Archive for April 13th, 2009

As Bees Go, So Goes Humanity

This is pretty disturbing.  So why weren’t whistleblowers successful in getting more attention on this type of issue all along, not to mention 20 years ago?  -GFS

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Honeybees in Danger

 

Link:  http://www.truthout.org/041209F

 

by: Evaggelos Vallianatos, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

 


Industrial, pesticide-dependent agricultural practices in the United States are creating a death trap for the honeybee and threatening the human-bee symbiotic relationship forged over millenia. (Photo: Getty Images)

    When I was teaching at Humboldt State University in northern California 20 years ago, I invited a beekeeper to talk to my students. He said that each time he took his bees to southern California to pollinate other farmers’ crops, he would lose a third of his bees to sprays. In 2009, the loss ranges all the way to 60 percent.

    Honeybees have been in terrible straits.

    A little history explains this tragedy.

    For millennia, honeybees lived in symbiotic relationship with societies all over the world.

    The Greeks loved them. In the eighth century BCE, the epic poet Hesiod considered them gifts of the gods to just farmers. And in the fourth century of our era, the Greek mathematician Pappos admired their hexagonal cells, crediting them with “geometrical forethought.”

    However, industrialized agriculture is not friendly to honeybees.

    In 1974, the US Environmental Protection Agency licensed the nerve gas parathion trapped into nylon bubbles the size of pollen particles.

    What makes this microencapsulated formulation more dangerous to bees than the technical material is the very technology of the “time release” microcapsule.

    This acutely toxic insecticide, born of chemical warfare, would be on the surface of the flower for several days. The foraging bee, if alive after its visit to the beautiful white flowers of almonds, for example, laden with invisible spheres of asphyxiating gas, would be bringing back to its home pollen and nectar mixed with parathion.

    It is possible that the nectar, which the bee makes into honey, and the pollen, might end up in some food store to be bought and eaten by human beings.

    Beekeepers are well aware of what is happening to their bees, including the potential that their honey may not be fit for humans.

    Moreover, many beekeepers do not throw away the honey, pollen and wax of colonies destroyed by encapsulated parathion or other poisons. They melt the wax for new combs: And they sell both honey and pollen to the public.

    Government “regulators” know about this danger.

    An academic expert, Carl Johansen, professor of entomology at Washington State University in Pullman, Washington, called the microencapsulated methyl parathion “the most destructive bee poisoning insecticide ever developed.”

    In 1976, the US Department of Agriculture published a report by one of its former employees, S. E. McGregor, a honeybee expert who documented that about a third of what we eat benefits from honeybee pollination. This includes vegetables, oilseeds and domesticated animals eating bee-pollinated hay.

    In 2007, the value of food dependent on honeybees was $15 billion in the United States.

    McGregor also pointed out that insect-pollinated legumes collect nitrogen from the air, storing it in their roots and enriching the soil. In addition, insect pollination makes the crops more wholesome and abundant. He advised the farmer he should never forget that “no cultural practice will cause fruit or seed to set if its pollination is neglected.”

    In addition, McGregor blamed the chemical industry for seducing the farmers to its potent toxins. He said:

    ”[P]esticides are like dope drugs. The more they are used the more powerful the next one must be to give satisfaction” and therein develops the spiraling effect, the pesticide treadmill. The chemical salesman, in pressuring the grower to use his product, practically assumes the role of the “dope pusher.” Once the victim, the grower, is “hooked,” he becomes a steady and an ever-increasing user.

    No government agency listened to McGregor.

    The result of America’s pesticide treadmill is that now, in 2009, honeybees and other pollinators are moving towards extinction.

    In October 2006, the US National Research Council warned of the” “demonstrably downward” trends in the populations of pollinators. For the first time since 1922, American farmers are renting imported bees for their crops. They are even buying bees from Australia.

    Honeybees, the National Academies report said, pollinate more than 90 crops in America, but have declined by 30 percent in the last 20 years alone. The scientists who wrote the report expressed alarm at the precipitous decline of the pollinators.

    Unfortunately, this made no difference to EPA, which failed to ban the microencapsulated parathion that is so deadly to honeybees.

    Bee experts know that insecticides cause brain damage to the bees, disorienting them, making it often impossible for them to find their way home.

    This is a consequence of decades of agribusiness warfare against nature and, in time, honeybees. In addition, beekeepers truck billions of bees all over the country for pollination, depriving them of good food, stressing them enormously, and, very possibly, injuring their health.

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    Evaggelos Vallianatos, former EPA analyst, is the author of “This Land Is Their Land” and “The Passion of the Greeks.

 

Add comment April 13, 2009

Former Congressman, Hastert, Hired to Lobby for Turkey

Now this is a good example of one pattern of conflicting interests, which seems to occur with great frequency among the post elected official crowd.  It is not a partisan issue, it seems to occur in all parties. 

 

Think about it.  They collect salaries and benefits from the taxpayers, allegedly serving the taxpayers, and then they hire themselves out to foreign interests to help find a way to make more money benefitting those foreign countries, despots, business interests etc. sometimes at the inconvenience and expense of the very people they used to serve and their own country.  It seems to me that this is all tied in with the corruption with plagues the defense contracting arena as well. 

 

And one cannot place the blame on the foreign parties.  They are doing what I am sure seems sensible to them – find someone who knows everyone, has connections and knows the political ropes and knows the way into the taxpayer’s pocketbooks.   Our own citizens, particularly those who chose to serve the people in an elected or civil service role, should have a higher ethical standard of behavior than this, as a matter of principle.

 

This is another area that should be changed!

 

-GFS

 

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Hastert Contracted to Lobby for Turkey

 

Link:  http://www.truthout.org/041209E

by: Kevin Bogardus  |  Visit article original @ The Hill


Former House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Illinois) will represent the government of Turkey on many bi-lateral issues, including a resolution before the US Congress on the mass killing of Armenian citizens in Turkey during the 1900’s. (Photo: Getty Images)

    The Turkish government has signed another prominent former congressional leader to join its K Street team.

    Former House Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-Ill.) and others at his firm, Dickstein Shapiro, are working on a $35,000-per-month contract for Turkey, according to records on file with the Justice Department.

    Hastert was the longest-serving Republican House Speaker until he retired from his seat after the 2006 midterm elections. He joined Dickstein in June 2008.

    The agreement is a subcontract between Hastert s firm and the Gephardt Group, founded by Richard Gephardt, the ex-Missouri congressman who was the Democratic House leader for several years. Gephardt and others at DLA Piper replaced the Livingston Group, longtime lobbyists for Turkey, as its Washington representatives last year.

    In a Feb. 27 letter to Thomas O Donnell, Gephardt s former chief of staff and executive vice president at his firm, Dickstein partner Robert Mangas says he and Hastert will be principally involved in the representation of Turkey. Mangas says in the letter that the firm will serve as Turkey s counsel, in connection with the extension and strengthening of the Turkish-American relationship in several areas, such as trade, energy security and counterterrorism efforts.

    Also working with Hastert and Mangas on the contract at Dickstein are Allison Shulman, a legislative specialist at the firm, and former Sen. Tim Hutchinson (R-Ark.), according to Justice Department records.

    One issue Hastert and others lobbying for Turkey will have to deal with this year is a congressional resolution that defines the killing of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks in the early 1900s as genocide. The Turkish government opposes the resolution and has lobbied against it every time it has been introduced in Congress.

    On the campaign trail last year, Barack Obama explicitly said the killing was genocide. But on a recent trip to Turkey, President Obama only said he stood by those prior statements. He did not use the word genocide, angering some Armenian-American activists.

    This Congress, the resolution to recognize the massacre as genocide was introduced by Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.). So far, the bill has attracted 93 co-sponsors.

    In October 2007, the same resolution was passed out of the House Foreign Affairs Committee in a contentious vote. But House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) did not end up allowing the bill to come to a vote as Turkish officials repeatedly said passing the resolution would threaten the nation’s alliance with the United States.

    Hastert has also been involved in the debate over the genocide resolution. In 2000, the Illinois Republican, then House Speaker, took the measure off the voting schedule after being asked by President Bill Clinton to do so.

 

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