Drought Map

common dreams has a drought map up.  As I posted before, the Ag secretary was saying that there was a bumper planting of corn this year, so the corn crop isn’t going to be that affected…which means there is speculation and falsely jacking up food prices.

They reported this morning that a meteorologist from Purdue was saying that a drought this bad is a “once-in-a-lifetime” happening and that folks who are living now will “never” see something like this again….um, yeah…

…and there’s this thing called the 1988 drought that I remember quite well because I was pregnant and worried about the food shortages they were predicting.  I’ve also been watching the rivers ever since then, and my memory may be faulty, but I don’t recall them reaching their former levels with the exception of a couple of years.  This has concerned me ever since.

This is the only article I could find that notes the extended drought –it puts it between 1988 and 1992.

 

Dow sponsoring Olympics

Helen Clark at commondreams has this up on Dow being a sponsor of the Olympics.   I think the time is long past of the Olympics being held in high regard…

Here’s a pretty good page on Agent Orange’s effects.

…and yet the lessons still haven’t been learned…

…and the unsuspecting folks who were unaware they were being poisoned…  Be sure to click on the link at the top of the page.  Unfortunately, I don’t have time to click on all the links on the page.  The one at the top is absolutely stunning.

Along these lines–

I looked up a couple of pages on the chlorinated hydrocarbons–insecticides– here and here. 

Michigan’s state website has this:  http://www.michigan.gov/dnr/0,4570,7-153-10370_12150_12220-27249–,00.html

It’s just mindboggling that so much is known about the dangers of these chemicals, but still they are used.

Rain

…falls mainly on the Hoosier plain…:)

I was in that haze between sleep and awake states at 6:30 this morning when I thought I heard a rumble…

Could it be?

Is that rain I hear hitting the window?

Nah…I’m still asleep…

And then…CRACK!  BOOM!  Nature blessed us with much, much needed rain.  It didn’t last long, probably ten-fifteen minutes, so I thought it was over…and then another storm came in and rained for an hour!  Woot!  I would go out dancing in it if I wouldn’t be taken away in a straight jacket (we don’t do that stuff here.  Spontaneous displays of joy and wonderment are not allowed. /just slightly snarky).

So, yeah, I’m letting out a big Ahhhh…thank you thank you thank you.

 

Ag in Indiana

We’ve apparently been noticed by Washington–the Ag Undersecretary is here seeing the amount of crop damage due to the drought. Link here:  http://www.wane.com/dpp/news/indiana/usda-undersecretary-to-visit-allen-county-farm

I was listening to the rightwing radio station this morning (It took me so long to find a nooz station that actually has a live reporter because it was with the same station that broadcasts Limbaugh, Hannity, and whatshisname.  Unfortunately, it also means that the nooz is slanted towards the rightwing mindset…so, yeah…) and they had the Undersecretary on.  The guy was talking in farm terms that the public is not familiar with–anyone with any public speaking training knows that you have to keep the terms to common everyday terms so everyone will understand it.  Even the rightwing morning host said he didn’t understand what was just said—and the undersecretary didn’t try to clarify–I can’t figure out if he doesn’t have a clue (not likely) or if it was deliberate.

He did say that they have planted more corn this year than previous years, so the crop was not going to be that devastated.  The morning host said something like “You mean that even though we’re looking at a lot of crop loss here, that there isn’t going to be that much of an impact?”  To which the ag secretary said “no.”  Then the host asked about the prices.  The ag secretary said that prices were going up.  Um-hmmm…I smell a rat.  If the corn crop hasn’t been impacted in a severe way, then why the hell are the prices going up?

Can you say “speculation”?  I knew that you could.

As a side note, I found this with Michael Pollan on the cows being fed corn/grain instead of letting them feed on grass.  (Warning: parts are very graphic).

It’s very simply explained that they have systems that allow them to digest grass, not corn.  And the really disturbing aspect is how they used to allow them to mature to 4 to 5 years, but now have it down to 14 months, going to 11 months.  Mo money Mo money Mo money.

Another disturbing aspect is when the calf is separated from its mother–the mother bellows for days and days he says.

From the page:

There are] 35,000, 50,000, 100,000 animals in the space of a couple of hundred acres. And in the middle of the city is rising the single landmark, which is the feedmill. It’s several stories high. It’s silvery. It’s sort of this cathedral in the midst of this, and everything rotates around it. …

But they really are medieval cities in many respects, I realized, because they are cities in the days before modern sanitation. They’re from the time when cities really were stinky. When they were teeming and filthy and pestilential and liable to be ridden with plague, because you had people coming from many, many different places, bringing many, many different microbes into a concentrated area where they could spread them around.

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The problem with this is that the antibiotics are affecting the people eating them:  resistance, and encouragement of candida and other nasty bugs in the gut, cause such grief. And of course, doctors are not taking this into account any more than they’re taking diet into account when a patient presents with a problem.

So…even though we don’t have 14th century disease right now, with the destruction of a person’s immune system through their gut, it’s setting up a bad set of circumstances that have that potential.  We already have super bugs that are not treatable by even the most strongest antibiotics.

And I can’t even begin to understand the mindset that says that cows don’t care if they’re sick from not having their proper food, or being crammed in together standing in their manure, or  the mother cow losing her calf before its time (the fact that she bellows is your first clue) …

It is curious how Michael Pollan says it’s dangerous to say that an animal is impacted by the way humans treat it–I’ve heard old farmers call cows “bossy” because of their personality…so how is it dangerous to state observations that confirm the animals are more than machines?

Pollan states he bought a cow and raised it to market, but was not allowed to go into the kill floor.  A red flag.

Animals give us life and deserve to be treated with respect.  Stuffing them with corn that ferments in their insides, packing them in lots too small to move around freely with piles of manure, injecting them with drugs to counteract all of that doesn’t ring of respect.

At the end of the article, Pollan is asked about irradiation. Says it’s probably fine.  Yeah, radiating food would be just what is needed after all of the above…Good Grief.

Population, Resources and Environment

…is the name of the book I found at the library.  Authors:  Paul Ehrlich and Anne Ehrlich (1970, revised 1972)

As promised, this is the text concerning nuclear disaster–specifically, they were concerned with nuclear war (as were we all) but I think with all of the nuclear reactors out there, their theory could be applied:

[…] The entire climate of the Earth would soon be altered.  In many areas, where the supply of combustible materials was sufficient, huge fire-storms would be generated, some of them covering hundreds of square miles in heavily forested or metropolitan areas.  We know something about such storms from experience during the Second World War.  On the night of July 27, 1943, Lancaster and Halifax heavy bombers of the Royal Air Force dropped 2.417 tons of incendiary and high-explosive bombs on the city of Hamburg.  Thousands of individual fires coalesced into a fire storm about 6 square miles in area.  Flames reached 15,000 feet into the atmosphere, and smoke and gases rose to 40,000 feet.  Winds, created by huge updrafts and blowing in toward the center of the fire, reached a velocity of more than 150 miles per hour.  The temperature in the fire exceeded 1,450 degrees F, high enough to melt aluminum and lead.  Air in underground shelters was heated to the point where, when they were opened and oxygen was admitted, flammable materials and even corpses burst into flames.  These shelters had to be permitted to cool 120 days to two weeks before rescuers could enter.  [the authors make note of the book The Night Hamburg Died by Martin Caiden].

[…]

In many areas the removal of all vegetation would no be the only effect;  the soil might be partly or completely sterilized as well.  There would be no plant communities nearby to effect rapid repopulation and rains would wash away the topsoil.  Picture defoliated California hills during the winter rains, and then imagine the vast loads of silt and radioactive debris being washed from northern continents into offshore waters, the site of most of the ocean’s productivity.  Consider the fate of aquatic life, which is especially sensitive to the turbidity of the waer, and think of the many offshore oil wells that would be destroyed by blast in the vicinity of large cities and left to pour their loads of crude oil into the ocean with no way of shutting them off. [BP oil spill, anyone?]

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So…if there were a disaster such as Japan’s here, it would affect the entire area in much the same way.  Not as catastrophic as the above, but nevertheless, it would affect the area in much the same say, just on a smaller scale.  And what kind of domino effect would there be?  Because we all know that what happened in Japan didn’t stay in Japan–it migrated here, causing fish to become radioactive.  I found a more in-depth article here with the same researcher–puts a different light on it with him saying, in so many words, “it’s not that bad.”  Pfft.  What kills me is that they only measured fifteen fish, and ALL of them had it.  Yeah, nothing to see here, folks…move along….

Incidentally, the researcher mentions that funding for the project came from Noah.  I think that was the writer’s error, and he was actually saying NOAA, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association.

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Onto the next topic:  Synthetic Insecticides (same book)

Chlorinated Hydrocarbons

This group includes DDT, benzen hexachloride (BHC), dieldrin, endrin, aldrin, chlordane, lindane, isodrin, toxaphene, and similar compounds designed to kill insects.  DDT is the most thoroughly studied of the chlorinated hydrocarbons, and much of the following discussion is based on it.  Its behavior is more or less typical of the group, although other chlorinated hydrocarbons are more soluble in water, more toxic, less persistent, etc.   In insects and other animals these compounds act primarily on the central nervous system in ways that are not well understood, but the effects range from hypersexcitability to death following convulsions and paralysis.  Chronic effects on vertebrates include fatty infiltration of the heart, and fatty degeneration of the liver which is often fatal.  Fishes and other aquatic animals seem to be especially sensitive to chlorinated hydrocarbons.  Oxygen uptake is somehow blocked at the gills, causing death from suffocation.  That chlorinated hydrocarbons apparently can influence the production of enzymes may account for their wide range effects.

1.  Chlorinated hydrocarbons have a wide range of biological activity; they are broad-spectrum poisons, affecting many different organisms in many different ways.  They are toxic to essentially all animals including many vertebrates. 

2.  They have great stability.  It is not clear, for instance, ho long DDT persists in ecosystems.  Fifty percent of the DDT sprayed in a single treatment may still be found in a field 10 years later.  This does not mean, however, that the other 50 percent has been degraded to biologically inactive molecules;  it may only have gone somewhere else. […]

3.  Chlorinated hydrocarbons are very mobile.  For example, the chemical properties of DDT cause it to adhere to dust particles and thus get blown around the world.  Four different chlorinated hydrocarbons have been detected in dust filtered from the air over Barbados; frog populations in unsprayed areas high in the Sierra Nevada of California are polluted with DDT.  Furthermore, DDT codistills with water; when water evaporates and enters the atmosphere, DDT goes with it.  Chlorinated hydrocarbons thus travel in the air and surface waters.

(I found this reference, but was sorely disappointed at the statement that chlorinated hydrocarbons have only been used for the last ten years. Good Grief, a research paper that doesn’t have historical data.)

4. Finally, chlorinated hydrocarbons become concentrated in the fats of organisms.  If you think of the world as being partitioned into nonliving and living parts, then these pesticides may be thought of as moving continually from the physical environment into living systems.  To attempt to monitor DDT levels merely by testing water (as has been frequently done) is ridiculous.  Water is saturated with DDT –that is, can dissolve no more–when it has dissolved 1.2 parts per billion.  Besides, the chemical does not remain for long in water, it is quickly removed by any organisms that live in water. 

It is these four properties –extreme range of biological activity, stability, mobility, and affinity for living systems –that cause biologist’s fears that DDT and its relatives are degrading the life-support system of our planet.  If any one of these properties were lacking, the situation would be much less serious, but in combination they pose a deadly threat.

Organophosphates

This group includes parathion, malathion, Asodrin, diazinon, TEPP, phosdrin, and several others.  These poisons are descendatns of the nerve gas Tabun (disopropyl-flurophosphate), developed in Nazi Germany during WWII.  All of them are cholinesterase inhibitors; they inactivate the enzyme responsible for breaking down a nerve “transmitter substance,” acetylcholine.  The result is, in a acute cases of poisoning, a hyperactivity of the nervous system; the animal dies twitching and out of control. 

Unlike chlorinated hydrocarbons, organosphospates are unstable and non-persistent; thus, they tend not to produce chronic effects in ecosystems or to accumulate in food chains.

Organophosphates inhibit other enzymes as well as cholinesterase.  Indeed, some of those that show relatively high insect toxicity and low mammalian toxicity do so because they poison an esterase that is more critical to the functioning of insect rater than of mammalian nervous systems.  Malathion, which is violently poisonous to insects, is relatively nontoxic to mammals because the mammalian systems contain an enzyme, carboxy-estrase, that destroys malathion.  But toxic effects on mammals can occur when malathion is used in combination with other organophosphates, which apparently inhibit the carboxy-esterase enzyme. 

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I was trying to find something written about the effects of the pesticides on enzymes–much is talked about them in health circles–the general consensus is that with the advent of the chemical age, enzymes have been diminished.   They advocate raw foods, non-microwaved foods, and organic foods to increase enzyme activity.  Enzymes are even more reduced in toxic people like myself, so taking a supplement of enzymes is needed.

I’ve looked at photos of our parents and grandparents when they were our age, and they don’t look as old as the Boomer generation does at that same age.  Our skin doesn’t look as healthy, either–it doesn’t have that glow.    I have to think it’s from unhealthy food coupled with the toxins in the atmosphere.    FW has had many “Ozone days” this summer due to the stupid, unrelenting heat.  I didn’t think it affected me that much until I went out for a jog last week on an Ozone day.  I felt pretty good jogging, but when I was going up the stairs to my apartment, I started to wheeze.  Well now that was not good.  So now, when I could be jogging outdoors, I have to do aerobics inside.  Not that I mind aerobics, because it’s fun, but I’d rather be outside jogging.

Anyway, I’m concerned about the long term exposure of the chlorinated hydrocarbons–we’ve all been exposed.  How much?  How long a period?  How has our DNA been affected?  And just because at the writing of this book the organosphosphates were not of big concern, it was written decades ago–what new information has been uncovered?  And is it information that was researched without $$ from chemical companies or those with an agenda?

Repatriation of Shoshone Remains

Well, after the last post, this is certainly brighter…

I cannot imagine how it would feel to have my family members’ remains on display for…entertainment?  …macabre curiosity?

Glad to see they are going home.

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From this article is a link to NCLB actually diminishing Native American children’s education.

It would be a freaking miracle for  a child to have truly been educated under the No Child Left a Mind Act…a miserable law that destroyed a well-rounded public education.  The law orders measurement of what can’t be measured.  It does not value art and music in education, even though it’s been shown that math skills are improved with music comprehension and art sparks creativity.

A link here.

Without creativity, one cannot think outside the box and innovate—the capacity to come up with creative solutions to problems is diminished.  Lastly, the school day is so controlled and so rigid that the teachers are constricted in their own personal teaching styles.

From the dark side…

…I try not to give Limbaugh more attention, as they say whatever you give attention to gives it power…but today, as I moved the dial past Limbaugh’s show, I couldn’t help myself…

He is heavily trying to divert attention from the Bain/Romney deal by arguing that corporations are not people…so, therefore, there is no way that Romney could have had anything to do with Bain sending jobs overseas.  Romney makes patronizing speeches about bringing jobs back to the U.S.–saying he “knows what it takes” to bring jobs back–yeah, it takes workers willing to work for $3.00 an hour…(While Limbaugh continues the slams on those on welfare–you lazy good-for-nothings, getting off your ass and get a freaking job….)

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Next we have a racist and sexist statement all rolled into one:  “Elizabeth Warren, Indian squaw…”

First, he and his ilk were all over her for claiming to be a Native American…even after it had been in the news that she was, in fact, Native American.  Now he degrades her and her heritage by that racist statement.  Squaw is a derogatory term the French gave the women–it means vagina. I believe they also named the Grand Tetons…I’ll leave your imaginations to what female body parts that name refers to…