Posts Tagged ‘Civil War’

John Wooden, at 99, Gets To See His Nell Again

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010

John Wooden has died;  he won 10 NCAA Basketball Championships at UCLA. He was revered and lionized. He was 99.

Nell, Wooden’s wife of 53 years, died in 1985.

I was in the midst of writing my Civil War Saga, THE BURDEN OF HEAVEN, and had hit a wall. I wanted a special relationship between my hero MATT DUNSTAN and his great love, REBECCA MASTERSON.  I wanted their love transcendental; but my sensibilities were being overwhelmed by Reality Tv.

So I took a break, and went to see  John Wooden do a Q and A.

He was like one of those 200 year old lamas in LOST HORIZON, old and frail, like a crumpled, fallen leaf. His one and only wife, his one and only love, had been dead a long long time.

I did not expect her name to be mentioned at the event.

The feckless interviewer asked this old, ancient, frail man, was he afraid of Death? There was a total hush in the audience, part embarrassment, part anticipation.

Wooden just smiled.

It was the most knowing smile I had ever seen, the man had the secret of life.

He said, “Of course not, because when I die, I will see Nell again, and I look forward to that. How can one be afraid of that?”

And the hush became stunned silence.

I sat there, in the midst of writing my puny little epic, and thought to myself, “My God, he believes that.”

To hell with the 10 National Championships, what pure joy it must be to know that you go to your Death with the knowledge you will see your one and true love again. It is PRINCESS BRIDE writ real.

When the BURDEN OF HEAVEN finally sees fruition, and you, reader, sit there in the theater, smirkng, how could anyone write such a foolish love affair as the one between MATT UNSTAN and REBECCA MASTERSON? all I can say in my defense is this; that fictional affair is based on the real affair of John and Nell Wooden, with a touch of Albert Camus thrown in.

As I look over the landscape of 2010, I despair. All the towering redwoods of 1,000 year growth, Wooden, Hopper, Roehmer have been clear cut by Death, leaving in their places stumps like Jon Gosselin, John Edwards, Tiger Woods.

In this age of reality Tv, we may never see the Redwoods again.

 

John and Nell Wooden

Dr. E.O. Wilson, “ANTHILL”, KENT BROCKMAN, and The Future, THE AGE OF ANTS

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010

Remember when KENT BROCKMAN declared his fealty to the Ants who had taken over HOMER SIMPSON’S Space Flight?

“Ladies and gentlemen, er, we’ve just lost the picture, but, uh, what we’ve seen speaks for itself. The Corvair  spacecraft has been taken over — ‘conquered’, if you will — by a master race of giant space ants. It’s difficult to tell from this vantage point whether they will consume the captive  earth men or merely enslave them. One thing is for certain, there is no stopping them; the ants will soon be here. And I, for one, welcome our new insect overlords. I’d like to remind them that as a trusted TV personality, I can be helpful in rounding up others to…toil in their underground sugar caves.”

 KENT BROCKMAN Hailing his new overlords, THE ANTS.

ANTS, who knew they could conquor the world? E.O. Wilson knew.

I am a long time admirer of Dr. E.O. Wilson, Nobel Prize Winner, two time Pulitzer Prize winner, and very opinionated Civil War Buff.

“Dear  Maxey:
Thank you very much for the note on divine irony. One historical emendation: the fate of the Confederacy was not sealed by the death of Stonewall Jackson, but by the capture of my great grandfather Black Bill Wilson, the infamous confederate blockade runner.
Best wishes,
Edward O. Wilson”
Dr. Wilson is  cool and the nicest Nobel Laureate Ever(take that Gabriel Garcia Marquez). He has just tried his hand at being a novelist, and has turned out a fascinating novel, ANTHILL; which this blog  STRONGLY recommends as a summer read.
“Nobody has done more to reveal the true nature of the “superorganisms” that ant societies comprise than Edward Wilson, a Harvard biologist, campaigning green, two-time Pulitzer prize-winning author, pioneer of sociobiology, and now, at the age of 80, also a debut novelist.
One part of “Anthill”, by the world’s leading myrmecologist, demonstrates that in Mr Wilson ants have found not only their Darwin but also their Homer. Midway through the novel, and comprising a fifth of the whole, is a self-contained novella, “The Anthill Chronicles”

Dr Wilson is a larger than life figure BY ACCOMPLISMENT, a wonderful  addition to our world.

I was originally baffled why this Great Mind would focus on ANTS, ANTS? I mean Woody Allen played the voice of the hero Ant in film.

But yet again, Dr. Wilson is ahead  of us all.

This summer I will be re reading the studies of Dr. Wilson, for it is time, in a cosmic sense, to look at Ants as not just an annoyance but as successor to Man.

When the Age of Man ends, it will be succeeded by the Age of Ants.

And Dr. Wilson saw it coming; how do I know this? In an interview,Smithsonian scientist Mark Moffett said this:

“Leafcutter ants have agriculture, which we don’t think of in the animal world.

The fungus is their food. It has their complete diet. These ants started growing their fungus 50 million years ago. Twelve million years ago, they domesticated that fungus so that it could no longer grow in the wild, much as we domesticated wheat and rice. And 8 million years ago, they figured out how to use leaves as a way to grow the fungus in huge monocultures. They even invented pesticides. These are produced either by glands on the ants or by a relative of the penicillin fungus that they grow in their nests.”

The key word, the Wilsonian word, is domesticated. If the Ant can do that, he can rule the world.

I, for one, like KENT BROCKMAN, welcome our new overlords, and will grovel before them with every book of Dr. Wilson I can find, to show them I understood.

Dr. Wilson, you are a great man.

Wilson’s scientific and conservation honors include:

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Jaime Escalante and Sam Houston, Two American Heroes Trashed By Their Own People

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

“LOS ANGELES – The funeral for “Stand and Deliver” math teacher Jaime Escalante has drawn some 600 family and friends, including Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger and actor Edward James Olmos..

Olmos led the Saturday service at East Los Angeles College. He helped make Escalante famous when he played him in the 1988 film “Stand and Deliver.”

Olmos said Escalante was “a genius in teaching, but he was a saint when it came to empowering students.”

The funeral began with a procession from East LA’s Garfield High School, where Escalante inspired struggling students to excel at advanced math and science.

Escalante’s wife, two sons and family members from his native Bolivia were also at the service.

Escalante died March 30 of cancer at age 79″

 

Name five American educators or teachers off the top of your head, who are they? Horace Mann, William James, Booker T. Washington, William McGuffey and Jaime Escalante. Mr. Escalante was a great American hero, borrowed from Bolivia. When everyone despaired, in a high school no one cared about, teaching students our school system seemed bound and determined to make a permanent under class, this Bolivian immigrant stood and delivered,  figuring out how to teach calculus to Hispanic kids.

And in the end he was trashed by his own.

There is only one other American hero who has suffered the fate of Jaime Escalante, to be scorned and trashed,  by the people you had helped to uplift, and that other one is Sam Houston of Texas.

Sam Houston was a soldier, Indian fighter,  statesman, drunk, Indian lover. Andrew Jackson’s protoge, they radically disagreed on treatment  of Native Americans; Houston did not want to wipe them out.

 He was a Tennessee Congressman and Governor; he resigned the Governorship   after marrying 18-year-old Eliza Allen.After his Eliza  left him,” he lived among the Cherokee, who formally adopted him as a member of their nation. He married a Cherokee widow named Tiana Rogers Gentry, During this time he was interviewed by Alexis de Tocqueville. ”

 Houston left the Cherokees(his Cherokee wife died shortly thereafter) and went to Texas. He took command of the rebel Texas army, who were fighting for their independence against Mexico and Generalissimo Santa Ana. Houston retreated, letting the Alamo fall, until he lured the Mexican Army into a death trap at San Jacinto. The Texans lost nine men, while killing 630 Mexican soldiers, capturing  700 more. Houston was a pretty good general.

He achieved Texas independence, became President of Texas, got Texas annexed into the Union. He became Governor of Texas and Senator from Texas. In 1860 he was Governor again.  When the Civil War started, Texas slave owners wanted to take Texas out of the Union and into the Confederacy. Houston said No; the man who gave them their independence  and American citizenship said No.

So the slave owners and racists  trashed him, and deposed him, sending him to his home, in exile. He died before he could see the ruin of Texas.

So why are Sm Houston and Jaime Escaanate alike? 

“The Los Angeles Times reports that he (Escalante)was an opponent of bilingual education. He campaigned for passage of Proposition 227, which curtailed bilingual education in California in 1998.

The obit says that Escalante had said the hate mail he received for taking the position he did on bilingual education led in part to his resigning from Hiram Johnson High School in Sacramento, the teaching post he had taken after leaving Garfield High School”

Jaime Escalante, the greatest Hispanic teacher who ever lived, was driven from his profession by professional Latinos, who don’t want their children, in the United States , educated in English.

The man who uplifted their children is driven from his vocation because of entrenched political correctness.

Escalante, the man who opened the doors for Hispanic kids to enter the world of higher math, is driven to ground, because he sees the key to education is English.

The man who did so much for Latinos  is broken by the people he helped.

The Profesional Latinos and the Texas slave holders have a lot in common, foremost, ingratitude to the men who uplifted them.

The California school system is collapsing under the weight of entrenched interests, and I fear that Mr. Escalante’s death has been timed so he could not see the ruin of his beloved students. Like Houston, he has been spared seeing the desertification of everything he had built.

The Once and Future American Ghost, Virginia Declares April, Confederate History Month

Friday, April 9th, 2010

This is the first of two blogs about the American Civil War; they are in response to the Governor of Virginia declaring April, Confederate History Month in Virginia.

America has a living, breathing, bestriding  ghost  in the house, the American Civil War. It just won’t go away. It lives in the attic, the basement,the living room,  the bedroom. It is ubiquitous and ever lasting; the question is, why?

The Governor of Virginia just invited the ghost to dinner, again. He has just issued a Proclamation  declaring April, Confederate History month in Virginia.

This is the Proclamation, edited.

 WHEREAS, April is the month in which the people of Virginia joined the Confederate States of America in a four year war between the states for independence that concluded at Appomattox Courthouse; and

WHEREAS, it is important for all Virginians to reflect upon our Commonwealth’s shared history, to understand the sacrifices of the Confederate leaders, soldiers and citizens during the period of the Civil War, and to recognize how our history has led to our present; and

WHEREAS, all Virginians can appreciate the fact that when ultimately overwhelmed by the insurmountable numbers and resources of the Union Army, the surviving, imprisoned and injured Confederate soldiers gave their word and allegiance to the United States of America, and returned to their homes and families to rebuild their communities in peace, following the instruction of General Robert E. Lee of Virginia, who wrote that, “…all should unite in honest efforts to obliterate the effects of war and to restore the blessings of peace.”;  

My Security Man, when I worked in Defense, had grown up in Indiana;  as a boy of seven,he had run errands for aged Civil War Veterans.  He told me the stories they had told him.

I know many Southerners, have had many  discussions,both sober and drunk,  on the war with  devotees of the Lost Cause.  I have gotten to know a direct descendant of General Stonewall Jackson.

I do have an opinion on why the ghost still lives; but first the Proclamation itself.

The Governor uses the Southern terminology for the War when the Proclamation calls it the War Between the States, which shades the reason why the Proclamation thinks the South lost the War. “can appreciate the fact that when ultimately overwhelmed by the insurmountable numbers and resources of the Union Army…”

It took me almost a decade to research and write my Civil War story, THE BURDEN OF HEAVEN; in the course of that odyssey, I came to have minimal respect for Jefferson Davis, Alexander Stephens and Edmund Ruffin.

When all those Southerners started the War, they believed they could win the war, and they had good reason to believe that.They had a martial soldiery, honed by service in the Slave Patrol, and excellent generalship. Cromwell had won with less.

Shelby Foote, whom I worship, stated on a PBS interview that the South never had a chance to win the war. I respectfully disagree. The South should have won the war between 1861 and 1863, and they could have won it except for one intangible, and that intangible was named Abraham Lincoln.

Four men ran for the Presidency in 1860; only the election of one would have started a Civil War. That man was elected, that is the God’s joke on the nation.

God’s joke on the South is that only one  man could have saved the Union during the Civil War, and that singular man was the one elected President.

The masses of the Union Army don’t matter; only Lincoln matters. We all know what would have happened if Lee had defeated Grant, Lincoln would have appointed Sherman to battle Lee. And if Lee had defeated Sherman, then Sheridan would have been appointed. If Sheridan had been defeated, then George H. Thomas, and if not Thomas then Winfield Scott Hancock, and if not Hancock then Joshua Chamberlain.  Sooner or later, Lincoln would have found the man to defeat Lee, and it is the genius of Lincoln, that the North would have stayed the course with him.

The North’s casualty lists would have broken any rational man, any other man but Lincoln. The defeat of the South is because of one man, Abraham Lincoln.

The South fought for slavery; slavery is perfidy. Slavery is equal to the Nazi Holocaust. The Germans don’t have Nazi History month; they want to forget about the Nazis. But the South wants to remember the Confederacy, why?

Is it just pure racism? No.

The Confederate History Month is not about the Confederacy per se. The Administration of the Confederacy was a bunch of losers……all this, this hunger for the Lost Cause, the Bonnie Blue Flag, the Stars and Bars is all about one man, Robert E. Lee.

Lee whitewashes the South.

He is arguably the finest general ever bred on American soil, Winifield Scott, who knew a lot about soldiering, thought so, and so do I.

It is above  argument that  he is the finest man, the”best” man ever to be in American public service. Beloved by the public, beloved by his soldiers, beloved by his family, honored for his integrity, offered the command of the Union Army by Lincoln. He is Edward the Confessor with a sword and a family.

Those Southern boys who crossed a mile wide field into the waiting guns of the Army of the Potomac did not do it for the Confederacy, nor Jeff Davis. They did it for “Massa Robert.” He was an extraordinary man, a towering moral figure; and the son of a bitch fought for slavery. It is amazing. By doing so, by being the best of men fighting for the worst institution, he truly cursed the nation.

Oliver Wendell Holmes Junior thought that it was in the best interest of the nation that Lee be hung after the war, for Holmes rightly noted, that the worst thing on earth was the good man who fought for the evil cause.

Because of his genius, and goodness, Lee fighting for slavery hurt this nation more than any other man. I too think he should have been hung.

This emotional hunger for the Confederacy is an emotional hunger for a time in which this nation had Lincoln and Lee, together, at the same time,breathing the same air.

This yearning for the old days,is because the present is so bereft of leadership, on every level, in every institution. So let them have their Confederate History Month; let them remember Lee as the Giant that he was. For if they do that, they will have to come to grips, with the fact a greater Giant brought Lee down, and that Greater Giant was Abraham Lincoln.

Remembering the Confederacy extols Lincoln.

Tomorrow, I will blog on the COSMIC significance of the American Civil War.

SIDEBAR

The full version of the BONNIE BLUE FLAG

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A2F-drjUwNU

A blog about the caliber of Abraham Lncoln

http://gerrymaxeyworkshop.com/blogging/?p=3454

The impact of the Civil War on American politics

http://gerrymaxeyworkshop.com/blogging/?p=2542

SIDEBAR II

Remarkably, the best performance I have ever seen of General Lee, and my opinion is adhered to by the Southern boys I know, was the one given by the Liberal icon Martin Sheen in the film GETTYSBURG.

I hope the actor who does my General Lee does just as good a job.

SIDEBAR III

The most Homeric retelling of the Civil War is Shelby Foote’s trilogy, THE CIVIL WAR; the savviest interpretation of facts is James McPherson’s BATTLE CRY OF FREEDOM.

The Scott Brown Election, “Amazing”…. The Kennedys and Henry Cabot Lodge Jr.

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

The election of Scott Brown to the “Kennedy Seat” is finally cause for the appropriate use of that one word,all those inarticulate young ladies, who give interviews and Tweet, know, AMAZING. Their one word vocabulary finally fits.

Brown’s election is amazing on many levels, one being the current political situation, as a candidate he flat out said he would oppose health care reform, yet he won in a state,Massachusetts, in which Democrats outnumber Republicans, 3 to 1.

Historically, it is even more AMAZING. Massachusetts has always been ground zero in the political war between Protestants and Catholics in this country.  Massachusetts has been our Northern Ireland.

This started in 1834, “The Ursuline Convent Riots were riots that occurred on August 11 and August 12, 1834 in Charlestown, Massachusetts, near Boston in what is now Somerville, Massachusetts. During the riot, a convent of Roman Catholic Ursuline nuns was burned down by a Protestant mob.”

As I did my reesarch for my Civil War saga, THE BURDEN OF HEAVEN, I kept running into this Protestant Scotch/Irish versus Catholic Irish war, symbolized by the infamous NINA signs on job sites, NO IRISH NEED APPLY.

I know of only three films, in popular culture, which have touched this issue. In  GANGS OF NEW YORK, Martin Scorsese touched on it, with the characters played by Daniel Day-Lewis and Liam Neesom.

Our great Irish American, New Englander, Director John Ford covered it twice. Once, in the subplot of his masterpiece, FORT APACHE. The tension between the Henry Fonda Protestant Colonel and the Irish Sergeant Major,played by Ward Bond, is a wonderful encapsulation of NINA.

Finally Ford truly explored it in his interesting film, THE LAST HURRAH starring Spencer Tracy as the old Boston pol beaten by the telegenic newcomer.

The Protestant elite in Massachusetts were called the Boston Brahmins; they were not only an extraordinary clique of  bigots but also extraordinarily able and brave men. The finest example was Henry Cabot Lodge Junior, the grandson of the Henry Cabot Lodge who crushed Woodrow Wilson’s hope for a League of Nations.

Lodge Junior was a man who resigned his US Senate Seat to go fight in World War II, the first man to do that since the Civil War. While fighting in that war, he single handed captured a four man German patrol. Cabot Lodge was a great American patriot.

In 1952, this finest example of the Protestant elite, was beaten by John F. Kennedy, the Sir Galahad of Irish Catholics in the battle for Lodge’s regained Senate seat. The Irish Catholics had not only won a Senate Seat, but in winning that seat, had beaten the finest Boston Brahmin ever.

From 1952-2010 that seat was held by Democrats; Ted Kennedy, John’s brother held that seat for 47 years. The seat was more than just one slot among 100 Senators; it was a trophy for Irish Catholics. They had risen from NINA and taken it from the noblest of the Boston bigots.

This election of Scott Brown is totally remarkable in historical terms in that   “ Brown and his family are Protestant Christians, and worship at New England Chapel in Franklin, a member of the Christian Reformed Church in North America.”.

The people must be pretty angry to seat a Calvinist Protestant in a seat held by the exemplars of Irish American Catholics, the Kennedys. That alone should alert the Democrats to the depth of the anger abroad on the land.

FREE THE PIGS, LISA SIMPSON Is in Charge of our Food Policy

Tuesday, August 25th, 2009

WOW

Where do these people come from? There is a reason George Orwell made pigs the villians of his masterpiece, ANIMAL FARM, pigs are  brutes, thugs. They will eat anything, including people.  During the American Civil War, teams of men were sent out after the battles to kill wild pigs feasting on THE WOUNDED,not the dead, but THE WOUNDED.

Anyone who has been around pigs know they are not cuddly (damn that movie BABE), but intelligent competition for DOMINION  rule of the eath. It is their misfortune that the taste good.

We cannot  make food policy on the basis of sympathy for pigs.  Note the author has a concern for the environment, then animals, then humans. Humans are last on his list, LISA SIMPSON has seeped into our food supply. While reading this article, all I conjure up was the famous SIMPSONS’ episode, LISA THE VEGETARIAN. 

PLOT OF THE SIMPSONS EPISODE, LISA THE VEGETARIAN

“Homer and Bart continue to razz Lisa at home, particularly since Homer is ready to host a barbecue, complete with roast pig. Bart and Homer even form a conga line and sing, “You don’t win friends with salad!” On the day of the barbecue, Lisa makes gazpacho for all the guests as an alternative to meat, but the attendees laugh at her. Enraged, she climbs aboard a riding mower and drives away with the roast pig in tow. Homer and Bart chase her, but she pushes the pig off a slope, and they are too late. The pig rolls through bushes, into a river, and is shot into the air by a dam spillway’s suction.But this seems to be the New Age agriculture policy. i say, continue to raise and eat pigs, I like bacon. And if I get another chance to blow a wild boar to hell, I will.

At home, Homer scolds Lisa for ruining his party, and she rebukes him for serving meat.”

 

By BRYAN WALSH 

Somewhere in Iowa, a pig is being raised in a confined pen, packed in so tightly with other swine that their curly tails have been chopped off so they won’t bite one another. To prevent him from getting sick in such close quarters, he is dosed with antibiotics. The waste produced by the pig and his thousands of pen mates on the factory farm where they live goes into manure lagoons that blanket neighboring communities with air pollution and a stomach-churning stench. He’s fed on American corn that was grown with the help of government subsidies and millions of tons of chemical fertilizer. When the pig is slaughtered, at about 5 months of age, he’ll become sausage or bacon that will sell cheap, feeding an American addiction to meat that has contributed to an obesity epidemic currently afflicting more than two-thirds of the population. And when the rains come, the excess fertilizer that coaxed so much corn from the ground will be washed into the Mississippi River and down into the Gulf of Mexico, where it will help kill fish for miles and miles around. That’s the state of your bacon - circa 2009.

 

Horror stories about the food industry have long been with us - ever since 1906, when Upton Sinclair’s landmark novel The Jungle told some ugly truths about how America produces its meat. In the century that followed, things got much better, and in some ways much worse. The U.S. agricultural industry can now produce unlimited quantities of meat and grains at remarkably cheap prices. But it does so at a high cost to the environment, animals and humans. Those hidden prices are the creeping erosion of our fertile farmland, cages for egg-laying chickens so packed that the birds can’t even raise their wings and the scary rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria among farm animals. Add to the price tag the acceleration of global warming - our energy-intensive food system uses 19% of U.S. fossil fuels, more than any other sector of the economy. 

 

And perhaps worst of all, our food is increasingly bad for us, even dangerous. A series of recalls involving contaminated foods this year - including an outbreak of salmonella from tainted peanuts that killed at least eight people and sickened 600 - has consumers rightly worried about the safety of their meals. A food system - from seed to 7‑Eleven - that generates cheap, filling food at the literal expense of healthier produce is also a principal cause of America’s obesity epidemic. At a time when the nation is close to a civil war over health-care reform, obesity adds $147 billion a year to our doctor bills. “The way we farm now is destructive of the soil, the environment and us,” says Doug Gurian-Sherman, a senior scientist with the food and environment program at the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS).

 

Some Americans are heeding such warnings and working to transform the way the country eats - ranchers and farmers who are raising sustainable food in ways that don’t bankrupt the earth. Documentaries like the scathing Food Inc. and the work of investigative journalists like Eric Schlosser and Michael Pollanare reprising Sinclair’s work, awakening a sleeping public to the uncomfortable realities of how we eat. Change is also coming from the very top. First Lady Michelle Obama’s White House garden has so far yielded more than 225 lb. of organic produce - and tons of powerful symbolism. But hers is still a losing battle. Despite increasing public awareness, sustainable agriculture, while the fastest-growing sector of the food industry, remains a tiny enterprise: according to the most recent data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), less than 1% of American cropland is farmed organically. Sustainable food is also pricier than conventional food and harder to find. And while large companies like General Mills have opened organic divisions, purists worry that the very definition of sustainability will be co-opted as a result.  

But we don’t have the luxury of philosophizing about food. With the exhaustion of the soil, the impact of global warmingand the inevitably rising price of oil - which will affect everything from fertilizer to supermarket electricity bills - our industrial style of food production will end sooner or later. As the developing world grows richer, hundreds of millions of people will want to shift to the same calorie-heavy, protein-rich diet that has made Americans so unhealthy - demand for meat and poultry worldwide is set to rise 25% by 2015 - but the earth can no longer deliver. Unless Americans radically rethink the way they grow and consume food, they face a future of eroded farmland, hollowed-out countryside, scarier germs, higher health costs - and bland taste. Sustainable food has an Élitist reputation, but each of us depends on the soil, animals and plants - and as every farmer knows, if you don’t take care of your land, it can’t take care of you.

The Downside of Cheap
For all the grumbling you do about your weekly grocery bill, the fact is you’ve never had it so good, at least in terms of what you pay for every calorie you eat. According to the USDA, Americans spend less than 10% of their incomes on food, down from 18% in 1966. Those savings begin with the remarkable success of one crop: corn. Corn is king on the American farm, with production passing 12 billion bu. annually, up from 4 billion bu. as recently as 1970. When we eat a cheeseburger, a Chicken McNugget, or drink soda, we’re eating the corn that grows on vast, monocrop fields in Midwestern states like Iowa.

 

But cheap food is not free food, and corn comes with hidden costs. The crop is heavily fertilized - both with chemicals like nitrogen and with subsidies from Washington. Over the past decade, the Federal Government has poured more than $50 billion into the corn industry, keeping prices for the crop - at least until corn ethanol skewed the market - artificially low. That’s why McDonald’scan sell you a Big Mac, fries and a Coke for around $5 - a bargain, given that the meal contains nearly 1,200 calories, more than half the daily recommended requirement for adults. “Taxpayer subsidies basically underwrite cheap grain, and that’s what the factory-farming system for meat is entirely dependent on,” says Gurian-Sherman. (See the 10 worst fast food meals.)

 

So what’s wrong with cheap food and cheap meat - especially in a world in which more than 1 billion people go hungry? A lot. For one thing, not all food is equally inexpensive; fruits and vegetables don’t receive the same price supports as grains. A study in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that a dollar could buy 1,200 calories of potato chips or 875 calories of soda but just 250 calories of vegetables or 170 calories of fresh fruit. With the backing of the government, farmers are producing more calories - some 500 more per person per day since the 1970s - but too many are unhealthy calories. Given that, it’s no surprise we’re so fat; it simply costs too much to be thin.

 

Our expanding girth is just one consequence of mainstream farming. Another is chemicals. No one doubts the power of chemical fertilizer to pull more crop from a field. American farmers now produce an astounding 153 bu. of corn per acre, up from 118 as recently as 1990. But the quantity of that fertilizer is flat-out scary: more than 10 million tons for corn alone - and nearly 23 million for all crops. When runoff from the fields of the Midwest reaches the Gulf of Mexico, it contributes to what’s known as a dead zone, a seasonal, approximately 6,000-sq.-mi. area that has almost no oxygen and therefore almost no sea life. Because of the dead zone, the $2.8 billion Gulf of Mexico fishing industry loses 212,000 metric tons of seafood a year, and around the world, there are nearly 400 similar dead zones. Even as we produce more high-fat, high-calorie foods, we destroy one of our leanest and healthiest sources of protein. (See nine kid foods to avoid.)

 

The food industry’s degradation of animal life, of course, isn’t limited to fish. Though we might still like to imagine our food being raised by Old MacDonald, chances are your burger or your sausage came from what are called concentrated-animal feeding operations (CAFOs), which are every bit as industrial as they sound. In CAFOs, large numbers of animals - 1,000 or more in the case of cattle and tens of thousands for chicken and pigs - are kept in close, concentrated conditions and fattened up for slaughter as fast as possible, contributing to efficiencies of scale and thus lower prices. But animals aren’t widgets with legs. They’re living creatures, and there are consequences to packing them in prison-like conditions. For instance: Where does all that manure go?

 

Pound for pound, a pig produces approximately four times the amount of waste a human does, and what factory farmsdo with that mess gets comparatively little oversight. Most hog waste is disposed of in open-air lagoons, which can overflow in heavy rain and contaminate nearby streams and rivers. “This creek that we used to wade in, that creek that our parents could drink out of, our kids can’t even play in anymore,” says Jayne Clampitt, a farmer in Independence, Iowa, who lives near a number of hog farms.

 

To stay alive and grow in such conditions, farm animals need pharmaceutical help, which can have further damaging consequences for humans. Overuse of antibiotics on farm animals leads, inevitably, to antibiotic-resistant bacteria, and the same bugs that infect animals can infect us too. The UCS estimates that about 70% of antimicrobial drugs used in America are given not to people but to animals, which means we’re breeding more of those deadly organisms every day. The Institute of Medicine estimated in 1998 that antibiotic resistancecost the public-health system $4 billion to $5 billion a year - a figure that’s almost certainly higher now. “I don’t think CAFOs would be able to function as they do now without the widespread use of antibiotics,” says Robert Martin, who was the executive director of the Pew Commission on Industrial Farm Animal Production.

 

The livestock industry argues that estimates of antibiotics in food production are significantly overblown. Resistance “is the result of human use and not related to veterinary use,” according to Kristina Butts, the manager of legislative affairs for the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association. But with wonder drugs losing their effectiveness, it makes sense to preserve them for as long as we can, and that means limiting them to human use as much as possible. “These antibiotics are not given to sick animals,” says Representative Louise Slaughter, who is sponsoring a bill to limit antibiotic use on farms. “It’s a preventive measure because they are kept in pretty unspeakable conditions.”

Such a measure would get at a symptom of the problem but not at the source. Just as the burning of fossil fuels that is causing global warming requires more than a tweaking of mileage standards, the manifold problems of our food system require a comprehensive solution. “There should be a recognition that what we are doing is unsustainable,” says Martin. And yet, still we must eat. So what can we do? 

Getting It Right
If a factory farmis hell for an animal, then Bill Niman’s seaside ranch in Bolinas, Calif., an hour north of San Francisco, must be heaven. The property’s cliffside view over the Pacific Ocean is worth millions, but the black Angus cattlethat Niman and his wife Nicolette Hahn Niman raise keep their eyes on the ground, chewing contentedly on the pasture. Grass - and a trail of hay that Niman spreads from his truck periodically - is all the animals will eat during the nearly three years they’ll spend on the ranch. That all-natural, noncorn diet - along with the intensive, individual care that the Nimans provide their animals - produces beef that many connoisseurs consider to be among the best in the world. But for Niman, there is more at stake than just a good steak. He believes that his way of raising farm animals - in the open air, with no chemicals or drugs and with maximum care - is the only truly sustainable method and could be a model for a better food system. “What we need in this country is a completely different way of raising animals for food,” says Hahn Niman, a former attorney for the environmental group Earthjustice. “This needs to be done in the right way.”

The Nimans like to call what they do “beyond organic,” and there are some signs that consumers are beginning to catch up. This November, California voters approved a ballot proposition that guarantees farm animals enough space to lie down, stand up and turn around. Worldwide, organic food - a sometimes slippery term but on the whole a practice more sustainable than conventional food - is worth more than $46 billion. That’s still a small slice of the overall food pie, but it’s growing, even in a global recession. “There is more pent-up demand for organic than there is production,” says Bill Wolf, a co-founder of the organic-food consultancy Wolf DiMatteo and Associates. )

So what will it take for sustainable food production to spread? It’s clear that scaling up must begin with a sort of scaling down - a distributed system of many local or regional food producers as opposed to just a few massive ones. Since 1935, consolidation and industrialization have seen the number of U.S. farms decline from 6.8 million to fewer than 2 million - with the average farmer now feeding 129 Americans, compared with 19 people in 1940.

It’s that very efficiency that’s led to the problems and is in turn spurring a backlash, reflected not just in the growth of farmers’ markets or the growing involvement of big corporations in organics but also in the local-food movement, in which restaurants and large catering services buy from suppliers in their areas, thereby improving freshness, supporting small-scale agriculture and reducing the so-called food miles between field and plate. That in turn slashes transportation costs and reduces the industry’s carbon footprint.

A transition to more sustainable, smaller-scale production methods could even be possible without a loss in overall yield, as one survey from the University of Michigan suggested, but it would require far more farmworkers than we have today. With unemployment approaching double digits - and things especially grim in impoverished rural areas that have seen populations collapse over the past several decades - that’s hardly a bad thing. Work in a CAFO is monotonous and soul-killing, while too many ordinary farmers struggle to make ends meet even as the rest of us pay less for food. Farmers aren’t the enemy - and they deserve real help. We’ve transformed the essential human profession - growing food - into an industry like any other. “We’re hurting for job creation, and industrial food has pushed people off the farm,” says Hahn Niman. “We need to make farming real employment, because if you do it right, it’s enjoyable work.”

One model for how the new paradigm could work is Niman Ranch, a larger operation that Bill Niman founded in the 1990s, before he left in 2007. (By his own admission, he’s a better farmer than he is a businessman.) The company has knitted together hundreds of small-scale farmers into a network that sells all-natural pork, beef and lamb to retailers and restaurants. In doing so, it leverages economies of scale while letting the farmers take proper care of their land and animals. “We like to think of ourselves as a force for a local-farming community, not as a large corporation,” says Jeff Swain, Niman Ranch’s CEO.

Other examples include the Mexican-fast-food chain Chipotle, which now sources its pork from Niman Ranch and gets its other meats and much of its beans from natural and organic sources. It’s part of a commitment that Chipotle founder Steve Ellsmade years ago, not just because sustainable ingredients were better for the planet but because they tasted better too - a philosophy he calls Food with Integrity. It’s not cheap for Chipotle - food makes up more than 32% of its costs, the highest in the fast-food industry. But to Ells, the taste more than compensates, and Chipotle’s higher prices haven’t stopped the company’s rapid growth, from 16 stores in 1998 to over 900 today. “We put a lot of energy into finding farmers who are committed to raising better food,” says Ells. (See pictures of the effects of global warming.)

Bon App[a {e}]tit Management Company, a caterer based in Palo Alto, Calif., takes that commitment even further. The company sources as much of its produce as possible from within 150 miles of its kitchens and gets its meat from farmers who eschew antibiotics. Bon AppÉtit also tries to influence its customers’ habits by nudging them toward greener choices. That includes campaigns to reduce food waste, in part by encouraging servers at its kitchens to offer smaller, more manageable portions. (The USDA estimates that Americans throw out 14% of the food we buy, which means that much of our record-breaking harvests ends up in the garbage.) And Bon AppÉtit supports a low-carbon diet, one that uses less meat and dairy, since both have a greater carbon footprint than fruit, vegetables and grain. The success of the overall operation demonstrates that sustainable food can work at an institutional scale bigger than an Élite restaurant, a small market or a gourmet’s kitchen - provided customers support it. “Ultimately it’s going to be consumer demand that will cause change, not Washington,” says Fedele Bauccio, Bon AppÉtit’s co-founder.

How willing are consumers to rethink the way they shop for - and eat - food? For most people, price will remain the biggest obstacle. Organic food continues to cost on average several times more than its conventional counterparts, and no one goes to farmers’ markets for bargains. But not all costs can be measured by a price tag. Once you factor in crop subsidies, ecological damage and what we pay in health-care bills after our fatty, sugary diet makes us sick, conventionally produced food looks a lot pricier.

What we really need to do is something Americans have never done well, and that’s to quit thinking big. We already eat four times as much meat and dairy as the rest of the world, and there’s not a nutritionist on the planet who would argue that 24‑oz. steaks and mounds of buttery mashed potatoes are what any person needs to stay alive. “The idea is that healthy and good-tasting food should be available to everyone,” says Hahn Niman. “The food system should be geared toward that.”

Whether that happens will ultimately come down to all of us, since we have the chance to choose better food three times a day (or more often, if we’re particularly hungry). It’s true that most of us would prefer not to think too much about where our food comes from or what it’s doing to the planet - after all, as Chipotle’s Ells points out, eating is not exactly a “heady intellectual event.” But if there’s one difference between industrial agricultureand the emerging alternative, it’s that very thing: consciousness. Niman takes care with each of his cattle, just as an organic farmer takes care of his produce and smart shoppers take care with what they put in their shopping cart and on the family dinner table. The industrial food system fills us up but leaves us empty - it’s based on selective forgetting. But what we eat - how it’s raised and how it gets to us - has consequences that can’t be ignored any longer.

- With reporting by Rebecca Kaplan / New York

Please write something about Harry Patch

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

“please write something about Harry Patch, I would like to see how you see it.”

“ nearly a century later, World War I continues to exert a hold on the British imagination unmatched by any of the conflicts since, …

The tremendous death toll is part of the reason why ….Britain and its imperial territories lost a staggering 900,000 troops, leaving almost no family untouched. Go to even the tiniest community in the British countryside and you’ll find a monument in the parish church or on the village green commemorating the sacrifices of local young men who fell in the war.

“A whole generation was wiped out,” said Monica Williams, 64. Two of her great- uncles died in battle.

“Henry John “Harry” Patch (17 June 1898 – 25 July 2009) — known as “the Last Tommy” — was  the last surviving soldier to have fought in the trenches of the First World War.Patch was born in the village of Combe Down in Somerset, England. He appears in the 1901 Census as a two-year-old along with his stonemason father.

Patch had refused to discuss his war experiences, until 1998 …… and the moment when he came face to face with a German soldier. He recalled Moses descending from Mount Sinai with God’s commandment, ‘thou shalt not kill’, and couldn’t kill the German. Instead, he shot him in the shoulder, which made him drop his rifle. But he carried on running towards Patch’s Lewis Gun, so he then shot him above the knee, and in the ankle. Patch said, “I had about five seconds to make the decision. I brought him down, but I didn’t kill him.”

I cannot comment on HARRY PATCH, no one can comment on Harry Patch, except Harry Patch.

 ”Millions of men came to fight in this war and I find it incredible that I am the only one left.” HARRY PATCH

He was a plumber, a plumber, an inarticulate plumber, yet by design or chance or fate he outlived them all, and eighty years after the end of the war he was forced, by a curious public  to find his voice. By 2008, the 90th  anniversary, he was the most articulate man ever against war.    
 
 In 2000, I was asked to vote on the Man of the 20th Century, and i did vote for Churchill, but I was torn. I almost voted for Kaiser Wilhelm II of Imperial Germany, for no man did more to ruin Western Civilization that Kaiser Willie. His bumbling ruined it all. He is the royal Dick Cheney.

What intimidates me about history is the nature of it. The Kaiser was an immature piece of bluster, who wanted to be a war hero. If he had been a soldier, I doubt if he could have fought because he had a withered arm, which the Jungians say withered his spirit and worldview. His father, Frederick III was a legitimate war hero, from the Franco-Prussian war. He had seen war, lived it, had men die in his arms. He hated  war.  He was brilliant, adept, open minded, gracious, fabulous, no withered arm, no withered heart.  He becomes Kaiser, and one month later he is dead from cancer leaving his withered son on the throne.

I don’t see that as fluke, I see that as a tragedy being written.

Once in Turku, Finland I had a drink with a German sales person from Solingen;he was a complete German with dueling scars on his cheek. He asked me why God hated Germany so; he lamented that God hated Germany even before the Nazis. I told him that was simple, the Germans had invented cocaine.

The Germans had bought general war, genocide and cocaine to the modern world; that is a lot to forgive.

So what did the Kaiser ruin?

Two years ago, a girl I dated in England sent me a birthday gift, a DVD, THE ELECTRIC EDWARDIANS (Great Britain from 1900-1913).”85. B&W.
In the earliest years of the twentieth century, enterprising traveling showmen in the north of England hired pioneer filmmakers Sagar Mitchell and James Kenyon to shoot footage of local people going about their everyday activities. These films would be shown later at nearby fairgrounds, town halls and neighborhood theaters. Workers, school children, sports fans and seaside vacationers all flocked to see themselves miraculously captured on screen!
The astonishing discovery of the original Mitchell & Kenyon negatives in Blackburn, England — in a basement about to be demolished — has been described as film’s equivalent of Tutankhamen’s tomb. .. this treasure trove of extraordinary footage provides an unparalleled record of everyday life in the years before World War I. Mesmerizing scenes of trolley cars and crowded streets, soccer matches, temperance parades, throngs of workers leaving the factory and a myriad of simple pleasures transport us to another — lost — world. The effect is as if H.G. Wells’ marvelous time machine had come to life. 

It is an extraordinary film, the people look so happy. I know they were poverty stricken and disease ridden but they all look so HAPPY. There is one telling scene of  horse drawn traffic, stretching for miles. Everyone, every horse and wagon  is in the queue; no one is pushing. They are moving, quietly, peaceful, serenely. All of it lost because of a bumbling war. By the end of the film, you begin to grieve, for you know what they don’t know , you know what will happen to all those young boys ten years later, all those workers laughing, all those proud men. They will all be butchered in the mud of Flanders.

 THE PICTURES ARE FROM THE ELECTRIC EDWARDIANS

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Electric Edwardians: The Films of Mitchell & Kenyon by:  Mitchell & Kenyon
Electric Edwardians: The Films of Mitchell & Kenyon by:  Mitchell & Kenyon
Electric Edwardians: The Films of Mitchell & Kenyon by:  Mitchell & Kenyon
Millions of men came to fight in this war and I find it incredible that I am the only one left.Electric Edwardians: The Films of Mitchell & Kenyon by:  Mitchell & Kenyon 

 

On Christmas Eve, 1914 at Ypres, Belgium, on the battlefield, German and British troops began a spontaneous truce. They just stopped fighting, to honor Christmas. Their guns just stopped. Then the Kaiser ordered the guns to start firing again; and Peace on Earth was lost for the rest of the century.

A German general once said of the British army,”they are lions led by donkeys.” Harry Patch was a lion, led by the most obtuse Generals in recorded history. 

World War II killed more people, but those battle deaths were caused by a clash of great Captains, great and brilliant War Lords, Rommel, Guderian, von Manstein, von Kesselring,Yamashita, Yamamoto,  versus Montgomery,Alexander,MacArthur,Patton,Eisenhower,Zhukov,Konev. The men facing death know they are dying because their Captains are great and evenly matched; it becomes a war of attrition.

Our Civil War and World War I, are the two most egregious examples of carnage incorporated. In both wars, incompetent Generals threw brave men against cold steel. Incredible slaughter, incredible courage; the difference in the slaughterhouses is Lincoln. If you were a General who lost a battle, you got fired. Lincoln fired McClellan, McClellan again, Pope, McDowell,Hooker, Burnside,Meade,Rosecrans. You lose you go.

But in World War I, the British started off with dumb generals, Sir John French and Lord Haig, and stayed with them, mistake, after mistake, after mistake. The British aristocracy was so ossified that they could not fire their own. 

What Redeems Lincoln’s management of slaughter was his ruthless administration towards loser generals; what doomed England was the coddling of loser aristocratic generals by the aristocracy because they were aristocrats. The One million dead Harry Patches is a direct result of the British class system   It is the coddling of  asinine aristocrats that ruins empires.

Finally, I spent three days at Salisbury Cathedral,in the garden there is a little plaque, dated 1916, remembering the beloved only son of the vicar, dead in Flanders. 

With Harry Patch dead, the table is full.

SIDEBAR

As my brother and I were leaving the bar in Turku to catch the train to Helsinki, the German with the duelling scars caught me.

“Do you know why the British lost so many men in World War I?”

“Bad Generals.”

“No, because the British had invented the concentration camp. They were not pure either.”

Harry Patch could have killed a man, and been honored. He didn’t. Harry Patch was pretty pure.

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