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Saturday, July 29, 2006
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news article: What
Does 'Organic' Really Mean?
(New York Times, 07/29/06)
read it
what I found interesting was this quote
WHICH foods are worth the higher price?
According to an analysis by the Environmental Working Group, a
nonprofit organic research organization, the so-called dirty dozen --
apples, bell peppers, celery, cherries, imported grapes, nectarines,
peaches, pears, potatoes, red raspberries, spinach and strawberries --
tend to have a high pesticide residue, even when washed. These are
worth buying organic, as is baby food, which tends to be made from
condensed fruits and vegetables.
Likewise, meat, poultry, eggs and dairy products that carry an organic
label are free of pesticides, synthetic growth hormones and
antibiotics. If a manufacturer does not use the term organic, but says
the product is "hormone free" or "does not contain antibiotics," "those
claims are somewhat meaningful," Ms. Rangan said.
and these links
Environmental
Working Group
Consumer Reports' Greener
Choices
Consumers Union Guide to
Environmental Labels
for example:
USDA Makes
Changes in Organic Program Based on 2005 Court Ruling and Congressional
Amendment to Organic Law -- Need to Close Loopholes
Last November, over 300,000
letters from people like you were sent to Congress opposing an
amendment to weaken organic standards. Despite our hard work and a
massive effort by organic farmers, food companies and consumers, a
late-night conference committee maneuver resulted in passage of a bad
amendment!
The amendment was inserted into the FY06 Agricultural Appropriations
Bill and passed. A number of Congressional representatives made
statements condemning both the undemocratic process and substance of
this change to the organic law.
The USDA is proposing to amend the National Organic Program regulations
to reflect the legislative changes made in Congress. The public comment
period is only open until May 12, 2006. But the proposal leaves
loopholes that could allow:
- dairy animals that could have been treated with
antibiotics, animal byproducts and hormones to be converted to organic
production; and
- numerous artificial (synthetic) substances, including over
500 food contact substances, to be used in organic processed foods
without review and approval by the National Organic Standards Board
(NOSB) and public input.
8:19:26 AM
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Saturday, July 22, 2006
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Warming Pacific Hurts Food Chain. A scarcity of krill in warmer waters near Pacific seabird breeding grounds means some species won't have enough food for chicks. Scientists expect severe population declines, which will mean other species up the food chain will go hungry. [Wired News: Top Stories]
8:12:58 PM
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From Business Week, July 31,
2006
Iran's annual oil and gas revenues: $60.000
billion
annual aid contribution to Hezbollah: $ .180 billion
annual aid contribution to Hamas: $
.040 billion
and from Business Week, July 31,
2006
Russia's government owned Gazprom gas company:
annual revenue: $60.000 billion
Some customers and their reliance on Gazprom:
Finland:
100%
Latvia:
100%
Lithuania: 100%
Slovkia: 100%
Greece: 87%
Czech Republic: 81%
Austria:
73%
Turkey:
66%
A Revolution in Wealth, by the
Tofflers
What most business, political and civil leaders have not yet clearly
understood
is a simple fact: An advanced economy needs an advanced society.
For every economy is a product of the society in which it is embedded
and is dependent on its key institutions.
(chapter 5)
in another place in the book, they mention the concept of: surplus
complexity.
more on that later.
5:10:13 PM
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Sunday, May 7, 2006
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Busy.
But also noodling on how to move my worries into a constructive,
positive effort to help define and resolve some of the social issues
before us all.
It is easy to find the issues of our impaired environment and our foot
dragging on coming to grips with how health care will inevitably become
our largest economic and ethical issue. It is easy to turn to black
humor about which wil kill us - global warming, a mutated virus plague,
the complexity of heath care choice or the race to spend our way to
"ethical" health care.
But what is a constructive, positive effort?
Is there one?
Yes.
We will make heart rending choices.
The eagle will disappear. As will the bear - polar as well as black.
The oceans fester. The global dimming will either save us from global
warming (yet we die of famine) or it doesn't and we find out whether Al
Gore's vision is gloomy enough. We come to live on corn rather than oil.
And we learn to make these heart rending choices with deliberate
practice.
A
Star Is Made
Freakonomics
By STEPHEN J. DUBNER and STEVEN D. LEVITT
Published: The New York Times on May 7, 2006
...And the best way to learn how to
encode information meaningfully, Ericsson determined, was a process
known as deliberate practice.
Deliberate practice entails more than simply repeating a task [~] playing
a C-minor scale 100 times, for instance, or hitting tennis serves until
your shoulder pops out of its socket. Rather, it involves setting
specific goals, obtaining immediate feedback and concentrating as much
on technique as on outcome.
Their work, compiled in the "Cambridge Handbook of Expertise and Expert
Performance," a 900-page academic book that will be published next
month, makes a rather startling assertion: the trait we commonly call
talent is highly overrated. Or, put another way, expert performers [~]
whether in memory or surgery, ballet or computer programming [~] are
nearly always made, not born. And yes, practice does make perfect.
These may be the sort of clichés that parents are fond of
whispering to their children. But these particular clichés just
happen to be true.
Ericsson's research suggests a third cliché as well: when it
comes to choosing a life path, you should do what you love [~] because if
you don't love it, you are unlikely to work hard enough to get very
good. Most people naturally don't like to do things they aren't "good"
at. So they often give up, telling themselves they simply don't possess
the talent for math or skiing or the violin. But what they really lack
is the desire to be good and to undertake the deliberate practice that
would make them better.
- The trait we commonly call
talent is highly overrated
- expert performers are
nearly always made, not born
- practice does make perfect
- when it
comes to choosing a life path, you should do what you love
because if
you don't love it,
you are unlikely to work hard enough to get very
good.
To
Build The Life You Want, Create The
Work You Love
Gradually I realized that, despite
obstacles, such plucky souls possessed a mode of thinking and working
that let them live the traditional [base "]American dream" (even though some
of the letters came from Asia, Canada, Australia, and Europe). They had
built their lives on the solid ground of genuine interests, meanings,
and values. They demonstrated old-fashioned virtues: thrift; hard work;
pride of workmanship; love of service and community; seemed to work for
something larger than self. They committed themselves to and invested
in their talents. They seemed to work for something larger than
self.... The main premise of this book is that authentic occupational
success is tied to healthy human development and that its seminal
demand is spiritual growth - our cultivation of those inner gifts and
forces that renew and animate our creative energies[sigma].
We live in a lesson-world: Its problems can help us grow. Our desire to
have someone else give us work, define our life[base ']s role, or tell us when
and how to do things is an avoidance of the highest order [^] a obvious
shirking of mature responsibility. Every generation has its share of
hardships to surmount: One of our era[base ']s assignments is to manage
tumultuous change. Another is to cultivate the highest self-awareness
that transcends the idea that our good [^] and [base "]the good life[per thou] [^] comes
from without. I propose a radical, yet ancient, notion: To build the
life you want [^] complete with inner satisfaction, personal meaning and
rewards [^] create the work you love. By this I mean invent a way to earn
an income doing what you do best, while serving others, becoming
authentic, fulfilling the highest standards of your vocation. This is
spiritual work. It[base ']s life[base ']s assignment. And most of us are
well-equipped to do it.
from Introduction,
Marsha Sinetarpyright @ 1995,
St. Martin's Griffin ~ New York,
ISBN
0-312-14141-6
So the question is
what do we love enough to save ourselves?
(no, not one thing we all do
thousands of things that we all do part of)
Oddly enough, I have a story that might help jump start this
"conversation."
more later....
8:52:41 PM
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Sunday, November 23, 2003
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Bradford Delong writes Notes:
Long-Term Budgeting
Yet another book to add to the
must-read-soon pile:
Which links to an Economist article, In
the long run we are all broke, How
to stop governments going bust.
...Most countries' explicit net
debt - issued as bonds and traded every day in financial markets - is at
manageable levels, relative to GDP. However, embodied in current tax
and expenditure policies are a lot of obligations for which governments
have not yet had to make explicit provision. This implicit liability
arises mainly from future increases in spending on pensions and health
care. Include it, and total debt vaults to levels last seen (for
explicit debt) in wartime. Governments often fall into bad habits when
their debts are so high, usually by resorting to the printing press and
using inflation to cut the real value of their liabilities....
So what is to be done? First,
governments must look much farther ahead than they do now. An
increasing number of western countries are planning their public
finances on a basis of three to five years, but this is nowhere near
enough, argues Mr Heller. They need to incorporate a long-range
perspective (of at least 25 years and preferably more) into their
budgets. Second, these projections should be vetted by independent
agencies such as America's Congressional Budget Office, because of
governments' tendency to see the silver lining and not the cloud....
That links to an IMF publication, Who
Will Pay? Coping with Aging Societies, Climate Change, and Other
Long-Term Fiscal Challenges:
7:41:45 PM
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Tuesday, November 11, 2003
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Monday, November 3, 2003
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SJ Mercury: Adding style to substance. It used to be that only high-end companies such as Apple Computer or Sony cared about industrial design -- the distinctive look and feel of their products. But in an age when hardware has become a commodity, many more tech companies are coming to realize that aesthetics matter. [Tomalak's Realm]
7:06:40 PM
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Saturday, November 1, 2003
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THE FUTURE OF NEWS
Preparing for
the Coming Era of Participatory News
The Internet means now everyone is a journalist - or can be.
Dale Peskin, Online Journalism Review,
posted: 2002-03-26
Forty years ago Marshall McLuhan
observed that we look at the future through a rear-view mirror. He
foresaw a time when our small planet would become a connected,
ever-changing global village that would immediately and inextricably be
altered by the way it is observed and reported.
McLuhan warned that few would notice. We would be changing and moving
too fast, he predicted. Our vision for the future would be left to a
backward glance through a small window of a moving vehicle....
3:23:20 PM
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MediaCon: Cooper's new book. Mark Cooper, of the Consumer Federation of America has published a new book, Media Ownership and Democracy in the Digital Information Age. The book can be purchased at Amazon (link to come), or it can be downloaded for free under a Creative Commons license. [Lessig Blog]
2:27:59 PM
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© Copyright 2006 Russ Savage.
Last update: 7/29/06; 8:21:34 AM.
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