Wednesday, November 05, 2008

Election Results: Good News, Bad News, and... it's Complicated



This election was truly historic, and everyone has their own spin on the issues. Well, here's mine:

Presidential Race: Barack Obama's slam dunk victory! OMG, indeed. Obama's election represents a victory over racism and xenophobia, the extreme conservatism and failed policies of the last 8 years, and a vindication of the power of the people to rise up and demand change. Walking around Minneapolis last night, I've never felt anything so powerful. The hope and excitement in the air was tangible. People who woke up during this election season, people who got involved, who voted for the first time or volunteered for a political campaign for the first time, this victory will embolden them to continue to be involved and demand their enfranchisement in the future. As long as we continue to see voter turnout rates at 80% and this level of involvement among young people, I doubt we'll ever see an administration like the W. Bush regime ever again.

But. There's a but. I have serious doubts that this victory would have been possible without the current severe economic recession. Certainly, the Bush administration's policies have, to some extent, precipitated this crisis, but there is realistically only so much a president's policies can do to affect the economy. Had, by some strange twist of fate, the economy been stable these past few months, I don't think we would have seen an Obama victory. That said, there continues to be a powerful contingency in this country who will stop at nothing to oppose the kind of progressive politics that Obama stands for. We will have to remain vigilant if and when the economy rebounds to ensure that our gains are not lost as Americans return to their apathetic and consumption-driven ways. An Obama presidency is an opportunity to make change, it is not in and of itself the change that we have sought.

Strong Schools Strong City Referendum: Oh, yes! Minneapolitans once again proved that they are prepared to make sacrifices and do whatever is necessary to ensure that all our children have the best education to prepare them to be excellent neighbors and citizens, and that even in difficult times we are willing to pay whatever price to ensure our future. We also showed that we cannot be intimidated by outsiders who will use dirty, illegal tactics to try to destroy our public school system. Minneapolis residents have shown that they are proud of their schools, proud of their communities, and proud of their commitment to the future, and they are ready to stand together to defend what they value. Huzzah!

On the other hand, now I'm unemployed! (Or, as Zoe likes to say, "funemployed.") No worries, friends, I'm lining up jobs and should be gainfully employed soon!

Senate Race: Ugh. This race has been brutal, and it's far from over. It saddens me, and sort of befuddles me, too, to see Minnesotans join together to elect Obama, and then launch into the nastiest, dirtiest, most cutthroat competition over this senate seat that Coleman should never have held in the first place. (I still contend that, had Wellstone not been killed in 2002, Coleman would never have seen the inside of the U.S. Senate.) But, I'm not blaming Coleman -- I blame everyone. Franken has run a terrible campaign which has only heightened the negativity and frustrated Minnesotans who universally prefer never to speak a harsh utterance against anyone. Barkley's campaign wasn't any better, but was likely a protest vote candidate for folks who were sick of the back and forth between Franken and Coleman. This was the worst instance of nose-holding whilst voting I've ever witnessed in my (albeit short) time as an eligible voter. My one hope is that this experience will convince more Minnesotans that Instant Runoff Voting is a necessary reform.

At this point, my principal lingering frustration is that people -- the politicians, their campaigns, and even the pundits -- seem not to realize that it doesn't really matter who got the most votes. When the election is this close, nobody is getting a mandate, and whoever actually takes that senate seat is going to have a hard road ahead to convince the majority of Minnesotans that they legitimately represent them. I believe it is necessary to go through with the recount because I think there cannot be any doubt in anyone's mind that one of the candidates did not actually receive a majority of the votes legitimately cast, and I think it's utterly disgusting that Coleman has suggested that this recount is not only unnecessary but is a waste of the state's resources. He's probably correct in assuming that a recount will not change the outcome, but the legitimacy and transparency of this and every election is a cornerstone of the democratic process. Coleman's assertion is symptomatic of his entire world view and persona. For Coleman, the only rules that apply to him are the ones he chooses to follow. Still, Franken will need to give a concession speech not unlike the one given by McCain -- he will need to convince Minnesotans that Coleman is and will be their senator, and we will all have to work harder to ensure that Coleman does, in fact, do his duty to represent Minnesotans in the senate (and not just continue to do what is politically convenient). Coleman also needs to acknowledge that this has not been a victory for him, and he will have to work hard to get back into our good graces or be prepared to find a new job in 6 years (or less if we catch him or his wife with their hands in the cookie jar).

Constitutional Amendment: Surprise! When I went to bed last night I assumed that the amendment had failed, so when I woke up and heard the news I thought maybe I was still a little hammered from the night before. The good news is that Minnesotans have demonstrated their commitment to invest in the arts and our natural resources, and I think this victory represents both a tangible financial investment in our future as well as a signal to lawmakers that Minnesotans really do support policies that support good stewardship of the environment.

But. Yes, another but. Some people feel this was a misuse of the constitution. I'm not so sure I agree, but I do think that the use of the sales tax was wrong. The sales tax will now go up from 6.5% to 6.8ish%. Because a sales tax is not graduated based on income it disproportionately negatively impacts low and middle income folks. From an environmental justice perspective, this is actually a step backward. Environmental problems tend to affect low and middle income people to a greater degree for a variety of reasons -- if you're rich, you can move to a neighborhood with cleaner water, less pollution, or purchase water filtration systems or organic foods, etc. Now, with this constitutional amendment, poor and middle income people will be forced to bear a larger proportion of the costs of cleaning up the environment. Why did it have to be a tax applied to consumer products? Why not a business tax? Or, estate tax? Property tax? Any number of other funding mechanism could have been applied. This, to me, seems like a huge mistake.

Proposition 8: Oh dear. True, this is California, but it is said that how California goes, the rest of the nation follows, so I think it's worth a mention. The passage of Proposition 8 (in case you haven't heard) changes the definition of marriage in CA to be a union between "one man and one woman," and hence has made gay marriage illegal and possibly will delegitimize recent marriages of same-sex couples (something the courts will have to determine). While Obama's election was a blow against racism, Americans clearly still struggle with bigotry. I continue to hold out hope for a day when we can look back on our treatment of homosexuals as barbaric and ignorant, but that day is not this day.

All in all, I'm so full of hope and joy that I can hardly contain myself! I don't know how to be, I don't know what it's like to live under a political regime that I actually whole-heartedly support! Let's congratulate ourselves for a job well done, and get ready to work even harder to make the changes that this presidency will make possible. This is a revolution, and I think all revolutions need certain semantic changes, changes in the discourse among the citizenry. Like, I noticed Wonkette was calling Obama-philes "Hopeys." I sort of like that. I also think we could incorporate "yes" and "yes we can" into a lot more of our regular discourse. I think it would make a nice greeting to say "yes we can!" Or, imagine ordering at a coffee shop: "Yes we can! have a grande latte!" (Maybe the first person plural is a bit much, not sure.) Anyway, think about it.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Secession!

[A good friend emailed this to me]

Dear Red States:
If you manage to steal this election, too, we've decided we're leaving. We intend to form our own country, and we're taking the other Blue States with us. In case you aren't aware, that includes California, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois and all the Northeast. We believe this split will be beneficial to the nation, and especially to the people of the new country of New California.

To sum up briefly: You get Texas, Oklahoma and all the slave states. We get stem cell research and the best beaches.
We get the Statue of Liberty. You get Dollywood.
We get Intel and Microsoft. You get WorldCom.
We get Harvard. You get Ole' Miss.
We get 85% of America's venture capital and entrepreneurs. You get Alabama.
We get two-thirds of the tax revenue, you get to make the red states pay their fair share.

Since our aggregate divorce rate is 22% lower than the Christian Coalition's, we get a bunch of happy families. You get a bunch of single moms.

Please be aware that Nuevo California will be pro-choice and anti-war, and we're going to want all our citizens back from Iraq at once. If you need people to fight, ask your evangelicals. They have kids they're apparently willing to send to their deaths for no purpose, and they don't care if you don't show pictures of their children's caskets coming home. We do wish you success in Iraq, and hope that the WMDs turn up, but we're not willing to spend our resources in Bush's Quagmire.

With the Blue States in hand, we will have firm control of 80% of the country's fresh water, more than 90% of the pineapple and lettuce, 92% of the nation's fresh fruit, 95% of America's quality wines, 90% of all cheese, 90% of the high tech industry, 95% of the corn and soybeans (thanks Iowa!), most of the U.S. low-sulfur coal, all living redwoods, sequoias and condors, all the Ivy and Seven Sister schools plus Stanford, Cal Tech, UCLA, Berkeley and MIT.

With the Red States, on the other hand, you will have to cope with 88% of all obese Americans (and their projected health care costs), 92% of all U.S. mosquitoes, nearly 100% of the tornadoes, 90% of the hurricanes, 99% of all Southern Baptists, virtually 100% of all televangelists, Rush Limbaugh, Bob Jones University, Clemson and the University of Georgia.

We get Hollywood and Yosemite, thank you.

Additionally, 38% of those in the Red states believe Jonah was actually swallowed by a whale, 62% believe life is sacred unless we're discussing the war, the death penalty or gun laws, 44% say that evolution is only a theory, 53% that Saddam was involved in
9/11 and 61% of you crazy bastards believe you are people with higher morals then we lefties.

Finally, we're taking the good pot, too. You can have that dirt weed they grow in Mexico.

Peace out,

--Blue States

Obama reads Michael Pollan!

This quote was excerpted from a recent interview with Joe Klein:

I was just reading an article in the New York Times by Michael Pollen about food and the fact that our entire agricultural system is built on cheap oil. As a consequence, our agriculture sector actually is contributing more greenhouse gases than our transportation sector. And in the mean time, it's creating monocultures that are vulnerable to national security threats, are now vulnerable to sky-high food prices or crashes in food prices, huge swings in commodity prices, and are partly responsible for the explosion in our healthcare costs because they're contributing to type 2 diabetes, stroke and heart disease, obesity, all the things that are driving our huge explosion in healthcare costs. That's just one sector of the economy. You think about the same thing is true on transportation. The same thing is true on how we construct our buildings. The same is true across the board.

You can read the rest of the interview here.

Wednesday, October 29, 2008

American Stories, American Solutions

In case you missed it.... (I did.)

Saturday, October 25, 2008

Fireroast Mountain Cafe in Minneapolis

http://www.fireroastmountaincafe.com/


I stumbled upon this little cafe in south Minneapolis today as I was delivering "Vote YES for Kids!" lawn signs in that neighborhood. It was very opportune, as I was extremely hungry and ready for a cozy place to sit and have a hearty lunch. This cafe is not only adorable, but also they've got great food, much of it organic, and books and other amusements. I snagged a paperback John Grisham novel to gear me up for a little work on my law school applications -- nothing like a little inspiration! I highly recommend you check this place out if you're in the area.

Strong Schools Referendum on KARE11



This is a great spot on the referendum -- Courtney does a fantastic job getting the message out, and the classroom scenes are adorable! VOTE YES! And, hey, why not VOTE TODAY at your city hall!

Friday, October 24, 2008

A Tribute to Paul Wellstone

Tomorrow is the 6th anniversary of Paul Wellstone's death. This day always brings a certain sadness and a sense of great loss to my mind, but his memory and everything he stood for gives me hope. I see that reflected in Barack Obama -- our future president! Let's win this for Paul!

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Michelle Bachman incites Powell's endorsement of Obama



Ok, it wasn't ALL her -- but note the reference to a crazy republican in Minnesota -- that's GOT to be Bachman he's talking about!

Friday, September 12, 2008

Letter from Eve Ensler



Eve Ensler, the American playwright, performer, feminist and activist best known for 'The Vagina Monologues', wrote the following about Sarah Palin:


Drill, Drill, Drill


I am having Sarah Palin nightmares. I dreamt last night that she was a member of a club where they rode snowmobiles and wore the claws of drowned and starved polar bears around their necks. I have a particular thing for Polar Bears. Maybe it's their snowy whiteness or their bigness or the fact that they live in the arctic or that I have never seen one in person or touched one. Maybe it is the fact that they live so comfortably on ice. Whatever it is, I need the polar bears.


I don't like raging at women. I am a Feminist and have spent my life trying to build community, help empower women and stop violence against them. It is hard to write about Sarah Palin. This is why the Sarah Palin choice was all the more insidious and cynical. The people who made this choice count on the goodness and solidarity of Feminists.


But everything Sarah Palin believes in and practices is antithetical to Feminism which for me is part of one story -- connected to saving the earth, ending racism, empowering women, giving young girls options, opening our minds, deepening tolerance, and ending violence and war.


I believe that the McCain/Palin ticket is one of the most dangerous choices of my lifetime, and should this country chose those candidates the fall-out may be so great, the destruction so vast in so many areas that America may never recover. But what is equally disturbing is the impact that duo would have on the rest of the world. Unfortunately, this is not a joke. In my lifetime I have seen the clownish, the inept, the bizarre be elected to the presidency with regularity.


Sarah Palin does not believe in evolution. I take this as a metaphor. In her world and the world of Fundamentalists nothing changes or gets better or evolves. She does not believe in global warming. The melting of the arctic, the storms that are destroying our cities, the pollution and rise of cancers, are all part of God's plan. She is fighting to take the polar bears off the endangered species list. The earth, in Palin's view, is here to be taken and plundered. The wolves and the bears are here to be shot and plundered. The oil is here to be taken and plundered. Iraq is here to be taken and plundered. As she said herself of the Iraqi war, 'It was a task from God.'


Sarah Palin does not believe in abortion. She does not believe women who are raped and incested and ripped open against their will
should have a right to determine whether they have their rapist's baby or not.


She obviously does not believe in sex education or birth control. I imagine her daughter was practicing abstinence and we know how many babies that makes.


Sarah Palin does not much believe in thinking.

From what I gather she has tried to ban books from the library, has a tendency to dispense with people who think independently. She cannot tolerate an environment of ambiguity and difference. This is a woman who could and might very well be the next president of the United States. She would govern one of the most diverse populations on the earth.


Sarah believes in guns. She has her own custom Austrian hunting rifle. She has been known to kill 40 caribou at a clip. She has shot hundreds of wolves from the air.


Sarah believes in God. That is of course her right, her private right. But when God and Guns come together in the public sector, when
war is declared in God's name, when the rights of women are denied in his name, that is the end of separation of church and state and the undoing of everything America has ever tried to be.


I write to my sisters. I write because I believe we hold this election in our hands. This vote is a vote that will determine the future not just of the U.S., but of the planet. It will determine whether we create policies to save the earth or make it forever uninhabitable for humans. It will determine whether we move towards dialogue and diplomacy in the world or whether we escalate violence through invasion, undermining and attack. It will determine whether we go for oil, strip mining, coal burning or invest our money in alternatives that will free us from dependency and destruction. It will determine if money gets spent on education and healthcare or whether we build more and more methods of killing. It will determine whether America is a free open tolerant society or a closed place of fear, fundamentalism and aggression.


If the Polar Bears don't move you to go and do everything in your power to get Obama elected then consider the chant that filled the hall after Palin spoke at the RNC, 'Drill Drill Drill.' I think of teeth when I think of drills. I think of rape. I think of destruction. I think of domination. I think of military exercises that force mindless repetition, emptying the brain of analysis, doubt, ambiguity or dissent. I think of pain.


Do we want a future of drilling? More holes in the ozone, in the floor of the sea, more holes in our thinking, in the trust between nations and peoples, more holes in the fabric of this precious thing we call life?


Eve Ensler
September 5,
2008

Tuesday, August 05, 2008

Wendell Berry article from Harpers

http://harpers.org/archive/2008/05/0082022

At last, the full text of the article is now available for free online! "Faustian Economics" is a marvelous essay -- classic material from W.B. As always, it's about far more than it's title encompasses.

Sunday, August 03, 2008

This man will save the world!



Did I mention he also invented the Segway? (Ok, not a "world saving" device by comparison, but instigator of hilarious comedy [see also, "Arrested Development"].)

Monday, July 07, 2008

Obama Leads in... Soda?



At www.campaigncola.com you can vote with your wallet, and land some tasty, "micro-brewed" soda pop (or just plain "coke" if you're from the south). Best part, it's made with pure cane sugar, none of that factory farm byproduct high fructose corn syrup. Oh, and Obama is wayyyy ahead. Psst... my birthday's coming up, ya'll!

Saturday, July 05, 2008

Indecision 2008: The Update

As you may recall, I had been trying to make a big decision about my future recently. I was debating about taking a another volunteer position, this time with the Lutheran or Jesuit Volunteer Corps. As some of you already know, I have decided not to take either position, and I may not be going to San Francisco after all. What I have decided is that I'm going to take a much needed break after the completion of my VISTA year on August 10 (36 days to go... but who's counting?). I'm going to spend at least a month working on my law school applications and figuring out what I'm going to do for the remaining time I have before I start law school next fall. So, that means I'll be in the Twin Cities between at least the month of August and the end of September. From there, who knows? Maybe San Francisco, maybe Minneapolis, maybe some other totally random location. As long as I can get a job and an affordable place to live and be around friends (or people who would fast become my friends), anyplace sounds good to me.

Also, I got my LSAT scores back... I won't say what I got, but I will say that it's ok. Not great, but ok. I'm thinking about shelling out (or, rather, letting my mom shell out) several hundred dollars for a prep course this fall so that I can retake the LSAT in October and raise my score. I guess if I do that, I'll definitely be staying in the Twin Cities through October, so I don't know. It also seems kind of silly to me to spend that kind of money on preparing for an exam that I've already taken and done well enough on. I mean, the point of trying to get a better score would be to try to get into a more "elite" school, which is really about making more money when I get out of law school, which is fine but sort of conflicts with my ideas about "living simply" and my sense of class consciousness. The point of going to law school is not about walking away with some elite credentials to blow away prospective employers; the point is to learn the law so I can serve the under-served. Not to mention the inherit disparity in a system that rewards people who can afford to attend expensive preparatory classes to improve their scores on high stakes exams. Is this a system I want to perpetuate? On the other hand, maybe this is an opportunity to fight the system from within. I take the course, I score better, I get into a "better" school, and my enhanced credentials improve my credibility as I argue for social justice. That would be money well spent. After all, I just let my mom shell out $1500 to fix my car, which only serves me and my work site, and leaves me with a gargantuan environmental footprint (not to mention my gas expenses). And, there's one other minor detail: do I even want to take this course? It's going to be hard. Each classroom session is four hours long, adding up to 80 classroom hours in only a handful of weeks. Sheesh. Well, maybe it's good to prime the pump a little before law school -- see if I can still hack the academic rigor...

Stay tuned as Indecision 2008 continues...

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Amy Sedaris + Bunnies = Love!


See Amy Sedaris and Office 2007 in Rabbit Rescue

This is actually a commercial for Microsoft Office, but it is adorable nonetheless. Kudos to Microsoft for making a truly great product -- this video!

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Indecision 2008: What's Next for Ms. Kay-Z???

As some of you know, my current job is set to expire officially in mid-August, at which point I will have to find gainful employment (or gainful free-loading) elsewhere. What's the plan? Well, I don't rightly know, but I'm investigating a few options:

Plan A: Service Corps job with the Lutheran Volunteer Service or the Jesuit Volunteer Corps. Basically, this would be very similar to what I've been doing, only I'd be doing it while living in a intentional community based on Lutheran or Jesuit spirituality (depending on which program I get accepted into). What's the upshot? I can live and eat in San Francisco for FREE! And, if I get my first choice job placement I could be working in legal aid, which might even help me get into law school next fall. Plus, it fits perfectly into the academic year, freeing me up to start law school in '09.

Plan B: Farm internship in California. A few weeks ago, I was sitting on the porch at WEI, drinking a beer and watching the clouds in the east turn from white to pink to grey as the sun set behind me and the songbirds sang their final notes and the bats began their noiseless insect hunt in the hastening twilight of evening, and I thought to myself, "damn, I love this." What more could I possibly want? So, I'm looking into doing another farm internship, this time in California, as close to San Francisco as possible. I might not be able to start work until next spring, but I could take a few months off to be a freeloader at home, which would give me a chance to study for the LSATs, work on law school applications and scholarship applications, and just generally reflect on my life. There's nothing sexy about living at home, or spending another winter in Minnesota, but still I'm liking this plan more and more -- I'm tempted to call this Plan A.

Plan C: Get a regular job in San Francisco. (See a theme? Yeah, I really want to go to San Francisco. Maybe I'll change my mind after I visit SF next week... but, I doubt it.) I'm considering a job as a campus organizer or administrator with U.S. Public Interest Research Group (PIRG). It's 40 hours a week, decent pay, an option to buy into their health insurance plan, and it's only for the academic year. I'm not sure I'm crazy about another community organizer job, but I'd be working on college campuses with people who are mostly my peers (read: potential friends -- omg, I could have friend again! and, a social life! wow.) And, I have lots of experience, and I'd probably be good at it. Actually, the more I think about it, the more I sort of like this. I'm anxious about not having the chance to play in the dirt for a whole year, but maybe I could volunteer somewhere, or I'm sure they have community gardens in SF, right??? If I can't get the PIRG job, there are lots of other food service or administrative assistant type jobs, the type that wouldn't make me ecstatically happy, but that wouldn't suck up all my energy for living, either.

Other ideas...
- I applied for a VISTA Leader job in St. Paul, and they offered me the position, and I haven't officially turned them down yet, but I think I'm probably going to. When I applied, I was thinking it would be sort of a "backup" option. First obvious flaw -- not in SF. Second, it only pays $1100 a month, and I'd basically be doing what I'm already doing (and I'm not real fond of that anymore). It was a confidence-booster, though, to get the job offer, but now I feel lousy for having to say "no thanks."
- Living at home at temping. The living-at-home part is loathsome, and doing temp jobs would probably be loathsome, too, but there's nothing like the offer of free room and board, and let's face it, I really like the T. C. I could do a lot of volunteering with my favorite orgs, like LSP, IATP, WEI, RTC, and that would more than make up for having a crappy part time job, and it might even make up for indignity of moving back with my mom... maybe. (Nothing personal, Mom. I love you. But, I'm turning 25 in August, and that's just embarrassing.) I also had this harebrained idea that I could spend more time on my fiber arts hobby, spin more, design some patterns, set up an Etsy.com store... A lady can dream, right? Well, probably this is what I would be doing during the winter if I go with Plan B, anyway.

So, there you go. There are pros and cons to all my plans, and I have to admit that I'm not really in control of what happens next. A lot of things will have to fall in place if any of my plans are to work out. C'est la vie.

Friday, April 04, 2008

Agriculture Bridge



Online Videos by Veoh.com

Wish this could have been around when I was a student! This short video talks about a new program linking agricultural researchers in the field with students to disseminate information about sustainable agriculture and encourage collaboration. Cool!

Monday, March 31, 2008

Spotlight on Lighthouse Farm



I received a lovely email from Lighthouse Farm in Princeton, MN updating me on spring happenings on the Mesko family's farm. They recently purchased two milk cows which they intend to milk by hand (I presume primarily for the family's consumption). One of the cows, Valery, has a damaged utter from when she slipped and fell at the commercial dairy from which she was sold. She could no longer be milked on commercial milking machinery, so they were going to send poor Valery to slaughter! Instead, the Mesko's are nursing her back to health, taking her off her diet of corn and putting her on a more natural diet of 100% grass, and they are still getting plenty of milk by milking her by hand. This is something that could only happen on a small family farm, and it is just a wonderful example of the kind of compassion that small family farms engender. (The photo above shows Valery -- on the left -- being milked.)

Please check out their website: www.lighthousefarm.com

Recession Impacts Americans, While Oil Companies Make Off Like Bandits!



Since 2001, the top five oil companies have increased their annual profits by an average of 500%!!!

Here are some good tips from the OCA on how to increase your vehicle's fuel efficiency:

1. Don't be a jerky driver: Jumpy starts and fast getaways can burn over 50 percent more gasoline than normal acceleration. Use cruise control once accelerated. (And, let's be honest, slamming on the gas doesn't really get you there any faster!)
2. Drive slower: According to the U.S. Department of Energy, most automobiles get about 20 percent more miles per gallon on the highway at 55 miles per hour than they do at 70 miles per hour.
3. A well maintained car (oil change, fuel filters, tire pressure, alignment) gets an average of 10 percent better fuel efficiency.
4. Turn off your engine if you stop for more than one minute. (This does not apply if you are in traffic.) Restarting the automobile will use less gasoline than idling for more than one minute. (That's one I never knew -- I always thought it would be better to let the car idle...)
5. Decrease the number of short trips you make. Short trips drastically reduce gas mileage. If an automobile gets 20 miles per gallon in general, it may get only 4 miles per gallon on a short trip of 5 miles or less.

OCA Guide to Bodycare Products

When it comes to organics, what you put ON your body is just as important as what you put IN your body. (Remember, your body's largest organ is your skin!) Unfortunately, deciphering labels on body care products is much more difficult than reading food labels, and with all the strange chemical names it's difficult to keep straight what's safe and what's not. The Environmental Working Group has an excellent website that lists hundreds of brand-name products and rates them for safety, but when you're out shopping you can't exactly access that information. So, I was pleased to discover that the Organic Consumers' Association (OCA) has a one-page fact sheet to help customers figure out what to steer clear from. Next time I go shopping, I'll be sure to print this out and bring it with me. It's not just about your health, it's also about the environmental impact of chemical intensive farming to produce the "herbal extracts" that go into supposedly natural body care products.

Environmental Working Group website: www.cosmeticsdatabase.com/

OCA's fact sheet on body care: http://www.organicconsumers.org/bodycare/CCad05.pdf

US Government Subsidizing GMO Corn in Minnesota


The federal government has struck a deal with the Monsanto Corporation, and for the first time in history, the U.S. Department of Agriculture is endorsing a specific company's seeds. In fact, U.S. farmers in four states, including Minnesota, will be given taxpayer subsidized price breaks on insurance premiums if they buy Monsanto's genetically engineered corn this year as opposed to other biotech, conventional, or organic seeds. According to Monsanto's New Business Development Manager, Tim Hennessy, the federal government's new openness to promoting and advertising Monsanto "opens the door for a lot of future opportunity". Learn more and take action: http://www.organicconsumers.org/articles/article_11198.cfm

Friday, March 14, 2008

Racism and Politics -- an interesting new perspective...

I just finished reading this article in the New York Times Magazine:

"What's the Real Racial Divide?" by Matt Bai

Here's an interesting quote from the article:

"As Erica Goode wrote in these pages last year, Robert Putnam and other sociologists have, in fact, found that people living in more diverse areas evince less trust for others — no matter what their race."

What do you think?

My two cents: Since I've been living in rural areas for a while, I've begun to notice that for most folks out here, racial diversity is pure abstraction. I can sort of see how (were they inclined to vote Democratic, which most around these parts are not) they would vote for Obama irrespective of his race since race has little relevance to them. I wouldn't say this makes them less racist, or xenophobic. It's not uncommon to hear a rural person make a statement like "Africans are so violent" or "it's those Asians that are the problem at the farmers markets," but for them these seem like obvious statements that come more from lack of experience than animosity.

And, having lived in a very racially diverse city in France, I can also see the perspective of urbanites inclined toward racist thoughts and behaviors. Perhaps it's just human nature to scapegoat the racial or ethnic "Other" when resources are limited or scarce.

I'd love to get your comments on this interesting article!

Monday, March 10, 2008

Local Foods Website



I just discovered a new source of information about finding locally produced foods in Minnesota! It's call the Local Foods Partnership and it appears to be a project of the Regional Sustainable Development Partnerships which is part of the U of MN. You can find all different kinds of products and it also links to the Buy Fresh Buy Local chapters. And, it's searchable!

Go to http://www.localfoods.umn.edu

Oprah Hosts Eckhart Tolle in Online Webcast



I recently read Eckhart Tolle's (pronounced TOLL-eh) popular book The Power of Now which has sparked a process of re-awakening to my spiritual journey. So, I was excited, and a bit surprised when I discovered that Oprah selected Tolle's newest book A New Earth for her book club. Not only that, she is also hosting Tolle on her website for a series of interactive webcasts to be held every Monday evening for 10 weeks. I missed the first live broadcast, but I was able to watch it on Oprah's website, and I found that I really enjoyed it. I don't think any of the ideas expressed during the webcast were particularly original, but Oprah and the audience tended to ask very practical questions that helped my own understanding of the concepts Tolle talks about in his books. Many of the questions were about how to fit Tolle's ideas into a more traditional Christian framework, which for me was useful in thinking about how to translate these spiritual and philosophical ideas into concepts that can be more easily understood by friends and family with more traditional religious backgrounds.

I'll be watching the next webcast TONIGHT at 8pm central. If you want to join me, you'll want to be logged in by around 7:40pm central. To participate, go to Oprah's Bookclub Website: http://event.oprah.com/videochannel/event/event_landing_2.html

Friday, March 07, 2008

Farm to School: Willmar, MN Makes the News



Props to the news team at KSAX for airing a story on the Farm to School program in Willmar, MN!

Watch the clip here.

Eveything I Want to Do is Illegal, Too

This is an excellent op-ed piece that come out in the NY Times a few days ago, written by a farmer from Rushford, MN. His is an excellent example of why the farm bill in its current incarnation is so darn screwy.

"My Forbidden Fruits (and Vegetables)" by Jack Hedin

Farm Bill: Where are YOUR tax dollars going?




This fantastic website
was recently brought to my attention (thanks Mom!) that allows you to browse through the entire database of farm subsidies without slogging through reams of fine print. You can search by state, county, region and congressional district and you can view the top recipients of farm subsidy monies (yep, their names are right there!). So, snoop on your neighbors and notice who's getting the big bucks. Is it ma and pa farmer down the road? Nope. More like big corn and big beef. You can also see total funds received from various programs for the region, and they also supply some other interesting demographic data like how many children in that region are living below the poverty line.

Check it out!

UCC v. IRS



Though I'm no longer a regular church go-er I still keep in touch with my faith community at Falcon Heights United Church of Christ. This is a community that has a long history of supporting justice and equality for all people, so I believe they are deserving of our support at this time.

The United Church of Christ needs your help by taking a stand for freedom of speech.

As you no doubt have heard through media reports, the Internal Revenue Service has launched an investigation of the United Church of Christ, based on our invitation to U.S. Sen. Barack Obama - a longtime member of the UCC - to speak at our 50th Anniversary General Synod in Hartford, Connecticut this past June.

The UCC took great care to ensure that Senator Obama's appearance met appropriate legal and moral standards. We are confident that, in the end, the IRS investigation will confirm that no laws were violated.

However, in order to adequately defend ourselves as well as protect the broader principle of the freedom of religious communities to entertain questions of faith and public life, we will need to secure expert legal counsel, and the cost of this defense, we are told, could approach or exceed six figures. This is troubling news. That's why we are turning to you - our members and supporters - to ask for your financial support to help offset these unforeseen legal expenses.

Each year, generous UCC members contribute faithfully to "Our Church's Wider Mission," our shared fund for mission and ministry in our conferences, nationally, and globally. We seek your contributions to ensure that money given for mission will not be needed to pay legal bills, instead of ministry needs. Thus the reason we've created a new UCC Legal Fund to help keep to a minimum the impact of this investigation on OCWM funds.

Read more about the allegations from the IRS on the UCC website.

Contribute to the UCC legal defense fund online.

Great Lakes Study Suppressed



This study was recently brought to my attention via prwatch.org:

"For more than seven months, the nation's top public health agency has blocked the publication of an exhaustive federal study of environmental hazards in the eight Great Lakes states, reportedly because it contains such potentially 'alarming information' as evidence of elevated infant mortality and cancer rates," reports Sheila Kaplan. The 400-page study, undertaken by a division of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in cooperation with the government of Canada, "warns that more than nine million people who live in the more than two dozen 'areas of concern' -- including such major metropolitan areas as Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, and Milwaukee -- may face elevated health risks from being exposed to dioxin, PCBs, pesticides, lead, mercury, or six other hazardous pollutants." Canadian biologist Michael Gilbertson, who was involved in reviewing the study, said it has been suppressed because it suggests that vulnerable populations have been harmed by industrial pollutants. "It's not good because it's inconvenient," Gilbertson said. "The whole problem with all this kind of work is wrapped up in that word 'injury.' If you have injury, that implies liability. Liability, of course, implies damages, legal processes, and costs of remedial action. The governments, frankly, in both countries are so heavily aligned with, particularly, the chemical industry, that the word amongst the bureaucracies is that they really do not want any evidence of effect or injury to be allowed out there."

Learn more about the study at the Center for Public Integrity.

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Conferences, Conferences, Conferences!



You can almost see me in this photo -- I'm waaaaay over on the left, with the short short hair (I cut it recently -- you can see the new "do" better in my Cuba photos). To my right is my lovely travel companion (we've been to TWO conferences together already!), Miss Caroline. This photo was taken at the Urban Agriculture Conference in Milwaukee last weekend. I've been soooo busy with work and everything else that I'm just now getting a chance to sort through my experiences and tell you all about them.

I think the Milwaukee conference will be the last in my series of farming conferences this year. We kicked things off in January with the "Garden Goddess Greenhouse" conference in Milan, MN (for those of you non-natives, that's pronounced MY-lan, not to be confused with the fashion capitol of the world in Italy). For those of you who haven't heard about what they're doing with passive solar technology, you should definitely check them out. Chuck Weibel and Carol Ford have put together this amazing winter CSA using a lean-to style greenhouse that operates all winter long with virtually no heat added from fossil-fuel sources -- it's all sun! They grow micro-greens and cool weather crops like kale, broccoli, cabbage, etc., and CSA members also get stored squashes, carrots, etc. Incredibly innovative! Check out their Yahoo Group and look at their photos: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/gardengoddessnetwork/

The next big conference was the MOSES Organic Farming Conference two weekends ago in La Crosse, WI. It used to be called the Upper Midwest Organic Farming Conference, but since they realized they're the biggest deal in the country, they're just calling it the "Organic Farming Conference" from now on! It was huge indeed! 2400 people attended the conference this year! It was exciting and totally overwhelming for me to have all those organic farmers and organic supporters all in one place! I'm used to having to defend my preference for local, organic, sustainable foods and fibers, but for once I was not in the minority on that account. I think anyone who aspires to farm nowadays generally feels like an oddball, but at MOSES I definitely found "my people."

And then, I found them all again next weekend in Milwaukee! Ok, not all 2400 of them, this conference was much smaller, which was a bit easier to digest for me. I felt like I got more out of the workshops, too, since the smaller size gave more folks a chance to get their questions answered. The highlight of that conference for me (aside from the amazing food!), was the SPIN farming workshop. SPIN stands for Small Plot INtensive, and was developed by a couple cannuks in Saskatchewan. They've figured out how to make $50,000 on a half acre of land by growing and strategically marketing vegetables! If you don't believe me, check out their website at www.spinfarming.com. I've been so jazzed up about farming since that workshop that I'm ready to run out and buy a farm! But, no... I'm restraining myself for now (my monthly visits from Sallie Mae are a helpful reminder that I'm in no position to invest in land). Also, I discovered that Milwaukee is a really fun place to hang out. The first time I visited there when I was in high school I pretty much just went to see a band play, and spent most of the time at an outlying KOA. Also, I wasn't yet of age to enjoy Milwaukee's greatest tourist attraction -- the beer! So much irresistible microbrews! We went to the Milwaukee Ale House, and then at the conference we were served Capital Brewery beer and liquor from Death's Door (both made from wheat and juniper grown on Washington Island in Door County). Finally, to round out my blue collar experience of Milwaukee, I went to see the Drive By Truckers at the Pabst Theater! The concert was great, and the beer flowed like... ok, there was just a lot of beer drinking going on! Also, thanks to Caroline's friend Christy for putting us up (and putting up with us!) the whole time!

So, that's my little update. More servings of tasty local food stories from around the web coming up soon!

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Is there a dentist in the house?

Watch this 5 minute video on the negative health effects of water fluoridation.

True Majority: Watch this and join the movement!


Wednesday, February 27, 2008

"Gerontocracy" -- Something else we share with Cuba

The Lede: Gerontocracy Alerts Issued for U.S. and Cuba
By Mike Nizza
Published: February 26, 2008
The two countries choose their leaders very differently, but from the same demographic.

Monday, February 25, 2008

Action Alert: Farm Bill Deadline March 15


Debate on the 2007 Farm Bill is STILL underway, which means we need to keep pressing for a fair farm bill that supports small, family, organic, and sustainable farmers!

If your senator or representative serves on the agriculture committee, please contact him/her before the March 15th deadline. Please ask your representative to fully fund these critical priorities:
$2 billion in additional mandatory funding over the next five years for the Conservation Security Program (CSP)
$15 million in annual mandatory funding for the Beginning Farmer and Rancher Development Program and $5 million in annual mandatory funding for the Beginning Farmer and Rancher Individual Development Account Program
$40 million in annual mandatory funding for the Value-Added Producer Grant
$16 million in annual mandatory funding for the Organic Agriculture Research and Extension Initiative

Not sure if your senator or representative serves on an ag committee? Here's the list for the Midwest region:
SENATE
Tom Harkin (D-IA)
Debbie Stabenow (D-MI)
Max Baucus (D-MT)
Kent Conrad (R-ND)
Charles Grassley (R-IA)

HOUSE
Collin Peterson (MN-7th)
Leonard Boswell (IA-3rd)
Stephanie Herseth-Sandlin (SD)
Earl Pomeroy (ND)

CALL TODAY: Capitol Switchboard 202.224.3121
Ask for your senator or representative.

Tell Joe Soucheray to "Cluck" Off!



This article was in Saturday's paper:

Joe Soucheray: Dumb clucks coming to Midway
JOE SOUCHERAY
Article Last Updated: 02/23/2008 08:21:05 PM CST

Jinny Kolar lives in the 1200 block of Seminary Avenue in the Midway, next
door to a woman named Faith Krogstad, who intends to raise chickens in her
back yard and hopes that her neighbors will raise chickens, too.

In fact, her group is called Midway Chickens, which sounds like the name of
a band that should be playing at the Turf Club.

Phyllis Kahn raises chickens on what she believes to be her private
Nicollet
Island, but even there, despite the presence of a significant high school,
Phyllis, who is daffy anyway, has a bit of room to raise chickens, and the
prospect of Phyllis chasing them is almost charming.

And in other neighborhoods in Minneapolis, I guess people raise chickens in
their back yards. It is probably happening all over the country, as the
closer you get to the country's tallest buildings, the more likely you are
to find the kinds of people who want to play farm, among their other
delusions.

I tried to reach Faith, but she is out of town. Faith is a coordinator at
something called Eco Education, a nonprofit environmental education
organization in St. Paul. Kathy Kinzig, who answered the phone at Eco
Education, said raising chickens is something Faith is doing on her own and
urban chicken farming is not necessarily under the purview of Eco
Education.


I have that sinking feeling that we are somehow paying for Eco Education,
just as we pay for the Hamline Midway Coalition District 11 Council, one of
17 district councils in St. Paul, which is neither here nor there except
that the Midway, the once mighty Midway, is virtually a petri dish of New
Urbanism, trains, co-ops, councils, community gardening and now chickens.

Chickens. Chickens on 40-foot lots.

Faith Krogstad believes, according to an e-mail that she sent to
prospective
chicken farmers, that raising chickens is somehow environmentally
responsible and good for the soil and that it teaches children where their
food comes from, even though from many back yards in the Midway you can see
a big Cub store or the new SuperTarget.

Because raising chickens to benefit the environment is not even plausible,
there really is only one reason to raise chickens in your back yard: to
assign to yourself a kind of progressiveness, or enlightenment. Nevermind
that raising chickens in your urban yard is going backward, not forward; it
is the illusion of self-sufficiency that confers the virtue.

No, I haven't forgotten Jinny Kolar, 65, who has lived in her Midway
neighborhood for 40 years. She does not intend to raise chickens. Kolar
understands that Krogstad acquired enough names on a petition to get
excused
from zoning regulations and that the Health Department, which you would
think might have a position here, apparently will intervene only if a
problem is reported. Those who oppose the idea, like Kolar, appear to be
out
of luck.

Also, Kolar understands that the chicken farmers will share the chickens
and
that the chickens will wander around on their own chicken bleep, that part
being good for the soil, I guess.

But Kolar, who is apparently sane, is worried that most of her neighbors,
who do not meet at coffeeshops to seek the pretend burdens of Third World
status, are not going to be prepared for what is coming: the smell, the
noise, the filth.

"One of the so-called chicken farms is next door to the playground at
Central Lutheran Elementary School,'' Kolar said. "Will that affect the
kids
on the playground? I don't know. In the absence of a chicken coop I guess
people have been advised to just cut holes in their garages. This could
affect our property values. I've been here a long time and I like the
prettiness and stability. But that will all change once the chicken farming
idea takes hold. And I feel that we, as a community, should think long and
hard before we let that happen.''

It sounds to me like Kolar and her like-minded neighbors better hurry up
and
find their own coffeeshop. Kolar is the true progressive here, not the
Midway Chickens.

Joe Soucheray can be reached at jsoucheray@pioneerpress.com or
651-228-5474.
Soucheray is heard from 2 to 5:30 p.m. weekdays on KSTP-AM 1500.

Jesus Loves Porn? Really?



I read about this website (xxxchurch.com) in Katherine Kersten's column in the Star Tribune this weekend, and I just checked it out briefly. From what I understand, the website represents an attempt by a group of Christians to challenge the prevalence of pornography in American culture, and they're fighting fire with fire, using the "sexiness" of porn to sell their message. They've got t-shirts and posters with hipster-ish graphics and catchy messages like "Jesus Loves Porn" and "Porn is Bipartisan." They also have programs to rehabilitate "porn stars" and porn users, and they sponsor debates on porn at college campuses, and other programs. At the heart of their message is definitely a bit of the old evangelical "have you accepted Jesus Christ as your personal Lord and Savior" stuff, but they're clearly not afraid to shake things up. If they're really all the appear to be, this might be the first serious challenge to the porn epidemic in this country and an opportunity to reveal the insidiousness of its misogynistic influence.

Kitchen Gardeners International


This is a cool non-profit I came across today that promotes backyard veg gardens. Kitchen Gardeners International also has their own holiday: International Kitchen Garden Day! Also, check out their "10 Steps to Planning Your Organic Garden."

Kitchen Gardeners International

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Local Food Hero Radio Show: Saturdays 1-2pm (Central)


Minnesota-based non-profit Renewing the Countryside is now hosting their own radio show on Air America Minnesota AM 950. The show is called "Local Food Hero" and airs from 1-2pm every Saturday afternoon. For those out of radio broadcast range you can listen online by going to www.airamericaminnesota.com. I haven't listened yet, so I can't vouch for the quality, but the folks at Renewing the Countryside are top notch!

Total Lunar Eclipse Tomorrow (and you don't even have to stay up late!)



Around 9pm tomorrow night (central time) a full-lunar eclipse will commence! The partial eclipse will begin around 7:43pm. Everybody keep your fingers crossed for clear skies! For more info or to see what time to check the skies in your area, go here

The Fidel Castro Whom I Know -- Gabriel Garcia Marquez

This article, written by world-renowned author Gabriel Garcia Marquez was brought to my attention via a very contentious debate raging on the Facebook discussion page. Not everyone will appreciate Marquez's viewpoint (Marquez and Castro are friends), but I think it's refreshing to at least hear the other side of things once in a while.

Farewell, Commandante!



It seems like a special privilege to have been one of perhaps only a small group of Americans who got to see Cuba in its final day's of Castro's presidency. According to Castro's letter in the Granma, he has decided not to be considered as a candidate for president when Cuba's newly elected parliament chooses the president in the coming weeks. Of course, Castro will still be a powerful force in Cuban politics and he is planning to continue writing his column for the paper. Probably, his younger brother, Raul Castro, will be chosen as president in his stead. Raul has demonstrated that he is interested in negotiating with the U.S. as well as liberalizing Cuba's economy, and with the American regime change imminent as well, there could be big changes on the horizon. It would be exciting to see an amelioration of the relationship between the U.S. and Cuba, but personally I hope that Cuba doesn't give up any of its revolutionary principles!

We'll see what the Cuban reaction will be -- most Cubans don't have access to the internet, so many of them haven't heard the news yet!

Sunday, February 17, 2008

Largest Beef Recall in History

A mind-boggling 143 million pounds of beef has just been recalled by the USDA. Evidently the slaughter house was slaughtering downer cows, which is illegal, and rightly so (although, one would think it should be illegal to PRODUCE a downer cow, not simply to try to feed that cow to a human being). (Downer cows are animals that can no longer stand on their own because they have been too abused and/or malnourished to do so.) Guess where most of this meat went? That's right, straight into the mouths of America's children thanks to our government's policy of feeding school children the lowest grade beef available. How many children have already eaten this contaminated beef? There's no way of knowing. For more details, check out the article in the New York Times. The Times leaves out one calculation, which is how many cattle are we talking about when we're talking about 143 million pounds of beef. Here's my estimate: around 286,000 head (assuming each steer yields around 500 lbs of beef). A veritable city of cattle.

Saturday, February 16, 2008

Victor's 1959 Cafe

Mom and I were already missing Cuba so much that we decided to check out this Cuban restaurant in South Minneapolis! We had their delicious fried yuca with mojo, salmon with a mango glaze, and truly authentic tostones (twice-fried plantains). It felt just like being in Cuba -- until we stepped foot outside! Chilly chicas!

They're open for breakfast, lunch, and dinner. So, if you're living in the T.C., I'm taking you with me!

Hasta siempre, Cuba!

My trip to Cuba was an unbelievable experience! I am so grateful for all that I learned and experienced and the wonderful people that I met! Here are the photos I took from that trip, and I will continue to update you all on more of the details of my experience as my ideas continue to coalesce. Ciao!

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Two Great Resources: Blue Thumb and Natural Step




I heard about these two resources from folks at the Buy Fresh Buy Local St. Croix Valley Steering Committee meeting, and I thought I would pass them on.

Natural Step is an international organization as well as an approach to problem solving for organizations, governments, and businesses. The "steps" are really a framework for transforming the way we do everything so as to make what we do more sustainable. I also think the steps themselves form a good definition of sustainability. The organization has resources to assist with the implementation of these steps. Many companies, including Smith and Hawken, Nike, and Ikea (to name just a few) are working with Natural Step. For now they seem to be only on the west coast in the U.S., but hopefully they'll make their way inland soon.





Blue Thumb is a project of the Rice Creek Watershed District, and it's a program to encourage people to garden with the preservation of our water resources in mind. They have great information about how to plant rain gardens to filter water that eventually cycles back into our homes, as well as how to garden with native plant varieties and to protect shorelines. This site is for every backyard gardener!

Livestock: The New Oil?


Caroline sent me this great article from the NY Times, and it couldn't have come at a more perfect time for me as I am just about to finish Ruth L. Ozeki's My Year of Meats. Ozeki's novel tells the story of two women struggling to find their voice in the face of male domination and violence which is a story that becomes mirrored in their relationship to meat and meat production. It's really brilliant -- it reminds me of The Sexual Politics of Meat by Carol Adams which very accurately documents the relationship between the sexualization and commodification of women's bodies and the bodies of animals.

Anyhoo. The article in the Times points out all the myriad reasons why the average American's consumption of meat is wholly unsustainable and ultimately barbaric in a world where so many are dying of hunger and malnutrition and the Earth's resources are running on empty. So, you should read it.

Saturday, January 26, 2008

Two Buck Chuck: Grapes of Wrath

As I sit at my computer, enjoying a lovely glass of shiraz, I couldn't help but wonder, where did this come from? And, how could it possibly cost a mere $2.99? Generally, if I think something is too good to be true, I'm usually right. And, it looks like I'm right again.

Wine produced under the Charles Shaw label from Trader Joe's, more commonly known as "Two Buck Chuck" is less the divine miracle that it appears to be. It is produced cheaply through the exploitation of illegal immigrant farm laborers and neighboring farms that overproduced wine in the '90s -- a sort of wine "bubble" not unlike the "tech bubble" and our more recent "housing bubble." So, the bubble burst, the value of wine and land in the San Joaquin Valley dropped, and Fred Franzia (that's right, of Franzia boxed wine fame -- actually, that was his father, but same family) swooped in and bought it all up. The reason the wine is so cheap is through the miracle of vertical integration -- he owns everything, even the porta-johns. At "Domaine Franzia" it is literally all about money -- the quality of wine is a mere afterthought. They grow what consumers will drink, and that is all. (The articles I found don't give much of an impression of what the San Joaquin Valley now resembles, but for those who are readers of John Steinbeck, I think you can use your imagination.)

To read more about Fred Franzia and his pithy witticisms (like, "terroir don't mean shit"), go here.

To read about vineyard workers in Napa and the San Joaquin Valleys, go here.

To fall in love with the San Joaquin Valley, and then lament what it has recently become, read "East of Eden."

St. Paul may be the capitol of Minnesota, but Minneapolis is the capitol of...


Ever since "locavore" was declared the word of the year by the writers of the Oxford English Dictionary, the word seems to be turning up everywhere! I was so excited when my dad (thanks Dad!) forwarded me an email from MPR announcing a new project called "Locavore Nation." Here's how it works: 15 people have sworn to eat at least 80% of their diet from all local sources (within 150 miles of their home). The people are from all across the U.S. The participants all write blog entries, and every week Lynne Rossetto Kasper checks in with some of them on her radio program, The Splendid Table. That's right, Minneapolis, MN is the capitol of Locavore Nation! (I would expect no less!)

Check out their website, and maybe offer them a few supportive comments!

Film: "What a Way to Go"

In case you're not already scared enough about the future of our planet, here's a new film for you!

Wilderness Connections is hosting a screening:
Saturday, February 2nd, 10:30 - 1:00 p.m. Merriam Park Library (room
in lower level), Corner Fairview and Marshall Aves., St. Paul, MN

Friday, January 25, 2008

Think you can get 50-60 mpg in your Honda Accord? This guy can!

The average hybrid car driver gets around 40 miles per gallon, but Wayne Gerdes gets more than that in a regular ol' sedan! It's all in a technique called "hypermiling." Here's the article.

Also, the article talks about a guy called, simply "Hobbit." I'm pretty sure that's this guy. I could be wrong, but then again, how many men are there in the world that are obsessed with green technology and are named "hobbit?" (Nevermind -- I don't want to know!)

Go, Go Nancy Pelosi!


I know it may come as a shock to you all, but a recent article in the New York Times (thanks, Caroline, I finally read this one!) indicates that Republicans are not only opposed to supporting small family farmers, they are also ardent supporters of trans fats, stuffing chickens in teeny tiny cages, and never ever eating vegetables that haven't spent time in a deep fat fryer. The good news -- something tells me us progressives are going to outlive their ilk!

Thank you, Nancy Pelosi, for making our representatives (even the Republicans) eat their brussel sprouts!

Here's the article.

Deconstructing Dinner Podcast



Deconstructing Dinner is one of my new favorite podcasts. It's a product of Canada (eh?). Clearly our neighbors to the north are more enlightened than we (is it too late to redraw the borders a little to the south?). Check out their website!

On the last podcast I listened to, there was this great folk song that is really worth a listen. You can stream it, or download it for free. (I, silly girl that I am, paid 99 cents for it from iTunes, but you all are smarter than I!)

Hooray for progressive media!

“ In 25 years of working with farmers, these are the happiest, most optimistic, and best-paid farmers I have ever met.”

For those of you interested in sustainable and urban agriculture, check out this article about Cuba's success in transitioning away from conventional agriculture:

http://www.i-sis.org.uk/OrganicCubawithoutFossilFuels.php

Here are just some highlights:

"By 1994, more than 8 000 city farms were created in Havana alone. Front lawns of municipal buildings were dug up to grow vegetables. Offices and schools cultivated their own food. "

"New biological products and organic gardening techniques were developed and produced by Cuba’s agricultural research sector, which had already begun exploring organic alternatives to chemical controls, enabling Cuba’s urban farms to become completely organic. In fact, a new law prohibited the use of any pesticides for agricultural purposes anywhere within city limits."

'According to Cuba’s Minsitry of Agriculture, some 150 000 acres of land is being cultivated in urban and suburban settings, in thousands of community farms, ranging from modest courtyards to production sites that fill entire city blocks. Organoponicos, as they are called, show how a combination of grassroots effort and official support can result in sweeping change, and how neighbours can come together and feed themselves. When the food crisis hit, the organoponicos were an ad hoc response by local communities to increase the amount of available food. But as the power of the community farming movement became obvious, the Cuban government stepped in to provide key infrastructure support and to assist with information dissemination and skills sharing."

Who REALLY wears the pants in this family?


Obeythepurebreed.com knows the answer to this question if you're a pet owner. I [heart] the t-shirts and bumperstickers in a big way (darn, 11 months til xmas!).

Oddly, they don't offer any merch for pets themselves -- I guess the website mainly caters to the bourgeois, I mean, humans.

Thursday, January 24, 2008

My new dream job: Foodscaping!

Check out this article by Barbara Damrosch published in the Washington Post (of all places!!!):


FYI: Barbara Damrosch writes books and a website with Elliot Coleman (lucky her!)

Monday, January 21, 2008

Free and Fair Elections Amendment

This video is a little long, but as another presidential election season approaches it's no waste of time to think about how to secure our votes. Also, if you're planning on going to caucus on Feb. 5 (in MN), then this information is definitely for you! (I'd go, but I'll be out of the country. What's your excuse?!)

Sunday, January 20, 2008

Sustainable Farming Event in Fairmont, MN



For those of you from my mom's hometown...


Rural Advantage 2008 3rd Crop Producer Meetings

February 11th & 25th, March 10th & 24th

Knights of Columbus Hall, Fairmont MN



Rural Advantage is hosting its annual series of 3rd Crop Producer Meetings in February and March. These informative meetings will cover a range of issues and opportunities emerging in the farm industry. This year’s topics include: 3rd crops, biomass markets, cover crops/carbon, and expanding markets for producers through ecological commodity payments. Meeting dates, topics, and times are below.



· Monday, February 11th - 3rd Crops 10 a.m. – 3:15

· Monday, February 25th – Biomass Markets 10 a.m. – 3:00

· Monday, March 10th – Cover Crops/Carbon 10 a.m. – 3:00

· Monday, March 24th – Getting Paid: Ecological Commodity Payments 10 a.m. – 3:15



3rd crops can provide multiple benefits in addition to the traditional food, fuel, and fiber. The very nature of growing some 3rd crops makes them valuable assets to the farming system. Please join us on Monday February 11th to learn more about a range of topics on 3rd crops; presentations include:

Miscanthus as a bioenergy crop
Woody agriculture
Placing perennial crops on the landscape
Establishing native grasses
Hybrid Hazelnuts
Small grains


The exploding bioeconomy is driving new markets for biomass beyond the traditional corn to ethanol and soybeans to biodiesel industries. New markets are being developed for products made from biomass. These include a host of renewable fuels, bio-products, composites & materials, chemicals, and more. Presentations on biomass markets include:

Pelleting opportunities with ag residues
Distributed energy with pyrolysis and gasification
Biomass to methanol
Alfalfa for fuel and feed


Managing healthy soils has long been a key management strategy to maintain yields in a world where pressure is being put on the agricultural system to provide ever increasing amounts of food, fiber, and fuel. This drive to produce more per acres has led to some interesting proposals for removing ag residues as a potential feedstock for renewable energy. Is this a sustainable option for maintaining healthy soils? If removing ag residues, could the use of cover crops mitigate some of the negatives? These questions as well as many more will be answered at this meeting on March 10th. Presentations that day include:

Aerial seeding rye as a cover crop
Integrating cover crops into Midwest farming systems
Cover crops and EQIP
Strategies for managing cover crops
Carbon cycling; biomass removal and bio-char
Soil conservation and biomass energy




3rd crops are known to provide multiple benefits to the farming system, yet their adoption by producers has been slow and challenging. An often repeated reason from farmers is that they do not compete economically with the traditional corn/soybean rotation. The answer is for farmers to get paid for the multiple benefits that growing 3rd crops provide to society as a whole. So in addition to getting paid for the crop grown, producers are also being compensated for things like carbon sequestered, nutrients reduced, water recharged back to the aquifer, as well as many more. This March 24th meeting will provide participants with some understanding knowledge on implementing ecological commodity payments through the following presentations:

Implementing ecological commodity payments
Water quality trading
Wildlife habitat payments
Carbon credit payments
MN Terrestrial Carbon Project
Innovations in Biorefining


All meetings are being offered free of charge by Rural Advantage and are held at the Knights of Columbus Hall located at 920 E 10th St. in Fairmont MN. Registration and coffee begin at 9:30 with presentations starting at 10:00. For a full agenda with all the meeting dates, speakers, topics, times, and locations please contact Jeff Jensen @ Rural Advantage for a brochure. 507-238-5449 or jeff@ruraladvantage.org





Jeff Jensen

Rural Advantage

1243 Lake Ave. Suite 222

Fairmont, MN 56031

507-238-5449 Fax: 507-238-4002

www.ruraladvantage.org

E-Mail: jeff@ruraladvantage.org

The Story of Stuff - Ch.1: Introduction

Ever feel like your stuff is taking over your life? Well, you're probably right! This is and excellent overview of the mechanics of our consumer society. See this video in its entirety on www.storyofstuff.com. Free Range Studios also has lots of other great videos, by the way.