Friday, January 29, 2010

Glimpsing the Apocalypse

Do you wonder how the Monsantos and AIG's of the world plow through all in their path, seemingly above the law, above governments, above any human institution that might try to slow them down? Richard Bruce Anderson proposes an interesting scenario where he likens non-human entities (corporations) to legendary, mythological characters like Zeus or Hercules. These modern day gods operate not to fulfill mortal needs, but rather to create new needs with which to further entrance the mortals. They are governed by only one internal corporate law, unimpeded by morality or human consciousness, to maximize profits, measured in growth, regardless of consequence.



Glimpsing the Apocalypse
by Richard Bruce Anderson
Excerpt:

"...We live in a mythical era, a time that surpasses legend. We’re witnessing a dazzling triumph of technology, an archetypal summoning of powers that are indistinguishable from true magic. But that triumph is hollow and destructive to much of what we value. The more we humans use our powers to impose order on the world, the more disorder there is. There are wars, and premonitory shadows of wars to come, as the world economy becomes ever more leveraged and dependent on scarce and finite resources. In the background there’s a steady slippage toward irreversible climate change and ecological collapse. And the astounding material success of the human endeavor hasn’t brought happiness, wisdom or enlightenment; instead there’s a profound disturbance in our collective human psyche. The best evidence of that disturbance is to be found in our suicidal abuse of nature, but we can also see its effects in the narcissism and desperation that are endemic in our society. Something is wrong at a very fundamental level – something that’s causing us to behave maladaptively.

What could have caused this imbalance? Given our brilliance and our accomplishments, what makes us behave so stupidly? Our innate human failings, our pride and greed and narcissism, must have a major part in it. But that’s not necessarily the whole story. In addition to human nature there’s another causal force at work, a force that we ourselves created: the industrial machine.

We humans have organized our economic affairs in a variety of ways in the past, but the way we make our living now is new in human history. Over the past five decades we’ve created an economy based on ever-increasing consumption, an economy that does not simply satisfy needs, but sets out to create them. We’ve left necessity and restraint behind to enter a world in which gross excess is the norm. This way of organizing life originated in the United States, but it’s spreading rapidly all over the world. It’s the principal threat to the natural world that sustains us and to the health of our culture our minds and our souls.

A self-organizing system, the consumer economy is a force all its own, an entity separate from ourselves. We built it, but we don’t control it. As the Dalai Lama remarked in Ethics for the New Millennium, “Modern industrial society often strikes me as being like a huge self-propelled machine. Instead of human beings in charge, each individual is a tiny, insignificant component with no choice but to move when the machine moves.” The machine operates by its own rules, rules that only indirectly involve humans...."

Link to full article:
https://www.adbusters.org/magazine/87/richard_bruce_anderson.html

Thursday, January 28, 2010

It’s a Great Year to Grow Organic Corn!

"...Maybe you read the Huffington Post article highlighting the seemingly inexhaustible connections Monsanto Corporation has with the Obama administration. Perhaps you’ve seen the USDA Web site that details the levels of bio-tech (GMO) corn that’s been planted in the US.

The statistics are sobering to the point of stagger...


...How can you limit your exposure to GMOs if there is no labeling law? You could buy the 2010 Non-GMO Sourcebook. Another thing you can do is order organic corn from a trusted seed seller like the Seed Savers Exchange and grow your own.
Corn is easy to grow..."
Read the whole article at the Es*sense blog:
It’s a Great Year to Grow Organic Corn!


Important links in the full article:
Monsanto's inexhaustible connections to the Obama administration
USDA Overview: Adoption of Genetically Engineered Crops in the U.S.
Monsanto's GMO Corn Linked To Organ Failure
Argentina approves new Syngenta GMO corn strain
Order The Non-GMO Sourcebook
Seed Savers Exchange
Abundant Life Seeds
Seeds of Change
How to Grow Sweet Corn, Popcorn and Indian Corn
Loving the Grind: how to make your own cornmeal

Monday, January 25, 2010

Sustainable Energy: Thermal Banking Greenhouse Design

"...At Minnesota’s latitude, farmers who can extend their growing season have a distinct advantage in the marketplace: By offering a product outside the “normal” growing season, they can receive a higher price. That’s what Schwen has done with his greenhouse vegetable production, starting earlier in the year with seedlings of warm-season vegetables (tomatoes, cucumbers, basil and peppers), and continuing production into the fall and even the winter months when he grows cold-tolerant crops such as salad mix, cilantro, scallions and carrots. Season extension is a common enough practice, but what makes Schwen’s operation so unique is the added innovation of thermal banking, which significantly reduces the energy costs of running a greenhouse for cold-season production. Schwen’s simple description of thermal banking is that it’s like a savings account: Instead of money, you save (or store) energy for future use. In this case we are talking about the heat that accumulates in a greenhouse during the daytime, especially on sunny days..."



Watch the video (with .pdf plans) on the thermal banking techniques used in this greenhouse. Sustainable Energy: Thermal Banking Greenhouse Design at Cooking Up A Story.