Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Mexican Drought News

200 Mayan Peasants Arrested for Blocking Road in Mexico
Latin American Herald Tribune
November 25, 2009

CANCUN – More than 200 Mayan peasants were arrested during a clash with police who tried to prevent them from blocking the highway between the southeastern Mexican cities of Chetumal and Cancun, officials said.

About 20 peasants sustained minor injuries and a police officer underwent surgery for a head injury suffered in Tuesday’s clash, Quintana Roo state Deputy Public Safety Secretary Didier Vazquez said.

&&&

The peasants blocked the highway to demand payment of insurance and subsidies for crops lost in the drought affecting the region.

The insurance company has refused to pay claims for lost crops and Quintana Roo’s government has offered to cover only 50 percent of losses, or some 450 pesos (about $34) per hectare affected by the drought.


ANALYSIS-US corn exports lag amid cheap global feed grains

Reuters
November 26, 2009

Nearly 1 million tonnes in corn sales to drought-hit Mexico last week gave U.S. exports a shot in the arm, but the spike in sales is more of a near-term blip than a turning point for slumping corn exports.

Elevated prices, high shipping costs, and stiff competition from cheaper feed grains from around the globe will continue to restrict export sales from the United States, the world's largest corn producer and exporter, traders and analysts said.

U.S. corn prices Cc1> have climbed steadily from a September low near $3 a bushel to around $4 a bushel, even as farmers harvest the second-largest crop on record.


CLIMATE CHANGE: Latin America’s Perpetual Fever

GlobalGeopolitics.net
November 25, 2009

MONTEVIDEO, Nov 25 (IPS) – ”To use a soccer metaphor, which Brazilian politicians like so much, the Kyoto Protocol was the 10-minute warm-up before the real game begins,” said scientist Carlos Nobre in reference to global climate change treaties.

”The real game should begin now, although there are many who would rather remain in the warm-up phase indefinitely,” added the Brazilian expert, who was among the authors of the 1990, 2001 and 2007 reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which was a co-recipient of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize, along with former U.S. vice-president Al Gore.

Nobre’s opinions appear, with those of another 22 noted experts, in the ”First Regional Report on Climate Change: Latin America and the Irreversible Effects of a Warmer Planet”, published Nov. 19 by Tierramérica in Montevideo.


Grain Report

IBT Commodities
November 24, 2009
by Tim Hannagan

MONTH-END ON TIME
We started the week's reports with our Monday weekly export inspection report showing 25.5 m.b. of corn was inspected for near-term export, up from 22.1 the week prior and four-week average of 24.

The worst drought in over 60 years in Mexico has helped U.S. exports as well as a faster harvest leaving Asia in for feed use. We still need sales over 30 m.b. weekly to have the trade turn price bullish.


Mexican farmers reeling from worst drought in decades

Mexico Monitor
November 22, 2009

The El Nino weather pattern has dried up Mexico's rainy season this year, leaving nearly four million farmers reeling from the drought conditions. About 50,000 head of cattle have already died due to lack of water, and if the drought persists, as much as seven million hectares of corn and bean crops could be lost. From the rural community of Temascalito, Franc Contreras has more on Mexico's struggling farmers.





Texas drought

Killing the Thirst
by Tom Palaima
November 13
Texas Observer

This summer Texas suffered through its worst drought in half a century. Two hundred and thirty public water systems declared mandatory restrictions. Crop and livestock losses during the preceding nine months totaled $3.6 billion. Seventy of Texas’ 254 counties were declared primary disaster areas.

In mid-August, as parts of Travis County were labeled “exceptional drought,” the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s worst category, the Austin American-Statesman published the Austin Water Utility's top 10 users. While profiling households that had used 136,900 to 316,100 gallons of water in single months—the average Austin household uses 8,500 gallons—the paper made clear that “[c]onsuming so much water is not against the law” and that these heavy users had paid their bills. Not one of these conspicuous consumers of our most vital natural resource besides oxygen seemed embarrassed or overly concerned.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

More Thanksgiving Music

Elliott Smith, "Pretty Mary K"



Deb Talan, Comfort



Typical Situation, Dave Matthews Band, 1995

Interesting older version. Violin is not electric.



Gordon Lightfoot, "Early Morning Rain"



Tom Waits, "Waltzing Matilda"



Waltzing My Matilda (very different, anti-war)



Bonnie Raitt, "Too Long At The Fair," live 1976



Snow Patrol, On/Off



Marvin Gaye, "Mercy Mercy Me"



laissez les bons temps rouler - a nawleans tribute



(cover) "You've Passed," Neutral Milk Hotel

This boy is a tad fuzzy, but he is a proficient ukulele player, and has a very good ear, and good calm presentation. Promising!



Psychedelic Furs, "Pretty In Pink"



The Shins, "Gone For Good"



Sara Bareilles, "Fairytale"



Velvet Underground, "Rock and Roll"



The Spinners, "Working My Way Back To You"



Spanish Johnny

Interesting version I had not heard before.



A.K.A.C.O.D. French Fries with Pepper (Morphine cover)

Saturday, November 21, 2009

top comment

You know... blogging is really flexible.

We don't ask many questions (unless you claim expertise or display obvious bias) and people come and go at whim.

Happy to see you whenever you show up, disappointed when you don't.

People have lives they don't have to explain.

At least to me.

Friday, November 20, 2009

Thanksgiving music

Rasputina; "Wish You Were Here" cover



Greg Brown, "Say A Little Prayer"




Furry Lewis, "John Henry"



Cathy Davey, "Cold Man's Nightmare"



Someone Still Loves You Boris Yeltsin, "I Think I Wanna Die"



Tom Rush, "Urge for Going"



Eva Cassidy, "Who Knows Where the Time Goes?"



Randy Newman; "I Think It's Going to Rain Today"



Marianne Faithful, "Sunny Goodge Street"





Men Without Hats, "Safety Hats."



Saturday Waits



Neil Young, Everybody Knows this is Nowhere. Live in Hyde Park, 2009

God we're all getting old.



Coldplay, "Green Eyes"



Richard and Mimi Farina with Pete Seeger, "Bold Marauder"

This is cool.



Mimi & Richard Farina - House Un-American Blues Activity Dream

More!!



Buffy Saint Marie, "Little Wheel Spin and Spin"



Buffy Saint Marie, Universal Soldier

with a bit of interview first.



Ian and Sylvia, "Four Strong Winds"



The Beatles, "Blackbird"

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Monday Music

Cat Power, "Satisfaction"



Greg Brown, "Our Little Town"



Bob Dylan, "Positively 4th Street"



The Velvet Underground, "Pale Blue Eyes"



Dr. John, "I Know What I've Got / Blue Skies"



Son House, "Grinnin' In Your Face"



Daniel Johnston, "True Love Will Find You In The End"



Dark Tranquility, "Mine is the Grandeur"



Blues Legends born before 1924



Cathy Davey, "Sing For Your Supper"

Friday, October 9, 2009

Nobel Peace Prize Winner Accused of War Crimes by Spain

http://www.brusselstribunal.org/index.htm

MADRID: Today the Spanish Senate, acting to confirm a decision already taken under pressure from powerful governments accused of grave crimes, will limit Spain’s laws of universal jurisdiction. Yesterday, ahead of the change of law, a legal case was filed at the Audiencia Nacional against four United States presidents and four United Kingdom prime ministers for commissioning, condoning and/or perpetuating multiple war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide in Iraq.

This case, naming George H W Bush, William J Clinton, George W Bush, Barack H Obama, Margaret Thatcher, John Major, Anthony Blair and Gordon Brown, is brought by Iraqis and others who stand in solidarity with the Iraqi people and in defence of their rights and international law.


Well, we can see a little more now why they wanted to get this done tout suite.

As usual, I'm up way too late. But I'm generally nowhere near this speechless. Even this late.

What persists in coming to mind, though, is; "How often do you get the chance to use a headline like this?"

Srsly.

Sunday, October 4, 2009

Ohio Food Co-op Swat Team Raid Trial This Week

John and Jackie Stower run the Manna Storehouse in LaGrange, Ohio. Last December their organic food coop and homeschool were raided by a SWAT team, who invaded their home with guns drawn, held them and their family captive for six hours, and confiscated a large amount of food. No charges were ever filed. The Buckeye Institute is helping the Stowers sue the The Lorain County General Health District, the Ohio Attorney General’s Office and the Ohio Department of Agriculture. The trial will open October 8 and 9 at 8:30 am.

From what I can gather, all this happened because the Stowers were running a buying club, buying in bulk with a bunch of people who pre-ordered with them organically grown food, grass-fed meat, and such other healthy food that they could not afford if they did not buy it in bulk. They were raising their own meat, and had the animals slaughtered by a licensed USDA butcher.

The Stowers did not have a retail food selling license, though.

The search warrant was expired. The SWAT team took computers, personal food stocks of the Stowers, the meat had been delivered back to the Stowers by the butcher shop the day before (this was not long before Christmas, right?)


The Stowers tell their story:



The Stowers are pretty damned scary, I guess.

Cable TV to cover Manna Co-op Trial
by Brad Dicken
October 5, 2009

ELYRIA - A county judge has granted permission to the cable television network formerly known as Court TV to cover a civil trial next week in which the owners of a LaGrange food cooperative have sued several government agencies over a raid on their property last year.

The Dec. 1, 2008, raid on Manna Storehouse on state Route 303 has already garnered quite a bit of attention and complaints that local authorities overstepped their bounds.

Assistant Lorain County Prosecutor Scott Serazin said complaints about how deputies handled the raid - law enforcement disputes claims that officers stormed the home of John and Jacqueline Stowers with guns drawn - are obscuring the real issues in the case.


April Update: SWAT Team Raid on Homeschool and Food/Health Ministry for Hungry Families
Journal of Whole Food and Nutritional Health
April 21, 2009

It happened before Christmas 2008 at a food and health ministry for hungry families in Ohio. It was as if the family were bio-terrorists or something.

Three snipers with high-powered rifles were aimed at the home with ten children being homeschooled. Babies and toddlers were inside also. About twelve armed sheriff deputies along with agents from the Lorain County (Ohio) Health Department and the Ohio Department of Agriculture raided and ransacked the inside and held the family for six hours inside a room in their home outside Lagange, Ohio.

Food, computers and phones were seized from their private home along with 61 boxes of grass-fed beef and lamb were taken that was butchered, wrapped and labeled by a licensed and USDA inspected butcher shop and delivered the day before. According to the expired search warrant, deputies were to seize money and bank accounts. The storehouse of organic foods from a variety of suppliers as well as the personal food stock were taken as the terrified family watched.


Whatever complaint the State of Ohio had, it is hard to imagine why the officials couldn't just ask politely, or at worst show up with a search warrant and insist. But the idea that they needed to scare everyone with weaponry and arrest them is far beyond the pale. I think once we buy them a SWAT team, they will inevitably find excuses to use it.

And once they start invading people's lives and taking them prisoner like that - people with kids - and get away with it, what's to stop them from taking the kids?

It happens. "You are criminal parents, and now we're absconding with your children and foisting the child protection agencies upon them."

Oh, happy days. Not.

If you want to read more about this, here's the wordpress blog link.