Gnocchi!

I was thinking about roasting the handful of nice organic potatoes for dinner tonight.  But then the L.A. Times dropped the serious gnocchi science on me.  I’ll let  you know how they turn out.

The recipe hasn’t changed much over the years, and making the gnocchi is still a task that falls to only the most senior cooks in each of my kitchens. It can take them months or years of watching and helping before they get good enough to do it on their own.

via Tom Colicchio: How to make gnocchi – latimes.com.

 

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Ecotopia, automobiles and justice

Premise number one: automobile culture as we know it in North America is unsustainable.

Ken Bensinger’s three-part series in the L.A. Times about exploitative auto dealers and the poor underscores just how much automobile-centered living has cost America.  The series is pretty clear: working poor are screwed without cars and the industries which prey on those needs are evil.  Not to mention the ecological damage, strip mall culture, distance between humans, high-speed culture, and consumer identity that are entwined with the lifestyle of the car.

Premise number two: the transition away from automobiles is going to be very hard for people, particularly in the U.S..

We set up this nation to be focused on individual-based car transit.  We can’t be too surprised that people hold onto their perceived right to drive a car with surprising firmness.  I was teaching a social movements class and showed a short video of activists in the United Kingdom protesting a church celebration of the automobile.  One woman on the film seemed particularly eloquent to me.  She spoke of losing her child to a speeding car.  When the class started discussing the video, I was surprised to find that most of the students wanted to blame this woman for “letting” her child go near a road.

Suddenly I realized that they were feeling judged and they wanted to undercut this tragic voice because they didn’t want to think about their participation in automobile culture.

The need to change car culture in the United States will be met with shallow innovation rather than actual change.  I suspect that we’ll  just tweak things in the era of declining oil returns.  We’ll have more electric cars reliant on natural gas and nuclear power plants to make energy.  We’ll have many more bio-diesel vehicles and probably new farm subsidies for vegetable oil producers.

Even though the gas-guzzler is fundamentally offensive, we won’t challenge the right to guzzle gas, we’ll just provide new “clean” justifications.  People who drive electric cars drive more.  That’s right!  When people buy a new energy-efficient vehicle they tend to use it more.  When we have the moral problems cleaned up (in our minds) we revert to unbridled consumer desire.  “Oh, lets take the Prius on the road trip — it’s so efficient.”

Alternative: thinking about the closed loop, Ecotopia and transportation

Ernst Callenbach’s Ecotopia books are interesting day-dreams on what a future might look like.  One reason the book is useful is the visioning component involved in future-fiction thinking — every reader is invited to disagree or re-envision.

In my Humboldt bioregion we have the Kinetic Sculpture Race where dozens of bicyle-driven human powered sculptures must prove themselves capable of traveling over sand, water and many miles of roads.  It isn’t hard to imagine this fleet of bike vehicles shared, rehabilitated and helping to move goods and people around the North Coast.

Catch a ride to the market on the giant hippo.

This suggests to me that the collapse of oil-based transportation might not be all that terrible in this place.  My daydream is that the transition  isn’t just about keeping gas pump-dependent, individuality-centered, automobile culture alive, but about being open to something else growing in it’s place.

Remember when you were a kid and you just rode your bike?  Meandered?  Wandered?  Crossed a parking lot and then rode in circles?  Have you actually done that lately?

I’m not trying to be a smart-ass.  I think this is part of the loss of car-dependent culture.  Most of us are so stressed out paying for cars, or paying for gas, or dealing with the extra hidden charges in our automobile insurance this month that we don’t get around to fun bike rides. Or to imagine that the problems of transportation aren’t unique.

I bet you can think of a time in the last few weeks where you were stymied by a lack of transportation.  I think this is what most of us have in common.  We want mobility, freedom to move.  The chance to just go and get where we need.

Rep. Gwen Moore (D-Wis.) has tried for years to get the government to help the poor buy cars. In 2005 and again in 2007, she sponsored legislation to provide $50 million a year for low-income car ownership programs. Both bills died in committee.

She said she has faced resistance from, among others, environmental organizations that insist mass transit is a better solution.

“Public transit is not practical in Milwaukee where the wind chill can be 45 below and you have to drop three kids off at day care,” Moore said. “We really have a crisis with respect to getting people to their jobs.”

via The poor have few options for seeking help in buying a car – Page 2 – latimes.com.

This is probably what underlies the vicious defensiveness about personal car ownership — this desire for freedom and escape.  Solidarity in modern capitalism can be seen in the unfulfilled invitation to freedom.  And the daily needs of living in the world that in fact seem to necessitate a car of one’s own.

So how do you challenge the cultural norm while still supporting the need of the poor to have safe and reliable transportation?  I guess the daydream is that we could actually start talking not only about the costs of automobile culture, but also the threads of other ways of living that are visible slightly below the surface.   Mix a little utopianism with newspaper reports.  Encourage people to talk about the impossible and pretty soon it isn’t impossible.

Cuba has endured a U.S. embargo for a couple of decades.  The mutual antagonism between the governments of Cuba and the United States has created a fascinating window into an alternative way of being.  I’m not oblivious to Cuba’s poverty and problems.  In terms of organic agriculture and in this case, automobiles, the resilient Cuban people (different than the government) have shown what is possible.

But since Cubans couldn’t legally sell their vehicles, they learned to do everything possible to keep them on the road.

Nelson Ramos, a car enthusiast and former economist in Havana, says cars in Cuba are “like members of the family.”

“Cars stay in the family forever. And you take care of the car, you fix the engine, and we probably have the best mechanics in the world,” Ramos says. “This is probably the only country in the world where you don’t have a junkyard for cars. We simply get the wreckage and put it on wheels and drive it again.”

via In Cuba, A Used Car Is No Bargain : NPR.

I try not to be a purist.  In my ideal world all transportation would be bicycles, but I know that isn’t realistic for most people.  So instead, I would put forward a dream of a transition inspired by justice.  The needs of a community being organized around those who needed help first.  I envision a few electric cars, or biodiesel vehicles that might operate as ambulances or as transit for those who have need.  We don’t need any new cars if what Cuba shows us is possible. People will be hand-carving door handles out of wood for the bicycle-powered buggies of the future.

 

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Filed under bicycle, capitalism, Eureka, Humboldt, resistance

Potato politics: senate and school lunches

You should know about Marion Nestle.  She is a food scientist and scholar of eatin’.  She kicks major ass in my opinion.

Her blog on food politics is quite good.  Today she is taking up the subject of school lunches and the powerful potato lobby.

Please note: the proposal does not call for elimination of starchy vegetables. It calls for a limit of two servings a week (one cup is two servings).

What’s wrong with that? Plenty, according to the potato industry, which stands to sell fewer products to the government and could not care less about spreading the wealth around to other vegetable producersPotato lobbyists went to work (apparently the sweet corn, lima bean, and pea industries do not have the money to pay for high-priced lobbying talent). The Potato Council held a press conference hosted by Senators from potato-growing states.

The result? The U.S. Senate added an amendment to the 2012 agriculture spending bill blocking the USDA from “setting any maximum limits on the serving of vegetables in school meal programs.”

Mind you, I like potatoes. They are thoroughly delicious when cooked well, have supported entire civilizations, and certainly can contribute to healthful diets. Two servings a week seems quite reasonable. So does encouraging consumption of other vegetables as well.

via Food Politics » One potato, two potato: Undue industry influence in action.

Not only is Nestle on point with this subject, but her remark about the potato lobby is correct.  Remember the scene in Life and Debt where the struggling potato growers of Jamaica get a meeting with the U.S. potato lobby hoping to sell some potatoes.  Instead the potato politicians are coming to sell Jamaicans subsidized potatoes.

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Exploitive car sellers and those who profit

Check out the three-part L.A. Times series on buy here pay here automobile sellers.  The second of the series came out today and is pretty intense.  It is about the financial vultures who have seen the profit in extorting the poor and are investing heavily in these rip off car businesses.

These dealerships focus on people who need cars to get to work, but can’t qualify for conventional loans. They sell aging, high-mileage vehicles at prices well above Kelley Blue Book value and provide their own financing. As lenders of last resort, they can charge interest at three times or more the going rate for regular used-car loans.

Many require customers to return to the lot to make their loan payments — that’s why they’re called Buy Here Pay Here dealerships.

If buyers default, as about 1 in 4 do, the dealer repossesses the cars and in many cases sells them again.

The dealerships make an average profit of 38% on each sale, according to the National Alliance of Buy Here Pay Here Dealers. That’s more than double the profit margin of conventional retail car chains like AutoNation Inc.

“The amount of return from these loans you can’t get on Wall Street. You can’t get it anywhere,” said Michael Diaz, national sales manager for Small Dealers Assistance Inc. in Atlanta, which buys loans originated by Buy Here Pay Here dealers. “It’s the gift that keeps giving.”

Investor money is pouring into the industry from several sources, helping Buy Here Pay Here dealers expand their reach and raise their profile.

via Investors place big bets on Buy Here Pay Here used-car dealers – latimes.com.

And who are those investors?

Subprime auto loan issues now represent a larger percentage of all auto-loan securitizations than at any time since 2006, according to Moody’s.

That means people who have never set foot on a Buy Here Pay Here lot, including retirement savers, own a small piece of the business.

via Investors place big bets on Buy Here Pay Here used-car dealers – Page 3 – latimes.com.

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Worried about 7 Billion people? Get over yourself.

Ah yes, the overly-simplistic logic of overpopulation fanatics.  Seven billion people . . . ooooh, what a scary Halloween.

Lets take dumb-ass of the month (only one day left . . . who will win in November?) Dr. Eric Tayag:

Dr. Eric Tayag of the Philippines’ Department of Health said in the AFP report: “Seven billion is a number we should think about deeply. We should really focus on the question of whether there will be food, clean water, shelter, education and a decent life for every child. If the answer is no, it would be better for people to look at easing this population explosion.”

via 7 billionth baby: Congratulations are mixed with dire words – latimes.com.

1.  If you  use the term “explosion” or “population bomb” to describe actual humans, you should immediate be sent back to health class.  Dehumanization by comparison to an inanimate killer is 180 degrees opposite from making a baby.  It is the easiest cue that you are reading or listening to an idiot if they use this language.

2.  Human beings make babies, some of them make many babies because they might want several babies.  Some parents may have kids because they want to love them.  If you don’t like that you shouldn’t have babies.

3.  If you are terrified about the new babies of the world using up your resources, get over yourself.  The lack of ” food, clean water, shelter, education and a decent life for every child” is about poverty and justice.  Work to make sure that every person in the world get’s access to these things.  It’s about politics not about penises.  To imagine that the solution is to reduce population or as Dr. Tayag says “easing” population is part of the racist day-dream that too often leads to sterilization abuses and eugenics.

4.  If you are really concerned with the ecology and sustainability of the earth then STOP USING SO MANY RESOURCES.  No I don’t mean babies, but you — the person wiping their ass with clean paper and pissing in clean drinking water.

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Oakland cops have a few bad apples

Thank  you colorlines.  You kick ass.

In August, I completed a two-year long joint investigation for Colorlines.com and the Investigative Fund of the Nation Institute that identified 16 officers still on duty who were responsible for more than half of the department’s officer-involved shooting incidents in the past decade. These repeat shooters operate behind a wall of secrecy, built over decades and sealed with a 2006 California Supreme Court decision blocking public access to personnel records.

Among the worst of them is Sgt. Patrick Gonzales. Over the course of his career, Gonzales has shot four people, three fatally, and been accused of repeated beatings and public strip searches of suspects. In the predominantly black neighborhoods he has policed for 13 years, Gonzales has long been widely known as a loose cannon. Despite Gonzales’ history of questionable uses of force and the $3.6 million paid out by Oakland to settle lawsuits involving him, he is also deployed repeatedly for crowd control. He was videotaped firing projectiles at anti-war protesters in 2003, he was at the November 2010 protest of Mehserle’s verdict and a photograph of him at the Oct. 25 Occupy Oakland raid (above) shows him wearing a gas mask and riot gear, with a tear-gas canister clutched in his hand.

via The Police Raid on Occupy Oakland Was Nothing New for This City – COLORLINES.

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Filed under human rights, police, protest, resistance

#scottolson #occupy wallstreet

Here is the ice-cold footage of US Marine Scott Olson getting shot by the Oakland police department.  Feel free to watch with a cynical eye, but check out when the flash bomb explodes in the midst of people trying to help an injured person.

This is intended to anger you.

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Lil B: beat the odds

If you like rap music a little bit, then you are asked to pick favorites.  Part of that is rivalries, where if you are a fan of one group or artist, you stay away from or even deter other people from listening to your favorite musician’s competition.

A more pernicious kind of intellectual trap comes when you feel a rapper wrongs you.  They might release a song or collaboration with someone who you know sucks.  Or they write a verse praising domestic violence or some crap like that.

Lil’ B has crossed his audience’s expectations so many times that they now expect the bizarre (if they’re still around).  You might pick up one of his ‘rap’ albums or mixtapes and discover very little that sounds like rapping.  Stream-of-consciousness un-clever wordplay.  Exceptionally awkward delivery, ideas that trail off.  Songs that make no sense to someone who is trying to listen to it with charitable ears.  It’s not edited to showcase Lil B’s clarity, his music is edited to showcase the mistakes. I’d argue that his performances expose Lil’ B’s vulnerabilities and screw-ups as an invitation to consider similarities.

Part of that is the idea of based — to return the living performative and free-wheeling lyricism.

There is a lot more interesting to talk about the based god.  Consider the political/rhetorical shenanigans of Lil’ B.  Calling his album “I’m gay.” His deeply internet-entwined performance and fanbase.  His discussion with his fans/friends makes an interesting impact on language.  He moves forward with toxic language choices for example ‘based god fucked my bitch.’

There is no positive element to that phrase.  The “my” suggests ownership over a woman.  Objectification and comparison to animals in the word bitch.  The weary trope of a celebrity having sex with someone’s girlfriend or partner.  Disempowerment and pain are really conveyed in this short phrase.

But somehow Lil B uses it to suggest solidarity.  He seems honestly shocked when asked in interviews if he would have sex with someone’s wife or mom — saying he never has.  He simply uses the words to convey something quite differently.

In some ways it sorts out his audience for him.  If you are hip enough to get past the terrible linguistic jump then you can be in the club.  Shouting painfully sexist and disempowering phrase is part of the invitation to something else with Lil B.

In the case of Lil B I just take each release on it’s own.  No reason to love or hate the artist forever.  Sometimes he’ll make a nice tune.  I know, pretty un-hip hop.  Let alone un-feminist.  In this case, we get “beat the odds,” a seemingly sincere, almost saccharine ode to hustling.

Mark my words: from Lil B riding in a sports car with Souljah Boy to riding the bus in this video.  We are going to see the return of working class images and references in hip hop.

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Filed under communication, feminism, hip hop, representation

Iran lectures the United States on human rights

Zing.  There it is.  Iranian Member of Parliament Zohre Elahian suggests that the United States be criticized for human rights violations stemming from police repression of protesters.

Elahian, who is the chairperson of the Majlis Human Rights Committee, also said that the UN Human Rights Council should address the issue of the violation of U.S. protesters’ rights.

“The scenes of the suppression of US protesters are upsetting and necessitate pursuing human rights (violations),” she said.

She went on to say that the era of U.S. claims about human rights has come to an end and the U.S. government has lost face due to the suppression of the people.

In addition, she called on the international community to condemn the use of excessive violence by the U.S. police against protesters.

via Occupy Oakland – police under scrutiny live updates | World news | guardian.co.uk.

[Although I got it from the Guardian, the original report is from the Associated Press. ]

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Welcome to Oakland #occupy wallstreet

Photo ran in the Guardian, taken by Kimihiro Hoshino/AFP/Getty Images

 

Photo credit Daryl Bush, AP, ran in the Guardian

 

photo byStephen Lam, Reuters, ran in the Guardian

 

This collection of images is pretty disturbing.  No good photos of the police/protester scraps from yesterday in US media, but the British journal has the images.  I found the same thing when I went to look for images of the crackdown on Chicago #operation wallstreet.  Lets note protesters helping each other and excessive police violence intended to communicate threats to the supportive public.  Lets also note courage, generosity and the elements of a new world being articulated.  The kind of world which disturbs corporate heads and their cop subordinates.

 

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