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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace

How to Survive the Triple Whammy of Energy, Food and Climate Crises

By John Feffer, Foreign Policy in Focus. Posted August 5, 2008.


To survive we need to recognize that these threats are not separate problems, and they must be addressed as one major crisis.
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Editor's Note: This essay originally appeared in TomDispatch, a website run by Tom Engelhardt and associated with The Nation magazine.

Gas prices are above $4 a gallon; global food prices surged 39% last year; and an environmental disaster looms as carbon emissions continue to spiral upward. The global economy appears on the verge of a TKO, a triple whammy from energy, agriculture, and climate-change trends. Right now you may be grumbling about the extra bucks you're shelling out at the pump and the grocery store; but, unless policymakers begin to address all three of these trends as one major crisis, it could get a whole lot worse.

Just ask the North Koreans.

In the 1990s, North Korea was the world's canary. The famine that killed as much as 10% of the North Korean population in those years was, it turns out, a harbinger of the crisis that now grips the globe -- though few saw it that way at the time.

That small Northeast Asian land, one of the last putatively communist countries on the planet, faced the same three converging factors as we do now -- escalating energy prices, a reduction in food supplies, and impending environmental catastrophe. At the time, of course, all the knowing analysts and pundits dismissed what was happening in that country as the inevitable breakdown of an archaic economic system presided over by a crackpot dictator.

They were wrong. The collapse of North Korean agriculture in the 1990s was not the result of backwardness. In fact, North Korea boasted one of the most mechanized agricultures in Asia. Despite claims of self-sufficiency, the North Koreans were actually heavily dependent on cheap fuel imports. (Does that already ring a bell?) In their case, the heavily subsidized energy came from Russia and China, and it helped keep North Korea's battalion of tractors operating. It also meant that North Korea was able to go through fertilizer, a petroleum product, at one of the world's highest rates. When the Soviets and Chinese stopped subsidizing those energy imports in the late 1980s and international energy rates became the norm for them, too, the North Koreans had a rude awakening.

Like the globe as a whole, North Korea does not have a great deal of arable land -- it can grow food on only about 14% of its territory. (The comparable global figure for arable land is about 13%.) With heavy applications of fertilizer and pesticides, North Koreans coaxed a lot of food out of a little land. By the 1980s, however, the soil was exhausted, and agricultural production was declining. So spiking energy prices hit an economy already in crisis. Desperate to grow more food, the North Korean government instructed farmers to cut down trees, stripping hillsides to bring more land into cultivation.

Big mistake. When heavy rains hit in 1995, this dragooning of marginal lands into agricultural production only amplified the national disaster. The resulting flooding damaged more than 40% of the country's rice paddy fields. Torrential rains washed away topsoil, while rocks and sand, dislodged from hillsides, ruined low-lying fields. The rigid economic structures in North Korea were unable to cope with the triple assault of bad weather, soaring energy, and declining food production. Nor did dictator Kim Jong Il's political decisions make things any better.

But the peculiarities of North Korea's political economy did not cause the devastating famine that followed. Highly centralized planning and pretensions to self-reliance only made the country prematurely vulnerable to trends now affecting the rest of the planet.

As with the North Koreans, our dependency on relatively cheap energy to run our industrialized agriculture and our smokestack industries is now mixing lethally with food shortages and the beginnings of climate overload, pushing us all toward the precipice. In the short term, we face a food crisis and an energy crisis. Over the longer term, this is certain to expand into a much larger climate crisis. No magic wand, whether biofuels, genetically modified organisms (GMO), or geoengineering, can make the ogres disappear.

After the attacks of September 11, 2001, "We are all Americans" briefly became a popular expression of solidarity around the world. If we don't devise policy choices that address energy, agriculture, and climate, while replacing the idolatry of unrestrained growth at the heart of both capitalist and communist economies, the tagline for the 21st century may be: "We are all North Koreans."

Through a Glass Darkly

For years, development experts have bemoaned the declining terms of trade that have kept some developing countries, and most poor farmers, mired in poverty. With the exception of the first energy crisis era in the 1970s, between the end of World War II and 2006, food prices never stopped sinking in relation to manufactured goods. Lower food prices are generally a boon for consumers. But they are devastating for the small farmers who make up the vast majority of the world's poor.


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See more stories tagged with: oil, agriculture, climate change, north korea, food prices, markets

John Feffer is co-director of Foreign Policy In Focus.


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View:
Ultimately it is only one crisis
Posted by: dobermanmacleod on Aug 5, 2008 1:16 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The article cites the triple crisis of peak oil, arable land, and climate change. Frankly, I don't think any of these are eventually a problem due to the genomic revolution.

Peak oil can be overcome with 4th generation fuel production which converts CO2 into fuel biologically by maximizing methanogenesis using a GMO. Furthermore, not only land but ocean can be maximized for food production using GMOs. Finally, the excess greenhouse gas can be removed from the air using GMOs.

Ultimately the one crisis is time. Currently we have an energy infrastructure dangerously dependent upon the burning of fossil fuels, and a food infrastructure dangerous dependent upon arable land, a favorable climate, and diminishing oil. It will take time to revamp our energy and food infrastructure, but we don't have that time:

"Few seem to realise that the present IPCC models predict almost unanimously that by 2040 the average summer in Europe will be as hot as the summer of 2003 when over 30,000 died from heat. By then we may cool ourselves with air conditioning and learn to live in a climate no worse than that of Baghdad now. But without extensive irrigation the plants will die and both farming and natural ecosystems will be replaced by scrub and desert. What will there be to eat? The same dire changes will affect the rest of the world and I can envisage Americans migrating into Canada and the Chinese into Siberia but there may be little food for any of them." --Dr James Lovelock's lecture to the Royal Society, 29 Oct. '07

As ecosystems rapidly collapse, civil unrest and war will stifle technological progress. Worse, the dark side of cosmopolitan genomic technology is individuals can now construct highly contagious and extremely lethal pathogens to use for bioterrorist pandemics.

Ultimately, we only have one crisis: the clock is running out to change our energy and food infrastructure before chaos ushers in a mass extinction and the end of civilization. www.myspace.com/dobermanmacleod

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» But Holland is under the sea! Posted by: KeepsonTickn
» RE: But Holland is under the sea! Posted by: richholland
How to Survive the Triple Whammy ?
Posted by: mmckinl on Aug 5, 2008 1:36 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Elect some real leadership.

Unfortunately the current two frontrunners won't even mention the biggest heist of tax payers money in history, the bailout of bankers over their sub prime crisis.

Neither of the two mentions peak oil or peak anything for that matter. McCain offers the false hope of drilling and Obama falls for the bait.

Neither of the two will discuss the disaster that ethanol has inflicted on food stocks or the land and water.

McCain's programs are a disaster and Obama's aren't much better. I don't see much hope ahead. It will take real suffering to get anything done and by then we may have resorted to a police state just to keep order.

have a nice day ...

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» You've hit the nail on the head Posted by: Lincoln fan
Green Revolution
Posted by: Dboy on Aug 5, 2008 1:37 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...the application of biotech advances through genetically modified organisms to produce new, high-yield, insect-resistant crops, generally hasn't lived up to its hype in the developing world.

In my opinion, the failure here is not in biotechnology, but in the business model. "RoundupReady", for instance, is designed to benefit Monsanto, not it's customers. Monsanto is a chemical company who saw the dollar signs and transformed itself into a seed company..but it kept it's chemical company mentality. They sell "RoundupReady" brand seed so they can sell RoundUp, NOT so they can feed anyone. Indian farmers have been committing suicide in alarming numbers the past few seasons...since they were sold on the "miracle" Monsanto product line. And when they kill themselves (due to their hopeless debt burden) they often do it by drinking Monsanto's pesticide.

We need small co-op biotech projects, where genetic designers are rewarded for creating productive crops without the corporate context. The GM technology itself is not evil, it's the way it can be used to control food supplies that IS evil. But there is another way. We need good seed that is free of intellectual property restraints and free of copy-protection. It worked with Linux, it can work with biotech.

dboy

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» RE: Green Revolution Posted by: richholland
» There is no Green Revolution Posted by: Last Chance
» RE: There is no Green Revolution Posted by: dmaciewski
» RE: Green Revolution Posted by: avatar_singh
Buy a bike, learn to cook, become a real human being
Posted by: Bobsays on Aug 5, 2008 3:09 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Those are three things that will help you survive (oh, and buy some gold and silver because the US dollar is set to go through the floor). There are too many macro events happening for the average joe or jill to do much about it. But you can change how you organise your own life.

Think about this: you can reduce yourself to a quavering wretch on the street consuming nothing more than a bowl of rice a day, but it won't make a damn difference if people in China and India are buying condos and buying flat screen TVs. So, clearly feeling guilty and trying to negate yourself is not a good strategy. Much better to just change your life to a healthy life. That would be the CHANGE.

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Still Ignoring That Gigantic Gorilla
Posted by: Last Chance on Aug 5, 2008 3:19 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
IF fanatic North Korean Communists had not encouraged a growing population for political reasons, but instead put a stabilization plan in effect to limit population to the land's growing capacity, they would not have been forced to cut down their forests to plant more crops.

As everywhere else, overpopulation is the primary cause of such disasters. Here in the USA and around the World the symptoms are obvious - greed for ever-growing wealth and power is exhausting the land's natural capacity, so the demand for oil keeps growing with the growing population = higher prices for diminishing supplies.

But will the governments support family planning programs? Nah! A growing economy is a healthy economy and it needs a growing population, period - and that stubborn myopia is now collapsing the U.S. economy and plunging everyone into social chaos that gets worse every day.

Apparently, life on Earth is little more than a growing mass of competing appetites crawling over each other to get on top of the heap, regardless of warnings from the few who dare to think beyond their desires.

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» Not so Posted by: themotie
Yes, population is a root problem!
Posted by: tomkara on Aug 5, 2008 5:34 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As another poster notes, nobody wants to talk about excess population, as though the mere suggestion that population should be reduced is equivalent to talking about sanctioned genocide or eugenics. In fact, population reduction will occur naturally (and quickly) if additional humans aren't created - ie - family planning on a massive scale. I do not argue with those who say that conservation and more equitable use of resources can hold off the crisis - for a short time. Even if population is reduced, we must have a more rational and equitable use of resources, and have clean energy to help undo the massive damage that has already occurred. But the earth is a finite sphere, and its resources are finite. The natural population of our species for almost its entire history was a tiny fraction of the current population, which has only been sustainable by massive increases in energy use. It is unnatural, and unsustainable. The theoretical limits of how many people the earth can support depend on theoretical limits of rational behavior which will never be achieved by humans at this stage in their development. The obvious, easiest and most fundamental shift needs to be in understanding that there is no right to overpopulate. Incentives for not breeding can make such a program as non-coercive as possible, and measure can be included to make sure no group is singled out or favored. We need more than zero population growth - we need massive reduction through natural attrition (death rate higher than birth rate). Like the demand for civil rights, this aim will only be achieved when people begin to speak out - loudly and publicly, even if it makes their friends with five kids and one on the way uncomfortable.

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North Korea?
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Aug 5, 2008 5:48 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What happened in North Korea has nothing to do with what is happening here. North Korea was made into an example of what happens when you dont jump into the global rat race to consume consume consume, like the good lil South Koreans did.

Plus, the US has to be able to outsource its pollution somewhere...

But anyway, what does that have to do with what's going on here? The US is being destroyed by mass delusion and psychosis brought on by over-exposure to the death ray we like to call television. The minds of Americans are almost completely controlled by a handful of elite occultists bent on killing 95% of the world's population. And no one really seems to care. So get your marshmallows ready.

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The Four Horsemen....
Posted by: Purple Girl on Aug 5, 2008 5:51 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Granddaddy of the Raiders...Orgnaized Religion. 'Be Fruitful and Multiply'.A straighforward Rejection of the FACT we are the only speies/creation on this planet who are capable of management- of our selves and everything else.Culprits- those who deny use of Birth Control methods being taught and readily available.Funny this remains only a focus when converting 'hedons'. Then of course the 'Us & Them' mentality which disregards Our innate kinship with the other stewards.Some actually believe- and operate at as if- those who are suffering are under the punishment of God, while those who are Not are Blessed- success being the Proof and the Exclusiveness. One can not work against 'god's judgement'. If they are suffering it must be because of their Sins against God- therefore actaully trying to reverse their fate would be denying 'Gods Will'.this 'Philosophy' is the Foundation on which the Three work From
Next of course comes Gov't- the Other horse & Rider who loves the 'Us & Them' theology laid down and justified by the Grand daddy.Hates to giv emoney to the Poor, but will BailOut their Cohort of industry without any moral conflict concern- Industries can't be Sinners, Only people Right? So by helping those nations who's people have proven they are 'Blessed' and ignoring those who are suffering, We maintain our 'non Compete clause'- so Give Israel a few more Billion and turn a blind eye (or throw crumbs at ) Darfur.
Industry- also has mechanisms which can assure those being 'punished' are not assisted.god Blessed some M.E Countries with Oil- a gift from God, Others were not. so to reconfirm our committment to adhering to the 'Rules' -Industry sends their tools over to Help the Rich get richer off their gift- Saudi Arabia, Kuwait... Iraq, Iran. They have used their 'gold from the Gods' correctly- sending such rewards to the unworthy countries like China, Russia, North Korea-'Godless People'. along with perpetuating Our pre ordained Right as the 'Blessed' with further Wealth.
Fourth crusader....The mass Media, the Propagandists, the mouthpiece of the Deception.
"Freedom Fighters or Terrorists"?, Extremeists or Religious Conservatives, the Poor or 'Welfare mothers'. Who finds and uses Just the right terms to paint the picture, to set the tone, to justify the actions and inactions. Who chooses what to report, how and more importantly what Not to report.Consider the lack of real reporting on Iraq, Aghanistan, Darfur,. Why are 'News' shows and 'Current event' shows only filled with various'Talking point' pundits and no true experts on the subject? stratedgically scripted.
So those suffering are Sinners, and are being punished and have a pre ordained lot in life- per gods Great Design. The job of the Gov't, Industry and media is to reward the 'Blessed' , help facilitate it's continued reign and keep the Hedons in their place.
Oh and add to that the idea that a 'Savior ' will come when all hell breaks out, and the 'blessed ' will be rewared and be placed high above the unworthy in heaven (Raptured), and working towards 'End of Days' is a Mission Statement, the Big pay off for all their 'Toils', assistance and compliance to God's Design and pre destine Judgements/punishments.
Remeber AIDS Tx's wouldn't work in Africa because the people wouldn't understand Time??? Which Continent did mankind orginate from, which group of man first developed time keeping mechanizisms- seasons changes, animal migrations? and they couldn't tell the time of day because they didn't have a Timex???
so when contempting the interrelatedness of Resources (gifts) and the disregard for the innate Responsilbity of our Species...You must being with the Philosophy which perpetuates the problem and Condones it. Apparently 'god' only has a limited number of seats for the 'Blessed'.And all the major Religions are the only ones allowed to play this 'Musical Chairs'.

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» RE: The Four Horsemen.... Posted by: kungfuma
» good points but.. Posted by: edgar1
The gorilla in the room....
Posted by: Spiritgirl on Aug 5, 2008 6:05 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This triple whammy of energy, food, and climate didn't just start. This is a by-product of another whammy called "free market", consumerism run-amok, and that "newer is better" philosophy that America has bought into in the quest for more money. Not so many years ago Europe dared to not by the genetically modified seeds that these chemical companies were touting as the next best thing. The Europeans know the value in the taste of "real" food. They understand what we have forgotten in our fast paced techno savvy lifestyles!

U.S. farmers bought into technology making life easier. Farm policy in this country (a taboo subject) also needs to be changed to stop paying farmers for not farming land. For land that isn't farmed how about we pay for the use of wind mills or solar panels? How about cattle and sheep ranchers utilize nature instead of hormones and "feed"? How about diverting money from the military-industrial-complex and put some of that money into research and development of alternatives? Energy policy needs to be more sound and reasonable, less about the bottom line.

I read somewhere that each generation of Americans always strives to leave their children with a better future. Will future generations look back and damn us for the legacy of food shortages, bad air, and the gas masks that they wear, that we have left them? Will they think about how selfish and lazy we were, and how when we really needed to come up with concrete, comprehensive policies we failed them miserably?

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» RE: The gorilla in the room.... Posted by: Last Chance
Cut out the Middleman! Dump the Corpirates!
Posted by: williameon on Aug 5, 2008 6:36 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The Fossil Fuel Age is over!
Let’s move forward.
Cut the cord!
KICK OIL!
Go around the oil pushers and
Create a new rational, model society to strive for.
Reaffirm our positive progressive Goals and Ideals.
All for one and one for all!

Become self sufficient and self reliant.
The Corpirate System is imploding,
From the weight of its own selfishness and GREED.
STAND BACK 500 FEET!

Start over with a clean slate
Take the best of what we know and move forward.
These simple procedures will soften the effects of the coming Global economic melt down.

What can save us?
The Local Revolution
Organic Foods
Green Energy
Local manufacturing
Health Care
Indie Media and
Self sufficiency.

Produce what we need as close to the point of consumption as possible.
Put people back to work rebuilding America!
Fresh is better.
Local is better.
Plow our money into our friends and families pockets instead of some stranger’s overseas.
A Renaissance is in order
The Greening of America
Get the Oil Monkey off your back and find freedom.
Shut off The Indoctrination Set
Stop the Homogenization of life to the Lowest Common Denominator:
GREED

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Population Control From Both Ends
Posted by: Gravitas on Aug 5, 2008 6:39 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I agree with those who say population control is one of the main solutions. In fact, it is the reason I no longer call myself Catholic, the Church's irresponsible attitude about birth control.

But I think population control should come at both ends. Because of pharma marketing, we have become a nation obsessed with eeking out every last millisecond of life. I think that push should be stopped. If you want to fine, but for many people longevity is not a priority. Those people should not be forced or pressured into a lifestyle they don't want for more time at the end that doesn't matter to them. Is it really a tragedy if 70 year old dies? If they were born at the turn of the 20th century, their lifespan might have been much shorter than that. Instead of looking at how much we gained, we are crying about the few hypothetical years they lost. And what is so wrong about making a graceful exit while you are still relatively healthy instead of clinging till you hit decay? Don't get me wrong. I am not saying we should start rationing health care for seniors. But plenty of people already feel the way I do. Leave them alone and realize that in the long run, they may be benefiting the planet.

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Simple. End the drug war, reform the zoning laws, and reform the food processing !
Posted by: maxpayne on Aug 5, 2008 7:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Drug war? Hint: Do a google search for hemp and petroleum

Zoning laws? Hint: Do a google search for

"zoning laws" solar wind

food processing? Hint: Do a google search for

"corn fed" "grass fed"

Also, corn-fed products will make you more hungry especially if they contain High Fructose Corn Syrup whereas its traditional counterparts will keep you healthy.

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This is a 'whammy' we can handle...if we're serious!!!
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Aug 5, 2008 7:17 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Energy,food,climate...the latest scare-terrorist tactic pushed down the people's throats so they keep their collective attention focused off the real problem; The government/ Industrial/Fiinancial Complex. You'll notice I did'nt capitalize 'government', that's because you never impart the illusion of power to the puppets. Which is exactly what the government and it's party candidates are Puppets to the greed mongers that make living more of a struggle than it needs to be.
They hold up wind and solar with the pharse, "It won't meet our needs." BULLSHIT!!!
Done correctly wind and solar can give us nearly 80% of our power needs. We've been able to make cellulose fuels for more than a hundred years,that's where diesel fuel originally came from,now they force a lie on us that it's nearing development. Truthfully,they just figured out how to make it expensive. Just to hold up development.
Food?? Come on,all we need to do is eliminate some of the feed cattle ranches and pork farms and we'd have the crop land and the water resources to feed millions,hundreds of millions instead of just a few.
Climate...well that's going to take some serious effort on all our parts,yes, even the the yahoos that control our government.
Firstly convert to biodiesel for trains,trucks and buses. Ban coal burning,no grandfather clauses,no special permits. Coal is responsible for not just acid rain that eats your lawn furniture but also vast amounts of mercury. A substance that can cause mental defects like bi-polar mania,autisim and chronic
depression. Not to mention anueurisms,tumors,MS
and lupis. One of the fastest ways to clean the atmosphere is ti use 'Air-powered cars' for city driving. They do highway speeds and exhaust pure air.Plant more trees. Make laws that every housing development has to have a minimum of two trees per lot. In big cities there's a flowering vine that won't hurt masonary,grow to 60 ft. in height and provide much needed 'green space' to clean inner city air and lower heat indexes. Retrofit all tall buildings with wind generators to take advantage of constant wind above 100 ft.
This bullshit of telling us we're nearing destroying ourselves over Energy, Food and Climate represents a scare tactis perpetrated by BOTH Party's to keep our attention off the fact that neither Party will do anything diffrent. They will still be the same controlled psychophants they always were and the People will always be their fodder for the machine. Look beyond the haze that's campaign spin and you'll see the truth. That both candidates represent a huge steaming pile of monkey crap these jabronies think passes for a platform.
Draft-Elect Jeffrey7 for Prez '08
www.myspace.com/jeffrey1776

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ba
Posted by: mnstra on Aug 5, 2008 7:23 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
reduce highway speed limits to 55mph again.It will solve all our energy problems for today.

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» RE: ba Posted by: edgar1
» RE: ba Posted by: buzzsaw
Kathy McMahon, Peak Oil Blues
Posted by: Peak Shrink on Aug 5, 2008 7:28 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
None of this is a surprise, and neither is gov't inaction. There are still profits to be made by "steering the course" steadily downward.

Energy depletion? Climate Change? Skyrocketing food prices? If you want to do something, dig up a lawn and plant food; buy from a local farmer via Community Supported Agriculture, eat only in season and within 100 miles of your home (or a 90%/10% if you must) and learn to put up at least some of your food for the winter months. We'll need a heck of a lot more farmers in the future, who can grow food without pesticides or fertilizers. We'll start to make progress when we start turning around those massive farmland-turned-suburbs that are emptying out, into suburbs-turned-farms.

We’ll need 50 million new farmers, according to Richard Heinberg, and assuming farmers need to be as fit as military personnel, we have about 60 million people aged 18-49 here in the USA, eligible for fighting. Alas, war is just more profitable...

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» RE: Kathy McMahon, Peak Oil Blues Posted by: Ellen Remore
There is a way out: The tenth amendment passage
Posted by: Vic Fedorov on Aug 5, 2008 7:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is a way out. It involves the tenth amendment which reserves powers not given to the federal government by the constitution to the state or the people.

It also involves free assembly. When the tenth amendment encourages and enforces excercising powers by the people they mean the people in free assembly. Free assembly is local, empowered, free, assembly deciding and discussing local issues: and voice votes and consensus of people present at the free assembly.

Thus a great many of our state constitutions that create local officialdom are in violation of the federal law.

Currently, in many places, powers not given to the federal government are excercised by local officials who are neither the state, nor the people.

Thus the whole dialogue of what we want at a local level is subsumed by the few deciding for the many. And this is illegal and illogical. For representative government, expediently, makes sense at a federal and state level but is never intended by constitutional democracy to retard our people and polity at a local level.

The regulation of our lives by school is done locally. The regulation of our lives by our economy is done with an abscence of discussion locally. The federal government only has a few powers. There is no mention of mayors and councilpersons in the federal constitution.


If local free assemblies were wisely promoted and practiced, the economy could be talked about. The economy is what most needs talking about because it is a very wasteful one, with a bottom line of many unproductive jobs, commutes, and lack of discussion by the people.

If people discussed what they wanted from society, they would want a more agrarian society, less of a birthrate, no unproductive jobs, more time, greater consideration of how to treat children... all sorts of things.

And you wouldn't have the waste that exists now in an economy that is undiscussed because the number one things local free assemblies should discuss, the economy and the way we raise our kids: two suprastructures regulating the people, rather than being regulated by the people.

This is why we left the state of nature. To discuss what we want as a community: To talk about making our locality as self-sustaining as possible, to create a wise local society, to ask each other what we want. And there is a law that forbids the usurpation of this dialogue by local officials deciding and setting the agenda for the many. And the law of Free Assembly implies the same.

And we wouldn't want this bogus economy, but there are no free assemblies where this is ascertained, and a few local inhibited officials dominate the decision making process and agenda.

I'm always amazed why I see so few alternet articles on the outrageous destruction of forest and farmland for unconsidered population growth, which the people always seem to be against. For is you look at the laws of the tenth amendment you quickly see that anything built approved by local officials was built illegally.

Wise local free assemblies is the constitutional democratic way to reduce energy waste by discussing unnecessary jobs and commutes, encourage greenness, and return to a more blessed agrarian society.

So complaining about the way things are, when we should be learning and enforcing our own constitution....the latter is forward-looking and constructive.

And if there is no refutation of this interpretation of law, there must beconsensus that it is true. Consensus should manifest itself.

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» A bitter irony Posted by: Lincoln fan
one fell swoop
Posted by: vasumurti on Aug 5, 2008 7:39 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A vegan diet would solve nearly all the energy and environmental problems listed above in one fell swoop, according to author John Robbins, in Diet for a New America (1987). Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, it makes veganism seem as reasonable and mainstream as recycling.

Half the water consumed in the U.S. goes to irrigate land growing feed and fodder for livestock. Huge amounts of water are also used to wash away their excrement. U.S. livestock produce twenty times as much excrement as does the entire human population; creating sewage which is ten to several hundred times more concentrated than raw domestic sewage. Animal wastes cause ten times more water pollution than does the U.S. human population; the meat industry causes three times as much harmful organic water pollution than the rest of the nation's industries combined. Meat producers are the number one industrial polluters in our nation, contributing to half the water pollution in the United States.

The number of animals killed for food in the United States is 70 times larger than the number of animals killed in laboratories, 30 times larger than the number killed by hunters and trappers, and 500 times larger than the number of animals killed in pounds. If Americans reduced their meat consumption by just 10 percent, it would release enough grain and soybeans to feed over 60 million people.

Many on the Left are beginning to take a stand in favor of animal rights. Joanna Macy spoke at the San Francisco Green Festival, in November 2005. In his 1990 updated and revised edition of Animal Liberation, Australian philosopher Peter Singer writes that many of the political parties leaning towards the "Green" end of the political spectrum in Europe were beginning to oppose animal experimentation.

John Robbins elaborated further on the economic waste of raising animals for food in May All Be Fed, which my brother gave me for Christmas in 1992. Oxfam, the international charity, reports that in Mexico, 80 percent of the children in rural areas are undernourished, yet the livestock are fed more grain than the human population eats! Meat consumption in Taiwan increased 600 percent between 1950 and 1990. In 1950, Taiwan was a grain exporter; in 1990 the nation imported, mostly for feed, 74 percent of the grain it used. Twenty-five years ago, Syria was a barley exporter. But in the intervening years, livestock have consumed increasing amounts of the country's grain. Now, despite a phenomenal 1000 percent increase in the land area devoted to producing barley, Syria must import the cereal.

John Robbins spoke before the United Nations in 1994, where he received a standing ovation.

I had the opportunity to hear John Robbins speak at a Unitarian church here in Oakland several years ago. The church was PACKED! John writes in The Food Revolution (2001):

"The revolution sweeping our relationship to our food and our world, I believe, is part of an historical imperative. This is what happens when the human spirit is activated. One hundred and fifty years ago, slavery was legal in the United States. One hundred years ago, women could not vote in most states. Eighty years ago, there were no laws in the United States against any form of child abuse. Fifty years ago, we had no Civil Rights Act, no Clean Air or Clean Water legislation, no Endangered Species Act. Today, millions of people are refusing to buy clothes and shoes made in sweatshops and are seeking to live healthier and more Earth-friendly lifestyles. In the last fifteen years alone, as people in the United States have realized how cruelly veal calves are treated, veal consumption has dropped 62 percent."

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Polluting the Planet to Save it.
Posted by: david.model@senecac.on.ca on Aug 5, 2008 8:53 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
One of the core messages in John Feffer's article is that we should be very cautious about relying on technology to solve the problems of agriculture, energy, and climate-change. I would expand his message to a total prohibition on counting on high-tech solutions to solve our current problems.

Using technology to attempt to solve these problems while maintaining the same lifestyle is an insane notion that ignores the inevitable side effects of new technologies, the accelerating demand for applying these new technologies and the ultimate depletion of resources.

In addition to these problems is is the urgency of climate-change, the agricultural crisis, and energy problem compared to the time that would be required to test new technologies for just short-term effects. Long term effects may be impossible to predict until it is too late.

For example, the idea of polluting the oceans and stratosphere to address global warming reminds me of the Vietnam maxim "We must destroy the village to save the village". It makes as much sense. The pollution used to solve one problem will become a problem itself eventually.

Another problem with technological solutions to these three crises ignores another major catastrophe, namely the growing shortage of water. Even if we adopted these high-tech solutions, the water shortage would be the fly in the oinment.

If we pose the question as to who benefits from these technological solutions as opposed to alternatives, we discover that it is big business. So instead of following a sensible, natural path to reducing greenhouse emissions, solving the food problem, and adopting alternateive forms of energy, we would be adopting a highly risky, untested, and short term solution to preserve the profits of large corporations.

The corporatocracy wants to preserve its monopoly and wealth and power with unnatural solutions to our problemns rather than conservation, alternate forms of energy and farming. The public must resist as if our planet were at stake, because it is.

http://www.stateofdarkness.com

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Ain't it grand?
Posted by: willymack on Aug 5, 2008 8:56 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
We're our own worst enemies. We continually fail to recognize the criminally insane, posing as "business" people, and allow them to bleed us dry. Again, and again, and again, ad infinitum. We continue to ignore the fact that our planet is grossly overpopulated with-US. We continually buy into the consumer-based fantasy that more and bigger is GOOD, somehow, and the horrendeous waste and pollution we cause has no consequence. We continue to procrastinate and put off actions and legislation, aimed at mitigating and eliminating a situation certain to be the death of many, if not most humans. But look at the bright side. Many wil say that our oversized brains will conjure a miracle that'll at the same time, enable us to go right on with our "American way of life" (screw the rest of the world), retain our ten mile-per-gallon Belchfire Behemoths, build even more roads to accomodate them, and live happily ever after in our gigantic Mc Mansions. As for the increasing numbers of unemployed, working poor, and dispossessed, right here in 'murica, fiddle-dee-dee! We're singularly blessed by the big guy somewhere up there, who'll NEVER let us down-will he?

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» RE: Ain't it grand? Posted by: Ellen Remore
Apocalypse Now?
Posted by: Ellen Remore on Aug 5, 2008 9:10 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Pretty damn scary. It almost makes me glad to be on the cusp of old age. But trust me on this one--when 20 or 30% of the population is selling apples on street corners, the Republicans will spin it as a healthy growth in small-business startups.

Seriously, I have railed against globalization in general and NAFTA in particular for years. Everybody told me I was an utterly daft reactionary / Luddite. Maybe I wasn't.

Not to worry though--don't we have it on good authority that Jesus will be back any day now?

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» Buy a Gallon for Jesus Posted by: edgar1
» RE: Buy a Gallon for Jesus Posted by: Ellen Remore
» RE: Buy a Gallon for Jesus Posted by: jbloggz
» RE: ;) Posted by: phoolish
Tinkering around the edges won't fix core problems
Posted by: SevenStarHand on Aug 5, 2008 1:52 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The deceptive triangle of money, religion, and politics are the pillars of this civilization. While they remain so, humanity will not be able to change in time and the worst case outcomes are inevitable. If we are ever going to survive the great dangers that loom large, the entire civilization must be fixed. The most important thing to change is the existence of money and the delusion of profit (hence greed...) While everything revolves around profit, cooperation will fail and so will we.

Only wisdom and cooperation are going to save humanity this time, so let go of the deck chairs and run to the lifeboats ASAP.

One key to wisdom and cooperation...

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Look at Cuba
Posted by: Boone on Aug 5, 2008 7:47 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Any study that cites North Korea in the '90's should also examine Cuba in the same time period. The path taken in Cubs was quite different and led to a much happier result. It could be done elsewhere.

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» RE: Look at Cuba Posted by: phoolish
» RE: Look at Cuba Posted by: richholland
It's an ironic world
Posted by: Vic Fedorov on Aug 6, 2008 7:58 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's one things to have laws like the tenth, and traditions like Free Assembly, and another for them to be practiced and enforced. It means we've been given laws, but don't know them. What strange world is this?

I think if asked, everyone would prefer free assemblies deciding and discussing local issues, than the few officialsdeciding for the many; if not asked, people seem apathetic: Conversely, if worked with, everyone has a good heart at bottom.

New England practices town meetings, where quorums of 240 are required for decisions to be made, and they've held back the destruction of forests and farms.

The lack of focus on this and the way localities are run, in light of New England, the tenth and free assembly, is the media's fault. Here they are acting like they know everything, and these basic facts they don't know or ignore.

Personally, I think this is a metaphysical situation, and mind-controlled; but the natural place of this serious consideration is not seen. I don't think any journalist, or anyone is against the people deciding local issues in free assemblies. So why the media doesn't cover this constitutional fact indicates a controll of the media in no one's interest.

I brought up in federal court, that local officials violate the tenth amendment. A simple federal question, and sued for my town to make their decisions in free assemblies.

You'd think this noble cause and federal lawsuit would have gotten a little media coverage, at least from local papers. No, not at all.

Thus without the media keeping the judiciary and opposing parties honest through public scrutiny, this federal question was submitted to a host of behaviors that did not treat the issue fairly.

That's ironic, because I think local officials understand the tenth amendment and local self-rule by the people in free assembly is good, and would have been more cooperative had public reporting of the case existed.

Compared to some of the trivialities published in newspapers, the tenth amendment, and the way localities make decisions, the illegality of the current form, is very meritorious.

And that is why the system hasn't shifted here. Because if the media isn't covering an issue, public officials can igore an issue. So I really blame the media's total lack of coverage of this issue, for its failure to prevail in federal court. (They ruled I didn't have "standing" to bring it up.) Which really doesn't hold up in public debate, but suffices privately.

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Don't fall in the trap!
Posted by: NUWAYofTHINKING on Aug 6, 2008 3:27 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Population reduction = eugenics, NWO, agenda 21.

Global warming/climate change is caused by the sun. Human are responsible for less than 5%. In the middle-age there was a period which was warmer than it is now and there were no SUV.

Food crisis is caused by biofuel. Read the World Bank report.

Energy crisis is caused in part by financial speculation, and we are advancing rapidly in the alternative energy department.

So please, lets not fall in the trap!

All of these crisis are engineered to give more power in the hand of the government, so they can tax us, enact more laws, reduce our liberties.

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acudoc
Posted by: acudoc on Aug 7, 2008 2:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No mention of the international banking cartel which controls the issuance of currency that keeps economies and trade rolling. The medium of exchange is now created by a banking system almost entirely through the monetization of debt and for this bookkeeping privilege this banking cartel reaps a handsome profit in the form of interest streams. Politicians love it because they can run deficits and borrow money created ex nihilo by the banking system rather than raise taxes, but in so doing they indebt the population inexorably. This massive transfer of wealth to a financial NONPRODUCTIVE elite makes possible continual warfaring, insures constant devaluations of currencies, ever-present upward pressure on the costs of doing business, and the consequent inflation which everyone thinks appears magically for no reason whatsoever. Look to the root. Until this artificial system of credit creation out of nothing is ended and a non-fractional reserve banking based on the archetypal system of gold and silver backed currency instituted, we will continual to suffer the horrible economic and political consequences.

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Welcome to the site
Posted by: Cattylion on Aug 9, 2008 6:19 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The rich people have such a hard time finding dates, the ***Millionaire4me.com***--This dating site guarantees complete anonymity so you can be sure that your potential mate likes you for your personality and not your status in life.

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