In These New Times

“In these new times, in spite of the dangers, the most brutal force, the most fearful night, we are engaged in the fight to survive.” No Novo Tempo-Ivan Lins, Vitor Martins

Archive for March, 2010

U.S. exchange rate hegemony should come to halt

Posted by seumasach on March 31, 2010

People’s Daily

23rd March, 2010

The hubbub of calls for Renminbi (RMB) appreciation has been increasingly clamorous in the United States. Of late, some U.S. senators have jointly initiated a bill moved forward by Senator Charles Schumer aimed at stopping China from “manipulating” its currency. The bill urged the Obama government to go on pressurizing China and threaten to list it as a “currency manipulator”.

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Mobile phone towers threaten honey bees: study

Posted by seumasach on March 31, 2010

canada.com

31st August, 2009

The electromagnetic waves emitted by mobile phone towers and cellphones can pose a threat to honey bees, a study published in India has concluded.

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Earth ‘entering new age of geological time’

Posted by seumasach on March 30, 2010

Population growth altering the earth’s geology in such a way as to create “a catastrophic mass extinction”. With our carbon footprints we’re pummelling out new rock formations. They’ve said it before and they’re saying it again: there are just too many of us for this delicate little organism, this Gaia, this mother earth. Let the culling begin and what better way than to use electromagnetic pollution to eliminate the bees and pollinators and then get our scientists to be absolutely baffled by it, so that before we know it it’s too late. We can get our most prestigious journals like the NY Times to post articles explaining that there’s nothing to worry about and food supplies won’t be seriously affected.

Of course, human intervention is behind the coming crisis, but are we  talking about human development in general, or the intervention of certain elites intent on preserving their monopoly of power and wealth at the expense of the rest of us? We at ITNT go for the latter interpretation. The great danger lies not just in the domination of the media by these people but in their control of the “expert”-in the co-optation of the scientists and the transformation of science into a tool of oligarchy.

We cannot highlight sufficiently the centrality of the Malthusian agenda to the Anglo-American elite: it lies at the black heart of their anti-humanist agenda and by definition puts all our lives at risk.

Telegraph

27th March, 2010

Humans have wrought such vast and unprecedented changes on the planet that we may be ushering in a new period of geological history.

Through pollution, population growth, urbanisation, travel, mining and use of fossil fuels we have altered the planet in ways which will be felt for millions of years, experts believe.

It is feared that the damage mankind has inflicted will lead to the sixth largest mass extinction in Earth’s history with thousands of plants and animals being wiped out.

The new epoch, called the Anthropocene – meaning new man – would be the first period of geological time shaped by the action of a single species.

Although the term has been in informal use among scientists for more than a decade, it is now under consideration as an official term.

A new working group of experts has now been established to gather all the evidence which would support recognising it as the successor to the current Holocene epoch.

It will consider changes human activities have brought to Earth’s biodiversity and rock structure as well as the impact of factors including pollution and mineral extraction.

It is hoped that within three years, their case will be presented to the International Union of Geological Sciences, which would decide whether the transition to a new epoch has been made.

The theory has been proposed by a group of scientists, including Paul Crutzen, the Nobel Prize-winning atmospheric chemist, in the journal Environmental Science & Technology.

They conclude: “The Anthropocene represents a new phase in the history of both humankind and of the Earth, when natural forces and human forces became intertwined, so that the fate of one determines the fate of the other. Geologically, this is a remarkable episode in the history of this planet.”

Dr Jan Zalasiewicz, of the University of Leicester, co-author of the paper, added: “It is suggested that we are in the train of producing a catastrophic mass extinction to rival the five previous great losses of species and organisms in Earth’s geological past.”

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China’s stance boosts Iran

Posted by seumasach on March 30, 2010

“The Iranian establishment has also arrived at the conclusion that within the framework of a global power shift, West Asia is transforming rapidly. There is a growing perception in Tehran of an emerging power vacuum in the region. This situation, in Tehran’s view, has arisen mainly on account of the growing weakness of Israel, especially after the debacle it suffered at the hands of the Iran-backed Hizbollah in the 2006 summer war in Lebanon. Iran firmly believes that eventually it would be joined by Turkey, Syria and Lebanon, and possibly Saudi Arabia, which is already working with Syria to stabilise a polarised Lebanon, to engender a new security order in the region. Many in the Iranian establishment are of the view that China and Russia are poised to emerge as the new global players in West Asia.”

The Hindu

26th March, 2010

Yang Jiechi, Foreign Minister of China, a veto-wielding member, spelt out clearly his country’s opposition to fresh sanctions in early February. Later in March, at a press conference, he said pressure and sanctions are not the fundamental way forward to resolving the Iran nuclear issue.

Encouraged by China’s firm resistance to “crippling sanctions,” and the resonance this view has found among regional heavyweights, including Brazil, Turkey and Saudi Arabia, Iran is reasserting its long-held view that the era of western dominance, led by the United States, is entering its terminal phase. After sending mixed signals for some time on Iran, India has also firmly spelt out its opposition to fresh sanctions. Speaking on March 15 in Washington at the Woodrow Wilson Centre, Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao said: “It continues to be our view that sanctions that target Iranian people and cause difficulties to the ordinary man, woman and child would not be conducive to a resolution of this [Iran] question.”

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Karzai’s China-Iran dalliance riles Obama

Posted by seumasach on March 30, 2010

M K Bhadrakumar

Asia Times

39th March,2010

Great moments in diplomatic timing are hard to distinguish when the practitioners are inscrutable entities. Afghan President Hamid Karzai’s visits to China and Iran within the week rang alarm bells in Washington which were heard in the Oval Office of the White House.

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The buzz on bees and crops

Posted by seumasach on March 29, 2010

This is the next stage in the spin concerning CCD, the disappearing bees. Now we accept their disappearance and play down its significance:

“If pollinators were to vanish, it would reduce total food production by only about 6 percent”

This is highly questionable if not downright mendacious and the authors use a simple mechanical model failing to take into account the interdependence of all environmental factors. Contrast these authors claims with the viewpoint of Andrew Goldsworthy:

While the bulk of our staple foods come from wind-pollinated cereals that do not rely directly on the bees, these do not support the nitrogen-fixing bacteria needed for sustainable agriculture.  Without bee pollinated crops (e.g. legumes) that host these bacteria, we will have to rely on artificial nitrogen fertilisers, which are either mined from limited natural sources or manufactured from the nitrogen of the air. Both are heavily dependent on fossil fuels and are not sustainable. Without them even our wind-pollinated crops will be decimated, which will lead to famine and mass starvation.

In addition, cereals do not provide an adequate balanced diet. In particular, they are almost totally lacking in vitamin C, which is essential to prevent scurvy.

It is simply sinister to hear so many fruit and vegetables, dependent on pollination described as “luxury foods”. According to a motion put through the European parliament

Three quarters of food production (76%) is dependent on bees and 84% of vegetables grown in Europe depend on pollination.


We also, of course, find the implicit Malthusian angle.

The paradox is that our demand for these foods endangers the wild bees that help make their cultivation possible

This is a variation of the Malthusian thesis that food supplies can never keep up with growing population

This is the  mantra of the Anglo-American elite and relates to what has always been their greatest obsession: the culling of humanity.

New Observer

27th March, 2010

In the past five years, as the phenomenon known as colony-collapse disorder has spread across the United States and Europe, causing the disappearance of whole colonies of domesticated honeybees, many people have come to fear that our food supply is in peril. The news this week that a Department of Agriculture survey found that American honeybees had died in great numbers this winter can only add to such fears.

The truth, fortunately, is not nearly so dire. But it is more complicated.

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Scientists stumped as bee population declines further

Posted by seumasach on March 29, 2010

“Under normal condition you have 10 percent winter losses.. this year there are 30, 40 to 50 percent losses.”

This is looking catastrophic and yet these tossers calling themselves scientists continue to talk crap. Here, unsurprisingly we have a malthusian angle:

“The world population growth is in a sense the reason for pollinators’ decline,”

Never mind! This will soon correct itself if the scientists continue to be “stumped” and mysteriously fail to follow the most promising lead of all.

Data from the US Department of Agriculture show a 29 percent drop in beehives in 2009, following a 36 percent decline in 2008 and a 32 percent fall in 2007.

This affects not only honey production but around 15 billion dollars worth of crops that depend on bees for pollination.

Scientists call the phenomenon “” that has led to the disappearance of millions of adult bees and beehives and occurred elsewhere in the world including in Europe.

Researchers have looked at viruses, parasites, insecticides, malnutrition and other  but have been unable to pinpoint a specific cause for the .

The rough winter in many parts of the United States will likely accentuate the problem, says Jeff Pettis, lead researcher at Department of Agriculture’s Bee Research Laboratory in Beltsville, Maryland.

Winter figures will be published in April. But preliminary estimates already indicate losses of 30 to 50 percent, said David Mendes, president of the American Beekeeping Federation.

“There are a lot of beekeepers who are in trouble” he said.

“Under normal condition you have 10 percent winter losses.. this year there are 30, 40 to 50 percent losses.”

He said the phenomenon probably results from a combination of factors but that the increased use of pesticides appears to be a major cause.

“I don’t put my bees in Florida because the last couple of years there has been tremendous increase in pesticide use in the orange crop to fight a disease,” he said.

“It’s a  and the only way to control this disease is to use pesticide… a few years ago they did not use any pesticide at all.”

He said that pesticide use “has changed dramatically” and has made beekeeping “more challenging.”

Research conducted in 23 US states and Canada and published in the Public Library of Science journal found 121 different pesticides in 887 samples of bees, wax, pollen and other elements of hives, lending credence to the notion of pesticides as a key problem.

Pettis said the finding of pesticide residue is “troubling.”

“It might not be the only factor but it’s a contributing factor,” he said.

The best thing to help bees, he said its “to try to limit habitat destruction,” leaving more natural areas in agriculture and in cities such so honey can have “a diverse natural environment.”

Ironically, he said the problem stems from expansion of agriculture to feed the world. But in destroying bee populations, that can hurt crop production.

“The world population growth is in a sense the reason for pollinators’ decline,” he said.

“Because we need to produce more and more food to feed the world and we grow crops in larger fields. A growing world means growing more food and to do that we need pollinators. And the fact that the world is continuing to grow is the driving force behind the habitat destruction.”

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Dispatch from Devon

Posted by seumasach on March 28, 2010

For more on “mobile phone masts interfering with navigation systems”, click here

Matthew Engel

FT

27th March, 2010

Having decided that spring had finally sprung, Paddy Wallace zipped himself into his protective suit, grabbed his veil and headed off in his tractor round the country lanes of North Devon.

Wallace is the second-generation owner of Quince Honey Farm in South Molton, one of the biggest bee farms in Britain, and his mission was to assess the winter’s depredations. He has 1,500 hives spread around his neighbours’ fields in one of the most glorious symbiotic relationships in agriculture: he borrows a sliver of their land, and his bees pollinate their crops.

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‘Kohl Would Have Done the Same Thing’

Posted by seumasach on March 28, 2010

Chancellor Angela Merkel got her way with her solution to the Greek crisis. Now she is reaping criticism for her stubborn course. Political scientist Werner Weidenfeld argues that Merkel’s predecessors would have done the same thing — but says that her communication strategy needs an overhaul.

Read full article:

Der Spiegel

26th March, 2010

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EU shapes up for battle with Tories over new treaty

Posted by seumasach on March 28, 2010

This is becoming very interesting indeed as things come to a head between the UK and the Eurozone. Britain is the living proof of the absurdity of the notion that being outside the Eurozone allows the economy to flourish; that allowing the currency to fall is some kind of automatic compensation for massive indebtedness. It is most striking that europe has actually benefitted from the fall in the euro, with a surge in exports. This illustrates the underlying strength of Europe, at least, vis-a-vis the UK where the trade deficit has only worsened with the fall in sterling. Britain is a parasitic financier based economy; Europe still has substantial productive capacity, it has a real economy. Let’s see where this takes us as the hedge funds start shorting the pound and the illusory foundations of UK prosperity disintegrate.

Telegraph

25th March, 2010

Foreign leaders believe a Tory win in the general election could prove to be the biggest obstacle to French and German plans to give Brussels sweeping new powers to police national economies.

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Russia and China against the West?

Posted by seumasach on March 28, 2010

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