Sunday, November 21, 2010

Food, Ink. (legislatively)


food

Senate Bill S 510 Food Safety Modernization Act vote imminent: Would it outlaw gardening and saving seeds?




http://foodfreedom.wordpress.com/2009/06/13/seeds-how-to-criminalize-them/


http://www.naturalnews.com/030418_Food_Safety_Modernization_Act_seeds.html


This is quite complicated and causes me some great concern, since the appearance of the bill at first glance is simple updating of the food protections standards already in place and enforceable by the FDA. Still, upon closer inspection (pun unintended) there appears to be a great deal to be concerned about relative to the suspension of human rights and liberties of the individual citizen. We may lose the right to grow our own food.


The bill is uncharacteristically broad in scope and vague in language. There is enough in it for me to be concerned that this is a trojan horse for the food industry (namely the big 5 industrial producers) to hold all the cards (er, seeds) in the market. They've seen a great deal of backlash from consumers who have seen films like Food, Inc. lately, and it is clear that they're not willing to take that lying down.


This concerns me because there have been a few things lately which should have been noted by those of us interested in our food economy in USA. One is the hoopla and legal battles over drinking unpasteurized milk, and the other is the rise of urban farming.


The first is a very unusual contest between those folks who believe that pasteurization is a destructive process and simply want the liberty to drink their milk without it and the "big brother" government regulators who claim to be acting in the interest of public safety. I don't see how someone drinking unpasteurized milk puts anyone at risk of the sorts of communicable diseases that this new legislation alludes to. 


And the growth of urban farming, led by a man named Wil Allen, from Growing Power here in Milwaukee, is a boon to the urban poor. He's teaching the poor and the landlocked how to grow food to feed their own families on a 3x3 square of concrete. It's been gaining accolades from around the world, and he's been to D.C. to talk about his successes here in Milwaukee and the Midwest. He recently helped establish a greenhouse in Cabrini Green in Chicago (puttin' the green back there), for example.


Allen certainly raised the hackles of the industrial giants like Monsanto and co. when he began this movement. They see this movement reducing their formerly guaranteed markets, and they cannot be pleased that the education program will teach people the difference between healthy and processed foods, something which has been a really significant issue in our inner cities. Nutrition could revolutionize the urban poor's lives, but that would impact the bottom line for some in unacceptable ways.


This legislation would put the Growing Power movement at risk of being illegal. It threatens to take the liberty of the individual citizen. When we can no longer grow our own food we will be stripped of the most basic human right. We'll be at the mercy of corporate farms. We'll be test subjects in the bioengineering industry.


Overseas we've seen the production of potatoes without eyes and empty beans, controlled by the folks at companies like Monsanto (which has control of the food supply in Iraq nearly exclusively now). There is an effort to monetize everything in America. If companies can eliminate the legacy (unfettered) seeds from the planet, they'll hold the patents to all of our food. If they engineer foods which do not produce seeds within them, they'll also prevent the rest of us from being able to take back growing our own food, even with the tainted seed from those new products.


Remember that in USA there have been granted the same rights as an individual to a corporation. They're considered "individuals" and they are treated as the same, even though they have the powerful interests of their billions behind them. That said, they're now willing to give back some of those individual rights if they can wrest control of the rights of the individual to fed themselves from their grasp. Then they can retreat toward being an inhuman machine.


What is insane about this whole thing is that corporations used to work toward building a name which consumers could trust, in an effort to build brand-recognition and loyalty over generations. Nowadays the same corporations have eschewed this philosophy and now work toward building monopolies and brand-illusion (with hidden parent companies) without a concern for loyalty. They're no longer building corporations for consumers, they're building them for profits. All that matters is the next quarterly report, and if that means wresting control of human rights from citizens to create an unwilling or at the very least, unwitting market of consumers, then it's totally acceptable.


Meanwhile, folks are waking up to the corporate dominance, albeit slowly. We may be too late. This past election has set in motion a machine of billionaire interests which manipulated the electorate and will now stop at nothing to legislatively build a permanent majority. That was something dreamed of in the Bush II years, but W was too dim to maintain it. Now, since Citizens United, they are empowered to actually do it.


I didn't think that this would impact what I eat. But now I must admit that I have been far too optimistic. Heck, this is a bipartisan legislation, so I hold no allusions about the Dems having clean hands here. They're in bed with the corporations as well, but may be better at hiding it. 

Friday, November 19, 2010

Pure Energy Toward Understanding

"I wanna know what you're thinking.
There are some things you can't hide.
I wanna know what you're feeling.
Tell me what's on your mind."


-- Information Society (Pure Energy)


In some ways I don't believe what I am saying here. I don't really want to hear what most people think. I'm rather closed-minded when it comes to those who are closed-minded, and that seems to be the attitude of choice from the vocal conservative minority in the United States.


With folks like Sarah Palin making comments about Michele Obama which are racially motivated and demeaning in print, while her daughter calls someone who criticizes her show a "faggot", there are plenty of people who resonate with such ignorance. They're lauding her for "sayin' it like it is." They seem to champion brutal honesty as some sort of reactionary protest to political correctness. But in the process they're undoing civility, sanity and humanity.


I've never been a flag-waver for the cause of the political correctness movement. First of all, those two words are not indicative of what the intention of the ethic is. Second, politics should have nothing to do with it. Finally, it really isn't about "correctness". It's about admitting that one isn't correct, and applying humility to ones words and statements. So that term is really antithetical to the goal of cultural civility.


But the backlash from the right is simply wrong. While I cannot completely blame these befuddled masses for their brashness and disregard for the humanity of those with whom they disagree, I have to hold them accountable for the results of their histrionics. Sure, there are folks who they listen to as modern-day prophets of punditry like Glenn Beck, Sean Hannity, and Rush Limbaugh. These sorts have been highly successful at manipulating the passion of the right and warping it into a misshapen victimstance. 


Continually stoking the fire and indoctrinating their listeners with new mantras, these monetizers of mania have found a way to profit from perceived suffering. 


They've become not unlike the voice of Gríma Wormtongue, the chief advisor to King Théoden of Rohan in the Lord of the Rings. They're continually whispering poisoned thoughts into the ear of the King. The King is unaware that Grima is actually a conduit for the wishes of the now evil wizard Saruman, who is in legion with the pillar of evil Sauron himself. 


The King becomes an ingrown, pale, shadow of a human being, dead to the suffering around him. He makes choices based upon misinformation, and turns away even those who he once loved when they come to him for compassion or assistance.


It takes the heroism of white wizard Gandalf, back from the depths of the earth after vanquishing the demonic balrog, to wrest the choke-hold of Wormtongue from King Theoden, and restore sanity and life to the kingdom of Rohan. He confronts a shrinking Grima:


'The wise speak only of what they know, Grima son of Galmod. A witless worm have you become. Therefore be silent, and keep your forked tongue behind your teeth. I have not passed through fire and death to bandy crooked words with a serving-man till the lightning falls.' 

-- The Two Towers: The King of the Golden Hall, p. 118



The fact that Rush and Beck in particular have been brash enough to state in public that they're simply entertainers trying to make as much money as they can, and that their listeners haven't cared, is the most troubling thing. There is not a place for truth or for facts to matter to this sort of people. They are driven by self-interest and delusions of what the American Dream is, and a revision of the history of what we stand for in this country.


Rush has even gone so far as to say that they ought to abandon the causes of the middle-class and support the interests of the rich. Well, we're certainly reaping that now. Folks like the Koch brothers with their shadow funding and creation of bogus orgs have changed the political landscape, and we're all suffering for it. People who are suffering the consequences of the failure of the economy, the deterioration of health care, and the changing climate are standing in the streets bearing signs in support of their oppressors. They must be laughing in their penthouse offices...


It's confounding the rest of the developed world, watching from an objective perch. They cannot understand why those who aren't benefiting from the failed economic policies like deregulation, and employee-sponsored health care are passionately fighting to keep things as they are.


Progressives are painted as communists and atheists. People who speak with civility and honestly like Michele Obama are painted as racists by people who are unwitting racists. There are those who support "telling it like it is" that will not afford the same to those who they disagree with. They truncate the speeches of their opponents to remove the context and box them in with misshapen quotes.


They claim that their opposition does the same. But that's just not true. The antics and tactics of the right are unique to them. Sure, they're successful at this point in history, but they're doomed to fail. The left will not engage in the same sorts of battles, and with the nation moving center-left as each generation grows up into adulthood, and the reality of the global interconnectivity shaping world-views, they've only got a generation or two left to gloat and promote.


Seriously, if you survey the thirty and under set, they're politically left as a whole, and it's not because of any sort of ignorance of youth. In fact, they've shown themselves to be less so than their parents. They've had more interaction globally with different cultures, more opportunities to have their beliefs challenged, and more rapid technological advancement than any generations in history.


What results is a more apolitical, center-left, optimistic, free-thinking society that leans toward european socialism. We're not that far off from following in the footsteps of N. Europe in this way. No matter what the bitter minority tries to do to change this, there will be a shift in ideology. 2008 proved it. A midterm didn't get these same folks quite as motivated to be politically active, and the bitterness of the ads certainly turned them off, but that won't last forever. There will be a rebound in 2012. 


Anyway, the point is that we're moving toward a more progressive future for USA, and I welcome it with open arms. I support open dialogue in all forms, especially with those I disagree. But there has to be a safe space to do so, with terms set before conversing that insure introspection and engagement will trump emotion and rhetoric. I'm okay with disparate opinions, as long as they're well-articulated and owned by the person who claims them.


But we're a society which is increasingly defined by the marginal extremists who are more identified by what they're opposed to. Ask the same what they stand for and they might regurgitate a mantra of shallow philosophies, but these can be quickly uprooted by simple questions.


Then again, they're the puppets. They'll not likely be able to see their own fallacies of reason. 


What we need is a Gandalf to speak into this madness and extract the poison of the corporate corruption and destructive self-interest that has hamstrung our nation for over twenty years. Please, someone, break this spell...



Sunday, November 7, 2010

Brewtown Brou-Ha Ha

Here's a synopsis of the game prototype I have been working on. It's actually more in flux than it sounds, and advice is welcome.


A bi-collaborative game where two teams of gamers group together to try to accomplish game objectives and stay alive for the duration of this game set in downtown Milwaukee, WI USA. The game will involve dice-based combat, but will have multiple paths to victory for both the monsters and the humans, both fighting for different things.


One group will consist of six monsters: a cow; a crayfish; an asian carp; a gorilla; a bluegill; and two deep-tunnel sewer rats. The other group will consist of humans, plus humans with functions like workmen, fire fighters, police, nat'l guard, and some super-humans like Lara Croft and ninjas might appear during gameplay.


The game is driven foremost by the HO scale minis used in the game, and the plastic monsters. The toy value is what this Über-Ameritrash game is about.There will be multiple rule sets developed. Really, this game started with the toys, and a desire to improve an old game or two, while thematically morphing it into a game which featured downtown Milwaukee, WI USA.


At this point it's a prototype. The game is a homage to The Creature That Ate Sheboygan, borrows from Heorscape and Monsters Menace America, requires some D&D features like THACO, and has lots of other options for tweaks and alt games. 


The "ha ha" is deliberate in the name because of the twisted humor woven into the fabric of the game. The "bronze fonz" is on the map, and either side will get a bonus for either destroying it or simply rubbing it for good luck. Names for the creatures also have built-in humor:


Vince Gill: the bluegill who is also a Packer fan, but hates MIlwaukeeans because of their fascination with the Friday Fish Fry. His desire is to crush restaurants which serve fish.


Son of Samson: the undead giant son of the most famous ex-resident of the Milwaukee Zoo, whose goal is to get to the top  of the Firstar/U.S. Bank tower and fling poo.


Carpie Diem: an asian carp, who seized headlines recently as the no.1 environmental enemy to Lake Michigan. He can jump across city blocks and smash things under his weight. Very easily distracted by the Ladybug Club, thinking they are asian lady beetles.


Holey Cow: a sympathizer with O'Leary's Chicago firestarter, this copycow is a Cubs fan and happens to breathe methane gas fires from her four stomachs, and out her nostrils. She's also capable of making massive cowpies which block city streets.


'Hood Ratz: a pair of residents from our failed Deep Tunnel system, these rodents are skaven mad *wink* and capable of chewing through even the five foot thick walls of the Fed Bldg. They're also attracted to hip-hop music.


Rebecca the Boiling Crayfish: (no relation to our new Lt. Governor of WI) she's looking for her crawdaddy in one of the restaurants that serve her brethren. The humans are in hot water this time.


The game narrative is such that an event has taken place that, combined with the deep tunnel sewer failure, has caused six local creatures to grow in size and terrorize Brewtown.


The Federal Bldg. is within the now quarantined section of Brewtown, and the goals of the monsters are many, but they have to achieve them before they are killed or the feds are able to call in the antidote. Meanwhile, the humans are to stay alive and kill monsters,while protecting buildings from fires, repairing blocked roads, and achieving other goals along the way.


There are several groups of humans:


Firefighters: complete with a new ladder truck, these six individuals have axes and hoses in hand *wink* to face any challenge.


Police: one car (Milwaukee police are grossly underfunded) and a handful of officers help with attacks, rescue civilians, and keep the peace among the surviving humans.


National Guard: these weekend warriors with five tanks were setting up for maneuvers downtown, ending in at the Veterans Memorial nearby when this hit. They've not got much live ammo with them for this reason, but they have plenty of rubber bullets of all sizes-and they look scary as hell. The can fly in one helicopter from General Mitchell Airport in a couple of rounds, and it will have the firepower they need, but the rest of the military is on furlough.


Municipal Construction: several men on a job site with a huge dump truck, a CAT backhoe, and two CAT scoopshovels. They're tough enough to fight the monsters on their own with their equipment and they're experts at "catcalls". 


Waste Management: one unmanned truck full of Milwaukee's finest refuse, left abandoned.



Superhumans: activated at different times in the game when humans accomplish certain goals: a Lara Croft lookalike, with the guns to prove it; a ninja; two advanced swordplay students from the T'ai Chi Ch'uan center of Milwakee, and their leader Mike. Mike's wearing a Yoda costume he found at the Milwaukee Film office, and his mastery of push hands gives him the equivalent of the "force push". He hopes the creatures watched the trilogy, and fear him...


The two collaborative groups struggle until the game ends for a variety of reasons. There are several paths of victory for either team.

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Life Isn't Fair

I think this is an insidiously evil thing to teach our children. I hear parents tell their kids this and I cringe.

Many times this phrase can be the instigator for an institutional bystander syndrome. We know that the psychology of groups are affected heavily by those who are perceived as leaders, and also that in sociological terms we see that people will often opt to remain inactive when they see need from the confines of a group. They  choose to believe that someone else will meet that need for whatever reason.

So do we need to repeat this mantra and look to our shoe tips as we face the difficulties of life? Or should we instead meet needs when we see them? Should we spare our lives and protect ourselves from pain, psychologically or otherwise?

What is life? Isn't that the question?

Is life lived in the absence of pain?

Or is it living in embrace of our shared humanity? Is it experiencing the plethora of the emotions and sensory appointments that we will encounter, and bringing others along for the ride and allowing ourselves the same?

Some Odd Self Reflections

Just a bit about me. I work in admissions at UWM currently, went to UWEC, where I was a devout young republican with fundamentalist religious leanings. I would have espoused nearly identical beliefs to Rob at that point.

But Twain said that travel is fatal to ignorance and bigotry. I've lived in the inner city, worked for peace in Northern Ireland, found my roots in Norway, and worked for fortune 500 companies, non-profits, the city, state, and now the UW System. 

I've attended no less than 50 different expressions of christianity (I don't use capitals for that term much). I've worshiped with native americans, penetcostals of various flavors, high church Irish-Catholics, evangelicals, apostolics, methodists, baptists, black urban storefront churches, non-denominational, etc, etc, etc. I've now landed in an Episcopal church--where one does not have to divorce the intellect to believe.

I'm not a dyed in the wool Democrat (yet), but I have been leaning toward calling myself a Blue Dawg (I live in da 'hood) Democrat. I've been independent of a party affiliation since 2000.

I'm actually a reluctant union leader. I'm still not sure whether I am a union guy, but I was elected to the exec board, and represent all of the union at UW-Milwaukee on several committees. 

So, I am a bit odd. I don't have absolute allegiances, or absolute beliefs at this point. I only know two things for sure: there is a God, and I am not God.

It's been incredibly hard to move from a group where I had a bunch of absolutes, tools with which to measure and judge the world, a precise world-view, and a sense of being right... to knowing very little.

Like my Tai Chi Ch'uan teacher has alluded to, learning that one knows nothing is the beginning of wisdom. I think reading Thomas Merton has really messed with my spiritual bedrock also, LOL

That leads me to the fact that I am a perfectionist, AND an artist. That means that I am always fighting between hemispheres. Life has been a strange journey for me.

"Art enables us to find ourselves and lose ourselves at the same time." 
— Thomas Merton

Peace,
Christian

Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Frank Schaeffer Took The Words Out Of My Mouth

"One reason the Republicans won on Tuesday is because many of their supporters have already given up on this world and are waiting for the next. I know, I used to be one of them." -- Frank Schaeffer


http://frank-schaeffer.blogspot.com/2010/11/bad-theology-and-crazy-politics-why.html


His blog really hit home for me. It was what I needed to read this morning, the day after big money bought the biggest political flip in seventy years. It's just so damn depressing to see how the religious right, and evangelicals who I once respected, have been manipulated by a party which has not been shy about saying that it is all about the interests of the wealthy.


Below is a comment on facebook from a cousin of mine, a pastor...



Seriously, this is coming to reality all too quickly- read this quote from Joseph Stalin- "America is like a healthy body and its resistance is threefold: its patriotism, its morality, and its spiritual life. If we can undermine these three areas, America will collapse from within."

2 hours ago ·  · 


    • Christian E. Vettrus I agree that the GOP is doing much to eradicate all three of these things.

      They misunderstand patriotism, truncate morality, and politicize spirituality, to the detriment of all three.