, December 05, 2007
Limbo Lower Now
This speaks volumes. How depraved must conditions be to drive someone to such lengths? How low must humanity sink?
Friday, November 16, 2007
Humane Inhumanity
Dark humor and irony abound in today's L.A. Times article, A fence without offense. It deals with the difficulty of building a border fence that doesn't offend the sensibilities of our rabid racists and imperialists. "They want to make it seem like you could shake hands through the fence," said Peter Andreas.
The fence must be formidable but not lethal; visually imposing but not ugly; durable but environmentally friendly; and economically built but not flimsy.
This is the U.S. today, where people can be concerned about an eco-friendly torture device. They can want to intimidate workers into taking lower wages, but not have to face the reality of it when looking out their backyards. The ruling class needs to divide people in a violent manner, but there is a benefit to pretending that the violence isn't there. "Other countries are a lot more into intimidation," he said. "This is the only humane border fence being constructed."
There is nothing humane in oppressing another people. That doesn't mean that industries cannot be built around trying to convince people otherwise.
Wednesday, August 15, 2007
It's All Your Fault
The real zinger is at the end of the article:
"Predicting a recession is pretty simple. Since consumer spending is 70% of the economy, if we become cautious and close our wallets, then we go into a recession,"
So, economic crises are not the stuff of speculation and over-production. The housing market bubble, which was fueled not simply by sub-prime mortgages but by high-end residential investments, won't have anything to do with it. The higher prices people are paying for food because that industry has found an opportunity to gouge working people with the excuse of ethanol won't be at fault. It will be because silly people get nervous and spend their money on food ...
Wal-Mart said its customers were spending more on lower-margin items such as food and less on clothes and other higher-margin goods.
Don't worry, Congress is already hard at work trying to make sure that hedge fund managers don't get hurt by our fickle buying habits.
Thursday, August 02, 2007
Terrorist Attack in the Heartland
But these aren't the terrorists that the media keeps warning us about. These are not the terrorists who come from a foreign country or "foreign" religion to wage war against a nation which has devastates their economy and people daily. These are the terrorists that sit on city and county governing bodies, deciding to cut funding to basic infrastructure and deny necessary maintenance. These are the terrorists who make the conscious decisions to undermine public health and safety by closing down hospitals. These are the terrorists that, despite record profits and booming economies, see the need to keep the corporations in power even more firmly entrenched in power down to every last penny.
Reports by the Minnesota Department of Transportation in 2001 indicated problems with the bridge, particularly with steel joints because of "unanticipated out of plane distortion" of girders. The report also noted a lack of redundancy in the main truss system, indicating that a single point of failure could collapse the bridge. A 2005 report recommended replacement of the bridge, though the decision was made to avoid that option.
Even if this collapsed bridge on the I-35W turns out to be a fluke, it remains emblematic of the collapsing infrastructure all around us. The ruling class is carrying out a war, and they don't care who the casualties are.
Thursday, May 10, 2007
Some Comparison, Please
NPR was reporting numbers of food-related deaths each year in China. How does the U.S. compare? E. coli has been in the media as of late, but that's only the tip of the iceberg. And even when these numbers are provided, are they reported deaths or estimated deaths based on some organization's calculations?
The radio also made much of the unreliability of food suppliers in China. They spoke of cultural and business problems, implying that the Chinese just haven't come around to a "proper" attitude yet. But lets get some numbers. What agencies are there in China? What are their guidelines and enforcement powers? And, most importantly, how does food safety regulation compare to the U.S.? This one is particularly important, because over the last decade or more the FDA has moved to a "self-monitoring" model where companies are expected to inspect themselves. The FDA inspectors then come in and just look at the data the company has already assembled. The FDA does not have the power to recall certain food items, but must "shame" the company into doing it voluntarily.
There is little reason to doubt that food safety is not up to acceptable standards in China, but it would be important to point out how inadequate they are here, as well. The complaint about the fraud and incentive for corruption in China's food industry needs to be compared and contrasted against the same situation here. Serious economic analysis is missing, and not expected soon.
Monday, April 30, 2007
Fundamental Assumption
Critics see the high-speed train as a potential boondoggle that would be a drain on the state treasury and a loser that would never pay for itself.This is practically the same think that Snoble, the MTA's chief, said just last week; that these services are not able to pay for themselves, and thus a fee increase is necessary.
The a priori assumption of the newspapers and politicians in this country is that a public service must pay for itself. Every last single thing must be held to the profit model, else it be purged and beaten into shape until a profit can be made. Here, when mass transit and the environment should be at the forefront of the discussion in this country, humanity must be made to suffer to maintain profits.
The fundamental contradiction and hypocrisy here, of course, is that if politicians held everything to this ideal, then there'd be no reason for people to pay taxes. These ideals are only held up when they serve the goal of cutting or not providing public services. A human-centric system would take a (temporary) hit to build essential infrastructure.
Thursday, April 19, 2007
Yes, Virginia, America is Racist
The article continues on to offer quotes from several other minorities, including a Latino and a Muslim. (They also quote a racist from a local right-wing, AM radio station ... this is the L.A. Times.) Here is another apt quote from a psychologist, "When you've got a white guy going crazy, [his ethnicity] doesn't stand out because most mass killings are done by whites."
Of course, the one word the L.A. Times is unable to say is "racist". Fact is, America is racist – why else would ethnic minorities have these kinds of initial gut reactions? These are the reflexes of people who have grown up in a society that discriminates against them systematically. Instead, the newspaper adopts a line that the "typecasting of minorities" is somehow a part of human nature and unavoidable.
Saturday, April 14, 2007
Destroying Our Myths
There are two separate rapings of the Robin Hood story coming soon. One for TV depicts Robin Hood as a pacifist who only robs from the sheriff of Nottingham ... and not from the myriad other parasites who put the sheriff into office to prop up their exploitation of the poor. The writer for this series actually said, "I don't think it's interesting or sympathetic anymore to have your supposedly heroic characters robbing people just because they're rich." Well, if you are talking to Hollywood executives, you are probably correct.
The seconds script, slated as a film staring Russell Crowe in the part of the sheriff, attempts to depict the sheriff is a "working-class cop". Historically, sheriffs were overseers for the serf system, working for the local lords to make sure that serfs kept at their work and didn't steal from the lord.
This certainly isn't the first time this folk hero has been maligned or distorted, but it is interesting that we see two such stories hitting the media plate at the same time. This degenerate society of ours, with the huge chasm between rich and poor growing constantly, has nothing to offer those at the bottom but a "rotten apple" theory of corruption or a request to sympathize with their torturers. Robin Hood is a story that poor folk have been telling for centuries because it speaks to them. The message of robbing back from the rich (what they robbed from us) is apparently a little to apt these days, so the story must be corrupted.
Saturday, April 07, 2007
Sick Society Turns to Black Market
Drug trials need to be done on this drug. I believe that Canadian researchers who discovered this are looking to do trials with public funding, but the process shouldn't be as long and drawn out as it necessarily will be under our current system. Many terminally ill cancer patients, aware of the study and their dire situation, have started acquiring the drug from the black market. A humane society would handle this better. With people taking this on their own, without supervision, it will be difficult for scientists to figure out what other possible effects the drug may have. We can only hope that the drug makes like better for those forced to turned to the black market.
Thursday, April 05, 2007
An Important Source
Funding has been going on for 35 years now, and it is clearly a violation of church-state separation. But the important thing is the main issue for the military: the Boy Scouts are a "useful recruiting and training tool." The BSA has long been a bastion of blind patriotism and religion. You aren't technically allowed to be a member unless you are religious; atheists need not apply.
It would be nice to see a real separation of church and state, but that's only possible in a democracy. Cases like this, while sad in that they show how far we are from a more humane society, also bare wide open the real nature of this system in a straightforward way. It also shows how intimately connected religion and the state are.
Wednesday, March 21, 2007
Why Attorneys Matter
It is one thing for the nation to carry out unspeakable acts. It is an entirely different thing to make plain that the checks and balances of the system are in fact illusion. The legal system is a fundamental part of the illusion that the people have some sort of check on the government. High school civics classes across the nation go to great lengths to instill this notion.
To paraphrase George Carlin, it is called the American Dream because you have to be asleep to believe it.
Monday, February 05, 2007
The Game is Up
What is the first proposal that the article makes, even if only in "jest"? That all American abandon their cars for bicycles. The EPA administrator says, "As a citizen, each of us has an opportunity to make a difference." But then their own statistics later on reveal this common attitude, i.e. that individuals should have to suffer and sacrifice for the greater corporate good. Motor traffic and transport account for 7.3% of global emissions. Power plants, however, account for 39%. Seems a little obvious that we should start with the big dogs, but then energy companies are a major component of the ruling class, so we cannot expect them to sacrifice themselves (and by sacrifice, we mean take less profits).
They hint at one way the U.S. is trying to solve the problem today — "If the rest of the world returned to the Stone Age." Maybe U.S. foreign policy is more forward-looking that we realized. By returning Iraq and Afghanistan to the stone age, we are helping to stem global warming. Who's next? Any volunteers?
But we've seen where the U.S. and the rest of the imperialist powers stand and how far they are willing to go. The war in Iraq is about oil and the control of that oil-producing region. Another chunk of our foreign policy is about preventing Iran and North Korea from developing nuclear energy, thus keeping them dependent upon fossil fuels — another article in today's paper reports that a deal might be in the making with North Korea to supply them with oil in lieu of the two light-water reactors they were promised over a decade ago. And blame continues to be heaped upon China; how dare they try to expand their economy so recklessly? The second suggestion, of course, was that the "Chinese could close all their factories."
Real change requires large-scale action. People cannot "give up" their cars simply because of this problem. Real alternatives have to be produced, and we see here in L.A. how, despite the glaring need, even the "transportation" mayor is dragging his feet on putting in real mass transit and doing it now. Every proposal a capitalist politician puts forth is an attack against working people, an enforced sacrifice so that corporate profits might be protected for a little while longer. This system offers no solutions for humanity, only for itself.
Friday, February 02, 2007
Protecting the Cattle Industry
The problem with this is that E. coli is a bacteria that lives in the intestinal track of mammals. Last I heard, leafy greens were plants that grow out of the ground, now out of a mammalian hind end. Since the focus of the laws is the greens growers, it seems an obvious maneuver to avoid blaming the people who should be responsible for keeping E. coli out of the water and fertilizer supply. Another example of good old fashioned American blaming the victim.
Even if the cause of these particular outbreaks is not directly attributable to nearby cattle farms, it doesn't negate the fact that more people in the U.S. die or get sick from E. coli because of infected beef than from anything else, but somehow those stories aren't big news.
Monday, January 22, 2007
In Case You Were Worried
In case there was any doubt as to what would happen to the Gemini relationship of business and politicians with a new Congress, this article sheds some light on the matter: Lobbyists find new Congress is open for business. A lobbyist from Bracewell & Giuliani says it about as well as can be expected in a public statement: "One of the lessons is that good lobbying is always bipartisan."
The article has its own twist. It presents the situation as one where other groups besides business are getting a voice. The counterpoint is that you cannot win an election like the last one and expect to do nothing ... there must still be token gestures. By no accounts will the Oil industry be hurt by the elimination of subsidies – all honest economists will tell you this and a basic understanding of economics should confirm it &ndash and the bills passed only cut a small portion of those subsidies. But the public effect is to fuel the illusion that the Democrats have done something about excessive Oil profits. The same goes for Medicare changes (which don't do what would be a baby step in fixing the problem) and the minimum wage increase (long overdue and loaded with subsidies).
