Things
change, like the global temperature, which is warming at an
unprecedented rate. So says a new study, published in Science, that
tracked temperatures back 11,300 years, to the last Ice Age. As NPR reports:
So
it's taken just 100 years for the average temperature to change by
1.3 degrees, when it took 5,000 years to do that before.
Climate
scientists predict that the current warming will continue, given the
amount of greenhouse gases going up into the atmosphere.
"The
climate changes to come are going to be larger than anything that
human civilization and agriculture has seen in its entire existence,"
says Gavin Schmidt, a climate researcher at NASA's Goddard Institute
for Space Studies. "And that is quite a sobering thought."
Things
change, like the head of the CIA, with the Senate voting to confirm
Obama's “assassination czar,” John Brennan. The vote came after Attorney
General Eric Holder, responding to Sen. Rand Paul's filibuster,
clarified that “no,” the President does not “have the authority
to use a weaponized drone to kill an American not engaged in combat
on American soil.” The President made sure, however, that he does have the authority to lock that person up indefinitely under the National
Defense Authorization Act — though he claims his Administration
will never use it, even as his Justice Department has fought in court
to retain the power.
Things
change, like public attitudes toward cannabis, even though law
enforcement remains mired in the Dark Ages on the topic. Check out my
cover story in Honolulu Weekly, where I outline what's happening with
cannabis legislation this year, and give a history of eradication in
Hawaii, including the role of herbicides and former Defense Secretary
Dick Cheney:
In
1985, the state Department of Land and Natural Resources (DLNR)
joined the war against pakalolo, much of which was being grown on
public land, especially on the Big Island. Within a year, DLNR had
developed a new weapon–a spray rig that could be operated from a
helicopter to apply a dose of herbicide to specific plants. “This
method proved to be more efficient than manual eradication efforts
resulting in a dramatic increase in the number of plants eradicated,”
reports the agency’s website.
Within
two years Hawaii was engaged in year-round eradication with its
intensive Operation Sweep.
But
even all that manpower, money and herbicide wasn’t enough.
“Hawaii’s
marijuana industry, driven by an insatiable demand, is the root of
Hawaii’s drug problem,” former state Attorney General Warren
Price wrote in his 1989 report, “A Survey of Hawaii’s War on
Drugs.” Price complained that “the eradication effort in Hawaii
is . . . costing over $1 million per year and it is not apparently
reducing, much less eliminating, the marijuana industry in Hawaii,
nor is there any evidence to suggest it is reducing local
consumption.” The report called for slowing the tide of substance
abuse by wiping out the Islands’ marijuana crop, which that year
was worth an estimated $1 billion to $10 billion, surpassing the
value of sugar, pineapple and even tourism.
So
instead of cannabis, we now have GMO seeds, nearly 8 million tourists a
year and an ice epidemic. Go figger....
Things
change, like public awareness about GMOs, resulting in a clamor for
labels to inform us of what we're eating. In response, the state
House took the teeny, tiny baby step of approving HB174, which requires labeling any imported genetically
engineered produce. Despite the hoopla, it's essentially meaningless, for two reasons. First, there is virtually no GE produce imported into the state. Second, there already
is a means for identifying GE produce, via those little stickers on
fruit. If the number starts with an 8, it's been genetically
modified. If it starts with a 9, it's organic. And if it's just
four digits, it's conventionally grown.
Though anti-GMO guru Jeffrey Smith argues that no one uses the 8, that could be due partly to the fact that there are just three types of GE veggies:
some varieties of zucchini, yellow squash and
corn on the cob. And then there's the GE papaya, which is grown only
in Hawaii, and will remain unidentified to buyers here, thanks to a timid Lege.
Things
change, like overriding Republican resistance to an expanded Violence Against Women Act that finally includes protections for
Native American women and LGBT persons. Unfortunately, far too many
women are still being raped, beaten, mutilated, controlled,
manipulated, dominated — in short, diminished and destroyed – by
a violent patriarchal system.
To
quote Vandana Shiva on this International Women's Day:
"The
multiple wars against the earth — through the economy, through
greed, through capitalist patriarchal domination — must end, and we
have to recognize we are part of the earth. The liberation of earth,
the liberation of women, the liberation of all of humanity is the
next step of freedom we need to work for, and it’s the next step of
peace that we need to create."
Things
change.
6 comments:
Once again, Mahalo Joan, For the forward looking journalism that is so essential to the survival of us all.
In the last month you've painted a very gruesome picture of our patheticly useless government and the pocket liners that run it.
One subject I'd like to see covered, is the Department Of Harassment and Revenue Generation (judicial).
Kauai really needs a aclu type agency for oversight.
Gavin Schmidt is a crackpot. He and Hansen have repeatedly altered past temperatures. This study has just 73 data origination points. Ridiculous. You see vineyards in York, Britain? How about pastures in Greenland? Wild grapes in New Brunswick, Labrador, or Newfoundland (Vinland)? Yet they were once there.
Must have been a lot warmer in the past, eh?
With all the anti GMO hype on the island what's ironic is how will all the GMO Canabis on the island be treated?
Frogs in a pot of slowly heating water...."Must have been a lot warmer in the past, eh?"
Eat GMO and buy more Health Insurance. "shooting blanks" yet?
Dr Shibai
"Gavin Schmidt is a crackpot." Only if you're a genius. But you're a dumbass, so there you have it.
"With all the anti GMO hype on the island what's ironic is how will all the GMO Canabis on the island be treated?"
What a great comment, had me on the floor laughing!!
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