Pressure for Drones Over US

SOURCE: Shannon Rudolph (shannonkona@gmail.com) SUBHEAD:Feds under pressure to open US skies to drones for law enforcement surveillance. Image above: A General Atomics MQ-9 Reaper hunter/killer drone on the tarmac. From (http://gizmodo.com/279934/us-to-deploy-an-entire-squadron-of-unmanned-aerial-drones-in-iraqistan). [Editor's note: Yeah. It's been so precise and successful in Afghanistan I can see why we'd want a bunch of gamers working joystick driven robots and mixing it up with commercial airliners... And be careful about any backyard BBQ wedding parties at your place.] Unmanned aircraft have proved their usefulness and reliability in the war zones of Afghanistan and Iraq. Now the pressure's on to allow them in the skies over the United States.

The Federal Aviation Administration has been asked to issue flying rights for a range of pilotless planes to carry out civilian and law-enforcement functions but has been hesitant to act. Officials are worried that they might plow into airliners, cargo planes and corporate jets that zoom around at high altitudes, or helicopters and hot air balloons that fly as low as a few hundred feet off the ground.

On top of that, these pilotless aircraft come in a variety of sizes. Some are as big as a small airliner, others the size of a backpack. The tiniest are small enough to fly through a house window.

The obvious risks have not deterred the civilian demand for pilotless planes. Tornado researchers want to send them into storms to gather data. Energy companies want to use them to monitor pipelines. State police hope to send them up to capture images of speeding cars' license plates. Local police envision using them to track fleeing suspects.

Like many robots, the planes have advantages over humans for jobs that are dirty, dangerous or dull. And the planes often cost less than piloted aircraft and can stay aloft far longer.

"There is a tremendous pressure and need to fly unmanned aircraft in (civilian) airspace," Hank Krakowski, FAA's head of air traffic operations, told European aviation officials recently. "We are having constant conversations and discussions, particularly with the Department of Defense and the Department of Homeland Security, to figure out how we can do this safely with all these different sizes of vehicles."

There are two types of unmanned planes: Drones, which are automated planes programmed to fly a particular mission, and aircraft that are remotely controlled by someone on the ground, sometimes from thousands of miles away.

Last year, the FAA promised defense officials it would have a plan this year. The agency, which has worked on this issue since 2006, has reams of safety regulations that govern every aspect of civilian aviation but is just beginning to write regulations for unmanned aircraft.

"I think industry and some of the operators are frustrated that we're not moving fast enough, but safety is first," Krakowski said in an interview. "This isn't Afghanistan. This isn't Iraq. This is a part of the world that has a lot of light airplanes flying around, a lot of business jets."

One major concern is the prospect of lost communication between unmanned aircraft and the operators who remotely control them. Another is a lack of firm separation of aircraft at lower altitudes, away from major cities and airports. Planes entering these areas are not required to have collision warning systems or even transponders. Simply being able to see another plane and take action is the chief means of preventing accidents.

The Predator B, already in use for border patrol, can fly for 20 hours without refueling, compared with a helicopter's average flight time of just over two hours. Homeland Security wants to expand their use along the borders of Mexico and Canada, and along coastlines for spotting smugglers of drugs and illegal aliens. The Coast Guard wants to use them for search and rescue.

The National Transportation Safety Board held a forum in 2008 on safety concerns associated with pilotless aircraft after a Predator crashed in Arizona. The board concluded the ground operator remotely controlling the plane had inadvertently cut off the plane's fuel.

Texas officials, including Gov. Rick Perry, Sens. Kay Bailey Hutchison and John Cornyn, and Rep. Henry Cuellar, have been leaning on the FAA to approve requests to use unmanned aircraft along the Texas-Mexico border. FAA recently approved one request to use the planes along the border near El Paso, but another request to use them along the Texas Gulf Coast and near Brownsville is still pending.

Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano has told lawmakers that safety concerns are behind the delays. Cornyn is blocking a Senate confirmation vote on President Barack Obama's nominee for the No. 2 FAA job, Michael Huerta, to keep the pressure on.

Other lawmakers want an overall plan to speed up use of the planes beyond the border. A bill approved by the Senate gives FAA a year to come up with a plan; a House version extends the deadline until Sept. 30, 2013, but directs the transportation secretary to give unmanned aircraft permission to fly before the plan is complete, if that can be done safely.

Marion Blakey, a former FAA administrator and president of the Aerospace Industries Association, whose members include unmanned aircraft developers, said the agency has been granting approvals on a case by case basis but the pace is picking up. She acknowledged that there are still safety concerns that need to be addressed before the planes can be used more widely.

Some concerns will be alleviated when the FAA moves from a radar-based air traffic control system to one based on GPS technology. Then, every aircraft will be able to advise controllers and other aircraft of their location continually. However, that's a decade off.

Michael Barr, a University of Southern California aviation safety instructor, said the matter should not be rushed.

"All it takes is one catastrophe," Barr said. "They'll investigate, find they didn't do it correctly, there'll be an outcry and it will set them back years."

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Something wrong with Hizzoner?

SOURCE: Kenneth Taylor (taylork021@Hawaii.rr.com) SUBHEAD: Meeting on subject of Kauai referendum on replacing mayoral politics with a county manager-council system. Image above: Boss William Tweed of New York's Tammany Hall, the home of the Democratic Party political machine that played a major role in the politics of 19th century New York City. Mayoral politics... what could possibly go wrong? From (http://stratamaxgames.com/?p=14). WHAT: Tasked with reviewing proposals to change the existing form of county government to a county manager system, members of the Charter Review Commission Special Committee on County Governance are seeking input from Kaua‘i residents. The public is invited to provide their perspective on these proposals at upcoming community meetings: WHEN: Tuesday, June 15, 6 pm, Līhu'e Neighborhood Center (old) Thursday, June 17, 6 pm, Hanapepe Neighborhood Center Following the meetings, the Special Committee on County Governance will submit a report with its recommendations to the entire Charter Review Commission at its June 28 meeting. The Special Committee is comprised of three-members: Patrick Stack, chair; Joel Guy; and Jan TenBrugggencate. Anyone with special needs requiring an American Sign Language interpreter or an auxiliary aid to participate in any of these meetings should contact the Boards and Commissions Office at 241-4922 at least five business days prior to the meeting. To access the county manager proposals, please go to the county website, www.kauai.gov and navigate to the Boards and Commissions page or call the Boards and Commissions Office.
Council-Manager Resource Material By Robert J. O’Neill, Executive Director of ICMA - (http://transformgov.org/en/Page/100086/CouncilManager_Form_Resource_Package)

The collection of articles, statistics, and other information—grouped below as ICMA’s Council-Manager Form Resource Packet—will assist you in helping residents, elected officials, and business leaders within your community gain a better understanding of the value that professional management brings to our cities and towns.

ICMA's origins lie in the council-manager form of local government, which combines the strong political leadership of elected officials (in the form of a council, board, or other governing body) with the strong professional experience of an appointed local government manager or administrator. Under this form, power is concentrated in the elected council, which hires a professional administrator to implement its policies. These highly-trained, experienced individuals serve at the pleasure of the elected governing body and have responsibility for preparing the budget, directing day-to-day operations, hiring and firing personnel, and serving as the council's chief policy advisor.

Although ICMA actively promotes the council-manager form as the preferred structure, the organization also supports professional management in all forms of local government.

We invite you to use these materials as part of your council-manager form adoption and retention efforts. Click on the link to the packet components and you will be taken to ICMA’s Resource Center, where you will find a description of the material and one or more downloads. In addition to the materials contained in the Council-Manager Form Resource packet, scroll further down this page for a list of other resources, or contact Jared Dailey, assistant program manager, at jdailey@icma.org, for more information on form-of-government issues.

Launching an educational or promotional effort in support of the council-manager form can be difficult, but we hope you find these materials useful. Thank you for helping ICMA advocate the value of professional local government management and good luck with your efforts!

BACKGROUND

Brochure: Council-Manager Form of Government: Frequently Asked Questions (brochure)

Forms of Local Government Structure

Sample Ordinance for Establishing a Manager’s Position

Article: Taking Stock of the Council-Manager Form at 100

VALUE OF THE PROFESSION

Brochure: Professional Local Government Management: The Benefits to Your Municipality (brochure)

Article: How Professionals Can Add Value to Their Communities and Organizations

Questionnaire for Determining Value of Professional Administrator/Manager

Article: The Mayor-Manager Conundrum That Wasn't

Article: Council-Manager or "Strong Mayor": The Choice is Clear

EFFICIENCY/FISCAL SUPERORITY

How Professionals Save Local Governments Money

Article: Money Magazine's Best Places to Live (2008) and Statistics

Article: San Antonio's Bond Rating

STATISITICS

Form of Government Statistics (2009)

Form of Government Statistics: Council-Manager versus Mayor-Council in Specific Population Ranges

Local Government Longitudinal Statistics

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Biomass Worse Than Coal

SUBHEAD: Oops! New study indicates use of biomass as alternative energy source has bigger CO2 footprint than conventional coal. Image above: Coal plant amongst the trees. Photo by Steve Ringman in Seattle Times from (http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/politics/2008997025_coal07m.html).

By Daniel Kessler on 12 June 2010 in TreeHugger.org - (http://www.treehugger.com/files/2010/06/biomass-worse-than-coal.php)

Massachusetts has a law mandating a portfolio of renewable energy, including energy derived from wind, solar, and biomass. But a new study says that replacing coal power with biomass will actually increase the amount of CO2 emitted, throwing a wrench in the state's plan and casting some doubt over the utility of using biomass on national scale and the inclusion of biomass titles in the energy bills now being negotiated in Congress.

The study from the Manomet Center for Conservation Sciences finds that the replacing coal power generation with that from biomass would result in 3 percent greater emissions by 2050.

From the AP:

Biomass has long been part of the state's portfolio of renewable energy sources, along with solar, wind and geothermal energy. The Patrick administration has already invested $1 million to jump-start four proposed wood-burning plants in Russell, Greenfield, Springfield and Pittsfield, as it tries to reach the state-mandated goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions 80 percent by 2050.

Massachusetts Environmental Secretary Ian Bowles said Thursday the state is now rethinking that policy, including taxpayer incentives for wood-burning plants.

"Now that we know that electricity from biomass harvested from New England forests is not 'carbon neutral' in a timeframe that makes sense given our legal mandate to cut greenhouse gas emissions, we need to re-evaluate our incentives for biomass," he said in a statement accompanying the report.

The Waxman-Markey bill that passed through the House last year included language that would ultimately create a market for small-diameter trees, brush and forest slash to be used as biomass fuel. Some advocates want even greater federal incentives for biomass, such as woody biomass from federal lands to qualify as renewable feedstock for biofuels production.

Keep an eye on the Senate climate bill to see how biomass might be used and what incentives are given to it.

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Sioux Onipikte Prayer

SOURCE: Mary Stone (maliastone@earthlink.net) SUBHEAD: A message from leader of Sioux Nation on BP Gulf oil spill affect on Animal and Plant Nations. Image above: Chief Arvol of the Lakota, Dakota and Nakota Nations. From (http://www.foursuns.de/FS%20News/06%20news/honor%20sioux/un_wird_sioux.htm). By Chief Arvol Looking Horse on 14 June 2010 for Sioux Nation - My Relatives, Time has come to speak to the hearts of our Nations and their Leaders. I ask you this from the bottom of my heart, to come together from the Spirit of your Nations in prayer. We, from the heart of Turtle Island, have a great message for the World; we are guided to speak from all the White Animals showing their sacred color, which have been signs for us to pray for the sacred life of all things. As I am sending this message to you, many Animal Nations are being threatened, those that swim, those that crawl, those that fly, and the plant Nations, eventually all will be affect from the oil disaster in the Gulf. The dangers we are faced with at this time are not of spirit. The catastrophe that has happened with the oil spill which looks like the bleeding of Grandmother Earth, is made by human mistakes, mistakes that we cannot afford to continue to make. I asked, as Spiritual Leaders, that we join together, united in prayer with the whole of our Global Communities. My concern is these serious issues will continue to worsen, as a domino effect that our Ancestors have warned us of in their Prophecies. I know in my heart there are millions of people that feel our united prayers for the sake of our Grandmother Earth are long overdue. I believe we as Spiritual people must gather ourselves and focus our thoughts and prayers to allow the healing of the many wounds that have been inflicted on the Earth. As we honor the Cycle of Life, let us call for Prayer circles globally to assist in healing Grandmother Earth (our Unc'I Maka). We ask for prayers that the oil spill, this bleeding, will stop. That the winds stay calm to assist in the work. Pray for the people to be guided in repairing this mistake, and that we may also seek to live in harmony, as we make the choice to change the destructive path we are on. As we pray, we will fully understand that we are all connected. And that what we create can have lasting effects on all life. So let us unite spiritually, All Nations, All Faiths, One Prayer. Along with this immediate effort, I also ask to please remember June 21st, World Peace and Prayer Day/Honoring Sacred Sites day. Whether it is a natural site, a temple, a church, a synagogue or just your own sacred space, let us make a prayer for all life, for good decision making by our Nations, for our children's future and well-being, and the generations to come. Onipikte (that we shall live), Chief Arvol Looking Horse 19th generation Keeper of the Sacred White Buffalo Calf Pipe of the Lakota, Dakota, Nakota Nation of the Sioux .

BP Headed to Toilet

SUBHEAD: Junked! Or would BP be happy to privatize the gains and socialize the losses? Image above: BP station damaged in Proserpine, Australia, by cyclone Ului on 3/21/10. From (http://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/comment.html?entrynum=1451&tstamp=&page=16). By Associated Press Staff on 15 June 2010 in Huffington Post - (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/06/15/bp-downgraded-by-fitch-ov_n_612380.html) An influential ratings agency downgraded BP on Tuesday because of worries about the continuing Gulf of Mexico spill, sending the oil company's shares to a new low.

Shares in BP fell below 350 pence for the first time since the oil rig disaster, dropping 2.5 percent to 346 pence ($5.12) by midafternoon on the London Stock Exchange.

Fitch Ratings downgraded BP's long-term issuer default rating and senior unsecured rating to BBB from AA.

"The scale of today's rating action has been partly driven by the increased risk that the balance between long-term and near-term cost payments may now be skewed much more heavily toward the near term than previously anticipated," Fitch said.

The ratings company said it was concerned by reports from U.S. government scientists that the volume of the spill was significantly larger than previously indicated, and it was also worried by pressure from U.S. officials on BP to pay billions of dollars into an escrow account to guarantee payment of cleanup costs.

"Both of these events have a direct bearing on BP's fundamental financial flexibility," Fitch said.

On Monday, shares fell 9 percent in London and 10 percent in New York as the company remained under intense pressure to stop the catastrophic leak of oil from a well in the Gulf of Mexico.

BP has lost 45 percent of its value since the April 20 explosion at the Deepwater Horizon rig in the Gulf of Mexico that killed 11 workers and set off the worst oil spill in history.


A Word to BP Shareholders By Harry Shearer on 14 June 2010 in Huffington Post - (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/harry-shearer/a-word-to-bp-shareholders_b_612362.html) The British media have been ablaze with patriotic defensiveness, upset that President Obama keeps calling BP "British Petroleum". Strange: I was at the Tate Britain museum yesterday, visiting galleries sponsored by...BP. The London Olympics have as a main sponsor...BP. Seems pretty British to me.

The media, and the Prime Minister, have also been insistent about the economic importance of BP to...Britain. The figure floating around suggests that a significant amount of pension-fund income in Britain each year comes from BP. Although it's not British, you recall. And then they point out that almost 49% of BP shares are owned by Americans, and that BP grew to its mammoth size by merging with Amoco, an American company, mainly to gain control of Amoco's operations in, of all places, the Gulf of Mexico.

So, okay, a message to BP shareholders, be they Brits, Americans or none of the above. You benefited through the years from the profits generated by the company which accumulated 97% of the fines levied against oil companies for safety and environmental violations (not counting Exxon Valdez compensation).

You gained financially from the damage your company inflicted on its workers and its surroundings. Now your company, following those same policies, has created enormous economic and ecological damage, and you are concerned about the impact that unlimited liability for that damage would have on your dividend and on the ability of your company to avoid bankruptcy.

Question: how many of you complained to management about the policies and practices from which you benefited all these years? Or do you just complain when these policies and practices inflict profound economic and other costs on others, for which your company may be held responsible? Did you complain when management obviously low-balled flow estimates out of the well for at least a month, so as to minimize damage perceived by the potential jury pool?

Or, as seems more likely, are you happy to privatize the gains and socialize the losses?

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Long Emergency Fierce Urgency

SUBHEAD: Sometime this summer the tide will reverse and we'll contend with more than just shrieking wildlife suffocating in crude. Image above: A pelican nibbling at the surface of the sea in better times. From (http://images.new-jersey-birds.com/labels/Florida.html). By James Kunstler on 14 June 2010 in Kunstler.com - (http://kunstler.com/blog/2010/06/fierce-urgency.html) The exquisite morbidity of the BP oil spill has concentrated the collective national mind like few other events in this ongoing long emergency. How many times a day does it occur to you -- perhaps while sitting in traffic, or oogling some girl in a nearby cubicle, or cruising the freezer stacks in the supermarket -- that one mile deep in the Gulf of Mexico that crude is just blasting away into the deep blue sea? Anyway, it troubles my hours. But what if it hadn't happened? What if the nation's attention was not fixed on the "fierce urgency" of this disaster and we were left with all the tiresome familiar problems of politics and economy?
After the financial storms of May, people in the knife-and-fork-using nations may feel that all our troubles with money have been sorted out and settled. Greece had an apoplexy and Europe somehow survived -- at least so far. Spain fell to its knees and apparently remains there, in mid-aria, waiting for an orchestra to strike up the next measure. Portugal is trying to hide in plain sight, like a beach-goer who has lost swimsuit in the surf. Hungary choked on something last week and was left sitting at the table with its face in a plate of goulash. Iceland has been put on, well, on ice after stiffing its British account holders. The Brits have discovered that they have enough money to run their country in the style of Edward the Confessor. France is weeping over all the Spanish, Greek, and Portuguese bad paper in its bank vaults. Italy, having become a wholly-owned subsidiary of Silvio Berlusconi, is eating a sparse lunch under the grape arbors. The Baltic states are sinking into a northern peat bog of penury.... And Germany remains upright, wondering how it can wiggle out of this sad-ass collective of fazed cookies.
June so far is a strange ebb tide of of events relating to the world's money, but when the water goes out like that, you know it's sure to return before long, and the peaceful mud-flats of June may vanish under a summer tsunami. I know I'm not alone in the creepy feeling that really nothing has been sorted out and the world is waiting to get hammered six days to Sunday by the consequences of living too large for too long. The markets have been stranded, too, gyrating on the peculiar life-support of robot-traders -- since all the humans have packed up and left the scene for higher ground. The corporate creaming-off of anything not nailed down in America continues apace, with the cream ending up as icing on the petit fours passed around the twilight lawns of East Hampton.
President Obama may be lucky that he has something he can pretend to be decisive about in the BP oil spill. It's allowed him to completely avoid taking a public stand on crucial parts of the financial reform legislation working its way through congress like a stinking bolus. For instance, where does Mr. Obama stand on the reform of credit default swap activities? This dark realm of swindling has come close to choking the American money system to death -- and might yet do the job -- but the president hasn't offered up a word of leadership on it. My guess is that the gestures of reform will leave reform completely unfinished by the time the high water of events starts rushing back in. All the structural fault-lines will remain as even more decay sets in and new cracks appear. Something is gonna give this summer.
It all comes down to one thing: the world is mismanaging contraction. The world will not solve the problems of massive over-complexity with more complexity. But scaling down is apparently not an option, though it will happen whether we participate or not. The USA is like Herman Melville's Bartleby the Scrivener who, when asked to do anything, replied, "I prefer not to." His preference led him to a pauper's grave.
The future attempts to regulate undersea oil drilling will send many companies to do their thing in other parts of the world where nobody gives a shit what you do offshore as long as you pony up the royalties to the grifters in charge onshore. America is going to lose a whole lot more of its own oil production. Smaller companies may shut down altogether from the cost of complying with new safety rules and an inability to get insurance. The oil from deep water in the Gulf of Mexico was how we hoped we would offset the ongoing depletions in Alaska. We're going to have to import even more oil than the two-thirds-plus we already depend on. One thing President Obama -- nor anyone else with an audience or a constituency -- will speak a word about is our massive, incessant purposeless motoring.
Pretty soon, the oil missing from the Gulf will leave a message at the 7-Eleven stops in Dallas and Chattanooga, and before the year is out the cardboard signs that say "Out Of Gas" may hang on the pumps. A great hue and cry will rise out of the Nascar ovals and righteous lady politicians with decoupaged hair-doos will invoke the New World Order and the Book of Revelation in their rise to power. Reasonable men with moderate views will dither on the sidelines, afraid to offend one faction or another.
Sometime this summer that ebb tide of events is going to reverse and we'll have more to contend with than just the shrieking wildlife suffocating in orange gunk, and the ruined spawning grounds of the shrimp, and the lost livelihoods of the sportfishing charter guides, and the tarball covered beaches and devalued real estate. We decided to de-complexify the hard way, the way that brings about as much pain and disorder as possible until we discover that the long emergency beats a path straight into a world made by hand. .

The Saudi Arabia of Lithium

SUBHEAD: We struck Lithium! Now the Afghanistan War makes sense. It wasn't about Al Qaeda, it was about charging our Blackberries. Image above: A Blackberry 9000 displaying the Empire at night. From (http://a2view.wordpress.com/2009/09/25/blackberry-bold-9000-vs-iphone-3gs-a-love-hate-relationship). By James Risen on 13 June 2010 in The New York Times - (http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/14/world/asia/14minerals.html) The United States has discovered nearly $1 trillion in untapped mineral deposits in Afghanistan, far beyond any previously known reserves and enough to fundamentally alter the Afghan economy and perhaps the Afghan war itself, according to senior American government officials.

The previously unknown deposits — including huge veins of iron, copper, cobalt, gold and critical industrial metals like lithium — are so big and include so many minerals that are essential to modern industry that Afghanistan could eventually be transformed into one of the most important mining centers in the world, the United States officials believe.

An internal Pentagon memo, for example, states that Afghanistan could become the “Saudi Arabia of lithium,” a key raw material in the manufacture of batteries for laptops and BlackBerrys.

The vast scale of Afghanistan’s mineral wealth was discovered by a small team of Pentagon officials and American geologists. The Afghan government and President Hamid Karzai were recently briefed, American officials said.

While it could take many years to develop a mining industry, the potential is so great that officials and executives in the industry believe it could attract heavy investment even before mines are profitable, providing the possibility of jobs that could distract from generations of war.

“There is stunning potential here,” Gen. David H. Petraeus, commander of the United States Central Command, said in an interview on Saturday. “There are a lot of ifs, of course, but I think potentially it is hugely significant.”

The value of the newly discovered mineral deposits dwarfs the size of Afghanistan’s existing war-bedraggled economy, which is based largely on opium production and narcotics trafficking as well as aid from the United States and other industrialized countries. Afghanistan’s gross domestic product is only about $12 billion.

“This will become the backbone of the Afghan economy,” said Jalil Jumriany, an adviser to the Afghan minister of mines.

American and Afghan officials agreed to discuss the mineral discoveries at a difficult moment in the war in Afghanistan. The American-led offensive in Marja in southern Afghanistan has achieved only limited gains. Meanwhile, charges of corruption and favoritism continue to plague the Karzai government, and Mr. Karzai seems increasingly embittered toward the White House.

So the Obama administration is hungry for some positive news to come out of Afghanistan. Yet the American officials also recognize that the mineral discoveries will almost certainly have a double-edged impact.

Instead of bringing peace, the newfound mineral wealth could lead the Taliban to battle even more fiercely to regain control of the country.

The corruption that is already rampant in the Karzai government could also be amplified by the new wealth, particularly if a handful of well-connected oligarchs, some with personal ties to the president, gain control of the resources. Just last year, Afghanistan’s minister of mines was accused by American officials of accepting a $30 million bribe to award China the rights to develop its copper mine. The minister has since been replaced.

Endless fights could erupt between the central government in Kabul and provincial and tribal leaders in mineral-rich districts. Afghanistan has a national mining law, written with the help of advisers from the World Bank, but it has never faced a serious challenge.

“No one has tested that law; no one knows how it will stand up in a fight between the central government and the provinces,” observed Paul A. Brinkley, deputy undersecretary of defense for business and leader of the Pentagon team that discovered the deposits.

At the same time, American officials fear resource-hungry China will try to dominate the development of Afghanistan’s mineral wealth, which could upset the United States, given its heavy investment in the region. After winning the bid for its Aynak copper mine in Logar Province, China clearly wants more, American officials said.

Another complication is that because Afghanistan has never had much heavy industry before, it has little or no history of environmental protection either. “The big question is, can this be developed in a responsible way, in a way that is environmentally and socially responsible?” Mr. Brinkley said. “No one knows how this will work.”

With virtually no mining industry or infrastructure in place today, it will take decades for Afghanistan to exploit its mineral wealth fully. “This is a country that has no mining culture,” said Jack Medlin, a geologist in the United States Geological Survey’s international affairs program. “They’ve had some small artisanal mines, but now there could be some very, very large mines that will require more than just a gold pan.”

The mineral deposits are scattered throughout the country, including in the southern and eastern regions along the border with Pakistan that have had some of the most intense combat in the American-led war against the Taliban insurgency.

The Pentagon task force has already started trying to help the Afghans set up a system to deal with mineral development. International accounting firms that have expertise in mining contracts have been hired to consult with the Afghan Ministry of Mines, and technical data is being prepared to turn over to multinational mining companies and other potential foreign investors. The Pentagon is helping Afghan officials arrange to start seeking bids on mineral rights by next fall, officials said.

“The Ministry of Mines is not ready to handle this,” Mr. Brinkley said. “We are trying to help them get ready.”

Like much of the recent history of the country, the story of the discovery of Afghanistan’s mineral wealth is one of missed opportunities and the distractions of war.

In 2004, American geologists, sent to Afghanistan as part of a broader reconstruction effort, stumbled across an intriguing series of old charts and data at the library of the Afghan Geological Survey in Kabul that hinted at major mineral deposits in the country. They soon learned that the data had been collected by Soviet mining experts during the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan in the 1980s, but cast aside when the Soviets withdrew in 1989.

During the chaos of the 1990s, when Afghanistan was mired in civil war and later ruled by the Taliban, a small group of Afghan geologists protected the charts by taking them home, and returned them to the Geological Survey’s library only after the American invasion and the ouster of the Taliban in 2001.

“There were maps, but the development did not take place, because you had 30 to 35 years of war,” said Ahmad Hujabre, an Afghan engineer who worked for the Ministry of Mines in the 1970s.

Armed with the old Russian charts, the United States Geological Survey began a series of aerial surveys of Afghanistan’s mineral resources in 2006, using advanced gravity and magnetic measuring equipment attached to an old Navy Orion P-3 aircraft that flew over about 70 percent of the country.

The data from those flights was so promising that in 2007, the geologists returned for an even more sophisticated study, using an old British bomber equipped with instruments that offered a three-dimensional profile of mineral deposits below the earth’s surface. It was the most comprehensive geologic survey of Afghanistan ever conducted.

The handful of American geologists who pored over the new data said the results were astonishing.

But the results gathered dust for two more years, ignored by officials in both the American and Afghan governments. In 2009, a Pentagon task force that had created business development programs in Iraq was transferred to Afghanistan, and came upon the geological data. Until then, no one besides the geologists had bothered to look at the information — and no one had sought to translate the technical data to measure the potential economic value of the mineral deposits.

Soon, the Pentagon business development task force brought in teams of American mining experts to validate the survey’s findings, and then briefed Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and Mr. Karzai.

So far, the biggest mineral deposits discovered are of iron and copper, and the quantities are large enough to make Afghanistan a major world producer of both, United States officials said. Other finds include large deposits of niobium, a soft metal used in producing superconducting steel, rare earth elements and large gold deposits in Pashtun areas of southern Afghanistan.

Just this month, American geologists working with the Pentagon team have been conducting ground surveys on dry salt lakes in western Afghanistan where they believe there are large deposits of lithium. Pentagon officials said that their initial analysis at one location in Ghazni Province showed the potential for lithium deposits as large of those of Bolivia, which now has the world’s largest known lithium reserves.

For the geologists who are now scouring some of the most remote stretches of Afghanistan to complete the technical studies necessary before the international bidding process is begun, there is a growing sense that they are in the midst of one of the great discoveries of their careers.

“On the ground, it’s very, very, promising,” Mr. Medlin said. “Actually, it’s pretty amazing.”

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Massive Public Layoffs Warning

SUBHEAD: Obama warns of massive layoffs of public sector teachers, police, and firefighters. Image above: Sesame Street teachers, firemen and police get laid off... especially teachers. Mashup by Juan Wilson.

By Staff on 13 June 2010 in Huffington Post - (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/06/13/obama-warns-of-massive-la_n_610401.html)

[Editor's note: This is an excerpt from article that is part of White House effort that appears to be an attempt to shore up stimulus effort and delay pain of joblessness that is coming.]

On Saturday night, the White House released a letter Obama sent to congressional leaders of both parties asking for nearly $50 billion in emergency aid to state and local governments to fend off "massive layoffs of teachers, police and firefighters" and to prevent a possible double-dip recession.

"We are at a critical juncture on our nation's patch to economic recovery," the president warned. "It is essential that we continue to explore additional measures to spur job creation and build momentum toward recovery, even as we establish a path to long-term fiscal discipline. At this critical moment, we cannot afford to slide backwards just as our recovery is taking hold."

In an interview with the Washington Post, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel "said the letter is intended to settle the growing debate over the opposing priorities of job creation and deficit reduction and 'where you put your thumb on the scale.'"

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Act Two of Economic Collaspe

SUBHEAD: Our economic problems are hardly over as public debt rises and stimulus fades away. Image above: Carton of Double Dip flavored swizzler sticks over 1929 stock crash headline. Mashup by Juan Wilson. By Zoe Schneeweiss on 10 June 2010 in Bloomberg News - (http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601010&sid=aY_SHqr1LQhk) Investor George Soros said “we have just entered Act II” of the crisis as Europe’s fiscal woes worsen and governments are pressured to curb budget deficits that may push the global economy back into recession.

“The collapse of the financial system as we know it is real, and the crisis is far from over,” Soros said today at a conference in Vienna. “Indeed, we have just entered Act II of the drama.”

Soros, 79, said the current situation in the world economy is “eerily” reminiscent of the 1930s with governments under pressure to narrow their budget deficits at a time when the economic recovery is weak.

Concern that Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis may spread sent the euro to a four-year low against the dollar on June 7 and has wiped out more than $4 trillion from global stock markets this year. Europe’s debt-ridden nations have to raise almost 2 trillion euros ($2.4 trillion) within the next three years to refinance, according to Bank of America Corp.

“When the financial markets started losing confidence in the credibility of sovereign debt, Greece and the euro have taken center stage, but the effects are liable to be felt worldwide,” Soros said.

Soros gained fame in the 1990s when he reportedly made $1 billion correctly betting against the British pound. He also wagered that Germany’s mark would appreciate after the collapse of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and that Japanese stocks would start to fall in the same year. His firm, Soros Fund Management LLC, manages about $25 billion.

Credit default swaps, which aim to protect bondholders against the risk of a default, are dangerous and a “license to kill,” Soros said today. CDSs should only be allowed if there is an insurable interest, he said.

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Israel Redefines "Chutzpah"

SUBHEAD: Something to you can boycott. Better Place is an Israeli manufacturer of chargers for electric vehicles to be used in Hawaii. Image above: Better Place's CEO Moshe Kaplinksy at the first of his electric parking lots in Israel. From (http://sunhomedesign.wordpress.com/2009/01/06/the-end-of-petroleum-for-personal-transportation). DEFINITION: Chutzpah; (noun, slang) 1. 1. unmitigated effrontery or impudence; gall. (origin - Yiddish khustpa - Aram huspa) unmitigated
By Larry Geller on 11 June 2010 in Disappeared News -

(http://www.disappearednews.com/2010/06/israel-redefines-chutzpah.html)

My usual working definition of the popular Yiddish word “chutzpah” is: A man kills both his parents and then appeals to the judge for mercy because he is an orphan.”

That’s still the best I’ve seen, but Israel is coming up with its own definition. Because of its tight, damaging and illegal blockade of Gaza, the boycott Israel movement is gaining some steam around the world, and there is a separate boycott movement in the West Bank. So now a bill introduced in the Israeli parliament would force the Palestinian Authority to compensate Israel for its losses due to boycotts.

The Land of Israel, a right-wing parliamentary lobby group committed to Jewish settlement of the West Bank, submitted the bill with the support of 25 politicians from right wing and centrist parties. If approved, it could theoretically force the Palestinian Authority (PA) to pay thousands of dollars in compensation to Jewish businesses affected by the Fayyad-led boycott campaign, a scenario that would likely spark furious reaction from Palestinians.

The move comes amid a growing global backlash against Israeli policies, which has intensified since Israel launched its bloody raid on a Turkish-led humanitarian convoy trying to breach the blockade of the Gaza Strip. [The Independent (UK), Israel plans to send bill to Palestinians over boycotts, 6/11/2010]

For more information on the worldwide Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement, see the website for the Global BDS Movement. For an article on the boycott of goods made in the illegal Israeli settlements in the West Bank, see Fayyad Challenges Israelis With Boycott of Settler-Made Goods (Bloomberg/Business Week, 6/11/2010).

It may be hard to find Israel-made products in Hawaii to boycott. One obvious target, not here yet, will be one of the darling electric vehicle projects embraced by Governor Lingle and DBEDT. Better Place is an Israeli company that will manufacture electric vehicles and charging stations to be used in Hawaii.

More about Better Place in this article. According to the article, Better Place has already installed charging stations at illegal settlements in the West Bank. Palestinians themselves are not even allowed to use those roads.

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Billionaire's Agland Lawn Farm

SUBHEAD: Farmers are the backbone of our civilization -not billionaires. Image above: Cozy neighborhood "farms" on Crater Hill in Kilauea, Kauai, Hawaii. From GoogleEarth. Note tennis court and guest cabanas. [Editor's note: The planning and approval of projects like this illustrate the pathetic state of awareness of our county officials of what is best for Kauai and its residents. Sucking up to billionaires who want to escape the havoc they have brought about on the mainland should be discouraged.] By Leo Azambuja on 11 June 2010 for the Garden Island News - (http://thegardenisland.com/news/local/article_eac8bee2-75f9-11df-a43c-001cc4c002e0.html)

The first cities were developed around agricultural activities, which provided abundant and reliable food supplies.

But farming is not easy. It requires long hours of intensive labor. So it’s safe to say that farmers need a comfortable home, preferably located within the farm lands.

But would they really need a home with a dozen or so rooms, a theater and a gigantic swimming pool? The argument gets even hotter when the so-called farmers will hire outside labor to grow and harvest turf, which will only cover one acre out of a 16.95-acre property.

Roland Sagum III, from Applied Planning Systems, and Sean Combs, from Land Strategies Hawai‘i, came before the Planning Commission on Tuesday to represent their clients, Steven and Diane Dechka, applying for a Special Management Area use permit to build a “farm dwelling” in Seacliff Plantation near Crater Hill in Kilauea.

“The zoning is agricultural, the General Plan is agricultural and the state land use (designation) is agricultural,” said county planner Lisa Ellen Smith, reading the Planning Department report.

The proposed “residential farm-dwelling unit” will have four bedrooms including a master suite, three bathrooms, powder room, kitchen, living room, dining room, theater, wine/safe room, exercise room, family room, sitting room and a three-car garage.

The living area amounts to 5,930 square feet, plus a covered lanai of 1,777 square feet.

But because farmers work hard, they may also play hard. So a 4,513-square-foot swimming pool is also proposed.

The farm will have no storage shed, but the owners will use part of the 1,101-square-foot garage to store farming materials, Sagum said.

The “farm dwelling” lot will be accessible thanks to 8,505 square feet of driveways and sidewalks.

In order to not “adversely impact” the scenery, the structure will be painted in earth tones, while mirrored glass and reflective materials are prohibited, according to the report.

When Smith finished reading the report, some commissioners looked puzzled.

“Why do you call this a farm lot?” asked commissioner Herman Texeira. “I don’t understand it.”

Thanks to Deputy County Attorney Ian Jung, Texeira had a prompt answer.

It is a home in connection with a farm, said Deputy County Attorney Ian Jung, advising Texeira to look in the packet of written documents he received that contains the turf-farm plan.

But Texeira wasn’t about to give in. “Who are we kidding?” he asked.

Commissioner Hartwell Blake also had concerns.

“I don’t know why we continue to entertain this anomaly,” he said. “It’s unfortunate.”

The ‘farm’

About one acre fronting the property will be dedicated to the “sod farm.” Another half-acre wrapping alongside and on the back of the property will have fruit trees.

“We’re told there really is a shortage of certain types of grasses,” Sagum said.

Landscape contractor Lawrence Tachibana said the farm would produce sod at a minimum quantity, and the bulk of it would be for stolon production, or horizontal stems of grass.

Tachibana said landscapers currently import stolons. “There’s a demand for it,” he said.

Commissioner James Nishida said landscaping is a “good” industry.

“It’s good for the environment, I think. It supports nurseries,” he said.

“I saw you guys’ farm plan, I thought this is one good solution,” Nishida said. “The pay scale for landscapers tends to be more than agricultural labor.”

“It’s a big industry that needs to be supported too,” he said.

Commissioner Jan Kimura asked if Dechka could donate three acres for a grass farm.

“We’ll look into that, and we’ll see how we can make that happen,” Sagum said.

Nishida argued that more grass would require more water usage, but Kimura was quick to remind him that more grass would generate more sales.

Pot-what?

Some commissioners may have questioned the real intent of the turf farm, but one thing is certain. The farm will never have a shortage of fertilizer.

Steven Dechka is the president and chief executive officer of Canpotex Ltd., a company based in Saskatchewan, Canada, that produces potash. Canpotex is the world’s largest exporter of potash, according to its website.

Potash is the common name for potassium carbonate. About 93 percent of the world’s potash consumption is used in fertilizers. Some of the world’s largest known deposits of potash are located in Saskatchewan.

The company has corporate offices in Singapore, Hong Kong, Tokyo, Saskatoon and Vancouver. It sells a range of eight million to nine million metric tons of potash annually to markets that include Australia, Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea and Malaysia.

The Saskatchewan Business Magazine ranked Canpotex as fourth in the top 100 Saskatchewan businesses in 2009. In the previous year the company was ranked sixth, and its gross sales receipts that year totaled $1.98 billion, according to the www.sasktop100.com, the magazine’s website.

‘Hard to swallow’

“We know it’s the state law, we know it’s a farm dwelling. It’s kinda blatantly putting one big house, and saying you’re going to mow the stolons, and do the fruit,” said commission Chair Caven Raco.

“It’s kinda hard to swallow,” he said.

Earlier in the meeting, Raco said that “it’s not really a sod farm, it’s a stolon farm.”

For the untrained ear, it sounded like Raco said it was a “stolen farm.”

Deferral

The commission deferred the decision to the June 22 meeting, when the applicant will have to show he fulfilled conditions from other government agencies.

Douglas Haigh, chief of the county Department of Public Works Building Division, submitted a signed document stating that the structure is outside the flood plain. The applicant will still be required to apply for building permits.

Gregg Fujikawa, chief of the Water Resources and Planning Division of the county Department of Water, said he has no objections to the proposed Special Management Area permit application.

The State Historic Preservation Division of the state Department of Land and Natural Resources found no historic properties in the area.

Chief of the DPW Engineering Division, Wallace Kudo, and County Engineer Donald Fujimoto co-signed comments stating that part of the information on the SMA application is incomplete, thus should be rejected. The application was not even signed by the petitioner, the comments stated.

The county DPW Engineering Division also said the project will require grading, and plans for such should be developed by a licensed professional engineer.

Best-management practices should be a part of the applicant’s building plans.

The Condominium Property Regime maps are lacking the expiration date of land surveyor Ronald Wagner’s license, according to the Engineering Division. Hawai‘i Administrative Rules 16-115-9 state that the signed document “shall state the expiration date of the licensee.”

The state Department of Health also had a few recommendations regarding wastewater systems and solid-waste management, plus noise, pollution and water disposal during construction.

If the building area — including clearing, grading and excavation — is equal to or greater than one acre, the applicant has to obtain a National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System permit. The building area of the proposed structures amounts to 21,826 square feet, but the actual area of consideration is greater than that because it should include the space in between structures.

All discharges related to the project must comply with the state water quality standards even if the applicant is not required to obtain an NPDES permit.

Non-compliance with water-quality and permit requirements, as specified in HAR 11-54 and 11-55, could lead to penalties of $25,000 per day per violation.

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Just Us building our community

SOURCE: Ed Justus (talkstorybooks@hotmail.com) SUBHEAD: Press release announcing Ed Justus, of Hanapepe, for Kauai County Council. Image above: Campaign photo of Ed Justus for Kauai County Council race. Press Release on 11 June 2010 from Voters for Ed Justus - Having filed his papers on May 24th, Ed Justus, owner of “Talk Story Bookstore” in Hanapepe, recent winner of the U.S. Small Business Administration’s 2010 Young Entrepreneur of the Year award and 2009 Finalist for the Ho’okela Retail Merchant of the Year for Kaua’i, is now a candidate for County Council. Ed is a participating member of the Kaua’i Chamber of Commerce, Kaua’i Filipino Chamber of Commerce, West Kaua’i Business and Professional Association and the West Kaua’i Lions Club, and is a regular volunteer with Salvation Army and Habitat for Humanity. In addition to running a continuously successful bookstore with his wife, Cynthia, Ed is vice-president overseeing the renovation of the Aloha Theatre property in Hanapepe and is actively engaged in the creation of a skateboard park on the Westside. STATEMENT: I look forward to supporting and encouraging the already forward movement for Kaua’i’s sustainability. By continuing to expand the diversity of our agriculture and farming and promoting incentives to revitalize commercial areas in our communities for small businesses, both creating more jobs, and pursuing renewable energies, these actions continue to enhance and honor our island’s heritage and way of life, making Kaua’i even better for ourselves and our visitors. As a resident of the Westside, small business owner, husband, friend, neighbor, pet owner and member of many business and community organizations, I’ve seen how important it is for our communities to know they have access to the people they choose to represent them, to feel their voice is heard and to see action taken. I look forward to serving on a county council that will continue to make beneficial decisions and constructive actions based on the needs, concerns and desires of every member of our community. See also: TGI: Justus sees Westside skatepark, revitalized Aloha Theater 6/12/10 CONTACT: Ed Justus phone: (808) 335-6469 email: talkstorybooks@hotmail.com mail: Voters for Ed Justus PO Box 770 Hanapepe HI 96716 More information on the campaign will be available soon. “It’s Just-Us that builds a community!” .

Digital Nation? No Thanks!

SUBHEAD: Telecommunication is eroding the boundaries between work and home and between the corporation and the self. Image above: Dwight Schrute plays Second Life in scene from "The Office". From (http://www.jessezuurmond.nl/?p=57). [Editor's note: I know... I know. Here I am sitting at a computer posting this particular article. How ironic can you get? We'll soon know.] By Peter Crabb on 8 June 2010 in Culture Change - (http://www.culturechange.org/cms/content/view/654/1) One of the brilliant insights in Daniel Quinn’s 1992 novel Ishmael is that modern industrialized people do not know how to live. Humans have long been cut off from the contingencies of nature, first as a consequence of discovering the wholly unnatural skill of growing reliable food supplies in one place, and later as a side effect of learning how to manufacture wholly unnatural objects and environments. The resulting alienation from nature and from our ancestors’ nature-adapted ways of life left us clueless and susceptible to being sold ideas about how people should live, usually by the most audacious psychopath in the group. Systems of dos and don’ts and fear-inspiring superstition kept the overworked and underfed serfs and slaves distracted with mythology, rituals, “moral” prohibitions, and unrestrained baby production. Except for the rare Spartacus, the serfs and slaves didn’t have the time or energy to give any trouble to the soft, overfed elites living in white palaces. They simply went along with the program.

Some things just don’t change.

Today the industrial capitalist elite is hard-selling a mythology-based way of life that undermines human potential and the capacity for sustainable communities. As part of the pitch, PBS (the P variously standing for Petroleum, Pharmaceutical, Pentagon, Propaganda, or Phone, take your pick) aired the Frontline program “Digital Nation” in February, 2010, a 90-minute infomercial selling tv-viewing serfs the notion that junk technologies are good for them.

At the outset, the producers give their game away with the announcement that “Major funding is provided by Verizon Foundation.” Indeed, the look of the just-released DVD is quintessentially Verizon: images of attractive young people gazing happily into cell phones. In real life, of course, most cell phone users are visibly bored or frustrated or downright angry as they desperately clutch their gadgets. But this video is not about reality. It’s an outline for a business plan that uses Madison Avenue-style myth-making to seduce the audience.

The tone of the video is set in the opening sequence, when writer-producer-director-correspondent Rachel Dretzin sits down at a blurry web cam, looks the viewer in the eye, and begins with the ubiquitous pseudo-hip condescension, “So . . . .” This opener should immediately alert viewers that they are about to be explained to by savvier-than-thou technology cultists about the emerging electronic information and communication technologies (ICTs) and how they are shaping society.

It is not surprising, then, that in what follows there is lots of happy talk about corporate technology products. Co-writer-correspondent Douglas Rushkoff has long been a cyber-enthusiast and mythologizer of technology. He says that “Virtual worlds do offer humans the chance to do something altogether new,” by which I don’t think he means sitting around getting fat and developing carpal tunnel syndrome. Philip Rosedale, CEO of the virtual world Second Life, crows, “We’re alienated from each other and the world around us.

When people come together in a virtual world, we immediately become more social, more connected, and more dependent on each other.” Real world bad, unsustainable fake world good. And one teenage technology cultist couldn’t have put it more mythically if she were paid: “We should embrace the technology that we have, and we should be thankful for it.”

In typical USAn media Newspeak fashion, Digital Nation pretends to look at “both sides” of technology issues, as though there are always only two sides. This is a well-established technique used by advertisers who know they can persuade people to buy their products if they present a view that opposes their own. It makes them look fair-minded and thus more credible. Despite a few remarks about the pitfalls of technology dependency, the take-home message of the video is that technology is inevitable, it is a force of nature, don’t ask questions, and lie back and enjoy it. Oh, and, it’s all about YOU!

At MIT, an institution not known for circumspection about technology, psychologist Sherry Turkle nonetheless makes the sensible observation that college students “have done themselves a disservice by drinking the Kool-Aid and believing that a multitasking learning environment will serve their best purposes.” Stanford sociologist Clifford Nass elaborates by reporting laboratory evidence that the idea of multitasking is sheer myth.

He finds that college students who think they are really good at multitasking—texting, watching American Idol, listening to an MP3 player, emailing, surfing the web, munching Cheetos, and writing a paper on the gender instantiations of Miley Cyrus all at the same time—are in fact really bad at all of those things. The brain can only do one thing well at a time. In typical Verizon advert style, an attractive young MIT coed dismisses concerns about multitasking by coolly announcing, “We are completely capable.” Who do we believe, the nerdy scientists or the beautiful young people?

Katie Salen, a professional educational technology booster, promotes the use of computer games in schools. “Games give us an incredibly engaging learning experience. . . . What it comes down to is that if you can’t engage that kid in wanting to learn something, you really have a problem on your hands.” So be sure our taxpayer-funded schools buy lots of corporate technotoys to keep the kids distracted with texting and twittering and facebook-befriending, trendily called “student-centered education.”

In one of the rare moments of enlightened dissent, journalist Todd Oppenheimer counters that this is “complete hogwash. . . . Schools are one of the few institutions we have in our society where you can have a sustained conversation about something without being bombarded and distracted by all these machines. We have to protect that.” He is right about the potential of education, but we’ve already failed miserably to protect kids and schools from the creeping technology menace.

The dialogue about multitasking and distraction is part of a larger battle over consciousness, and the corporate sellers of junk technology are winning that battle as they colonize the minds of younger generations. Those of us who envision a new reality that is free of corporate parasitism would do well to take note of this development.

It isn’t just tv and the internet. It’s a whole consumption constellation of corporate-produced distractions that have totally captured the attention and energies of young people. The digital ghetto they live in isolates them from older generations and cultivates contempt for any reality other than the one they have been sold. Why visit with neighbors or learn to garden when texting is so much more fun and easy?

The video lamely pretends to address the problems of technology’s impact on physical and mental health. In one segment Douglas Rushkoff travels to South Korea to investigate internet and video game addiction among young people. The Koreans have treatment programs where kids give up their gadgets for several weeks of reeducation, low-tech activities, and diet and exercise. Exoticizing technology-induced behavioral problems by reporting from South Korea subtly implies that USAns don’t have the same technology addiction problems. But the critical viewer will see plenty of images of pudgy, addle-brained USAns glued to screens, the real story.

No reference at all is made to the multiple hazards of electromagnetic fields (EMFs). We just see joyous innocent girls and boys clutching electronic devices close to their bodies. It’s not surprising that a Verizon-funded program would avoid broaching the topic when the current industry plan appears to be all wi-fi in all places at all times. Nor are there any references to the environmental harms of these technologies.

Nothing about the alleged fact that one Google search uses enough electricity to boil a cup of water. Nothing about the disastrous effects of mining rare earth metals to manufacture these gadgets. And nothing about the plague of plastics these technologies are made from. As far as this program is concerned, there really are no costs to the promised digital world.

We are told that technology is also changing business. Visiting IBM’s world headquarters, we learn that the computer company has largely adopted a telecommuting model, where workers stay home several days a week and meet and work online, leaving the physical buildings empty much of the time.

The implication is that this is the way of the future for business. But the promise of telecommuting that was hyped in the 1990s hasn’t materialized for most workers, whose days still include time trapped in bumper-to-bumper traffic on the way to brick-and-mortar workplaces. Instead of the liberation promised by telecommuting, ICTs have brought us something quite different and unwelcome: the erosion of the boundaries between work and home and between the corporation and the self.

When email first became a routine part of university business, I was outraged when I returned home at the end of a long day of teaching to find more orders from bosses waiting in my email inbox. There was no escape. And things got worse from there as many workers were issued pagers and then cell phones and then PDAs. The 24/7 work world invaded the serenity of home, disrupted family ties, and obliterated personal space. But you won’t hear anything about that on this video.

There are two tell-tale segments about technology and the military. We can guess that these were included because the program’s sponsor, Verizon, must profit handsomely from militarism. Surely every one of the quarter of a million U.S. service personnel at over 700 military bases around the world must carry a cell phone and subscribe to cell service. That’s a bloody big market.

In one of those segments, we visit the U.S. Army Experience Center near Philadelphia, where teenagers as young as 13 are lured to play with sexy weapons, helicopter and Humvee simulators, and first-person shooter games to get a feel for the adrenaline rush of combat. Recruiters joke with the kids who shout “Die!”and “Kill them!” as they play. “A 21st century approach to recruiting, modeled on the Apple Store,” reports our correspondent, Rachel Dretzin. Weekly protests outside the Army Experience Center focus on the intentional blurring of the line between reality and combat video games.

One Army recruiter assures us, “Certainly video games are not like warfare. I think most kids are smart enough to understand that.” A teenage visitor to the Center concurs: “I don’t get confused. It’s all fictional. I mean, it’s fun, but it’s nothing like the real thing.” Anyone who saw the WikiLeaks video released in April, 2010 (link below) that shows a helicopter gunship pilot’s view of mowing down Iraqi civilians as though he were playing a video game might come to a different conclusion.

Katie Salen says the distinction between the real world and the virtual world is a peculiarly adult perspective, “an idea that’s come from a generation where ‘virtual’ didn’t exist . . . but kids have the ability to kind of move seamlessly between the digital and the real.” Rachel Dretzin echoes that sentiment:

”Maybe there’s something these kids are getting that we [adults] aren’t sure how to value yet.”

Kids are the experts, adults are out of it and just plain stupid. Never mind that the people who make and market these technologies are very crafty adults who know exactly what they are doing as they lure young people into all-consuming technology dependence.

Summing up the video’s me-centered consumerist ideology, correspondent Douglas Rushkoff muses, “But when you stand back and look awhile, it becomes clear that people will take almost any technology and use it to express themselves, to find other people, to remake the world on their own terms . . . I love the possibilities of a digital life.”

When I stand back and look, it becomes clear that the corporate powers are forcing junk technologies on us that are destroying our health, our communities, and the planet. We are being reduced to cyber-serfs. I for one will stick with the possibilities of real life.

Peter Crabb recently spearheaded a new policy at the college where he teaches: cell phone use in the classroom are banned. He is a social psychologist who lives among the flora, fauna, and fungi of rural eastern Pennsylvania. For now, at least, he can be contacted at pbcrabb at verizon dot net.

See also: Island Breath: World of World of Warcraft 6/19/08 Island Breath: Virtual World Apocalypse 12/15/05

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The Devil's Excrement

SUBHEAD: The BP oil disaster in the Gulf brings us teetering, once again, to the brink of economic collapse. Image above: "Where Does Your World End?" Motto of Century Travel. From (http://www.flickr.com/photos/avi_abrams/475270221/sizes/o/). By Guy McPherson on 10 June 2010 in Nature Bats Last - (http://guymcpherson.com/2010/06/teetering/) The real economy — not the born-again exuberance in the world’s stock markets — is stalling as the effects of easy money wear off. Indeed, investor fund flows haven’t been this bad since Lehmann Brothers collapsed in the autumn of 2008. The IMF says risks to the global economy are high, and policy makers are about out of bullets to ward off the demons. In short, the world’s industrial economy is headed for a crack up and the U.S. dollar is doomed. Small wonder, given the paltry amount of currency relative to the gihugic amount of derivatives.

Of course, had stock traders known the dire nature of AIG, for an easy example, the economy would have completed its ongoing collapse long ago. Fortunately, Americans prefer presidents and presidential candidates who lie about the likes of AIG (and, as nearly as I can distinguish, everything else).

But back to the smoke-and-mirrors recovery. It’s fizzling out and there is worse to come. The Wall Street Journal predicts collapse will come in 2011. Over on CNBC, the recommendation is to buy barbed wire as the endpoint of devaluation appears. Others prefer a different phrase: the next step down, also known as a dead end. If you’re a part of Saudi Arabia’s royal family — welcome to the blog, by the way, and feel free to post a comment — it’s time to get out before the apocalypse comes to the kingdom.

For the imperialist-in-charge, what to do, what to do? Now that the Keynesian approach has about run its course, Obama is set to re-open offshore drilling program in a feeble attempt to keep the current game going. And there’s undoubtedly more stimulus headed our way, even though we already passed the point of debt saturation: each new dollar of federal debt now subtracts 45 cents from GDP.

If you’re having a tough time swallowing the notion that the economy can go from apparent recovery to the toilet in a few years, remember what most people believed in 1930: they thought the bad economic news was behind them, too. It’s looking a lot like 1930.

Even usually clueless Americans are getting nervous about the economy — apparently they’re no longer watching television. But even the ever-soothing voices on the tube are pointing out that the gusher in the Gulf is getting worse by the day, with economic implications bound to bury the coast for decades. The BP spill is probably gushing on the order of 100,000 barrels per day, not the 70,000 bpd reported by BP, a number that keeps going up as they keep repairing the problem. The spill certainly exceeds estimates by ultraconservative marine scientists.

But even the latter scientists agree about the existence of the undersea plume (or cloud). I am definitely not applying the “scientist” label to anybody working for the Obama administration: those former scientists gave up their integrity card when they started lying in the name of political fortune. Their new jobs are to hide the facts, not reveal them.

Despite the ongoing game of obfuscation, striking similarities have emerged between the financial collapse of 2008-2009 and the Gulf disaster. Among other characteristics, BP is paralleling the actions of the big banks, aided by the Obama administration, in covering up the truth. It comes as no surprise that BP CEO Tony Hayward has racked up a “greatest hits” list of quotes only a politician’s mother could love.

Energy analyst Matt Simmons predicts BP will declare bankruptcy within a month. That would be one way to escape paying for damages. The more likely approach, in my opinion, is a full-scale bailout by you and me. That route is already wending its way through Congress, although GOP House leader John Boehner is shying away from the idea he proposed earlier.

In a stunning bit of good news — in the category of throwing us a bone — BP finally released the list of toxins in the dispersants. Now that I’ve seen the list, though, I’m not particularly happy about it.

Finally, a single article from the mainstream points out that maybe we should re-think our oil-drenched lifestyles. Oil drilling threatens our future, as even the BBC has determined. Will that be enough to get us off the devil’s excrement? Certainly not if Barack Obama or the politicians in Louisiana have their way.

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China Condemns Farm for City

SUBHEAD: The suicidal industrialization of China continues to eviscerate its ability to sustain itself. Image above: Yange Youde on his farm. Ten-story apartment buildings of Wuhan, China. From article. By Staff on 10 June 2010 for Huffington Post - (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/06/10/china-farmer-fights-evict_n_606626.html)

A farmer in central China is defending his right to land ownership by using homemade rockets to ward off government attempts to evict him.

Since February, farmer Yang Youde, 56, who resides on the outskirts of Wuhan in China's Hubei province, has successfully thwarted two attempts to flatten his home by firing the cannon -- which he crafted out of used stove pipes -- and igniting 2,000 yuan (300 dollars) worth of fireworks toward demolition crews, China Daily reported.

"I shot only over the heads to frighten them," Yang said in an interview. "I didn't want to cause any injuries."

Yang is not alone in his dispute. According to the Associated Press, a nationwide boom has lead to a series of violent confrontations between residents and government officials over property seizures, with many businesses eager to cash in by evicting residents and developing their land. In November, a 47-year-old woman living in the Sichuan province died 16 days after setting herself on fire over the planned demolition of her husband's textile business.

In the early 1990s Yang signed a contract that entitles him to the disputed land through 2029, according to reports. However, all neighboring farmland has recently been requisitioned for a government project that includes the construction of several buildings.

Local authorities say that Yang was offered 130,000 yuan ($19,000) for his land. But Yang, citing government legislature on compensation for land use, is demanding nearly five times that amount.

"I'm a farmer," he said. "My whole life depends on farming. If I surrender, I have nowhere to go."

Image above: Yang Youde fires homemade cannon from his porch to discourage the condemnation of his farm for urban development.

Kawakami Realizes his Roots

SUBHEAD: Kawakami’s change of heart could mean passage of farm-housing bill. Image above: Derik Kawakami sits at Kauai County Council Meeting. Pjhot by Dennis Fujimoto. [Editor's note: Since his election Derek Kawakami has transformed himself. He is trim and energetic and articulate. After reading this article I believe he may have made as important a transformation intellectually and spiritually. Congratulations Derek. Next election we will be looking to support you.] By Leo Azambuja on 11 June 2010 in the Garden Island News - (http://thegardenisland.com/news/local/govt-and-politics/article_d2136d12-7530-11df-9886-001cc4c002e0.html) The farm-worker-housing bill seemed to have reached the end of its rope Wednesday.

With the Kaua‘i County Council split exactly in half, it would still have to go through some agony and pain before dying.

But a tsunami wiped clean the council chambers here.

Councilman Derek Kawakami had been a vehement opponent of the bill. Just like a righteous samurai following his code of honor, he was scheduled to be the first to sink the sword in the bill many farmers believed would help to increase their production.

Kawakami proceeded just as expected, bleeding the life out of the bill while explaining why he had been so against it.

When everyone thought Kawakami was going to hand a lifeless bill to his colleagues, the unexpected happened.

“I must admit that I indeed have forgotten that my roots have come from farming,” said Kawakami, shocking everyone.

“I’ve had a change of heart on this bill,” he said, causing an uproar in the room.

“When I look into the eyes of farmers like Louisa Wooton, when I look into the eyes of farmers like Roy Oyama, when I look into the eyes of farmers like Jerry Ornellas, it reminds me that I’m looking into the eyes of my own ‘ohana,” Kawakami said.

The night before the meeting, Kawakami stayed up late, writing down reasons for his opposition to the bill. What happened next was pivotal for his change of heart.

“I had a dream,” said Kawakami, adding that in the dream he visited his late uncle Edwin Kashima.

Kawakami said the kolohe farmer was the only uncle he could relate to. In the dream, Kawakami walked through his uncle’s farm, including a shack built with wood taken from shipping crates picked up at Big Save supermarket.

“I woke up so startled that my wife woke up,” he said. “I was in tears.”

Kawakami showed the audience old black-and-white pictures of both sides of his family, all barefoot. They were all farmers. At that point he admitted he had forgotten his roots and announced his decision to support the bill.

Showdown

Councilman Jay Furfaro and former Councilwoman JoAnn Yukimura originally introduced the bill almost three years ago, and it has since gone through lots of hearings and input from farmers.

The bill would allow farmers to build up to three, removable, farm-worker dwellings, totaling no more than 1,800 square feet of combined living space.

Several farmers had come to the meeting prepared for what was apparently the last attempt to convince council members to approve the bill.

The outcome, however, looked gloomy.

Councilman and rancher Daryl Kaneshiro had already recused himself from voting, alleging conflict of interest. With only six voting members and needing a majority of four votes to pass, a likely tie would kill the bill.

Council members Lani Kawahara, Tim Bynum and Furfaro have openly supported the bill, but Kawakami and Chair William “Kaipo” Asing had been fighting it all along, fearing abuse that could lead to development of residential subdivisions on agriculture-zoned lands.

The wild card was Councilman Dickie Chang, who seemed to be on the fence.

Two weeks prior, on May 26 the bill had reached full council, but was deferred in the 11th hour. At the end of a 12-hour work-day, Kawahara had to leave before a vote could be called for. She had to catch a plane to go on an official trip to a health conference in California.

Furfaro then asked for a two-week deferral, so Kawahara could participate in the vote. Asing, against his will, called for the motion.

Had the vote been called for before Kawahara left, it would’ve been a tie, killing the bill on the spot. That night, Chang had not yet stated his position, but he admitted Wednesday he would’ve voted against it at that meeting.

Another deferral

Despite the clear majority support, Bill 2318, Draft 3 was not approved Wednesday.

Furfaro asked for yet another deferral, of no more than two weeks, to work on amendments for safety against possible abuse.

Currently, there are at least 11 provisions to prevent abuse, he said (see box). Even the staunchest supporters of the bill agreed that enforcement needs to be done.

The bill will resurface once again on second reading on June 23, but with at least four of the six voting council members supporting the bill, it will likely pass.

Chang has not said what direction he will take, and Asing has repeatedly said he supports the intent of the bill, but thinks it’s not abuse-proof.

Kawakami, before announcing his change of heart, said he believed the intent of the farmers was “pure from the heart.”

After the council introduces extra safety measures, Chang and Asing may have a reason to join the party.

Not a cure for all

Kawakami may be voting for the bill when it resurfaces June 23, but he doesn’t believe farm-worker housing is a cure for a diminishing agricultural industry on Kaua‘i.

Some of the challenges, he said, include lack of collaboration between local farmers and food industry, increased costs of freight and materials, lack of education on the value of local products, lack of interest in farming as a career, implementation of renewable-energy practices and developing export potential.

Many farmers and other council members echoed some of Kawakami’s concerns. They agreed the farm-worker housing is not a cure-all, but it’s a starting point.

Kaua‘i Farm Bureau Executive Administrative Melissa McFerrin said there is still much work to be done, but said the bureau is there “for the long haul to be a resource and work together (with farmers).”

Kawakami also said it remains unclear how many farmers would qualify, and was not convinced the measure would assure affordability of agricultural lands. The overall issue, he said, is the lack of worker housing in general. He was concerned abuse would drive prices up.

Yukimura said the council makes laws, but the mayor and the administrative departments are the ones in charge of enforcing the laws.

“I have to see the track record with respect to vacation rentals and shoreline setbacks; and all of these things haven’t been really good up until now,” Yukimura said. “We really have to ask the administration to step forward and do their part.”

Andrea Brower, deputy director of Malama Kaua‘i, said she hopes the community members will do all they can to help enforce against abuse.

As farmer Ned Whitlock said, “farmers may be a few, but there’s a mountain underneath them.”

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