Learn biochar for your garden

SOURCE: William Stepchew (billstepchew@gmail.com) SUBHEAD: Workshop at Kauai Nursery, Saturday, December 3rd 9:30am, on making your own biochar. By William Stepchew on 21 November 2011 in Island Breath - (http://islandbreath.blogspot.com/2011/11/how-to-make-biochar-for-your-garden.html) Image above: A biochar harvest from system for under $400. From (http://www.flickr.com/photos/81339495@N00/sets/72157617279225172/). Biochar is charcoal; virtually pure carbon made from "pyrolyzed" plant matter; woodchips, sawdust, seed hulls, hay, etc. It is being used to improve soil for gardening and food production. Topics covered will be:
  • What is biochar, what does it do, who thought of this, why is it important.
  • How to build and use a 1-gallon size biochar maker, a simple device and method for making small quantities of consistent, high-purity and easy-to-use biochar, suitable for home gardeners for use in potting soils and gardens.
  • How to use biochar to improve your gardening and potting soil.
  • |Other uses for biochar.
  • Questions and Answers.
RSVP by November 26 to register. Space is limited. Contact Bill Stepchew, billstepchew@gmail.com or 635-4021 Participants will have the option of building and testing their own char-maker at the workshop for a $10 materials fee, or come watch for free. WHEN: Saturday, December 2, 9:30 - 11:30 am WHERE: at Kauai Nursery and Landscaping, 3-1550 Kaumualii Hwy, Lihue See also: Ea O Ka Aina: The Real Eldorado 3/3/11 Ea O Ka Aina: The Biochar Solution 12/10/10 Ea O Ka Aina: Save the World with Biochar 4/26/10 Ea O Ka Aina: Biochar goes Industrial 10/18/09 Ea O Ka Aina: Sacres Shrines & Skinny Chickens 8/26/09 Ea O Ka Aina: Searching for Terra Preta 8/7/09 Ea O Ka Aina: Soylent Black 1/11/09 Ea O Ka Aina: Black is the New Green 2/28/09 Island Breath: Rethinking BioChar 10/15/07 .

Plans for Kealia and Moloaa Forests

SOURCE: Hope Kallai (lokahipath2@live.com)

SUBHEAD: Written comments on DLNR Plans for these Kauai forests will be accepted until December 7th. Note from Hope Kallai: According to DLNR, there are no trails in these Forests, except for the two Na Ala Hele segments. There are no Hawaiian cultural or traditional uses. There are no archeological sites. There are, however, opportunities to make money for the DLNR. How convenient. Please send your comments to DLNR by December 7, 2011.

 By TGI Staff on 5 November 2011 from DLNR Press Release - 
  (http://thegardenisland.com/news/local/article_9b778d1c-0862-11e1-a961-001cc4c03286.html)


Image above: Looking south-south-east towards Mount Namahana in Moloaa Forest Reserve. From (http://v8.cache4.c.bigcache.googleapis.com/static.panoramio.com/photos/original/40265894.jpg?redirect_counter=1).

The state Department of Land and Natural Resources is inviting the public to provide comments on a draft forest reserve management plan for Kealia and Moloa‘a Forest Reserves, states a DLNR press release.

Together these two reserves consist of 10,505 acres of public land on the northeast side of the island and are generally characterized by steep, wet, forested slopes, with high tree canopy in the upper areas.

“Our forest reserves provide the public with a safe water supply, forest product, recreational opportunities, and contain a wealth of cultural and natural resources,” DLNR Chair William Aila Jr. said.

Hawai‘i’s forest reserve system, which currently encompasses approximately 637,000 acres of conservation land, was created in 1903 with the goal of protecting forests and other watershed areas to ensure an ample water supply for the people of Hawaii.

The plan is one of a series of site-specific plans to be prepared by the DLNR Division of Forestry and Wildlife for individual forest reserves in the state.

The approval process includes review by DOFAW branch and administrative staff, partner agency and public consultation, approval by the administrator of DOFAW, and finally approval by the Board of Land and Natural Resources.

Kealia Forest Reserve was established by Governor’s Proclamation in 1906 to protect the forest on the mountain slopes and in the upper valleys of the watershed, and to assist in maintaining regular stream flow.

Moloa‘a Forest Reserve was established by Governor’s Proclamation in 1909; this reserve completed the ring of forest reserve land around Mount Wai‘ale‘ale, an area that provides most of the water used by the residents of Kauai.

Vegetation in these areas is primarily alien forest, although some native ecosystems remain along with rare plants and animals. Public use is limited to two state-managed Na Ala Hele hiking trails that allow access to the southern edge of Kealia forest reserve. Public hunting (mammals only) is allowed in the Kealia and Moloa‘a forest reserves; camping is not.

Visit www.hawaii.gov/dlnr/dofaw/forestry/FRS to view the plans.

Written comments will be accepted until Dec. 7. Comments can be emailed to Jan.N.Pali@hawaii.gov or Sheri.S.Mann@hawaii.gov or sent through regular email to:

 Jan Pali, Forestry and Watershed Planner
1151 Punchbowl Street, Room 325,
Honolulu, HI 96813.
.

The Blue Bus is Calling Us

SUBHEAD: If short-term borrowing is unavailable, things could go south very quickly - even to food arriving at the supermarkets.

 By James Kunstler on 21 November 2011 for Kunstler.com -  
(http://kunstler.com/blog/2011/11/the-blue-bus-is-calling-us.html)

 
Image above: The Blue Bus tinted by Juan Wilson from photo "Zoo Bus Epica" by Kevin Harkness. Click to enlarge. From (http://www.newtribez.net/Harko127/photo/view/27-01327-zoo-bus-epica-cmyk-jpg).
Zeez European politicians unt economists all zound like rocket scientists wiss all zeir charming euro-chatter. But zey must be quite dumb to machen zuch an unglaublich scheiße sturm of zee système financier. Che cazzo è?

Surely all the pretending nears its dire conclusion. Everybody is broke and everybody is in hock up to his prefrontal lobes and everybody is whirling around the drain over in the grand continental theme park of lovely cities and great eats. I'm sorry, but I don't see how they can stop the hemorrhaging as we slide into the season of holiday enchantment.
Every bank (and its uncle) is dumping everybody's sovereign bonds as though they were discovered to be croissants imported from a leper colony. Feh...! Folks of all stripes and accents desperately seek to move their money to some safe harbor - but where is this cozy mooring?

To the US for the moment perhaps; but what happens Monday morning when the markets react to the weekend news that the US Senate super-committee has been utterly unable to agree on decisive action that would forestall the scheduled massive automatic budget cuts built into this red-white-and-blue doomsday machine - not to mention the ratings agencies threats to knock UST-paper down another notch upon such failure. Oy yoy yoy!
Just to be plain here: nothing is working. The global system of accounting control fraud has completely unraveled. Nobody will lend money to anybody anymore because everybody suspects everybody else is lying about their ability to meet any obligation. The whole world has become a daisy chain of schnorrers and schmiklers. All those hundreds of trillions of dollars in credit default swap insurance (ha!).

Worthless and pointless, because now that a Greek default of at least 50 percent, officially, has failed to ignite a payout, then no default will. Instead, you'll just get cascades of un-hedged defaults. All the lawyers who ever lived could litigate until the sun turns into a red dwarf and they will never resolve these swindles, and the money represented in them will be so far gone that not even Ray Kurzweil in full Singularity mode will encounter a trace of it in his eternal travels through a zillion parallel universes.
So much for the hedge fund industry. I hope the folks who ran those cute operations enjoyed their years in Fairfield County, Connecticut, and Saddle River, New Jersey, because in a few weeks they'll be disguising themselves as OWSers in some makeshift urban encampment in order to line up for three-day-old bagels. Personally, I look forward to test-driving a few $5000 "must-sell" pre-owned Lamborghini Sesto Elementos, not that I'd actually buy one. The nimble might even score some bargain beachfront property in the Hamptons.
It's been about a fortnight now since John Corzine's MF Global fund went up in a vapor, including a reported $800 million or so (rumored to be actually more like $2+ billion) filched out of clients portfolios that cannot be accounted for - though there are additional rumors that it constituted a batch of collateral that was liquidated a micro-second after its arrival at JP Morgan, which had lent Corzine's firm enough money to buy the rope that it hung itself with. Notice, the story has completely disappeared from the mainstream news media (while the Kardashians soldier on).
Even poor Gerald Celente, chief of the Trends Journal forecasting group, arch-nemesis of "the white-shoe boys" got snookered in the action when MF Global somehow ended up with custodial care of the Gold ETFs Gerald was collecting and his shit just vanished! I heard him fulminating over it on a podcast and he is not somebody I'd want to be on the bad side of. Up until now, Celente was only commenting on the prospects for revolution in the streets. Now, I daresay, he'll be out in front leading it (or perhaps rappelling down Jamie Dimon's security wall with a straight razor clenched in his teeth).
The MF Global case has fast-tracked the evaporation of trust in all the places, large and small, where American One-percenters stash their cash. The redemption orders must be flying through their transoms like radioactive black swans. By lunchtime tomorrow this could include all the TBTF banks. That's what the pundits mean by "contagion." Where will that money go now (if they can get it out)?
I don't see where else it can go now except to shiny yellow and white metal, and maybe some oil positions. But the mechanisms of the precious metals trade have also been monkeyed with, and you'd best be careful where you place your order. As for oil, if lending really does seize-up, then letters-of-credit will not be issued and tankers will not be moving any product. More to the point, the global revolving debt system has depended on colossal transfers of ultra-short-term borrowed money. If short-term borrowing is simply unavailable, things could go south very quickly - and by that I mean food stops arriving at the supermarkets, which hold just a three-day supply. Wouldn't that make for an interesting Thanksgiving?
I have admittedly painted an extreme picture this week. But this week presents the most extreme convergence of events the world has seen since September of 2008, and perhaps a good bit worse.
The End
This is the end Beautiful friend This is the end My only friend, the end
Of our elaborate plans, the end Of everything that stands, the end No safety or surprise, the end I'll never look into your eyes...again
Can you picture what will be So limitless and free Desperately in need...of some...stranger's hand In a...desperate land
Lost in a Roman...wilderness of pain And all the children are insane All the children are insane Waiting for the summer rain, yeah
There's danger on the edge of town Ride the King's highway, baby Weird scenes inside the gold mine Ride the highway west, baby
Ride the snake, ride the snake To the lake, the ancient lake, baby The snake is long, seven miles Ride the snake...he's old, and his skin is cold
The west is the best The west is the best Get here, and we'll do the rest
The blue bus is callin' us The blue bus is callin' us Driver, where you taken' us
The killer awoke before dawn, he put his boots on He took a face from the ancient gallery And he walked on down the hall He went into the room where his sister lived, and...then he Paid a visit to his brother, and then he He walked on down the hall, and And he came to a door...and he looked inside Father, yes son, I want to kill you Mother...I want to...fuck you
C'mon baby, take a chance with us C'mon baby, take a chance with us C'mon baby, take a chance with us And meet me at the back of the blue bus Doin' a blue rock On a blue bus Doin' a blue rock C'mon, yeah
Kill, kill, kill, kill, kill, kill
This is the end Beautiful friend This is the end My only friend, the end
It hurts to set you free But you'll never follow me The end of laughter and soft lies The end of nights we tried to die 
This is the end Words and music by Jim Morrison and the Doors (http://www.oldielyrics.com/lyrics/the_doors/the_end.html)

  .

Injustice for Roger Christie

SUBHEAD: Roger Christie, the leader of the THC Ministry is being held without bail for making smoking cannabis a sacrament.


By Richard S. Miller on 19 November 2011 for Disappeared News
  (http://www.disappearednews.com/2011/11/we-should-note-that-federal-prosecutors.html)

 
Image above: When I joined the THC Ministry over a decade ago I received a commemorative certificate that has been displayed in my house since - Juan Wilson.  

We should note that the federal prosecutors were not compelled to deny bail. There is prosecutorial discretion and perhaps the best recent example is the case of Christopher Deedy, a federal agent charged with second degree murder of a local man at a MacDonald’s. Deedy was arrested at the scene and released two days later after posting bond. I think that all would agree that murder is a much more serious crime than selling marijuana.” - Larry Geller
(The views expressed here are those of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of the University of Hawaii or its Law School.)

Roger Christie, 61, has been charged with being the leader of a marijuana operation based in the Hilo offices of the THC Ministry. THC is the abbreviation for the active ingredient in marijuana. Christie was denied bail and has already served more than 14 months in jail.

He is now faced with a choice of serving five more years in jail or going to trial, with the possibility of a much longer jail sentence if, as is likely the case, he is found guilty at the trial. Christie’s principal defense is that he had a religious right to grow and distribute marijuana. So far that defense has been rejected and may not be upheld at trial. Whether it is or not, there is, in my opinion, a gross injustice which led to the denial of bail and the possibility of an extended jail term.

We should note that the federal prosecutors were not compelled to deny bail. There is prosecutorial discretion and perhaps the best recent example is the case of Christopher Deedy, a federal agent charged with second degree murder of a local man at a MacDonald’s. Deedy was arrested at the scene and released two days later after posting bond. I think that all would agree that murder is a much more serious crime than selling marijuana.

I am writing you to express my views about the gross injustice which has led to Roger Christie’s terrible situation. It is true that Congress, in its unfortunate stupidity, has included marijuana as a Schedule One drug for which, in its erroneous opinion, there is no legitimate medical use. However, this does not mean that prosecutors, in the interest of justice, cannot exercise their discretion to mitigate the harsh and grossly unfair effect of the drug laws.

It is clear that our most dangerous “drugs,” causing very large numbers of deaths, are alcohol and tobacco, and they are sold legally, except to minors. Marijuana doesn’t even come close. The Center for Disease Control (CDC) has reported: "Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of death in the United States ..."More deaths are caused each year by tobacco use than by all deaths from human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), illegal drug use, alcohol use, motor vehicle injuries, suicides, and murders combined. ... Cigarette smoking causes about one of every five deaths in the United States each year." (Emphasis added.) And on alcohol:
"According to the Alcohol-Related Disease Impact tool, from 2001-2005, there were approximately 79,000 deaths annually attributable to excessive alcohol use ... the third-leading lifestyle-related cause of death for people in the United States each year." 
Further, a report published by ProCon.org, a non-profit organization that is dedicated to providing all the relevant and necessary information applicable to highly controversial public issues, such as those surrounding medical marijuana and prostitution, compares the number of deaths reportedly caused or contributed to by marijuana with a wide variety of popular and legal drugs.

These drugs are designed to provide some of the same kinds of relief to patients they seek through marijuana use. In a study from January 1, 1997 through June 30, 2005 there is no indication that marijuana, by itself, caused any deaths and that in conjunction with other drugs there were only a total of 279 deaths, compared with 11,687 deaths from FDA approved drugs designed to produce some of the same benefits as those claimed for marijuana.

Furthermore, there is growing evidence that marijuana can be very effective in treating medical problems, especially pain, without imposing the serious health risks of the currently approved drugs.

What these studies and comparisons seem to show, I believe very conclusively, is that the perceived dangers of marijuana have been grossly exaggerated, particularly with regard to causing death, and that there is a huge failure of justice and fairness in imposing criminal penalties, including jail and all the other nasty consequences of criminal conviction – such as loss of scholarship aid for students or loss of employment – on those who provide or sell marijuana. Meanwhile, the government licenses and regulates the sales of other substances like liquor, tobacco, and FDA-approved drugs, such as morphine, which have been proved to cause large numbers of deaths.

I understand, of course, that there is a difference between law and justice and that, except for the very important constitutional requirement of equal protection, there is no explicit legal requirement that the law be fair. Further, it is not and should not be up to individuals to decide which laws to obey and which laws to disregard. However, fairness and justice are very important values and, it seems to me, can only be achieved if those who run the criminal justice system undertake to exercise their lawful discretion in ways that enhance human dignity. While the adversary system may sometimes seem to encourage the seeking of the most extreme results, there is no law that says that prosecutors cannot and should not exercise discretion to insure that legal results and consequences are not grossly unfair and excessive, whether too lenient or too punitive. In my view, there must always be an unspoken goal which favors human dignity and which encompasses fairness and justice.

There is a very strong argument that Roger Christie’s situation, because he was disallowed bail, because he has already suffered 14 or so months in jail, and because he may face many more years in the hoosegow -- while purveyors of much more dangerous booze, tobacco, and other drugs can suffer no such penalties – is grossly out of whack. It will turn out to be even worse – far worse – if, as well may be the case, Mr. Christie sincerely believes that his religion permits or requires marijuana use. I am not a personal acquaintance of Roger Christie. What I perceive is happening to him, however, seems to me to be so far out of line and unjust – especially since house arrest or other more limited constraints or modalities were and are available – that I feel compelled to speak out in the hope that some justice and balance will be brought this situation. If there are concerns that Christie might continue to sell or provide marijuana unlawfully, probation is always available and is the usual device for assuring adherence to the law.

• Richard S. Miller is Professor Emeritus, William S. Richardson School of Law, University of Hawaii .

Germany shouldn't bailout Europe

SUBHEAD: There is no solution other than to let the bankrupt countries and financial institutions go, well, bankrupt. By Ilargi on 20 November 2011 for the Automatic Earth - (http://theautomaticearth.blogspot.com/2011/11/november-20-2011-why-germany-is-right.html) Image above: Oil painting "The Beggars" by Pieter Bruegel 1658. From (http://foxpudding.wordpress.com/2011/08/11/pieter-bruegel/). Here's why Germany is wise to refuse using the ECB to buy up anything not nailed down in Europe. All economic forecasts for countries in the periphery -which itself grows as we go along- are based on unrealistically positive numbers. And that means that soon they’ll come calling again for bail-outs. Austerity measures quite simply mean less consumption, and that in turn means a lower GDP. In the US, private consumption is some 70% of GDP; it may be somewhat less in other countries, but not that much. Basically, you have a handful of countries that have borrowed their way into prosperity over the past few decades, and that now find borrowing has become much harder. Italy and Spain need to pay around 7% on sovereign debt, and Greece has already been effectively shut out of the markets. On the sovereign front, borrowing becomes prohibitively expensive, which leads to budget cuts, which lead to austerity, which leads to wage cuts and increased unemployment, but the 2012 predictions all mention the need for economic growth. But what growth? On the business and private front, it also becomes much harder to finance anything with credit. All Eurozone periphery countries have banks that are already teetering on the brink of collapse. What will they do to drag themselves away from the edge? Increase lending? Obviously not. The only option -seemingly- available is to increase gambling. Double or nothing; everything on red. Buy credit default swaps, of course. Which may offer no protection whatsoever; if Greece's 50% "voluntary writedown" doesn't trigger a credit event (a CDS payout), then what does? The outcome is clear: periphery banks (and not just them) will have to come back to the ECB, or the Fed, or the EFSF, but the latter has already pretty much been written off as a failure even now. There’s nowhere left to turn. But nobody seems ready to accept that. Even if it's been obvious for a long time that it inevitably had to come to this. And that has nothing to do with indecisiveness, by the way, that's just a media ruse. The ECB, read: Germany, doesn't have the means and wherewithal to save the entire Eurozone. It could opt to put itself on the hook for $2-3 trillion, just to keep up appearances for another year or so -if that long-, but after that, countries and banks would be trick-and/or-treating at the doorsteps in Berlin and Frankfurt anyway. That wouldn't be a solution. There is no solution other than to let the bankrupt countries and financial institutions go, well, bankrupt. Mark to market. Restore confidence, albeit in a much smaller market. But the world's political and financial "leaders" won't allow it to happen, at least not in real time. Letting it happen in apparent slow-motion has an added benefit: it allows for technocratic, non-elected governments to take over for a while, and make sure countries are bled dry before handing them over to a proper electoral process again. Ironically, there is no more pivotal moment than this one for the people of the embattled nations, but they still allow for these broad daylight stealth takeovers to take place. Papademos and Monti even enjoy "broad support", while they should be tarred and feathered and told never to return or else. Let's turn to the specifics. Greek Finance minister Venizelos says Greece will "only" have a 5.4% deficit in 2012, and no new cuts or measures are necessary. A large part of that "assessment", mind you is based on the 50% "voluntary" write-off by private investors, something that won't be available to other nations. But it doesn't stop there: Greece is in a deep recession, something the negotiators of all the bailout deals and austerity plans have not -or at least not fully- implemented in their calculations. And it'll come back to haunt them (sometimes you'd suspect they aim for just that). Not that it seems to matter much today. All anyone is looking for are numbers that are palatable in the short term. Let 2012 take care of 2012. .

Kauai Council argues GMO labeling

SUBHEAD: The Maui council-generated measure was a part of the State Association of Counties legislative package.

 By Andy Parx on 17 November 2011 for Parx News Daily - 
(http://parxnewsdaily.blogspot.com/2011/11/gather-ye-torches-and-pitchforks-while.html)  

Image above: Illustration of Organic vs GMO Tomato used in article about Obama's embrace of corporate food.From (http://politicsoftheplate.com/?p=377).

Though we haven't viewed it yet, reports are that the Kauai County Council got quite the last minute earful at yesterday's meeting on a recommendation for a state legislative bill that would require labeling of foods containing Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO). The Maui council-generated measure was a part of the Hawai`i State Association of Counties (HSAC) legislative package that all four counties must approve for the recommendations to be sent to the 2012 legislature for consideration and, although the package has been on the council's agenda for more than a month, it was the first discussion of the proposal.

Previously the council had concentrated only on their own recommendation for a bill to close loopholes in the solar hot water mandate for new construction which had undergone changes before being sent, along with the rest of the package, to the full council from committee a week ago, seemingly destined for final disposition yesterday. But a last minute barrage of emails and Facebook postings by GMO-Free Kaua`i turned out the anti-GMO troops and, according to a Facebook posting by GMO-Free 's Jeri Di Pietro, the council re-referred the package back to committee to be debated next Wednesday.

But while the measure is still alive on Kauai, according to Big Mike Levine of Civil Beat, it may face the ax on O`ahu where the Honolulu City Council removed the measure from the package in committee on Tuesday and sent it to the full council without the bill that would require GMO products to say so on thhe labels.

The good news though is that Honolulu didn't reject it because they didn't agree with the bill but because, according to Levine, even though "Safety, Economic Development and Government Affairs Committee Chair Tulsi Gabbard said it's a matter of people knowing what they're feeding their families," she "eventually recommended that the GMO measure be removed, saying it's an important issue that needs a full airing that can't happen now under the tight timeline for the legislative package."

 But even though the bill may not get the recommendation of HSAC this year, it's important that the precautionary principle be stressed next week to the council which needs an education on the issue to counter the various farm bureaus' silly contention that because "no one has gotten sick or died" (failing to add "yet") from GMOs, they're perfectly safe and therefore, for some reason, people shouldn't be told what's in their food.

According to Wikipedia, the Precautionary Principle states that "if an action or policy has a suspected risk of causing harm to the public or to the environment, in the absence of scientific consensus that the action or policy is harmful, the burden of proof that it is not harmful falls on those taking the action." Of course the various individual island farm bureaus are populated by Pioneer and Sygenta sycophants who never seem to be able to answer the question of how people would know they were getting sick or otherwise suffering harm from GMO products if they don't know they're eating them.

 If you care about the issue, either write the council at counciltestimony@kauai.gov or better still, show up next Wednesday at 9 a.m. and tell them in person. It may be an uphill fight with big campaign cash and yelps of "jobs, jobs, jobs for the westside" from the industry, but now that the FDA has apparently permitted individual jurisdictions to pass their own labeling laws, the fight has to begin somewhere and with its corn seed folks spreading their Frankenfood pollen all over Waimea, Kauai is as good a place as any to start.

 .

Brazilians murder indigenous leader

SUBHEAD: An indigenous leader in southern Brazil has been shot dead in front of his community for ranchland. By Staff on 18 November 2011 for the BBC News - (http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/mobile/world-latin-america-15799712) Image above: Nisio Gomes (center) faces unidentified man hours before his murder. From (http://www.survivalinternational.org/news/7887).

Nisio Gomes, 59, was part of a Guarani Kaiowa group that returned to their ancestral land at the start of this month after being evicted by ranchers.

He was killed by a group of around 40 masked gunmen who burst into the camp.

Brazil's Human Rights Secretary condemned the murder as "part of systematic violence against indigenous people in the region".

In a statement, Human Rights Minister Maria do Rosario Nunes said the region in Mato Grosso do Sul state was "one of the worst scenes of conflict between indigenous people and ranchers in the country".

She said those responsible must not be allowed to escape with impunity.

Mr Gomes was shot in the head, chest, arms and legs and his body was then driven away by the gunmen, community members said.

His son was reportedly beaten and shot with a rubber bullet when he tried to intervene.

Unconfirmed reports say two other Guaranis were abducted by the gunmen and may also have been killed.

Many of the community's 60 residents fled the camp to hide in the surrounding forest

Tribe defiant

The incident happened near the town of Amambai near the border with Paraguay.

Federal Police and representatives of Brazil's main indigenous organisations have travelled to the area to investigate the killing.

"The people will stay in the camp, we will all die here together. We are not going to leave our ancestral land," one of the Guaranis told the Roman Catholic Indigenous Missionary Council (CIMI) .

CIMI said the community wanted to recover Mr Gomes's body so he could be buried in the land he tried to defend throughout his life.

The group had been camping on a roadside following their eviction until they decided to return to their land at the beginning of November.

The killing has been condemned by the campaign group Survival International, which campaigns for indigenous rights.

"It seems the ranchers won't be happy until they've eradicated the Guarani," Survival's director Stephen Corry said.

"This level of violence was commonplace in the past and it resulted in the extinction of thousands of tribes," he added.

The Guarani are Brazil's largest indigenous minority, with around 46,000 members living in seven states.

Many others live in neighbouring Paraguay, Bolivia and Argentina.

The group suffers from a severe shortage of land in Brazil, which has worsened as a boom in agriculture has led farmers and ranchers to extend their holdings.

Indigenous activists say farmers in Mato Grosso do Sul frequently use violence and threats to force them off their ancestral territory, and that the local authorities do little to protect them.

Video above: From (http://www.survivalinternational.org/films/marcosveron). .

Hewlett-Packard supplies Big Brother

SOURCE: Hewlett-Packard supplying computers to Syria to eavesdrop on internet communications to control dissidents. By Vernon Silver on 18 November 2011 for Bloomberg News - (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-11-18/hewlett-packard-computers-underpin-syria-electonic-surveillance-project.html) Image above: Syrian demonstrators face death in the streets. From (http://www.emirates247.com/news/world/syrian-activists-30-killed-in-24-hours-2011-07-18-1.408401). Hewlett-Packard Co. equipment worth more than $500,000 has been installed in computer rooms in Syria, underpinning a surveillance system being built to monitor e-mails and Internet use, according to documents from the deal and a person familiar with the installation. The gear made by Palo Alto, California-based Hewlett- Packard would run a Damascus monitoring center for Syrian agents to track citizens’ communications, and route data, according to blueprints and the person familiar with the system. The Italian company running the project, Area SpA, bought the equipment through resellers in Italy, according to the documents and the person familiar with the deal. More than 3,500 people have died in Syria’s crackdown on protesters since March. At the same time, technicians from Area were installing and testing the surveillance system, which also includes data-storage equipment from Sunnyvale, California-based NetApp Inc., a Nov. 4 article by Bloomberg News showed. Area, which is based outside Milan, bought the Hewlett- Packard and NetApp gear as part of a contract with Syria’s state-owned fixed-line telephone company, according to the documents and the person familiar with the transactions. The gear from Hewlett-Packard, the world’s largest computer maker, cost 427,911 euros ($578,000), according to Area financial records. Almost all the Hewlett-Packard equipment consists of racks of servers housed in fan-cooled cabinets, according to schematics and the person familiar with the job who has worked on the project for Area. Desktop computers comprise an additional portion. Compliance Highest Priority Hewlett-Packard spokeswoman Shelby Watts declined to comment specifically on Area’s surveillance system. “HP’s policy is to comply with all U.S. export control laws and regulations,” the company said in a statement. “We do not have any employees or facilities in Syria, and our sales to parties in that country have been limited to items that are consistent with U.S. law and licensing policy on telecommunications products.” “Compliance with U.S. and international trade laws are of the highest priority for HP,” the statement said. The U.S. has banned most American exports to Syria other than food or medicine since 2004, and issues licenses that permit exceptions. Hewlett-Packard spokeswoman Watts declined to address whether this particular sale had been covered by a license or comment on anything else beyond the company’s statement. Eugene Cottilli, a spokesman for the U.S. Commerce Department, said, “We are prohibited by law from discussing specific information about export licenses.” Project Backlash When reviewing license applications for sales to Syria of telecommunications equipment and associated computers, the U.S. evaluates whether the export would promote the free flow of information among the Syrian people and to the outside world, he said. U.S. Senators Mark Kirk, a Republican from Illinois, Robert Casey, a Democrat from Pennsylvania, and Christopher Coons, a Democrat from Delaware, have called for an investigation into NetApp’s role. Amid a backlash against the project, Area Chief Executive Officer Andrea Formenti said Nov. 8 that his company is weighing options that may include exiting the deal. Area has never had any relations with Syrian intelligence agencies, and its dealings comply with all export rules, the company said. Work on the Syria project has been suspended for more than two months, Formenti said, declining to say why. Technical problems “could be one of the reasons,” he said. The project hasn’t been completed and has never been operational, he said. Formenti didn’t respond to a request for comment for this story. Area records show Western suppliers’ financial stake in the Syria deal. Deep-Packet Probes The bill for Hewlett-Packard equipment compares with 2.75 million euros for the NetApp data-storage systems, according to the records and the person familiar with the installation. Germany’s Utimaco Safeware AG and Paris-based Qosmos SA also supplied technology for the project, according to the documents and the person familiar with the deal. European Union sanctions against Syria don’t bar such sales. Qosmos, a maker of deep-packet inspection probes that peer into the contents of e-mails, said it had been working on the project through Utimaco and is pulling out of the deal. Utimaco, based in Oberursel near Frankfurt, makes systems that connect tapped telecom lines to monitoring center computers. The company said in a statement on its website that it requires all its partners to adhere to German and EU export regulations and United Nations embargos. “We are thoroughly investigating the matter and have stopped any further activities with Area until we receive full clarification from them,” Utimaco said. No Intention Sophos Ltd., the Abingdon, England-based provider of security and data-protection software that controls Utimaco, said in a Nov. 11 statement, “We are working very closely with our team at Utimaco to understand this situation fully and see that a full investigation takes place.” NetApp said in a statement that it condemns any unlawful shipments to Syria and has notified the U.S. government about the Bloomberg article. “We absolutely do not support the sale of NetApp equipment to Syria,” NetApp CEO Thomas Georgens told investors on an earnings conference call Nov. 16. “I’m not here to suggest that we have found a legal way to achieve an objective to sell products to a banned country. We have no intention of doing that.” “NetApp produces storage products; we don’t produce applications that are being talked about in this particular article,” Georgens said. “NetApp has not produced this application or participated in its development at all.” Iran Sales Hewlett-Packard has previously sold computers and software for use by Syrian telecommunications companies under licenses granted by the U.S. Commerce Department. In a March 12, 2009, letter to the Securities and Exchange Commission, the company said that in the previous five years it had applied for and been granted 14 such licenses for sales that generated revenue of about $4 million. That letter came in response to an SEC inquiry about Hewlett-Packard’s sales of printers to Iran through a Dubai- based distributor, which the Boston Globe had revealed in a December 2008 report. Hewlett-Packard said that while the sales through a non-U.S. subsidiary were legal, it had decided to end distribution in Iran. See also: Ea O Ka Aina: Internet Censorship Ahead 11/16/11 .

Supercommittee Deadlock

SUBHEAD: However they decide the benefit is to the 1 percent while locking the 99 percent in a dungeon of debt peonage. By Ellen Brown on 18 November 2011 for TruthOut.org - (http://www.truth-out.org/supercommittee-deadlock-heads-they-win-tails-we-lose/1321627102) Image above: Of the Congressional Super Committee's 12 members, 6 Democrats and 6 Republicans. From (http://www.ibtimes.com/articles/241211/20111101/super-committee-legislators-form-mini-group-seeking.htm).

It is no great surprise that with only days to go, the Congressional "supercommittee," given the Herculean task of carving an additional $1.2 trillion out of the federal budget, has failed to reach agreement. Why should six Republicans and six Democrats with diametrically opposed views agree in a few weeks, when Congress couldn't shake hands on it after months of wrangling, despite the guillotine blade of a federal default hanging over their heads?

Whether the supercommittee reaches agreement or not, however, the deficit hawks win. If they agree, either $1.2 trillion gets cut from the budget or taxes go up by that amount; and the committee co-chair has categorically stated taxes are not going up, so that means the budget will be cut. If agreement is not reached, $1.2 trillion in cuts automatically kick in, split evenly between domestic and military spending. Either way, the economy will wind up with $1.2 trillion less in purchasing power. The result will be to reduce demand, kill jobs and put more people on the streets.

For the deficit hawks, however, it all seems to be going according to plan. The supercommittee is characterized as an emergency measure that was rushed through to avoid an arbitrarily imposed August deadline for freezing the debt ceiling, but it has actually been in the works for years. In 2009, it was called the "Bipartisan Task Force for Responsible Fiscal Action." That plan died when its Senate sponsors, Judd Gregg and Kent Conrad, failed to secure 60 votes for passage in the Senate. The Gregg-Conrad bill was criticized as railroading through legislation that would unconstitutionally slash domestic services without Congressional debate, but its task force would actually have been LESS autocratic than the supercommittee, which has sweeping powers and needs only a simple majority among its 12 members to prevail.

What has been forced out of the debate is whether cutting the budget is a good idea at all. The Peter Peterson Foundation, which has been pushing "austerity" for years, has finally gotten its way. Hedge fund magnate Peter G. Peterson was chairman of the Council on Foreign Relations until 2007 and head of the New York Federal Reserve between 2000 and 2004. He made his fortune with the controversial Blackstone Group, which he co-founded and chaired for many years. The Peter Peterson Foundation was established in 2008 with a $1 billion endowment to raise public awareness about US fiscal-sustainability issues related to federal deficits, entitlement programs and tax policies. The money was used to spearhead a massive campaign to reduce the runaway federal debt. Hysteria over the debt then prompted Tea Party newbies in Congress to hold a gun to Congress' head by arbitrarily capping the debt.

In the campaign to educate us to the debt's perils, we were repeatedly warned that when foreign lenders decided to pull the plug, the US would have to declare bankruptcy, that we were mortgaging our grandchildren's futures and selling them into debt slavery; and that all this was the fault of the citizenry for borrowing and spending too much. The American people, who are already suffering massive unemployment and cutbacks in government services, would have to sacrifice more and pay the piper more, just as in those debt-strapped countries forced into austerity measures by the International Monetary Fund.

The fear mongering, however, is a red herring. A sovereign nation can always find the money to pay debts owed in its own currency. The Federal Reserve can buy the debt itself - just as it has been doing. That alternative would effectively eliminate the problem of interest, since the Fed returns its profits to the government after deducting its costs.

Alternatively, Congress could reclaim the power to issue money from the banks and fund its budget directly. The US could pay its bills using debt-free US Notes or Greenbacks, just as President Lincoln did to avoid a crippling debt during the Civil War. Congress could do this without changing any laws. Congress is empowered to "coin money," and the Constitution sets no limit on the face amount of the coins. It could issue a few one-trillion dollar coins, deposit them in an account and start writing checks.

Neither option need inflate prices. As long as the money is used to purchase goods and services, the result will simply be to increase demand, increasing production. Prices will not increase until the economy reaches full employment and, at that point, any excess in the money supply can be taxed back to the government, keeping prices stable.

The key to all this is that our debt is owed in our own currency - US dollars. Our government has the power to fix its solvency problems itself, by simply issuing the money it needs to pay off or refinance its debt. The US federal debt has been carried on the books since 1835. It has NEVER been paid off during that time, but just continues to grow. This has not hurt the economy, which for most of that period has been among the most vibrant in the world. The federal debt IS the money supply. All of our money except coins is created as bank debt. Historically, when the deficit has been reduced, the money supply has been reduced along with it, throwing the economy into recession.

The real problem with a growing federal debt is the interest on it, which WILL become an insurmountable burden if allowed to grow exponentially. Interest paid on the federal debt in 2010 was $414 billion, or about one-half of personal income tax receipts. That's about as high as we dare let it go. But this problem can be eliminated either by funding the debt through the nation's own central bank, effectively interest free; or by the Treasury issuing the money outright, interest free.

The burgeoning debt has been blamed on reckless government and consumer spending; but the debt crisis was created, not by a social safety net bought and paid for by the taxpayers, but by a banking system taken over by Wall Street gamblers. The banking debacle of 2008 caused credit to collapse, businesses to go bankrupt and unemployment to soar, drastically reducing the federal tax base. If anyone should be held to account, it is Wall Street; but the bankers were bailed rather than jailed and the taxpayers got billed for the crime.

We have been deluded into thinking that "fiscal responsibility" is something for our benefit, something we actually need in order to save the country from bankruptcy. In fact, it has simply been an excuse to impose radical austerity measures on the people, measures that benefit the 1 percent while locking the 99 percent in a dungeon of debt peonage.

.

Wireless

SUBHEAD: Congratulations to Frank Reilly for his first-place entry in Joan Conroe's writing competition at Kauai Backstory. By Frank Reilly on 17 November 2011 for Kauai Backstory - (http://kauaibackstory.blogspot.com/2011/11/wireless.html) Image above: Kauai cottage. Photo by Juan Wilson. Jared Walker steps up to the return counter at Walmart. He's been there before, at different Walmart locations in too many different parts of the country to count. This time in Lihu’e, the County seat of the Hawaiian island of Kauai. The return counter is where Jared picks up the cash when it's wired in. He never goes to those cash advance places like Pay Day, or anyplace else where it's brutally obvious what he's doing. While he hadn't reached his father when he called, Jared left the same message for him that he had many times before, about the severity of his situation, his need for money and his expectation that it would arrive quickly so that he could get back on his feet again and establish himself in this new place. Because there is always a new place. This is what sets Jared apart. He is an adventurer, he would tell you. Someone who is able to cast off the shackles of the connected world and go, without a laptop, without a cell phone (save the occasional call for cash on a borrowed line), without an X-box, an iPod, a Wii - no small feat for a twenty-year-old. He is busy living, he would tell you. Jared is prepared when he steps up to the return counter. He is prepared to check on the wired funds in a voice low enough to be heard by the counter woman only. He is prepared to count the bills without ostentation, because who knows how many thieving eyes are on him? What he isn't prepared for is what he gets. Ten dollars. "There must be some mistake,” Jared sputters to the slight Filipino woman behind the register who handed him the wilted bill. She smiles warmly and shrugs. There has been no mistake. _______________ Lani, a local girl, is three people behind Jared on the return line at the counter. Lani is sixteen, but you wouldn't think that for seeing her. She has a shapely pair of muscular legs that can only be described as womanly. Her mother's legs, her increasingly nervous father has come to realize; the very thing that turned his head at nearly the same age. But there's something else that makes Lani seem older. Something about her composure. Something about her calmness. She is not disaffected, as teens often are. She is not bothered by or impatient with the line she waits in. There is too much to watch to be bored. In every person that passes her line of vision, too much to process, too much detail, too much subtlety to drink in all at once. Her eyes are locked on the back of Jared's neck. The tattoo there doesn't surprise her. Tattoos are everywhere after all, so a single one rarely stands out. But this one does. Not because it presents a striking image, but because it offers an incomplete thought. In a florid script that begins just below Jared's shaggy hairline, are the words:
"My life is like a stroll upon the beach,"
...and the thought ends there, disrupted by the ragged collar of his plain black tee. The comma that follows the word "beach" is what gets to Lani. That tiny mark implies that there is more to be said, that there is more to hear. But her thoughts are interrupted when Jared turns to look behind himself and she can see into his eyes, which are full of a watery fear that the ten dollar bill has dropped upon him. _______________ Jared's legs carry him out of the Walmart and to a bus stop a few paces away from the front door. As the bus pulls up he is thankful that it does not resemble any other bus he's ever ridden. He decides that he will ride it to a beach that will not resemble any other beach he's ever been to. And there he will meet people unlike any of the others he has met before. And surely these people will understand him. And feed him. Lani gets on the bus because she is headed home. There are a handful of other seats available, but Lani chooses to sit next to Jared, because Jared is different. Lani's classmates don't understand her, nor have they ever really tried. As is the case with most sixteen-year-olds, their attention is focused inward. They are the raw and tender centers of their personal universes. But Lani's attention is focused out. She is content to be a satellite. She is happy to orbit those around her and revel silently in their diversity. Her contentment and her quiet are often mistaken as arrogance. Her selflessness is like a too-bright light in a too-dark room. And so, Lani is weird. Lani is strange. Lani is different. _______________ The word "Aloha" opens a conversational door for Lani and Jared. She offers it as a matter of course, along with a wide smile. Jared grabs hold of it as a drowning man would a life preserver. After a brief exchange about the lack of AC on the bus and the relative merits of flip flops vs. hiking sandals, Jared finds he is increasingly comforted by the warm glow of Lani's attention. He uses it to talk through his crisis, to vent thoughts to her that would be bouncing around his skull now, were he riding the bus alone. He can't let go of the idea behind that damned ten dollar bill. The thought of it carries him back to his family's apartment, a duplex at the top of a doorman high-rise in Manhattan's financial district. He tells Lani about the expensive marble floors his father installed in the foyer there, practically on a whim. Marble, he repeats, scoffing. Like in the suburban bank branch his father had managed before the family took to Wall Street: a cavernous space, with absurdly high ceilings and marble everywhere. Marble, he tells Lani, that was used to lend substance to a financial process that had become increasingly weightless. Banks like those were long gone, Jared continues, but his father never abandoned his need to use the same theatrics in their home. Past the cold, marble floors are thick, steel sculptures on large, mahogany bureaus alongside deep, leather sofas. The thought of them all taunting him as his hand worries the lousy ten spot in his pocket. _______________ Lani does her best to absorb Jared's description of this other world. But she doesn't ask him to explain what she can't understand. She notes, instead, the rise and fall of his anger, which runs alongside the constant hum of his fear. And floating above his monologuing self, Jared is all too aware of his creeping sense of Lani as another pigeon, because his travels have been filled with them: attractive, wide-eyed girls waiting to be noticed, appreciated and seduced. He is able, however, to resist the urge to look down at Lani's brown, shapely legs. When he finally gets to his plight - no money, no place to go, nothing, Lani reacts as she was taught to: with empathy. She had not spent her youth side-stepping homeless people, as Jared had every morning near the heavy glass doors of the Walker's building. She had not lived in a place where the high-flown idealism of a Sunday sermon was mocked by the venality of the world right outside the church doors. The teachings of Christ were applicable for Lani on Kauai, and Jared was giving her a chance to prove that. She speaks, when the opportunity finally arises, of the coconut wireless, or at least of her youthful and idyllic interpretation of the phrase: A network of local connections that insures that those in need in her community are looked after. When hurricane Iniki hit Kaua’i, a few years before Lani was born and years still before cell phones were everywhere, she was told that people who needed help were found quickly and attended to. "People don't need to ask here", she says, "because word travels fast. And people are always ready to help." And hearing that, Jared allows himself the luxury of a long, relaxed exhalation as the bus rolls on its way. _______________ Lani's father, Kaikona, was younger than Jared when he started working at the resort. He made it through the first half-day of training for poolside services and thought he could coast through the afternoon when he was introduced to the ten-and-five rule. On approaching a visitor, at ten feet away hotel staff should acknowledge the guest with eye contact. At five feet away, a greeting is required. At first the rule didn't seem like much. It brought on some eye rolling and some head shaking from the other trainees. But that was it. Beside the pool it became something different. Kaikona found that when he did look up to meet the eyes of approaching guests, they were either staring at him expectantly, as if his congeniality was part of their vacation package, or deliberately looking away, as if they couldn't be bothered to be engaged by the help. He over thought these tiny transactions and as weeks became months they began to exact a toll. His natural affability was overwhelmed by a constant parade of remote New Englanders, curt Germans, gruff Texans, stuffy Brits. Over a few short years, his rancor metastasized, to the point where he found excuses to linger in the kitchen rather than make his pool rounds. He tried to empathize, thinking of what his expectations would be if he were dropping two thousand dollars a week on a hotel room, only to have all logic collapse beneath the insane weight of that cruel math. When you could afford to fly halfway around the world for some blue-green surf, how could you be anything other than grateful? The question gnawed at him, slowly filling his blood with a rage that, by the end of a week, coursed through his body like race cars with severed brake cables. He kept his surf board locked in his truck during the work day and spread his anger liberally over the pounding waves at his favorite shore break at dusk. Until, one Friday, he didn't. And a minor parking lot scuffle escalated into a severe beating that landed him in prison for aggravated assault. Kaikona's too-young wife was at her wit's end by then. She dropped Lani, who had just turned four, with his parents and left the island for good. When finally released three years later, a still-simmering Kaikona was saved by his young daughter, who seemed to absorb his fury as soon as he took her in his arms. With Lani to return to every day, Kaikona reconfigured Kauai - the only home he would ever know - into what he needed it to be so that they could remain a family. He found work at a different resort, loading and unloading massive, industrial linen driers, which satisfied him as a hellish kind of penance as well as a way to sweat out more of his rancor. Then it was home to Lani in the early evening before heading to a second job bouncing at a local bar, where any remaining ill will he carried found a fitting outlet. Lani had a way of invading his thoughts during the day, her poise and unflappable calm an inspiration to him. He could never decide whether her easy-going nature was a gift to him from a benevolent God, or if it was forged in his hot temper as a corrective for them both. "Chicken-egg thing,” he grew fond of saying. Kaikona's eyes are as wide as saucers, then, as he trudges up his driveway at dusk and spies Lani through the window to her room, pulling a plain black tee-shirt up and over the head of a blonde white boy who is perched at the foot of her bed. To read the rest of this short story visit (http://kauaibackstory.blogspot.com/2011/11/wireless.html). .

PMRF tests new weapon system

SOURCE: Ray Songtree (lifewalker777@gmail.com) SUBHEAD: DARPA test on Kauai launches weapon capable of traveling 5 times the speed of sound. By AP Staff on 17 November 2011 for the Washington Post - (http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/army-test-in-hawaii-launches-weapon-capable-of-traveling-5-times-the-speed-of-sound/2011/11/17/gIQA77vJWN_story.html) Image above: The Falcon Hypersonic Technology Vehicle 2 successfully tested. From (http://www.inquisitr.com/160700/army-successfully-tests-new-advanced-hypersonic-weapon). The Army on Thursday conducted its first flight test of a new weapon capable of traveling five times the speed of sound.

The Army launched the Advanced Hypersonic Weapon from the military’s Pacific Missile Range Facility on Kauai at about 1:30 a.m.

The weapon’s “glide vehicle” reached Kwajalein Atoll — some 2,300 miles away — in less than half an hour, said Lt. Col. Melinda Morgan, a Pentagon spokeswoman.

Earlier this year, the Congressional Research Service said in a report the Advanced Hypersonic Weapon is part of the military’s program to develop “prompt global strike” weapons that would allow the U.S. to strike targets anywhere in the world with conventional weapons in as little as an hour.

The Air Force and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, are developing a similar vehicle.

The Pentagon said the Advanced Hypersonic Weapon, or AHW, vehicle is designed to fly long ranges within the earth’s atmosphere at speeds that are at least five times the speed of sound.

The objective of Thursday’s test was to collect data on technologies that boost the hypersonic vehicle and allow it to glide. The Army was also testing how the vehicle performed in long-range flight.

The Congressional Research Service report said the AHW would be able to maneuver to avoid flying over third party nations as it approached its target. The weapon would use a precision guidance system to home in on the target, it said.

See also: Ea O Ka Aina: DARPA loses hypersonic weapon 8/11/11 Ea O Ka Aina: Angels don't play this HAARP 11/8/11 Ea O Ka Aina: Navy plans for Mordor 3/10/10 Ea O Ka Aina: DARPA & Super-Cavitation 3/25/09 .

Left? Right? Neither!

SUBHEAD: Take the status quo, and then imagine an opposite that’s just as bad, but for the opposite reasons. Then look in between. By John Michael Greer on 16 November 2011 for the Archdruid Report - (http://thearchdruidreport.blogspot.com/2011/11/aristotles-secret.html) Image above: Detail of watercolor painting "Easter" by Rudolph Steiner. From (http://www.amazon.com/Easter-Rudolf-Steiners-Watercolor-Painting/dp/0880107235). Those of my readers who have looked on from a distance as a large car wreck took place have some idea of my state of mind over the last week. Each of the three high-stakes poker games I mentioned in last week’s post—the European financial mess, the evolution (or devolution) of Occupy Wall Street, and the seismic shifts in world politics driven by the rise of China—have continued along trajectories that are pretty much guaranteed to end messily. In Europe, the spotlight has shifted from Greece to Italy as investors around the world bail out of Italian government bonds, driving interest rates above the 7% threshold that, by general consent, separates investments from junk. There’s a new Italian government, and a new Greek government, and no doubt there will be new governments in other countries before long, but since nobody is willing to do the one thing that will fix the problem—that is, admit that debts that can’t be paid will, in fact, not be paid, and allow the banks that unwisely lent money to deadbeat nations to go under, as capitalist economic theory says they should—changing governments won’t change anything significant. I wish more people remembered what happened the last time European governments put allegiance to a global financial regime ahead of the needs of their own people; that was in the wake of the 1929 stock market crash, for those who need a reminder. We’ll talk more about that down the road a bit. On this side of the water, the Occupy Wall Street protest and its equivalents in other American cities seem to have peaked for now, and the authorities have responded predictably by wading in with pepper spray and billy clubs. We’re still early in this particular game, though, far too early for either side to have a shot at winning or losing. Whether or not the protesters retain a token presence in urban centers over the winter, the coming of warm weather, the continuing decline of the American economy, and the public embarrassment of an upcoming presidential campaign in which nobody’s willing to talk about any of the real issues, will bring the protest kettle back to a steady boil in the new year. China’s emergence as the next superpower, finally, touched off a flurry of undiplomatic sniping. Obama, scrambling once again to shore up his fading reelection prospects, tried to talk tough about Chinese monetary policy at an international meeting, demanding that China "play by the rules." The Chinese retorted tartly that they were quite willing to play by rules that were decided on fairly by all parties, but submitting to a set of rules the United States established to shore up its own interests to everyone else’s disadvantage did not interest them. Across a wide range of issues, from trade policy to saber-rattling over Iran, China continues to carve out a position diametrically opposed to US interests in the face of increasingly ineffectual US opposition. How that will play out in the long run is a very good question, and will probably determine a great deal of the way that the 21st century plays out. All this, and the twilight of American empire that gives it its context and importance, will be central to a series of posts I plan on beginning here in the not too distant future. In the meantime, though, there are a few more points about magic I want to discuss, and weave back into the discussion of Green Wizardry that has guided this blog for almost a year and a half now. The elements of magical philosophy I’ve covered in recent posts here on The Archdruid Report aren’t simply an odd fit for a discussion on peak oil; they also contradict some of the most basic habits of contemporary thought. Thus it’s come as a pleasant surprise to see how many of my readers have been able to keep up with the discussion, and even to anticipate the issues to be raised in the next post. My post two weeks ago, A Choice of Contemplations, was no exception; several commenters thought about the principle that "what you contemplate, you imitate," noted that a great many people in the peak oil movement spend a great deal of time contemplating worst case scenarios, and worried aloud that this habit might conceivably help bring those worst case scenarios about. To some extent, that concern is based on a misunderstanding I’ve addressed already. Just as contemplating a toaster oven may make you imitate a toaster oven, but it won’t make one magically appear on your kitchen counter, contemplating a global disaster won’t necessarily make global disaster more likely—though it’s fair to note that it may make you imitate the behavior that you believe is going to cause global disaster, if your contemplations focus on that behavior intensely enough. This last point is a real issue, not only in the peak oil scene, but all through the spectrum of movements that have risen in response to industrial society’s failure to deal with its dependence on the planet it plunders so recklessly: far too many people in these movements devote more attention to what they oppose than to what they value. Sometimes this gets taken to a familiar and embarrassing extreme. I suspect all of us have met people who are fixated on the belief that some particular set of bad people are personally and malevolently responsible for whatever grievances they happen to feel most acutely. Talk to them about anything, and pretty quickly the conversation will come around to the badness of the bad people and the bad things they’re doing, whoever and whatever happen to be the object of their obsessions. Wind them up and get them going, in fact, and quite often it all starts to sound weirdly like an infatuated teenager talking about the girl of his dreams. From a psychological standpoint, of course, this is exactly what’s going on; the actions of the putative villains, like the charms of the girl, have become an inkblot onto which wholly internal psychological needs and emotions are projected. Still, it’s not necessary to go to this extreme to get caught up in contemplation of what you don’t want to imitate. There are doubtless plenty of reasons why so many people in the climate change movement never got around to accepting the sharp reductions in their personal carbon footprints that they wanted to impose on everyone else, but I’ve long suspected that too much contemplation of what they thought they were fighting was one of them. There were some people in that movement who tried to sketch out visions of a low-carbon future that was more interesting and more appealing than the present, but by and large the movement presented the world with a choice between a continuation of business as usual by low-carbon means, on the one hand, and planetary dieoff on the other. The ineffective but familiar strategy of trying to get people to change by scaring the bejesus out of them—sinners in the hands of an angry Gaia!—took over from there, preaching vehemently about greedy polluters ravaging the Earth in an orgy of conspicuous consumption. The result was to make this image so powerful that a great many people in the climate change movement were drawn into contemplating it, and thus imitating it. Fortunately, there are ways to avoid this trap. The most obvious, and most basic, is to go out of your way to spend more time contemplating what you value than what you oppose. It’s not necessary to have a comprehensive plan for a better world already in mind, since the levels of your brain and nervous system that respond to contemplation with imitation don’t need abstract plans, and can’t really use them. What they need are good clear images that express the values you want to cultivate. That’s why advertising has so little conceptual content and so many emotionally compelling images, for example; the thaumaturgists of Madison Avenue know perfectly well what they’re doing—which is one of the many good reasons why you should scrap your TV sooner rather than later. The same method works as well when you choose the images, instead of letting big corporations choose them for you. There’s a step beyond this, one that combines several of the principles we’ve discussed here already, but the best way to make sense of this further step involves a detour involving ancient Greece, modern California, and one of the more interesting figures in 20th-century occultism, the Austrian philosopher and mystic Rudolf Steiner. Steiner was an oddity in the occult community of his time, a genuine scholar—he’s the guy who edited the standard edition of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe’s scientific works—whose visionary experiences led him first into a variety of early 20th century occult circles and then to the creation of his own highly original teachings. The movement he founded, Anthroposophy, was one of the options I seriously considered, back in the day when I was first looking for a source of occult training. That didn’t turn out to be the path I chose, but even so, Steiner’s work on biodynamic agriculture has had a lot of influence on my own gardening methods, and if I’d had children, it’s a good bet that they would have gone to a school that used the Waldorf system of education that Steiner founded. His particular system of occult (or, as his followers like to say, "spiritual-scientific") teachings covers a lot of ground, enough to fill a couple of good-sized bookshelves, and—as the examples just mentioned suggest—strays fairly regularly into territory, such as gardening and education, that aren’t normally associated with the occult. One core theme of his teaching, though, has a direct bearing on what we’re discussing here. Steiner’s work drew extensively on central European traditions of occult Christianity, but his Christianity differs from the standard version in an intriguing way. Most varieties of Christianity map the moral dimension of existence onto a binary spectrum extending from God to Satan. Steiner argued instead that there were two powers of evil—he called them Ahriman and Lucifer respectively—who were as opposed to each other as both were to the powers of good, represented in this age of the world by the Archangel Michael. While that redefinition came out of Steiner’s own visionary experiences, he was following the lead of one of the towering minds of the Western tradition, the ancient Greek polymath Aristotle. In the Nicomachean Ethics, arguably the most influential work on the philosophy of ethics ever penned, Aristotle argued that any given virtue was not the opposite of one vice but the midpoint between two. Courage, he pointed out, was opposed to cowardice, but it was equally opposed to the sort of rash stupidity that ignores the existence of danger; real generosity is no more compatible with greed than with spendthrift wastefulness, and so on through the catalog of the virtues. For most of two thousand years, Christian philosophers have coped uneasily with the mismatch between Aristotle’s ethical insights and the mythic imagery of their own faith; Steiner found what is certainly one of the more thoughtful ways through the tangle. Ahriman and Lucifer—well, those of my readers who have been to California’s two most famous cities already know them well enough to pick them out in a perp walk. Los Angeles is as Ahrimanic a city as you’ll find this side of the underworld. Everyone there seems to be there exclusively for the purposes of getting rich, getting famous, getting laid, and getting stoned, not necessarily in that order. That’s the Ahrimanic end of evil—wallowing in material experience, the coarser the better, until you drown in it. On the opposite end of the spectrum is the Luciferic capital of North America, San Francisco, where the reigning vice is the spiritual pride that sees oneself as too good for the world as it is, and turns every interaction into a display of one’s self-defined superiority to the rest of the cosmos. Weirdly, an identical polarity existed through much of the 19th century on the opposite side of the continent, between gaudily greedy New York City and holier-than-thou Boston; the prevalence of the pattern suggests that something in the American character, at least, is well described by Steiner’s theory. According to the metaphor, there ought to be a place halfway in between where neither the Ahrimanic nor the Luciferic influence holds sway, and the good that is opposed by both these evils comes into its own. Unfortunately the large city that’s more or less midway between Los Angeles and San Francisco is Fresno, which has as yet shown no sign of rising to its cosmic destiny, and Hartford, Connecticut—which is roughly halfway between Boston and New York—seems to have gotten through the 19th century without any particular gleam of archangelic radiance. Whether or not this says something worth noticing about America’s capacity to manifest its ideals, or simply about the fact that every metaphor sooner or later hits the point of diminishing returns, the concept central to Aristotle’s philosophy and Steiner’s vision—that it’s possible to run off the rails on either side of the track—is the thing I’m hoping to communicate here. Apply that concept to the pervasive binaries that run through contemporary thinking about the future and some of the strategy that’s guided this blog since its inception may be a little more clear to my regular readers. When The Archdruid Report was launched five and a half years ago, the most common of those binaries was the insistence that the future of industrial society had to be either an endless trajectory of continued progress, on the one hand, or a sudden cataclysmic dieoff on the other. The experiment of consistently proposing a more plausible third option—the option of decline, which after all is what’s happened to every past civilization that’s overshot its resource base, as ours has—seems to have played some role in helping the peak oil scene get past that fixation. The same principle has other uses, though. Let’s say you’re faced with a status quo that is obviously problematic and headed for trouble, and you want to envision an alternative. Even among thoughtful people these days, it’s all too common to meet this sort of situation by imagining the opposite of the status quo as your alternative, and assuming that since the status quo is bad, the opposite must be good. There are some obvious problems with this sort of thinking, and some that may not be so obvious; we’ll be talking in another week or so about the way that binary opposition locks into place whatever it sets out to oppose, for example. Put Aristotle’s and Steiner’s logic to work, though, and you have a far more useful tool. Take the status quo, and then imagine an opposite that’s just as bad as the status quo, but for the opposite reasons. That makes you think about just what it is about the status quo that’s problematic, to begin with; once you’ve identified the problems, it challenges you to consider the downside of going to the opposite extremes; and once you’ve identified the spectrum of possibilities, it leads you to explore many points along that spectrum, in search of the range of options that offer the most benefits and the fewest drawbacks. It’s far less simple—or simplistic—than going to the opposite extreme; it also works better in the real world, where hard binary oppositions are a good deal less common than muddily complex issues in which moderation is inevitably a better strategy than extremism. Finally, the same logic can be applied to the problem I raised earlier—the risks run in contemplating something you don’t want to imitate. If you’re going to have to pay attention to something you don’t want to mirror in your own life, figure out what the equally destructive opposite to that thing would be, and put some attention into that, too. If you’ve chosen your opposite precisely enough, the two will cancel each other out—you can’t imitate something and its exact opposite at the same time—and the positive alternative halfway between the two, the thing you want to imitate and that you should also be contemplating, trumps both the negatives. Imitating the status quo, for example, is not a good idea; there are plenty of reasons for that, some of which we’ll be discussing down the road a bit, but the dubious value of copying the mores of a society that in practice treats shopping for products as the highest reach of human potential will probably be evident to most of my readers. What defines the modern industrial world, from this perspective, is a mode of life dominated by absurd material extravagance. What’s the opposite of that? A mode of life dominated by bitter material insufficiency—that is to say, the kind of society we may yet end up with, if the delusions of infinite material growth continue to guide our collective policy for too much longer: a society in which early death by starvation, exposure, and treatable disease is the fate of most people, because the resources that might have prevented that outcome were squandered on the senseless wastefulness of previous decades. Between these two extremes, in turn, quite a range of potentially viable midpoints can be found, and of course that’s part of the point; a binary analysis allows for only two options, a ternary analysis for an infinite number between the far ends of a spectrum. Still, the options that are viable all share certain basic elements in common. First of all, they start from the realization that the material resources that support human life are finite, and can be exhausted if they’re used too greedily or treated too cavalierly. They recognize that too much is as problematic as not enough, that "longages" can be as destructive as shortages. Given the current and continuing trajectory of contemporary industrial civilization, they take it as a given that most resources are going to be in much shorter supply in the years to come, that collective institutions such as governments and markets—which are geared to the fantasy of perpetual growth—are unlikely to take useful steps until it’s too late to do much, and that individual action focused on learning to get by with much less is therefore essential to any viable path to the future. That is to say, they share certain important things in common with the Green Wizardry we’ve been discussing here over the last year and a half. In the weeks to come, we’ll bring both the discussions involved in this last point—the exploration of Green Wizardry and that of magic—full circle. .

Air Pollution link to Extreme Weather

SUBHEAD: The presence of higher levels of particulates are thought to be the primary drivers of climate change today.  

By Stephen Messenger on 14 Nove3mber 2011 for TreeHugger - 
  (http://www.treehugger.com/climate-change/new-study-links-air-pollution-extreme-weather.html)

 
Image above: Smog filled skyline of Los Angeles, California. From (http://www.city-data.com/forum/city-vs-city/693001-skyline-competition-san-francisco-vs-los.html).
 
The harmful effects of air pollution on the human body are well documented, from causing brain damage to increasing the risk of heart attacks, but it turns out that it can put people under the weather in more ways than one. According to a new study from University of Maryland researchers, higher levels of airborne particulates has been linked to more intense weather manifesting as flooding and drought. The findings are the first of their kind to indicate that air pollution doesn't merely dirty the sky, it can actually change the climate too.

The results of the study, which appeared in the journal Nature Geoscience today, are considered an important revelation towards managing the increasingly taxed water resources throughout the world. Scientists have suspected that pollution from airborne dust and soot play a role in cloud development, but a recent pairing of observed weather data along with computer modeling confirms it.

“We have known for a long time that aerosols impact both the heating and phase changes [such as condensing and freezing] of clouds, and that they can either inhibit or intensify clouds and precipitation,” Russell Dickerson, an atmospheric scientist at the University of Maryland, tells The Epoch Times.

“What we have not been able to determine until now is the net effect. This study shows that fine particulate matter, mostly from air pollution, impedes gentle rains while exacerbating severe storms. It adds urgency to the need to control sulfur, nitrogen and hydrocarbon emissions.”

Researchers say that one of the main contributors to aerosols in the atmosphere are emissions from gas-powered motor vehicles, coal-burning power plants, and forest fires. Along with the greenhouse effect worsened by such emissions, the presence of higher levels of particulates are thought to be the primary drivers of climate change today.

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Is There Hope?

SUBHEAD: There is always hope. But it may be different than you think.  

By George Mobus on 16 November 2011 for Question Everything - (http://questioneverything.typepad.com/question_everything/2011/11/is-there-hope.html)

Image above: "Hear no; See no; Speak no Evil Monkey" tattoo on human arm. From (http://www.tattoodonkey.com/wise-monkeys-international-non-award-winning-electric-tattoo/tatt2dude.com*blog*wp-content*gallery*healed-tattoo*healedtattoomonkeys.jpg/).

There is Always Hope

If that write-in campaign that some readers suggested a while back were to work, and I was elected president, I would hire my gym buddy (ellipticals) Rudy to walk behind me whispering in my ear, “Remember, thou art mortal!” He does his best to keep me humble and this is a good thing. One of his most common complaints about this blog, and my writing, is that I usually finish my doom-and-gloom scenarios without a last message of hope.

Rudy has read many of the peak oil, collapse, and other end of civilization as we know it (EOCAWKI) books and he notes that every other author generally ends their work with something like, “...if only the powers that be would wake up and take action, we could fix these problems”, or “...if you do such and thus, you will be one of the survivors.” Essentially the modus operandi is to leave people with the hope that something could be done (and the authors often provide the solutions, if only...).

Hope for What?

To quote Rudy, “You got to leave them with hope!” OK Rudy here is my leaving them with hope.
The mainstream hope is for what is called “business as usual” or BAU. Let's face it, BAU is killing this planet (or at very least leading to the sixth great extinction event). Should we really hope that our American way of life is not only non-negotiable (as per Dick Cheney) but really deserves to be saved?

Dumbest!
If a new miraculous energy production method were found (imagine nuclear fusion in a football sized reactor able to power 10,000 homes!) and we managed to bring it up to scale in time to avoid the worst shocks of fossil fuel peaking, would the Ecos be better off? In truth, would humanity be better off, in the long run?

Consider that such a miraculous power source could be used to scrub CO2 from the atmosphere. That would be great, wouldn't it? But also consider that such a power source would allow us humans to grow in numbers and consumption of natural resources even more. Would that be good?
Also, all of that energy consumed in work (making our lives “better”) would add to the heat load of the planet directly. We wouldn't be faced with global warming due to the greenhouse effect, but by directly injecting heat into the atmosphere from all of our machines and abodes. Somehow the Second Law of Thermodynamics seems to win no matter what!
Hope for BAU is hope for not being inconvenienced in this lifetime. Little else. It is not hope for the future of humanity.

Dumber!
Perhaps, then, we should hope to save the bulk of the current population. Perhaps we can discover genetic modifications to food plants and biofuel plants that can at least provide us with the basic needs of our species (living in non-tropic climes) so that even if we all end up poorer, we will be able to survive and live reasonable lives.

We might miss our TVs and cable, our NASCAR Sundays and our Big Macs. But we will be able to keep the population stable and learn how to live within our physical means. The only problem is that we are still breeding and producing hungry mouths to feed. Even if everyone lived at a much reduced consumption level there are still far too many of us to live off of real-time solar energy resources alone. We would all end up far poorer than most people can imagine unless they've been to Somalia.
Hope for saving the population is hope for far more pain and suffering than can be imagined.

Dumb!
Well, what about hope for humanity in the form of at least saving some portion of the species so that our kind can go on? Surely some remnants of Homo sapiens can survive and be ready to produce a new civilization based on different principles. We can surely hold out hope that our species will survive whatever future traumas await us. Indeed some remnant must survive.

Only if it is composed of the average humans from our current population they will likely just behave like humans do now. They will make all the same mistakes our current clever but unwise species have made. Homo sapiens are adaptive and a surviving population chosen, more or less randomly, from the current population would simply continue to act as we have acted, selfishly and with no understanding of the larger scope consequences of our local, short-term actions. As adaptable as our species is, I suspect that given the same opportunities (finding energy sources, say) they would simply replicate the same mistakes we have made as a species with cleverness.

Hope for saving a remnant of the current species is hope that we will make the same mistakes all over again.

If not us then who?
But, hope for the genus, that is different. I have hope that some form of Homo does, in fact, survive and adapt to the future world. I just don't think it should be sapiens. Sapiens, after all, are not really particularly sapient! At least the average member of our species does not appear to have a sufficient level of sapience to have a more global scope of understanding*.

They do not really grasp the systemic nature of our world to the point of understanding the global and long-term consequences of their local current actions. Why they don't is perfectly understandable. We evolved in a world where that grasp was not really necessary. We are what we are.

But, unfortunately, we are also extremely clever beasts who have so altered the physical world (serious geologists want to call this period the Anthropocene to recognize the geological consequences of the existence of human beings) that we have created an environment that demands exactly that kind of scope in thinking in order to adapt to the environment.

In other words we have created the very conditions that contribute to the selection of necessary traits for greater sapience! We have created the selection forces that will work against sapiens and for a more sapient species in the future.

Hope for the genus is hope that we can become better beings.

Hope for evolution
My hope is that we current beings will be just sapient enough to recognize the ways of evolution. Even in our population of mere average sapiens there are variations in the gene pool that produce much greater sapience in a few individuals.

If we were to ensure the survival of those individuals through the coming turmoil (as best we could - no guarantees!) then the future generations of humans would be starting from a higher baseline of sapience and would, I suspect, be more likely to manage adaptation to the new world.

And, more importantly, our descendents would be positioned to make better choices in that future world because their capacity to acquire wisdom will be much greater, on average, than is the case presently for the extant population.

There is hope that a distant future form of humanity will survive and even thrive. I have this hope because we less sapient but very clever humans have come to understand how evolution works and can produce seeming improvements in the capabilities of animals.

We have come to understand the genetic basis for inheritance of traits and even how to read the genes relative to the particulars of those traits (though this ability is very new and needs development).
We have the understanding of how selection of traits works and how to bootstrap selection of a particular trait (as when we do animal breeding).

No illusions
I have no illusions that our species will adopt an explicit policy for identifying and favoring the few high sapient members of our populations. That would be entertaining a false hope in light of the ample evidence that we are unable to adopt such thinking.

As I write this I am imagining all of the people who are going nuts screaming “Eugenics, Eugenics! Evil!”

The average brain is unable to rise high enough to get the perspective of what is happening. I accept that, though it does cause me anguish. No, my real hope is that somehow those super-sapient individuals will self-recognize and seek out one another's company to form social networks and communities that can and will survive and adapt. My guess is that the super-sapient already surmise the need and intuit the actions. I am only supplying a voice to that implicit judgment.

Hope for wisdom
So there is the hope I have and leave you with. If you suspect that some young person is not just bright, but also has the seeds of higher sapience then encourage them to learn all that they can (particularly systems science!) about the world and what is really happening. Teach them about resilience and adaptability. If they are truly sapient they will learn without much prompting. Help them to meet and associate with other high sapient individuals.

Be sapient enough to recognize our own short comings and do not claim greater sapience for yourself (an old Chinese proverb says that if you think you are wise, then you are not!) Above all, have hope that the super-sapient among us will be the ones building a brave new world.
There, now maybe Rudy will stop complaining that I don't leave folks with hope!

* My suggestion is that we call our current species Homo calidus, meaning “Man the clever”. We are extremely clever, but not wise, it would appear.
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