Tuesday, September 3rd, 2013
DAVID ROBINSON SIMON, - AlterNet (U.S.)
Stephan: Yet more about the meat industry. Like everything else in our vampire capitalist economy it is set up for the benefit of the few at cost to the many. Here is some home truth about 'Meatonomics.'
The following is an excerpt from Meatonomics: How the Rigged Economics of Meat and Dairy Make You Consume Too Much-and How to Eat Better, Live Longer, and Spend Smarter by David Robinson Simon (Conari Press, 2013).
Imagine a bakery that sells every cake, pie, or loaf of bread for a dollar less than it costs to make. It’s a challenging business model, to say the least. But instead of going out of business, say the shop flourishes and expands, adding more ovens and increasing output for years. Impossible, right?
For a bakery, maybe. But not for America’s big producers of meat, fish, eggs, and dairy. The animal food industry actually uses this contrarian business model with surprising success. Take hog farmers, who routinely spend an average of eight dollars more raisÂing each pig than the animal yields when sold. The farmers, at least the big corporate operators, are in hog heaven. That’s because government subsidies actually make this business model profitable for those at the top. For the same reason, corporate beef producers routinely spend from $20 to $90 more than each animal’s value to raise cattle.
Each year, American taxpayers dish out $38 billion to subsidize meat, fish, eggs, and dairy. To put this corporate welfare package in perspective, it’s nearly half the total unemployment benefits paid by all fifty US states to unemployed workers in 2012. However, as we’ll see, unlike unemployment payments, subsidies don’t actually […]
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Tuesday, September 3rd, 2013
JOAN LOWY, - The Reporter (Pennsylvania)/ The Associated Press
Stephan: As the middle class disappears Americans are reacting like impoverished cultures everywhere -- using cars less. The automobile is a very expensive luxury for the poor. The young have simply created a life which is not centered on cars the way the two prior generations behaved. This is a perfectly predictable part of the nation's downward spiral.
WASHINGTON - Driving in America has stalled, leading researchers to ask: Is the national love affair with the automobile over?
After rising for decades, total vehicle use in the U.S. - the collective miles people drive - peaked in August 2007. It then dropped sharply during the Great Recession and has largely plateaued since, even though the economy is recovering and the population growing. Just this week, the Federal Highway Administration reported vehicle miles traveled during the first half of 2013 were down slightly, continuing the trend.
Even more telling, the average number of miles drivers individually rack up peaked in July 2004 at just over 900 per month, according to a study by Transportation Department economists Don Pickrell and David Pace. By July of last year, that had fallen to 820 miles per month, down about 9 percent. Per capita automobile use is now back at the same levels as in the late 1990s.
Until the mid-1990s, driving levels largely tracked economic growth, according to Pickrell and Pace, who said their conclusions are their own and not the government’s. Since then, the economy has grown more rapidly than auto use. Gross domestic product declined for a while during the recession but […]
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Tuesday, September 3rd, 2013
JESSICA JERREAT, - The Mail (U.K.)
Stephan: Where did the people in your area come from? Here is some basic information, and click through to see the revealing map that accompanies this story.
A truly captivating map that shows the ancestry of everyone of the 317 million people who call the melting pot of America home can now be seen on a U.S. Census Bureau map.
For decades, the United States opened its doors and welcomed with open arms millions of immigrants who all arrived through New York’s Ellis Island in the hope of a better life in America.
Indeed, the inscription on the Statue of Liberty in New York’s harbor reads ‘Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to be free’ and the fascinating map identifies the truly diverse nature of the United States in the 21st century.
Although the 2010 census left out questions about ethnicity, this map shows how it looked in 2000, according to Upworthy.
49,206,934 Germans
By far the largest ancestral group, stretching from coast to coast across 21st century America is German, with 49,206,934 people. The peak immigration for Germans was in the mid-19th century as thousands were driven from their homes by unemployment and unrest.
The majority of German-Americans can now be found in the the center of the nation, with the majority living in Maricopa County, Arizona and according to Business Insider, famous German-Americans include, Ben Affleck, Tom […]
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Tuesday, September 3rd, 2013
TED GENOWAYS, - Mother Jones
Stephan: The corruption of the food system has many aspects. One of the most blatant examples of the almost complete corruption of the government is illustrated in the AG-Gag laws. These are laws passed at the behest of the industrial animal husbandry section of the food system. Their practices are so vile they cannot stand public exposure. So what did the industry do? Improve itself, or get laws passed to block its exposure? Which do you think? They chose to pressure their Congressional servants to pass Ag-Gag laws that made it a crime to reveal their crimes. Neat, huh?
Note the role of ALEC, and click through to see the very useful map.
Shawn Lyons was dead to rights-and he knew it. More than a month had passed since People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals had released a video of savage mistreatment at the MowMar Farms hog confinement facility where he worked as an entry-level herdsman in the breeding room. The three enormous sow barns in rural Greene County, Iowa, were less than five years old and, until recently, had raised few concerns. They seemed well ventilated and well supplied with water from giant holding tanks. Their tightly tacked steel siding always gleamed white in the sun. But the PETA hidden-camera footage shot by two undercover activists over a period of months in the summer of 2008, following up on a tip from a former employee, showed a harsh reality concealed inside.
The recordings caught [6] one senior worker beating a sow repeatedly on the back with a metal gate rod, a supervisor turning an electric prod on a sow too crippled to stand, another worker shoving a herding cane into a sow’s vagina. In one close-up, a distressed sow who’d been attacking her piglets was shown with her face royal blue from the Prima Tech marking dye sprayed into her nostrils ‘to […]
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Monday, September 2nd, 2013
MARIANA MAZZUCATO, - Slate/New Scientist (U.K.)
Stephan: This is one of those areas where a belief, particularly on the Right, is strongly held, but bogus. Even media believes the myth of the the private sector being the only route to technological innovation.
Images of tech entrepreneurs such as Mark Zuckerberg and Steve Jobs are continually thrown at us by politicians, economists, and the media. The message is that innovation is best left in the hands of these individuals and the wider private sector, and that the state-bureaucratic and sluggish-should keep out. A telling 2012 article in the Economist claimed that, to be innovative, governments must ‘stick to the basics’ such as spending on infrastructure, education, and skills, leaving the rest to the revolutionary garage tinkerers.
Yet it is ideology, not evidence, that fuels this image. A quick look at the pioneering technologies of the past century points to the state, not the private sector, as the most decisive player in the game.
Whether an innovation will be a success is uncertain, and it can take longer than traditional banks or venture capitalists are willing to wait. In countries such as the United States, China, Singapore, and Denmark, the state has provided the kind of patient and long-term finance new technologies need to get off the ground. Investments of this kind have often been driven by big missions, from putting a human on the moon to solving climate change. This has required not only funding […]
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