More Proof that the World is run by the Rich for the Rich
Posted: January 29, 2011 Filed under: crops, Farming, Food | Tags: alfalfa, corruption, GM food, USDA, Vilsack 36 Comments
The Center for Food Safety took the USDA’s decision to allow unregulated planting of Round-Up Ready Alfalfa to court in 2005, all the way to the Supreme Court, and managed to stop any planting of the bio-mutated forage crop until the USDA had a full environmental impact statement ready. No more sneaking GM crops in the back door by pretending not to notice they were being planted, and then when forced to notice saying, ‘Oh My, Imagine that, how did THAT get there?’, with a hand to a cheek and a distressed look on their pretty little faces.
Didn’t we just do this?
Posted: January 5, 2011 Filed under: Environment, Farming, Food, toxic waste | Tags: bubble, commodity prices, corn, food, gm pigs, wheat 36 Comments(In which Sima works herself up into a frothing rant.)
Commodity futures prices, wheat, rice and corn, are rising again after a brief fall. In fact, they are supposed to top the records set in 2007/08 during the global food bubble.
Supposedly, Corn Rationing Needs to Begin:
“The corn market has one job and one job only—to go high enough to make people stop using the product,” says Ryan Turner, risk management consultant for FCStone, Kansas City. “We are past the point of encouraging more supply.” Turner predicts 2011 corn futures prices will exceed 2008 highs. “I don’t know if it will happen in January or June, but it will happen,” he says.
Soaring corn prices will slice into demand, with corn exports expected to fall first followed by feed usage. Analysts anticipate the cattle industry to begin rationing earlier than other livestock sectors due to poor margins, but rationing in poultry, hog, and dairy will be close behind. “It will be very painful,” Turner adds.
Those greedy so-and-sos! Imagine, eating corn and corn products? Making corn into feed to raise farm animals and then slaughtering those animals to feed humans. And furthermore, they feed the corn to dairy cows and produce milk and cheese and butter! Will the horror never end!
Obviously, everyone needs to suffer (UN: World Food Prices Hit a Record High in December). Especially the world’s poor. And those who produce the meat we Americans so love to eat are not to be excluded from the necessary pain. And those who produce the dairy we love to drink and nosh on with our imported European crackers. And those who make corn into tortillas, and those who make corn into corn syrup and those who make corn into ethanol… oh wait. Not those. In fact, those last ones may be part of what is driving the rise in corn prices. Nearly 1/3 of the 2010 US corn production was diverted to ethanol, after all.
Wikileaks and GMO/GM food, More cables, more fun!
Posted: December 28, 2010 Filed under: Economic Develpment, Farming, Food, Foreign Affairs, Wikileaks | Tags: Africa, cables, food, France, GM food, GMO, GMO food, monsanto, Spain, Wikileaks 24 CommentsRecently our own Grayslady posted an excellent article about Wikileaks, Monsanto and GMO Corn. She discussed a cable sent in late 2007 from our then Ambassador to France, Craig Stapleton, in which he discusses ways to force France and the EU to be more favorable towards the adoption of Monsanto’s GM BT enhanced, Roundup Ready corn. Other aspects of the information in that Wikileaks cable has been discussed in other places, for instance at Huffington Post by Jeffery Smith and at Truthout by Mike Ludwig.
What the cable suggested, in part, was publishing a ‘retaliation’ list of places, down to the actual fields, growing GMO foods in Europe in the hopes the fields and crops would be destroyed by activists, ’cause pain’ for officials and hopefully swing GMO acceptance in Europe around. The Ambassador went on to say that France was particularly culpable because scientists in France were attempting to change ‘knowledge’ by studying the effects of GMO products (even the ‘good’ GMO like BT enhanced products). These studies show that the effects of GMO food on those eating it may be more pronounced and drastic than the limited studies done by the FDA and USDA suggest (see for example the studies of Dr. Gilles-Eric Seralini, Professor Andrés Carrasco, and others). And for more, see this interview of Jeffery Smith on Democracy Now.
This is very interesting, because a cable sent in 26 October 2007 is the subject of French President Sarkozky’s first visit to the USA, and his meetings with American business leaders, including pushers of GM foods. The cable suggests that the President’s support of more restrictive rules on GM products in France might be politically based and therefore, changeable.
But Wait, There’s more! The cable to France, although receiving a lot of attention because it suggests undercutting the rightful government of our supposed allies and creating civil unrest and ‘pain’, is not the only released cable to mention GMOs and Monsanto’s needs across the world. Over at Eats, Shoots and Leaves there’s a good rundown by Richard Brenneman of some of the cables.
For example, in a cable from 9 April 2009 concerning, in part, African development, one of the points of intelligence to be gathered is the African governments’ and peoples’ reactions to growing and using GM crops. Brenneman rightly asks, why would this be a concern of our State Department, unless our government is actively pushing and supporting Monsanto and the company’s GM stable of crops?
I’m going to drop a final h/t to Rady Ananda at the Food Freedom blog. She wrote about GMO and Wikileaks several weeks ago, and has been right on top of things. She brings forth the case of the food crisis of 2007-08 which wraps up some of the things we at Sky Dancing discuss into a tidy bundle.
In a January 2008 meeting, US and Spain trade officials strategized how to increase acceptance of genetically modified foods in Europe, including inflating food prices on the commodities market, according to a leaked US diplomatic cable released by WikiLeaks.
Some of the participants thought raising food prices in Europe might lead to greater acceptance of biotech imports.
It seems Wall Street traders got the word. By June 2008, food prices had spiked so severely that ‘The Economist announced that the real price of food had reached its highest level since 1845, the year the magazine first calculated the number,’ reports Fred Kaufman in The Food Bubble: How Wall Street starved millions and got away with it.
The unprecedented high in food prices in 2008 caused an additional 250 million people to go hungry, pushing the global number to over a billion. 2008 is also the first year ‘since such statistics have been kept, that the proportion of the world’s population without enough to eat ratcheted upward,’ said Kaufman.
Remember back in 2007/08 when food prices, especially bread prices, suddenly shot up? I remember being astounded when the price of a bag of hot dogs went from 99 cents to 1.29$ overnight. I figured maybe it was the result of the rise in oil costs going on about then, and perhaps it was, in part. But after reading the article by Kaufman I’m not so sure. There was no crisis in food production at this time. It was simply a manufactured bubble. About that time there were terrible food riots in Mexico amongst 29 other countries, because the price of tortillas had gone up so much people couldn’t afford to buy them. I note that the Mexican government has recently taken steps to ensure this doesn’t happen again, by buying corn futures to guarantee a flat price.
So, I wonder, how are the big fat cats and the government diddling in our food today? Surely food, at least food, should be relatively safe from bubbles, like electricity, water, and sewage service? Oh wait, those are being commoditized too. Ahd I would like to point out, the price of the bag of hot dogs has not come back down, although the bubble burst… makes ya wonder, doesn’t it?
Note: I’m going to be in and out all today, so consider this something of an open thread. I’m really keen to know what everyone thinks of the Kaufman article. When I read it I was stunned by the lengths to which the greedy people of Wall Street will go to make money.
Once Upon a Time: Christmas in Medieval England
Posted: December 21, 2010 Filed under: Festivities, just because 22 CommentsOne of the crazy things I do with my copious free time (haha) is Medieval/Renaissance re-enactment. I try to combine that with my love of research and recently wrote a small article for a very local newsletter (distribution about 30, I think :)). I hope you all will enjoy reading a bit about how Christmas was celebrated 500-1000 years ago.
In the old, pre-Gregorian, calendars the shortest night of the year, winter solstice, falls on 24th December (in modern, Gregorian, calendars it falls on the 21st or 22nd). Therefore the 25th was the day when the duration of the sun’s light began to grow. This event, and the midwinter season, was celebrated in every known pagan European religion. For example, the Romans had the day of Sol Invictus (25th December) and the weeks long festival of Saturnalia and the northern Germanic and Norse cultures celebrated Jultide or Yule and Midwinternacht.

Christian bishops living in the 350s chose the 25th of December as the day to celebrate Christ’s birth. The symbolisms of the lengthening daylight and forthcoming emergence of plants and animals in Spring were inescapable. It was also very convenient to graft the celebration of Christ’s birth onto the existing pagan holidays. This meant that the Christmas traditions celebrated in Medieval England, and many of those celebrated today, are an amalgam of pagan and Christian ritual and belief. Both the pagan and the Christian worlds centered around an agrarian lifestyle which is foreign to many of us today, and their rituals reflected this lifestyle.
Read the rest of this entry »
December 16th Came and Went
Posted: December 18, 2010 Filed under: Anti-War | Tags: anti-war, rally, veterans protest 15 CommentsNotice anything on the mainstream news about an anti-war rally in DC? Yea, me neither. However, the rally was reported at the Huffington Post, at Democracy Now, at Raw Story and at Real News, amongst other alternative news sites (see David Lindorff at This Can’t Be Happening, for a good write up). There were 131 veterans arrested at the rally, including Ray McGovern, Daniel Ellsberg and Chris Hedges.
Here are links to some pictures that the mainstream Press did not bother to use: the Count, and UPI (pics run from number 5 to 10).
And here are links to some videos. I sang along with this first video. I credit my parents with my knowledge of the songs; I was very young during the Vietnam War protests and Civil Rights Movement, but I learned a lot of these at my mother’s knee.
Here’s Daniel Ellsberg’s speech. This was very good. He discusses Bradley Manning and Julian Assange.
If you only watch one video, watch this one. Chris Hedges’ speech, interspersed with comments from the veterans, is very effective. It’s linked off Stop These Wars. And it’s on youtube here:






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