Global Hot Spots of Hunger Set to Explode
UNITED NATIONS - As food prices continue to escalate worldwide, some of the poorest nations in the developing world are in danger of social and political upheavals.
The unrest, which is likely to spread to nearly 40 countries, has been triggered largely by a sharp increase in the prices of staple commodities, including wheat, rice, sorghum, maize and soybeans, according to the United Nations.
Following last week's food riots in Haiti, which claimed the lives of four people, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has appealed to international donors for urgent assistance to one of the poorest countries in the Caribbean.
A meeting of the world's finance ministers in Washington over the weekend warned that rising food prices were more of a threat to political and social stability than the current crisis in global capital markets.
The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) has singled out six countries with an "exceptional shortfall in aggregate food production and supplies": Lesotho, Somalia, Swaziland, Zimbabwe, Iraq and Moldova.
An additional six countries with "widespread lack of access" to food include Eritrea, Liberia, Mauritania, Sierra Leone, Afghanistan and North Korea.
The steep rise in basic foodstuffs has already sparked demonstrations and/or riots in Egypt, Cameroon, Haiti and Burkina Faso, while an increase in both fuel and food prices has triggered unrest in Indonesia, Ivory Coast, Mauritania, Mozambique and Senegal.
The FAO has also warned of impending political and social unrest, specifically in countries where 50 to 60 percent of a family's income is spent on food.
"If the basic food requirements of vast numbers of the poor remain beyond them, with a broad range of consequences to their well-being, they will probably have no alternative than to make themselves 'heard' by taking to the streets," says Ernest Corea, until recently a senior consultant with the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR) at the World Bank.
This has happened in history, and food riots of varying intensity have already taken place in several countries, he told IPS.
It was the U.S. civil rights activist Martin Luther King Jr. who said that "violence is the voice of the unheard", said Corea, co-author of "Revolutionising the Evolution of the CGIAR".
Anuradha Mittal, executive director of the San Francisco-based Oakland Institute, which has done exhaustive studies on issues relating to food trade and agriculture, told IPS that various causes for the current crisis are being cited in policy circles, including increased demand from China, India and other emerging economies.
The high per capita income growth of some of these countries has resulted in changing appetites.
Additionally, she noted, the price increases are also attributed to rising fuel and fertiliser costs, climate change, and the new emphasis on converting crops to biofuels, which are being held responsible for almost half the increase in the consumption of major food crops in 2006-07.
"What is not being mentioned is that in the last few decades liberalisation of agriculture, dismantling of state-run institutions like marketing boards, and specialisation of developing countries in exportable cash crops such as coffee, cocoa, cotton, and even flowers has been encouraged by international financial institutions backed by rich countries like the United States, and also by the European Union," she pointed out.
Mittal said these reforms have driven the poorest countries into a downward spiral. "Removal of tariff barriers has allowed a handful of Northern countries to capture Third World markets by dumping heavily subsidised commodities while undermining local food production," she said.
This has resulted in developing countries turning from net exporters to large importers of food, with a food trade surplus of about 1.0 billion dollars in the 1970s transforming into an 11-billion-dollar deficit in 2001.
She also said the situation has been worsened by the dismantling of marketing boards that kept commodities in a rolling stock to be released in event of a bad harvest, thus protecting both producers and consumers against sharp rises or drops in prices.
Corea blamed the crisis on inadequate investment in agriculture and the sharp decline in official development assistance (ODA) for agricultural development over several years.
Additionally, he said, there were also natural disasters and human-made impediments to agricultural development, which is the basis of food security. He pointed out that 21 of the 37 countries listed by FAO as "food crisis" countries requiring assistance have suffered from floods, droughts, and other adverse weather conditions.
And 20 of them are the scene of continuing, current or recent internal conflicts, civil strife, and large scale internal displacement of people.
Moreover, he said, there has been an increased demand for food as a result of both increased population and increased income.
Additionally, as incomes increase, the pattern of food consumption usually changes. For example, higher income earners tend to consume more meats than the poor. One consequence of this trend, he argued, is that some food stocks are diverted for processing as animal feed.
He also blamed rising food prices on subsidies to U.S. farmers for growing crops for energy, in response to the high price of oil and by-products. In 2008, a third of the country's maize output will be used in the production of ethanol and not for food production. Rising fuel prices have also increased the price of some agricultural inputs like fertiliser, and transport.
The diversion from food to fuel has already been described by some developing nations as "a crime against humanity".
Corea said there is also a lack of major agricultural research breakthroughs at the level of Nobel Laureate Norman Borlaug's research triumphs that led to massive increases of cereal production in Asia and Latin America in the 1960s and 1970s.
Also, there has been inadequate attention to the so-called "orphan" crops -- such as millets, indigenous vegetables, local roots and tubers -- which are not commercially as important as rice, wheat and maize/corn but are essential items in the diet of the poor in 26 of the 37 "food crisis" countries.
Asked if she expects the crisis to escalate, Mittal told IPS: "The situation will get worse if the diagnosis of the problem continues to ignore the underlying causes of this crisis and fails to ask what made developing countries vulnerable in the first place.'
Asked how best the food crisis can be resolved, Mittal identified several measures, both nationally and internationally.
Firstly, it is essential to have safety nets and public distribution systems put in place to prevent widespread hunger.
The poorest countries lacking resources should call for and be provided emergency aid to set up such systems.
And donor countries should commit and provide more aid immediately to support government efforts in poor countries and respond to appeals from the U.N. agencies, she added.
Additionally, development policies should promote consumption and production of local crops raised by small, sustainable farms rather than encouraging poor nations to specialise in cash crops for western markets.
National policies involving the management of stocks and pricing, which limit the volatility of food prices, are vital for protection against such food crisis.
Lastly, she said, there is a need to adopt the principle of food sovereignty by developing countries to protect their poorest farmers and consumers.
© 2008 Inter Press Service
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57 Comments so far
Show AllIt used to be a gallon of gas in Canada was an imperial gallon, or about five quarts. Is that still how it's sold there?
Egypt is the second largest reciever of US aid and yet the rich and famous can't feed this country.... The president and his up and coming son are doing such a job.........
KEM PATRICK: scary story about your shopping trip. These are definitely weird and frightening times.
I haven't noticed a shortage of decent food on the shelves where I live yet, but I'm changing my approach toward food: stocking up on dry beans and rice, gardening more and avoiding meats and processed foods as best I can.
Two suggestions for everyone that could help: permaculture and victory gardens.
yap.chongyee April 16th, 2008 7:48 am
i am in complete agreement with you. All of us have to start behaving like
we're all in the same boat. And for their to be justice, third world countries
need to be compensated for their exploitation this last 150 years or so.
The answer may be as simple as learning to live simply and sustainably.
Will the world's megarich give up some of their ill gotten gain so that this
can happen? I'm not betting on it.
The massive concentration of power, wealth, and resource in fewer corporate hands, combined with nationalistic hubris which seeks to dominate the global economy is accelerating changes which are increasingly difficult to manage, control, or direct. We are on a path which will not only cause hunger, increasing poverty, escalation of terrorism and war, but can only ultimately destroy ourselves. The greed we are becoming addicted to may be more dangerous than the drugs which destroy the mind and body. We are rapidly approaching the downward spiral into disaster. The high is wearing off, and the addiction is strong, the question which remains is: "Is there anyone who cares enough to intervene in the situation?" Like the addict, we are in the manic phase of our addiction, feeling powerful, feeling no pain, blaming others, and rapidly losing the respect others felt for us. We are also rapidly falling into debt, juggling the things we pay and the things we let slide. War debts are not optional, health care for children is. We use others, and cause immeasurable pain to others. Displaced persons in Iraq, forgotten vets in America, brave national guard volunteers losing jobs, families, and homes in their attempt to protect our honor.
The speeches of Robert Kennedy, of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and the wisdom great spiritual leaders, Jesus in our Western European tradition, the stories of Native American Spirituality, the teaching of Confucius, Buddha, Gandhi, and many others offer an alternative to the corporate greed addiction which is controlling so much of our world today. There is no magic do over, rebuilding after a world wide depression, or rebuilding from the ashes of a world war should human population survive are not attractive alternatives.
Change is inevitable. It has been said its difficult to steer a car that isn't moving, while this car is moving rapidly down a slippery slope with a sharp drop off just ahead. Who will have the courage to provide direction which safely negotiates the challenges which lie ahead. Information, knowledge, technology, even wealth is present in ample supply, who will show the wisdom to apply these resources for the common welfare of earth, and its living creatures, man himself being the most difficult to deal with. More of the same will not work, there is no going back, but a shared vision is possible and necessary.
Jobless:
The average Canadian lives 3 years longer than Americans. I feel that gap will increase in the next 10 years.
Well, the fix is definitely in.
For most of the countries at risk big families are an asset. Many children mean many hands to work the crops. Before North American and Western European farming became mechanized, farm families also had many children. As mechanization decreased the need for field hands families began voluntarily reducing the number of children and moving to the cities. This was possible because there was adequate food and agricultural fuel was cheap.
Now the powers that rule the world have decided that the agricultural surpluses that mechanized farming produces are surplus no longer, that a large portion of the production will have to be returned to the land in the form of fuel for the machinery to work the land, those populations that grew because this surplus was available will just have to go. Feeding the machines has priority over feeding people.
But the people in those parts of the world suffering from rising food prices are not getting any time or space in which to make the transition to a machine dominated world. They have no choices except to die. The two most powerful and potentially disruptive groups in the developing world have been bought off. Both India and China have been given enough of a taste of the good life to be willing to sacrifice a good chunk of their population. That is what American's have been going into debt to buy for the last ten years.
Unfortunately some excess American population will probably have to go also, and not by the natural attrition of declining birth rates either. But never fear, the processes are in hand to put down any rebellion from that quarter also. It's all been in the works for a long time.
Sorry you lost your job if I am reading it right. Why not have a look at Canada, if not just for the healthcare.
who listens. We are on the bubble. The bubble broke for me.
Kem
I don't live in the USA ( thank God) I am here in a small town that is mostly farms but in town has all the name brand stores you need. The big box stores are 15 minute drive away in the next town. I said and I was refurring to the lower price of food I pay compared to you that even with that low price I will still have a garden this season. Rice, I never mentioned the price of rice, but need a few things to bake some bread today I will have a look. Yes we pay more for gas but I will gladly pay the little extra for what our Gov gives in return. As for the garden we are in the 70's for temps tomorrow and some of the flowers are already blooming and the rest above ground. Snow is 100% gone in my area but still some in the forests. Pool had ice on it 2 weeks ago is now 55 degrees. Will be opening the pool in the next two weeks and hope to be swimming in 4. Peoples conception of Canada as a frozen icecude 8 months of the year is wrong. I have joked that at times it looks like we have just 2 seasons, Winter, and July but only do that to the americans I race against at the racetrack. Oh no, autoracing , what am I doing to the enviroment. I need to get a bigger engine.
Increasing food prices beyond people's means is just a slowed down version of the pet policy of Mr. Joseph Stalin: "No man, no problem."
We have one world government, and its name is money. We no longer have communism and we no longer have democracy. We no longer have Islamic states and we no longer have Christian states, by any measure of these holy books. Usually all over the world we have a bunch of strongmen, a junta, an oligarchy, an election-robbing bunch of thieves.
Sometimes people rebel against money. They have two enemies. First, their own new dictator. Second, the paid counterrevolution.
Culling of humanity, as advocated by Henry Kissinger and others??? All the nations mentioned...not a single one Caucasian.
The human species in power, those who could truly make a positive difference, throughout the world are the scurge of the Earth. They are the destroyers of everything in the name of profit and power.
Truth is there is a conspiracy by western nations to deliberately create food shortage so that the world's population will shrink. I see this conspiracy as common sense; kill off all those in the 3rd world and there will be less people.
The evils of green house gas was craeted by western nations; this all began since the invention of the motor car and the mass production of the model T. You in the west had polluded your way into prosperity, while we in the 3rd world watch you have 100 times what little that we were able to have. It is therefore the developed world that has to compensate us in the 3rd world for the century of pollution that you damaged the environment.
Nations like China have been too responsible, and instead of demanding our shre of the earth's properity, our President is acting too responsibly. I would have done diferently, I would have demanded our fair share. If China & India decided to act less responsibly, WHAT WOULD HAPPEN TO THE WORLD ? WILL WE ALL DROWN EQUALLY ? This is what I believe we in the 3rd world must take in our own hands. WE DEMAND OUR FAIR SHARE, another 50 years when we in the 3rd world must by international law dictate that 3rd world must have a greater share of the good things; like the developed world must retard economic advancement. Cannot be done ? The we all drown equally !
Um KEM, aren't you in the mountains?
Its still to early for planting up here in the mountains of Washington, but down in Oly my old garden is already rocking.
Perhaps growing old-world fruit trees in a mountinous near-desert in the Southwest "seven miles from the Mexican border" is NOT a smart or reliable way to obtain food?
Place matters in Nature, dude.
Check out Permaculture, a lot of it's about this stuff.
Anyway good luck. (And watch out for that Killer Gas from the Unfrozen North).
-matti.
To Munch1. I was very disappointed when I followed your links to get the answers to the current situation of food scarcity in the world. Both sites seemed made up of wishful thinking.
One, allinharmony.org, was about "meat-eating dominator cultures" - which could be applied to the human race from the dawn of time, and may in fact be a definition of the human race. So there is no reason to think it will change soon, as humans do not yet have ruminant multi-processor-stomachs, nor yet the proclivity to re-eat their own excrement for nourishment, like do rabbits.
The fact that as soon as they are able, formerly poor vegetarian cultures turn to eating more meat when possible must say something about a basic desire for this. Dominance over nature is what allows 7 billion people to be alive at once on this little Earh. And nature is straining under the yoke. But the alternative is not pleasant.
This desire to eat meat, like many inbred but anti-social ones, may be able to be mitigated, especially with higher technologies to manipulate vegetable matter (into juices, more digestible forms, and so on), and because meat becomes more expensive than the same caloric amount of vegetables. But to talk of "meat-eating dominator cultures" is of no use at all, and kind of silly.
The other site, www.foodfirst.org, was about the so-called 'myths' of food production. The reality is that even if you fed everyone today, what happens when the population then triples... in one generation? What happens is the whole planet becomes Haiti, wherein the living biosphere of a whole nation has been consumed to the bare dirt by overpopulation.
In the past, overpopulations would migrate to a place they could take over. Reference the European expansion into the relatively underpopulated Americas. And where they were populated, the clash of tribes depopulated the losers. Uncivilzed and unacceptable today... so far.
When there was no more room for this kind of expansion to happen, Europe turned in on itself, with the General War of 1914-1945. And in Asia, just more of the same - Japanese expansion into the so-called 'Co-Prosperity Sphere.' All War for Lebensraum.
The 100+ million-killed victims of that wartime didn't even make a dent in the human expansion to 7 Billion people today. Didn't even make a ripple. And that was a war over room and resources when the world was a much bigger place by spatial and temporal separation, and the population was much, much smaller.
So I couldn't believe the declarations of this site, It did have some truths, but neglected, in fact, denied the current Population Explosion that has been warned about for more than forty years, since the book, THE POPULATION BOMB. Which seems to have gone off, by the way.
The site's authors seemed not to be able to deal with this very real issue. They may be too sensitive politically to report and act on the truth, kind of like Democrats in Congress. For example, though it may be criminal that he is himself exploited, no one is forcing the destitute Bangladeshi peasant to have five kids, when he can barely earn one bowl of rice a day. Just stop fucking!
Of course, organized religions want more soldiers for the cause. So they say keep on fertilizing the babymaker machinery (i.e. the womb-men). And no curtailing the enwombed recruits. The religion needs all it can get to battle that other religion over there. Or nation. Either literally or through votes.
We should mitigate poverty, but in a way that does not undermine the efforts by just winding up with twice as many poor people begging, instead of enabling fulfilled individuals in a better-off society.
We should do put control into the hands of local cooperatives, and stop the biofuel hoax, and eliminate hunger, and aid the sick, and help people to a better life, and many other things this site suggests.
But this well-meaning site, www.foodfirst.org, ignores the simple primary fact of overpopulation, due to a philosophical refusal to see the reality of a finite planet and finite resources; deliberate ignorance by delusion. Hardly the magic bullet we need now. Or Haiti here we come.
Hey Goodluck, where in the states do you live where you still have a garden? ___ I'm in the southwest, seven miles from the Mexican border, no gardens here yet. It snowed early last month. We won't be harvesting anything for at least 60 days, except peas.
And 12 cents a pound for rice? My kids live in New Jersey and it's 60 cents a pound there, 50 a pound here. That's a BIG difference, 12 cents, versus 50 cents a pound. Are you still getting gasoline for a buck fifty a gallon too? Tell us where you live so we can move there. But post some current ads first, so we can be sure of your figures. Thanks for the info. BTW, I have a long attention span. ___ LOL.
I remember being told to eat my vegetables because there were millions of starving Chinese. Back in the 60s we had starvation in China, India, South America and Africa and we saw pictures of emaciated children on our TVs... That was before the communications age and these people simply held out bony arms and died...
Since then, they've watched re-runs of 'Dallas' and 'Dynasty' on their black and white Tvs and learned how the greedy nations fare... We are now in the age of terrorism.
Maoism not dead yet. It could make a comeback.
What is Permaculture?
Permaculture (permanent agriculture) is the conscious design and maintenance of agriculturally productive ecosystems which have the diversity, stability, and resilience of natural ecosystems. It is the harmonious integration of landscape and people providing their food, energy, shelter, and other material and non-material needs in a sustainable way. Without permanent agriculture there is no possibility of a stable social order.
Permaculture design is a system of assembling conceptual, material, and strategic components in a pattern which functions to benefit life in all its forms.
The philosophy behind permaculture is one of working with, rather than against, nature; of protracted and thoughtful observation rather than protracted and thoughtless action; of looking at systems in all their functions, rather than asking only one yield of them; and allowing systems to demonstrate their own evolutions.
PERMACULTURE IN LANDSCAPE AND SOCIETY
As the basis of permaculture is beneficial design, it can be added to all other ethical training and skills, and has the potential of taking a place in all human endeavors. In the broad landscape, however, permaculture concentrates on already-settled areas and agricultural lands. Almost all of these need drastic rehabilitation and re-thinking. One certain result of using our skills to integrate food supply and settlement, to catch water from our roof areas, and to place nearby a zone of fuel forest which receives wastes and supplies energy, will be to free most of the area of the globe for the rehabilitation of natural systems. These need never be looked upon as "of use to people", except in the very broad sense of global health.
http://permaculture.org.au/what-is-permaculture/
Take back your power. Learn about Permaculture. GROW YOUR OWN FOOD. RESIST GM MODIFIED FOOD CROPS!
Is Sustainable Agriculture an Oxymoron?
Published in Permaculture Activist #60, May, 2006)
Jared Diamond calls it "the worst mistake in the history of the human race."(1) Bill Mollison says that it can "destroy whole landscapes."(2) Are they describing nuclear energy? Suburbia? Coal mining? No. They are talking about agriculture. The problem is not simply that farming in its current industrial manifestation is destroying topsoil and biodiversity. Agriculture in any form is inherently unsustainable. At its doorstep can also be laid the basis of our culture's split between humans and nature, much disease and poor health, and the origins of dominator hierarchies and the police state. Those are big claims, so let's explore them.
http://www.permacultureactivist.net/articles/articles.htm
While 3rd world go hungry, the USA & Western nations develop the disease of OBESITY AND 1 OF EVERY 3 AMERICANS ARE OBIESE.
While the 3rd world go hungry, the USA & Western nations use up millions of tons of soy bean for biofuel to run SVU.
The USA is running a campaign to kill off people in the 3rd world as inconvienient baggage. That is the extent of the humanity of the USA and the West.
Oh, but did you hear Obama said some people are bitter?
All part of the plan. Look at Kissingers NSSM 200 memo from 1974. The tools used to depopulate and enslave nations are credit, food, oil, weapons. Globalization and free trade are the means to make those tools more effective, as they remove the means for nations to take protective measures. The US didn't become great due to free trade, we became strong due to fair trade and a government who looked to protect it's people and corporations. Now our corporations are global corporations, and our government is global minded, so Americans are being left behind. Same thing happening in Britain, and will happen in Europe. The illuminati is a global entity, your leaders do their bidding, despite swearing an oath to uphold the constitution, they use it as toilet paper. This is the type of government our founding fathers feared would evolve.
Now, some of the comments suggest an inclination to support restrictions on population and energy consumption due to fears of global warming and scarcity of resources. You are the product of a MSM that has fed you lies on virtually every issue, yet you believe the myth that man causes global warming, and that our planet can not feed 12 billion people, and that fossil fuels are in short supply. Sure, it is warmer today than it was 100 years. I remember the 50's and 60's when people were worried we were entering a new ice age, then it warmed up, and soon it will cool down again, a natural fluctuation. The ice caps on Mars are melting, do we have men on Mars? Read Thomas Golds theory on Oil, and ask yourself who profits when people believe their is an oil shortage (oil was at 4 dollars a barrel in the 70's), and ask yourself who is telling you we have a limited supply of oil.
Wars can be fought with many weapons. Food, Debt, Trade, Weapons, Oil. The global elite are at war against the global citizens with these weapons. When we surrender and welcome the UN into Los Angeles, as Kissinger predicted we would someday, then our surrender will be their victory, and tryranny under One World Government will rule the day.
Hunger & Poverty can never be mitigated until an effective means of family planning/population control is implemented. Our environment can not sustain the current reproduction rates. Other environmental measures are minor by comparison.
Unless this administration's zealotic opposition to this essential program need is halted, and these vital measures are addressed now, increasing poverty and reduction in quality of life--as well as environmental degradation--is inevitable.
The article ignores what is overwhelmingly the main cause of the current, unprecedented increase in food prices, i.e., speculation in commodities markets, which is the result of the collapse of speculation in mortgage-backed securities, i.e., the subprime meltdown. Capitalist money must earn an increasing profit. When mortgage-backed securities were no longer a place to earn this profit, the money went to the commodities markets. Instead of retailing cover stories about the food-price increase, IPS could make a real contribution on the question by doing an analysis of why speculation went to the commodities markets and not someplace else.
emtrk:
The average attention span of americans is as long as their dicks. Good points made
KEM
sorry to hear of your food shortage. Myself it was 1.25 for 10 LBS and I had about 200 bags on 3 skids. Broc, 99$ oranges 1.25 for 5 LBS, green pep 79 cents a LB. Strawberries 1.79 a LB. The store was full and the trucks arrive daily. I will still have a garden this season.
As for the rest of the people who posted I hope you had a real nice dinner tonight, and have fun watching your Dish or cable programs as well.
Randolfski:
We will never reach that 12 billion. I seriously doubt that we'll get beyond 7 billion. We're at the edge of the cliff, and we're looking down the barrels of so many guns that I've lost count.
During the waning years of the past century I never thought I'd hear myself saying it, but a species so brash, arrogant, ignorant and self-destructive as homo sapiens deserves the extinction it's surely going to get.
The problem in the usa is not a food shortage. It is an over abundance of food on the shelves. Not only are the shelves filled but they are over-filled.
No one is buying the food and I am sure a lot of dairy is going bad.
This is the corn lobbies fault.
I think the corporations are looking to control and steal money any way they can.
They often have volume sales in the supermarkets. If they really wanted the food to move smaller quantities would be on sale.
I recently lived in one of the examplar countries whose national elite, with the active support of US military aid and corporate domination, produced its version of the international food crises: Honduras.
The original banana republic.
When Honduras was more or less governed by the banana companies, it didn't develop the murderous coffee barons that emerged in Guatemala, Nicaragua and El Salvador.
In exchange the local campesino/a lost their best lands, forests, water and future to these companies -cash crops for export.
Now, these peasants are rushing to live in the local overburdened cities to contribute to the masses of under/unemployed, disposable urban workers.
Their folk culture has been totally eradicated by US pop culture. Their middle- and upper-classes emulate the US consumer culture. Thus destroying the nation's balance of trade.
The families from these classes live in a bubble totally separated from the nation's majority malnourished and/or empoverished fellow "citizens."
Last, the capital, Tegucigalpa, has notably experienced increasingly warmer average temperatures. The combination of denuding the surrounding mountains' trees, explosive growth in car, bus and taxi traffic (many of which are smoke-belchers), and the urban sprawl have caused a mini-greenhouse affect.
My wife remembers when she and her family had to wear gloves, jackets and warm shoes during winter months. The rest of the year, the climate was spring-like.
Those days are gone; and they left within a generation.
Today, on NPR, they featured a smart little girl who is a greenhouse "sceptic". She had recently wrote a letter to a Republican Senator from Oklahoma. Of course, he answered back avidly and his comments were included in the same show.
That little girl also lives in bubble.
The 21st century and all that we could do to make a better world and the biggest holocausts of all time is right now. And our politicians play word games with us, and the media eats it up. Could there be anything crueler than our selfish, arrogant, unethical, ruling classes. I have never been so ashamed, scared and nauseous in my life.
To address this issue, we need to address the issue that underlies most if not all of
the problems we face now. The human race has surpassed the planet's carrying capacity for supporting life. Imagine what this place will look like in 50 years when we have reached 12 billion people. It will make now look like a picnic. And what has allowed us to grow faster than nature intended is our use of fossil fuels which are a double whammy. Not only do they allow an unsustainable increase in the population, they also destroy the environment which all depend on for life. Until people of the planet start seriously addressing this issue, all the rest is going to be just band aid therapy.
FOOD/WATER
Most N Americans have absolutely NO idea how sever the problem really is
MSM will not tell the truth
Governments will not tell the truth
Climate change , pollution, are finally to the point of NO RETURN
very few people in America and Canada have starved,, sure they have been hungry, but when your stomach starts to meet your spine, any morals you may think you have are gonna disappear so fast, you will not recognize yourself.
Most studies indicate a dire problem here but who listens?, no one but a few.. the rest worry more about missing this weeks pablum fed to them on TV, dancing with the stars or American idol, or you name the shlop that passes as "entertainment" these days.
Some nasty and very serious situations are just around the next corner and not many are gonna do well at all..
Gee, I think CD readers are suffering from short term memory loss, Big Time! Was it only in January that we read about riots and demonstrations all over Mexico because of the implementation of NAFTA regs forcing an end to local subsidies for corn and beans - It put many small farmers out of business in Mexico, and raised the price of commodities by 50-100%.
We all know the playing field for Agro-Business is level when only they receive subsidies and the poor guy trying to feed his family and earn a small amount of currency is accused of illegal subsidies under the 'free trade' agreement.
How long before Mexico becomes another 'failed' government because of its inability to defend its population from the drug and Corporate Cartels running things from the north?
No wonder they emigrate, it beats starving on the rubbish strewn hills of Tia Juana, or kissing the ass of the tourists off the tour boats in hopes a little money will dribble out. They say tourists "smell of MONEY" and are fair game...
Just think, our good neighbors to the south may soon be on the list of countries that cannot feed their population, and we will continue to bitch about all the dirty Mexicans stealing our jobs!
I think the world is making a mistake here. Beating up a few disturbances for a few good headlines and to sell a few papers
Starving people dont riot. THEY DIE!!!
There is a coming famine that will kill millions of people, possibly hundreds of millions. While rich countries feed their cars and cows so they can continue to commute 4 hours a day and kill themselves with big macs.
Then we will all reel in shock and horror and SHAME!! Maybe then something will change.
mikk
The owners manual for my car states to not use ethanol. (ok, it is an old car) it is corrosive to parts of the car and will eventually cause a lot of problems.
Learn wildcrafting, animals always know where there are good things to eat and where the water is...they were the first teachers.
Its the Biofuels speculators that have done this.
By the way people corn is in everything in the US from the chicken and cattle feed to your ketchup. The Biofuel lobby is pushing ethanol derived from corn. Don't think because you live in America you are safe from this. Grocery prices have gone up and it will get worse.
I have a high fenced acre garden and fruit orchard. Last week the tree's blossoms all froze, no fruit this year and it will be awhile before anything else is ready for harvest. It's really not all that easy to garden, but it sure is fun and if it's sucessful, the food is far superior to anything we can buy in stores.
Last year it was a flop, because there weren't any inscets, hummingbirds or any specie of bees, wasps, or hornets. NONE!! Scary.
KEM PATRICK - I'm growing broccoli and potatos in a patio pot along with tomatos, letuice and a few other herbs. It's not much but it is fresh and the cut broccoli keeps nicely in a vase. Alas, pigs and cows are against apartment rules. ;)
It is the System!
The System is a vampire!
The System is a fraud!
The system only benefits the investors!
and now it is the Global System!
the majority will suffer by design...
Yesterday we drove the 40 mile round trip to town, ($5.10 for the cost of gasoline at 29 mpg on mountain roads.) We shopped at the lower cost super market, needed some essentials.
In the produce section the pickngs were slim, as they had not had a shipment since Friday. Three stalks of broccali cost $1.39 and ten pound bags of rice were $5.00, we took the last two there. The only potatoes they had were small ones in five pound bags and they didn't look good, some had already sprouted.
We passed on the asparagus at $3.29 a package and wilted ucumbers at $.65 cents each.
There was one twenty pound bag of rice there and very few dry pinto beans, maybe three pounds in the bin. I never, ever, have seen it like that. NEVER, and I've been around the block more than once. Can't wait for the depression, so we can watch the rioting i town through our binoculars from the top of our mountain perched house. It isnot going yo be pretty watching .
I have attempted to post a comment to this article that proves hunger is being managed by corporate/miltiary interets and explains the process.
It is being 'moderated' (censored). But, of all the ills facing humanity, hunger is the easiest to correct and the proof of that is also too simple... so 'moderation'.
There are two links that are suggested since the formulas we offer are being censored here:
http://www.foodfirst.org/en/node/235
and
http://allinharmony.org (go to page entitled 'Making Sense out of Nonsense'.)
Once you have read these two essays, you will know most of what you need to know about the simple steps required to end hunger around the world today and prevent it from returning... literally forever!
(Now, if only the military/corporate interests could be persuaded to drop their weapons, their censoring of info and step out of the way!)
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's hands get bloodier each day. When he started lowering interest rates in August 2007 (allegedly to help the victims of mortgage sharks)the same crooks that brought us the housing bubble were able to get their hands on cheap money to start speculating on commodities like food and energy (next they will drive up the cost of water). 99% of the world's population is now being harmed by Federal Reserve monetary policy. The starving people that this article addresses are the most harmed.
Although the British Central Bank has been resisting pressure from PM Gordon Brown and other politicians to lower interst rates, they have caved-in, releasing more cheap money for the same crooks to speculate on more commodities and cause more people to starve. The German
Central Bank appears to be holding interest rates steady so far.
Meanwhile, in addition to their mortgage problems which have not been helped by Federal Reserve monetary policy,the victims of the mortgage sharks now have to cope with rapidly rising energy and food prices, but at least they are not starving, yet.
test
Americans are not rich, they have several trillion dollars in personal debt and the 9 trillion dollars in national debt. When the debt comes due, we will all see a change in priorities.
The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) has singled out six countries with an "exceptional shortfall in aggregate food production and supplies": Lesotho, Somalia, Swaziland, Zimbabwe, Iraq and Moldova.
An additional six countries with "widespread lack of access" to food include Eritrea, Liberia, Mauritania, Sierra Leone, Afghanistan and North Korea.
Anyone notice a pattern there?
Democracy Now! and the Bill Moyers Journal have both done a good job in recent weeks of covering this crisis. Things are spinning out of control at an alarming rate...and hearing reports of people in Haiti eating mudpies to stop their hunger pain...just horrible. In the 21st century it is quite sad that we have people all over the world fighting for their basic needs.
It is good to see that Hugo Chavez announced he is sending food aid to Haiti. I fear that this is a warning sign of the future and potential wars over basic resources, such as water. This crisis should be addressed now before we get to a point where we see major conflicts develop worldwide.
A good number of these starving third world countries are making their meager livings producing the consumer goods America hoovers up like a drunken Bush daughter goes through booze on spring break.
When the peoples of these countries can no longer afford even the meanest staples of survival, they will turn on their Western backed governments like starving wolves. And the governments, and the cheap consumer goods, will cease to be.
This will only get the attention it deserves when the poor of the US and Europe start rioting for basics. And this does nothing to address the continual rise of fuel prices that in turn have a concrete effect on the transportation of food. if the food stops being trucked in, the average city has only a three day supply of food on it's shelves.
Then things will get really ugly.
Kent State at a supermarket, coming to a city near you. Sooner than you think.
It should be noted that Mittal's solutions are exactly the types of solutions that corporate America fights tooth and nail to prevent. Everything from social safety nets (re:social security, Medicare, FEMA) to protecting local food production ('not-so-free trade agreements', implementation of GM foods) are the enemies of the Neo-cons who at this point in time are winning the war between the rich and the poor.
American corporations are responsible for impoverishing a large chunk of the world and in return this spawns over population, food shortages and environmental destruction. The average American is only responsible in this tragedy in that they continue to empower the corporate bought politicians by electing the corporate parties (Dems and Repubs) over and over. This is understandable as the MSM continues to misinform the populace through a sophisticated and well-organized, corporate sponsored system of conditioning. However, if the general populace ever becomes aware of the dangers of a corporate controlled government, we could then begin to replace our current batch of corporate pliant politicians with newly elected officials who actually represent 'We the People'!
We have no bread and King George offers Yellow Cake. Hope springs eternal like giving a starving man a menu instead of a meal...
Dont worry about it. As George Monbiot says, we should eat less meat--but because he is afraid of looking like Carrie Underwood or an Olympic athlete, he will continue to do what is wrong.
If a finger waving columnist can do what he wants--so can anyone else.
The world is going to hell in a hand basket but sit back and enjoy --its one hell of a taboggin ride.
Let's not forget the role of Cental Bankers in this Food Crisis. It is a crisis, not a shortage, note the first sentence in this article - "As food prices continue to escalate worldwide".
Through the euphemistically named mechanism of "liquidity injections", vast amounts of currencies have been printed up and bestowed on the investing class, to save them from their own stupidity. Trying to prevent further stupidity on their own part, they buy futures contracts in the things people want to eat. With an unlimited supply of nice, liquid cash, they can bid the prices up beyond the point where ordinary people can compete - people can no longer afford the food.
The investing class are sure they'll get rich this time, as they think people will pay anything for these edible goodies, and they are certain that this drive their profits with no risk.
Then the prices go up, people plant more, there is a supply glut, prices go down, farmers go broke - a vicious yet predictable cycle.
Because only the rich can conjure up massive doses of currencies that are quickly losing value (due to excessive conjuring), everyone else begins to suffer.
There is food. Legalized counterfeiting has rendered many people's money too weak to bargain for food with. And the tide shows no sign of turning.
word
most of the western world might as well be living on mars
It is when the majority of the people who post on this web site will sit down to a dinner or BBQ something maybe have some wine or a beer and won't even give this topic a second thought. Later in the evening they will post how bad it is and should be stopped. Will that majority do something, no there is hockey on TV or a movie, or water in the basement from the extra snow we got this winter that will fill their time. In 24 hours this topic will be replaced with another and the same thing happens again.
Well I guess it has started. But if the US doesn't have to give dead people aid they have more money for war.