Saturday, 31 October 2009

Blair War Crimes Petition

hit counter scriptTo:  President of the United Nations General Assembly and the UK Attorney General
BWCF - THE BLAIR WAR CRIMES FOUNDATION

To The President of The United Nations General Assembly, H.E. Father Miguel d’Escoto Brockmann, and The Attorney General of the United Kingdom, and their successors in office.

RE ANTHONY CHARLES LYNTON BLAIR

We, the citizens of the United Kingdom and other countries listed, wish to uphold The United Nations Charter, The 1998 Rome Statute of The International Criminal Court, The Hague and Geneva Conventions and the Rule of International Law, especially in respect of:-

1: 1949 Geneva Convention IV: Article 146
The High Contracting Parties undertake to enact any legislation necessary to provide effective penal sanctions for persons committing, or ordering to be committed, any of the grave breaches of the present Convention.

2: 1907 Hague Convention IV: Article 3
A belligerent party which violates the provisions of the said regulations shall, if the case demands, be liable to pay compensation. It shall be responsible for all the acts committed by persons forming part of its armed forces.

We therefore call on you to indict Anthony Charles Lynton Blair in his capacity as recent Prime Minister of the UK, so long as he is able to answer for his actions and however long it takes, in respect of our sample complaints relating to the 2003 Iraq War waged by the UK as ally to the United States of America.

We are concerned that without justice and respect for the rule of law, the future for us and our progeny in a lawless world is bleak, as revealed by recent US declarations about the use of torture and the events of December 2008 in Gaza show.


The following are our sample complaints relating to the Iraq War 2003-2009:

1: Deceit and conspiracy for war, and providing false news to incite passions for war, causing in the order of one million deaths, 4 million refugees, countless maimings and traumas.

2: Employing radioactive ammunition causing long-term destruction of the planetary habitat.

3: Causing the breakdown of civil administration, with consequent lawlessness, especially looting, kidnapping, and violence, and consequent breakdown of womens’ rights, of religious freedom, and child and adult education.

4: Failing to maintain the medical needs of the populace.

5: Despoliation of the cultural heritage of the country.

6: Supporting an ally that employs ‘waterboarding’ and other tortures.

7: Seizing the assets of Iraq.

8: Using inhumane restraints on prisoners, including dogs, hoods, and cable ties.

9: Using Aggressive Patrolling indiscriminately, traumatising women and children and wrecking homes and property.

10: Marking bodies of prisoners with numbers, writing, faeces and other degrading treatment.

11: The use of cluster bombs and other indiscriminate weapons including white phosphorous on “shake and bake” missions.

12: Supporting indiscriminate rocket attacks from F16 fighter planes on women and children in Fallujah in Nov 2004

13: Supporting the shooting up of ambulances and medical personnel in Fallujah in Nov 2004

14: Supporting the expulsion of the entire population of Fallujah save for young men of military age, for a reprisal attack on that city in Nov 2004.

Sincerely,
The Undersigned

Wednesday, 28 October 2009

Here's how i see it...

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Corporation - large thing, private , public, big...


If you want to be free....
Never work for a corporation....
Never buy from a corporation....
Never watch the stories adverts and corporate "art"....
Then you will have the time, free of memes and mind viruses

TO have the chance to BE FREE

Pre-teen yoga

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William Waygood aged 10.. Thoughts on Supermarkets

hit counter scriptWhy don't you do what henry 8th did...

you know....

the dissollution of the monastrys...

A place for All Faiths....and none

hit counter scriptAnarchism is not a romantic fable but the hard-headed realization, based on five thousand years of experience, that we cannot entrust the management of our lives to kings, priests, politicians, generals, & county commissioners."

— Edward Abbey


"Many people say that
government is necessary
because some men cannot
be trusted to look after
themselves, but anarchists
say that government is
harmful because no men
can be trusted to look after
anyone else." -- Nicolas Walter (1924-2000)
British journalist, philosopher, atheist, anarchist.

"It is the people who will deliver us from the men who have been corrupting us, & the people themselves will win their liberty."
— Louise Michel

-- Anarchy is the expression of the liberation of man
from the idols of the state, the church, & capital;
socialism is the expression of the true & genuine
community among men, genuine because it grows
out of the individual spirit.

— Gustav Landauer

Disobedience, in the eyes of any one who has read history, is man's original virtue. It is through disobedience that progress has been made, through disobedience & through rebellion.

— Oscar Wilde, The Soul of Man Under Socialism,
in "Fortnightly Review" (London, Feb. 1891; reprinted. 1895)

A map of the world that does not include Utopia is not worth glancing at.

— Oscar Wilde

Tuesday, 27 October 2009

From CIWF

Pig Business on More4 WEBSITE

Tracy Worcester’s documentary on intensive pig farming can still be seen here on the More4 website.
Please do watch it if you haven't yet seen it yet and tell your friends and family.
Former actress, Tracy Worcester has campaigned for years for quality food, animal welfare and environmental protection. Pig Business is her four year exploration of intensive pig farming.
>Teaser trailer from YouTube

Pig Business

The documentary reveals the global impact of intensive pig farming on the welfare of animals, local communities and the environment.
Compassion in World Farming has worked with her, providing footage from an undercover investigation into pig farming in Poland.
Pig Business was televised on More 4, Tuesday 30th June 2009.
In the film, Tracy shows how intensive production systems can harm human health and the environment, and how these systems push traditional farmers out of business. She travels from the UK to the US and Poland to meet local residents who demonstrate how they have been adversely affected by the new industrial pig production methods, as well as leading politicians. Tracy also confronts industrial farming executives with her findings and argues that supermarket labelling is a unreliable guide to where pork is actually sourced from.
Lasse Bruun, Compassion in World Farming's Head of Campaigns, comments: "What you see in Tracy's Pig Business is the shocking reality of intensive farming for the animals, the people and the planet. Animals are treated like factory units and suffer under the appalling welfare standards. Compassion in World Farming believes all animals should be reared under the best conditions, and for pigs this means outdoor bred and reared."

Read More

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Sunday, 25 October 2009

From GM Watch

10 reasons why we don’t need GM foods

 
If you want to print this article as a two-sided A4 leaflet, download a PDF. Difficulty level: low. Suitable for everyone.
With the cost of food recently skyrocketing – hitting not just shoppers but the poor and hungry in the developing world – genetically modified (GM) foods are once again being promoted as the way to feed the world. But this is little short of a confidence trick. Far from needing more GM foods, there are urgent reasons why we need to ban them altogether.

 1. GM foods won’t solve the food crisis

A 2008 World Bank report concluded that increased biofuel production is the major cause of the increase in food prices.[1] GM giant Monsanto has been at the heart of the lobbying for biofuels (crops grown for fuel rather than food) — while profiting enormously from the resulting food crisis and using it as a PR opportunity to promote GM foods!
“The climate crisis was used to boost biofuels, helping to create the food crisis; and now the food crisis is being used to revive the fortunes of the GM industry.” — Daniel Howden, Africa correspondent of The Independent[2]
“The cynic in me thinks that they’re just using the current food crisis and the fuel crisis as a springboard to push GM crops back on to the public agenda. I understand why they’re doing it, but the danger is that if they’re making these claims about GM crops solving the problem of drought or feeding the world, that’s bullshit.” — Prof Denis Murphy, head of biotechnology at the University of Glamorgan in Wales[3]

2. GM crops do not increase yield potential

Despite the promises, GM has not increased the yield potential of any commercialised crops.[4] In fact, studies show that the most widely grown GM crop, GM soya, has suffered reduced yields.[5]
“Let's be clear. As of this year [2008], there are no commercialized GM crops that inherently increase yield. Similarly, there are no GM crops on the market that were engineered to resist drought, reduce fertilizer pollution or save soil. Not one.” — Dr Doug Gurian-Sherman, former biotech specialist for the US Environmental Protection Agency and former advisor on GM to the US Food and Drug Administration[6]

3. GM crops increase pesticide use

Official data shows that in the US, GM crops have produced an overall average increase, not decrease, in pesticide use compared to conventional crops.[7]
“The promise was that you could use less chemicals and produce a greater yield. But let me tell you none of this is true.” — Bill Christison, President of the US National Family Farm Coalition[8]

4. There are better ways to feed the world

A major recent UN/World Bank-sponsored report compiled by 400 scientists, and endorsed by 58 countries, concluded that GM crops have little to offer global agriculture and the challenges of poverty, hunger, and climate change, because better alternatives are available.[9]

5. Other farm technologies are more successful

Integrated Pest Management and other innovative low-input or organic methods of controlling pests and boosting yields have proven highly effective, particularly in the developing world.[10] Other plant breeding technologies, such as Marker Assisted Selection (non-GM genetic mapping), are widely expected to boost global agricultural productivity more effectively and safely than GM.[11]
“The quiet revolution is happening in gene mapping, helping us understand crops better. That is up and running and could have a far greater impact on agriculture [than GM].” — Prof John Snape, head of the department of crop genetics, John Innes Centre[12]

6. GM foods have not been shown to be safe to eat

Genetic modification is a crude and imprecise way of incorporating foreign genetic material (e.g. from viruses, bacteria) into crops, with unpredictable consequences. The resulting GM foods have undergone little rigorous and no long-term safety testing, but animal feeding tests have shown worrying health effects.[13] Only one study has been published on the direct effects on humans of eating a GM food.[14] It found unexpected effects on gut bacteria, but was never followed up.
“We are confronted with the most powerful technology the world has ever known, and it is being rapidly deployed with almost no thought whatsoever to its consequences.” — Dr Suzanne Wuerthele, US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) toxicologist

7. Stealth GMOs in animal feed — without consumers’ consent

Meat, eggs and dairy products from animals raised on the millions of tons of GM feed imported into Europe do not have to be labelled. Studies have shown that if GM crops are fed to animals, GM material can appear in the resulting products.[15] As GM foods have been shown to affect animals’ health, eating such “stealth GMOs” may affect the health of consumers.

8. No one is monitoring the impact of GM foods on health

It is claimed that Americans have eaten GM foods for years with no ill effects. But these foods are unlabeled in the US and no one has monitored the consequences. With other novel foods like trans fats, it has taken decades to realize that they have caused millions of premature deaths.[16]

9. GM and non-GM cannot co-exist

GM contamination of conventional and organic food is increasing. An unapproved GM rice that was grown for only one year in field trials was found to have extensively contaminated the US rice supply and seed stocks.[17] In Canada, the organic oilseed rape industry has been destroyed by contamination from GM rape.[18] In Spain, a study found that GM maize “has caused a drastic reduction in organic cultivations of this grain and is making their coexistence practically impossible”.[19]
The time has come to choose between a GM-based, or a non-GM-based, world food supply.
“If some people are allowed to choose to grow, sell and consume GM foods, soon nobody will be able to choose food, or a biosphere, free of GM. It’s a one way choice, like the introduction of rabbits or cane toads to Australia; once it’s made, it can’t be reversed.” — Roger Levett, specialist in sustainable development[20]

10. We can’t trust GM companies

The big biotech firms pushing their GM foods have a terrible history of toxic contamination and public deception.[21] GM is attractive to them because it gives them patents that allow monopoly control over the world’s food supply. They have taken to harassing and intimidating farmers for the "crime" of saving patented seed or "stealing" patented genes — even if those genes got into the farmer’s fields through accidental contamination by wind or insects.[22]
“Farmers are being sued for having GMOs on their property that they did not buy, do not want, will not use and cannot sell.” — Tom Wiley, North Dakota farmer[23]
If you want to print this article as a leaflet, download a PDF.
Notes
1. “A Note on Rising Food Prices”, Donald Mitchell, World Bank report, 2008.
2. “Hope for Africa lies in political reforms”, Daniel Howden, The Independent, 8 September 2008, accessed September 2008
3. “GM: it’s safe, but it’s not a saviour”, Rob Lyons, Spiked Online, 7 July 2008, accessed October 2008
4. “The adoption of bioengineered crops”, US Department of Agriculture Report, May 2002
5. “Glyphosate-resistant soyabean cultivar yields compared with sister lines”, Elmore, R.W. et al., Agronomy Journal, Vol. 93, No. 2, 2001, pp. 408–412
6. “Genetic engineering – a crop of hyperbole”, Doug Gurian-Sherman, The San Diego Union Tribune, 18 June 2008, accessed September 2008
7. “Genetically engineered crops and pesticide use in the United States: The first nine years”, Benbrook, C., BioTech InfoNet, Technical Paper No. 7, October 2004; “Agricultural Pesticide Use in US Agriculture”, Center for Food Safety, May 2008, using data from US Department of Agriculture
8. “Family Farmers Warn of Dangers of Genetically Engineered Crops”, Bill Christison, In Motion magazine, 29 July 1998, accessed October 2008
9. “International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development: Global Summary for Decision Makers (IAASTD)”, Beintema, N. et al., 2008; accessed October 2008
10. See, for example: “International Assessment of Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development: Global Summary for Decision Makers (IAASTD)”, Beintema, N. et al., 2008, accessed October 2008; “Feeding the world?”, J. N. Pretty, SPLICE (magazine of the Genetics Forum), Vol. 4, Issue 6, August/September 1998; “Organic agriculture and food security in Africa”, United Nations report, 2008, accessed October 2008
11. “Marker-assisted selection: an approach for precision plant breeding in the twenty-first century”, Collard, B.C.Y. and D.J. Mackill, Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B, Vol. 363, 2008, pp. 557-572, 2008; “Breeding for abiotic stresses for sustainable agriculture”, Witcombe J.R. et al., Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B, 2008, Vol. 363, pp. 703-716
12. “Gene mapping the friendly face of GM technology”, Professor John Snape, Farmers Weekly, 1 March 2002, p. 54
13. Here is just a small selection of these papers: “Genetically modified soya leads to the decrease of weight and high mortality rate of rat pups of the first generation”, Ermakova I.V., EcosInform, Vol. 1, 2006, pp. 4-9; “Fine structural analysis of pancreatic acinar cell nuclei from mice fed on GM soybean”, Malatesta, M. et al., Eur. J. Histochem., Vol. 47, 2003, pp. 385–388; “Ultrastructural morphometrical and immunocytochemical analyses of hepatocyte nuclei from mice fed on genetically modified soybean”, Malatesta, M. et al., Cell Struct Funct., Vol. 27, 2002, pp. 173-180; “Ultrastructural analysis of testes from mice fed on genetically modified soybean”, Vecchio L. et al., Eur. J. Histochem., Vol. 48, pp. 448-454, 2004; “A long-term study on female mice fed on a genetically modified soybean: effects on liver ageing”, Malatesta M. et al., Histochem Cell Biol., Vol. 130, 2008, pp. 967-977; “Effects of diets containing genetically modified potatoes expressing Galanthus nivalis lectin on rat small intestine”, Ewen S.W. and A. Pusztai, The Lancet, Vol. 354, 1999, pp. 1353–1354; “New Analysis of a Rat Feeding Study with a Genetically Modified Maize Reveals Signs of Hepatorenal Toxicity”, Séralini, G.-E. et al., Arch. Environ. Contam. Toxicol., Vol. 52, 2007, pp. 596-602.
14. “Assessing the survival of transgenic plant DNA in the human gastrointestinal tract”, Netherwood T. et al., Nature Biotechnology, Vol. 22, 2004, pp. 204–209.
15. “Detection of Transgenic and Endogenous Plant DNA in Digesta and Tissues of Sheep and Pigs Fed Roundup Ready Canola Meal”, Sharma, R. et al., J. Agric. Food Chem., Vol. 54, No. 5, 2006, pp. 1699–1709; “Assessing the transfer of genetically modified DNA from feed to animal tissues”, Mazza, R. et al., Transgenic Res., Vol. 14, No. 5, 2005, pp. 775–784; “Detection of genetically modified DNA sequences in milk from the Italian market”, Agodi, A., et al., Int. J. Hyg. Environ. Health, Vol. 209, 2006, pp. 81–88
16. “Trans Fats: The story behind the label”, Paula Hartman Cohen, Harvard Public Health Review, 2006, accessed October 2008
17. “Risky business: Economic and regulatory impacts from the unintended release of genetically engineered rice varieties into the rice merchandising system of the US”, Blue, Dr E. Neal, report for Greenpeace, 2007, accessed October 2008
18. “Seeds of doubt: North American farmers’ experience of GM crops”, Soil Association, 2002, accessed September 2008
19. “Coexistence of plants and coexistence of farmers: Is an individual choice possible?”, Binimelis, R., Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Ethics, Vol. 21, No. 2, April 2008
20. "Choice: Less can be more", Roger Levett, Food Ethics magazine, Vol. 3, No. 3, Autumn 2008, p.11, accessed October 2008
21. See, for example, Marie-Monique Robin’s documentary film, “Le Monde Selon Monsanto” (“The World According to Monsanto”), ARTE, 2008; and the website of the NGO, Coalition Against Bayer-Dangers
22. GM company Monsanto has launched many such lawsuits launched against farmers. A famous example is the case of the Canadian farmer Percy Schmeiser. Just one article on this case is “GM firm sues Canadian farmer”, BBC News Online, 6 June 2000, accessed October 2008
23. “Monsanto ”Seed Police” Scrutinize Farmers”, Stephen Leahy, InterPress Service, 15 January 2004, accessed October 2008
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Friday, 23 October 2009

GMO's on their march - From Farmers Guardian

A major new report from the Royal Society, an independent academy of scientists, has called for a £2 billion ‘Grand Challenge’ research programme on global food security – and it said GM was a top priority.
The Society, a respected national academy, said policy makers must allow farmers to adopt GM technology to increase crop yields sustainably.
“Where GM has been proved effective at either increasing yields or else resistant to diseases it should be used in the UK,” said Professor Ian Crute, one of the report’s authors.
Prof Crute said GM crops would need to be looked at on a case-by-case basis however, and that they were not the only solution to world hunger.
The Royal Society report ‘Reaping the benefits: Science and the sustainable intensification of global agriculture’ examined the current and predicted threats to food-crop production, the contribution that science and technology can make to future food security, and the likely consequences and impacts of the technologies discussed.
Professor Sir David Baulcombe FRS, who chaired the Royal Society’s study, said: “We need to take action now to stave off food shortages. If we wait even five to ten years, it may be too late.
“Biological science has progressed in leaps and bounds in the last decade and UK scientists have been at the head of the pack when it comes to topics related to food crops.
“In the UK we have the potential to come up with viable scientific solutions for feeding a growing population and we have a responsibility to realise this potential.
“There’s a very clear need for policy action and publicly-funded science to make sure this happens.”
However, the year-long study has received a strong backlash from anti-GM campaigners.
Emma Hockridge, Soil Association policy coordinator, said GM technology did not offer the benefits it often promised. “For over two decades huge claims have been made about the potential for GM, which have not come to fruition.”
Instead she said Marker Assisted Selection, which was also included in the report’s recommendations, was producing almost all of the successful innovations in crop breeding. She added other farming systems could provide food security.
“Scientific evidence proves that low input systems, such as organic, can provide sustainable solutions to food security,” she said.

Readers' comments (3)

  • When are we in the EU going to admit that the rest of the world is moving on without us. Organic farming will never feed the world's rapidly expanding population. GM may not be the only answer, but it is certainly a significant part of the answer, and to pretend otherwise is ostrich-like behaviour. Fine, let's ban GM in Europe and pretend it never happened - but try explaining to your average African farmer why his family should starve to satisfy the esoteric whims of misguided refuseniks with full stomachs...
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  • The average African farmer would be well able to feed his family, had he access to adequate water for crop irrigation. Selling him GM seeds- which he will have to purchase every year from the big multinational seed companies, like Monsanto, rather than save his own- will only put him in debt. Reference the suicides of Indian farmers over just this issue.

Thursday, 22 October 2009

From the Independent

Outrage at plans for secret inquests

Plans to introduce secret inquiries into controversial deaths from which the public and bereaved families could be banned are to be pushed through the House of Commons by the Government.

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Wednesday, 21 October 2009

More Jaw Jaw

hit counter scriptWednesday, 21 October 2009
Facebook!
State Secretary Hilary Benn today launched a task force to boost the domestic consumption and production of fruit and vegetables in the UK. The task force will be comprised of growers, retailers, consumers and agricultural researchers and will develop an action plan to get the UK growing.
Read more... [New Government Taskforce]

Sunday, 18 October 2009

Noam Chomsky: Big Business Dictates the Presidency

hit counter script"Campaign funding is a remarkable predictor of election, and also of policy," says linguist and political activist Noam Chomsky. He asserts that the Supreme Court is currently considering a lawsuit that would allow corporations to "buy elections directly, instead of indirectly."

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World-renowned intellectual Noam Chomsky has been pushing change in language, politics and culture for decades. The controversial expert on modern language explains why "the smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum." - Commonwealth Club of California

Noam Chomsky, a professor of linguistics and philosophy at MIT, is the author of numerous books on U.S. foreign policy, including American Power and the New Mandarins, Political Economy of Human Rights (two volumes, written with Edward Herman), Fateful Triangle: The United States, Israel, and the Palestinians, and Pirates and Emperors, Old and New: International Terrorism in the Real World. His most recent books are Failed States and Perilous Power.

Prof. Noam Chomsky on American goal in Afghanistan and Pakistan

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Swati's First Video

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Friday, 16 October 2009

A Better Life ... for less

 Cancel Sky, Avoid Adverts and Junk information, Get Rid of the TV (watch on internet advert free)

Sunday, 11 October 2009

A turbulent priest -

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"I know some people call me a crank. But its worth remembering that a crank is used by engineers to create revolutions" John Papworth

Friday, 9 October 2009

Future of Food - A few ideas for DEFRA ministers to come

hit counter scriptI think all can agree that there is plenty of land to produce abundant food for our population, probably we need more fruit and veg and less arable, pigs and poultry, mixed farming and a lot more labour and a lot less fossil fuel. It is biologically possible. In terms of distribution I don't see the problem with retailing in cities and towns without centralised distribution and the current unsustainable centralised system. Apparently a huge amount of the carbon involved in food production is people driving to the supermarket. A more effective use of fossil fuels would be smaller multiple outlets where people do not need to drive, or of course delivery.

The current corporate statist centralised system, with a handful of major "monopoly" retailers (local and national) is a long way from true conservative principles, or the principles of freedom and free trade outlined by people like Ben Franklin and Adam Smith and is certainly unsustainable from an environment point of view. A free and fair market, and a market that works for the good of people, leaves the land better for the next generation is the responsibility of government.

The negative externalities of the existing system are huge...... Pretty et al. (2000), for example, estimated the total external environmental costs of agriculture in the UK was £2.3 billion in 1996. The cost in terms of water pollution of nitrate fertiliser on which our agriculture now depends is huge - if applied to the industry by a nitrate tax it could be as large as total farm profits. The balance sheet over the past 20 years if you take in the cost of BSE, Foot and Mouth etc are huge sums coming from the public purse. Then of course there are the single farm payment costs. ..

At the moment with the total profits of UK agriculture less than £2billion a year for the past 10 years the current systems is unsustainable financially as much as it clearly is environmentally and socially ( see farmer suicide rate data). Therefore the industry is not and cannot pay its way.To say its broken and mad is a record that's been playing and been obvious to rational observers since Sir Richard Body wrote about it in the early 1980's. Policy and common sense have rarely been acquainted since 1947.

But its the supermarkets that are the issue. Yes people in towns and cities will want to buy food at retail outlets that is convenient - btw 50% of consumption is restaurants and catering - but I think the brave thing to do would be to break up the monopoly buying power of the supermarkets into many small local players to get a true free and fair market.

Clearly therefore the current financial and economics are unsustainable, therefore even without social and environmental good, an agri-ecological model of food and farming is the logical place to start. With an even, and "public" good playing field it would be the only game in town.

The answers are all there, its just a matter of incentives and regulation being used to create a sustainable food system and restore our "green and pleasant" land.

Tuesday, 6 October 2009

The New Agrarian

Untitled Document

The New Agrarian

Volume one, 21st September 2009
"The farmer is the only man in our economy who buys everything at retail, sells everything at wholesale, and pays the freight both ways." - JFK
Welcome to the first edition of The New Agrarian – a newsletter updating you on what's happening and what's planned with the development of the Agrarian Renaissance.
The newsletter is arranged in five sections, described in the contents below, and you can navigate through it using the linked headings.
Forging the Renaissance – what's been happening towards building the Agrarian Renaissance movement
Down at Church Farm – all the news from the Agrarian Renaissance pilot project, Church Farm
What's Coming Up – events on and off Church Farm, and the main things we're currently working towards
What We've Noticed – Renaissance-related things that have caught our attention in the wider world
How You Can Help – if we're going to change food and farming, then we must do it ourselves... together...
We've presumed to include you on the distribution list because we've had some contact with you over the last year and a half and we thought you might be interested. If you'd like to be taken off please reply to this email with “unsubscribe” as the subject. If, on the other hand, we've missed someone or you know someone else who wants to be on the list, please let us know (including their email address).
www.agrarianrenaissance.co.uk [currently a holding page – full site coming soon]

Forging the Renaissance

By the people, for the people
Agrarian Renaissance is now officially registered as an Industrial Provident Society (IPS). This is a fully democratic, one member one vote legal structure. We will soon be opening up membership so that anyone can join and own a share in the movement that will help them create their own future. An IPS is run by a management committee. Tim Waygood, Joy Duffen, Robert Marsden and Sam Henderson currently make up that committee. Any proposition put before the committee must be passed by a majority vote. Members can initiate propositions, and are also able to run for election to the committee at the AGM (or initiate a vote of no confidence in any member of the committee at any time!) We're glad to have taken the time to find a structure that can truly serve all those who want to be part of the Agrarian Renaissance. Expect more on becoming a member soon!
The New Agrarians
On June 4th, a core group of individuals committed to make the Agrarian Renaissance happen met at Church Farm. It was an inspiring day and we're truly honoured to work with a group of individuals that shares so many talents, complementary specialisms, achievements and “sometimes contrasting cosmologies”. We believe we now have the basis of a movement with true diversity that can achieve real change. These New Agrarians have agreed to contribute their efforts and expertise in return for “Sweat Equity”, earning their share in the movement. Here's to them!
Policy Foresight Symposium
Sir Crispin Tickell's Policy Foresight Programme hosted a symposium on July 2nd entitled “An Agrarian Renaissance?”. Tim presented all that has been achieved at Church Farm and laid out a vision of how we can radically transform food and farming. Of the New Agrarians, Colin and Ruth Tudge were instrumental in arranging the day, and Colin did a masterly job of holding both the Government Chief Scientist and the Defra Chief Scientist to account, while Professor Martin Wolfe presented his pioneering work on agroforestry and growing grain in populations rather than prone monocultures. You can find the symposium report here: http://www.21school.ox.ac.uk/news_and_events/news/archive.cfm/2009/an-agrarian-renaissance
FARM in Transition
We're delighted to have made contact with John Turner and Sir Julian Rose of FARM – a fantastic organisation set up to fight for proper farmers and farming in the wake of the foot and mouth tragedy. After initial meetings (including one at Julian's Hardwick Estate – one of the first organic farms in the country and a truly inspiring place) we are working towards a shared plan to offer Transition Towns and other communities working towards a post-carbon future easy and accessible opportunities to engage with farmers. Sourcing our food, fuel and fibre from the land that surrounds us means real progress towards a genuinely more resilient and satisfying way of life, as well as new possibilities for those who work that land. It's also worth checking out the work Julian has been doing with his partner Jadwiga Lopata to defend Poland's traditional systems of food and farming, which are under serious threat from corporate and European “improvers” - http://www.icppc.pl/eng/index.php
Visit from the Shadow Minister
Oliver Heald, the local MP, and Jim Paice, the Shadow Defra Minister, paid a visit to Church Farm to see for themselves how we can create new food and farming systems that don't cost the earth and just happen to also be happier, healthier and generally better in every way for all those involved. Since then the New Agrarians have swung into action, providing the honourable members with a memo and accompanying papers, and inviting an ongoing and serious dialogue with the Agrarian Renaissance. You can see Oliver's report of the visit here: http://www.oliverhealdmp.com/newsshow.aspx?id=10&ref=224

Down at Church Farm

Store and café and veg box
It's been a busy summer, and Church Farm now proudly boasts a farm shop and accompanying cafe, open 8 til 8 every day. The café's menu is made up almost entirely of food off the farm, and everything that's produced can be bought in the “village store”, along with all the other essentials you might need, sourced exclusively from local producers and ethical wholesalers. The first veg box subscribers are now being signed up, and there will soon be a mobile shop taking fresh produce direct from the farmer to local population centres in an ex-Tesco delivery van (at least they're good for something!).
Interns and experts
The three elements of the farm – horticulture, livestock and Rural Care – are now being managed by teaching experts, ably assisted by an enthusiastic posse of “interns”. The interns are provided with food, accommodation, a weekly honorarium and a wealth of experience and knowledge, in return for their interest, engagement and hard work. This looks like becoming a fantastic way of working, whereby the farm benefits from the dedication of people who really care while actively equipping them to go out and start new enterprises.
Rural Care's college contract
Rural Care continues to go from strength to strength, and now welcomes at least five co-farmers on site every day of the week, having recently signed a new contract with a local college specialising in clients with severe and complex needs. A special mention should also go to Gareth, who's now a fully paid-up employee of the farm café.
Furry Friends and a Forest Garden
The farm's events and education programme is developing quickly. A Summer Camp provided fun on the farm and top-notch child care for local kids over the holidays, and the annual Bank Holiday Bash was a brilliant success. Highlights coming up include Bat Walks (and, we hope, a bit of Badger Spotting at the set by Great Field), and a six week forest gardening course which will end up with a new forest garden in Beards Oak and a host of local enthusiasts tooled up to go forth and plant their own.
Beauty and the Beast
The subtitle's probably a bit of a stretch, but it's too good to refuse – Church Farm is now hosting a local, affordable mechanic and a full, ethical beautician service. We're on our way to proving that farms can, and should, do much more than growing food (let alone manufacturing commodities). Our farms must be the bustling, thriving centres of an agrarian future – the renaissance starts here.

What's Coming Up

Signing up pioneer members
In the coming weeks, once we're sure we have all the necessary systems in place, we'll be opening up to invite the first pioneer members of the Agrarian Renaissance. Get ready to sign yourself up and encourage others to join. It will be the Agrarian Renaissance Pioneers who truly build and shape the movement, leading up to a full launch in May next year.
Low Carbon Communities Network conference
By the time you're reading this, a delegation of New Agrarians will have hosted a workshop at the Low Carbon Communities Network's annual conference, leading a discussion on how Low Carbon Communities can play a part in the Agrarian Renaissance by engaging with local farmers and starting up their very own farm.
Transition Farming Conference
On November 10th in Exeter, Agrarian Renaissance will take the platform at the Royal Agricultural College's Transition Farming event to talk about 'Transition Pathways: creating viable, resilient, food and farming enterprises' and will be running a workshop in the afternoon to draw up viable transition pathways using real examples provided by farmers in the audience. You can book a place here: http://www.rac.ac.uk/?_id=3342
The Rise of Real Bread
A fantastic conference, subtitled “changing Britain's daily loaf”, will be held in Oxford on November 14th. A lunch time workshop will form the basis of work to produce one of the Agrarian Renaissance's first replicable systems – how to set up and run a community bakery from start to finish, through growing, harvesting and milling grain to baking and delivery. You can book a place here: http://www.landshare.org/events/index.php
What We've Noticed
Government food strategy
The government's Low Carbon Transition Plan is certainly interesting reading, and it's good to see food and farming at least getting a mention. Take a look at the response on Colin's blog http://campaignforrealfarming.blogspot.com/2009/08/anticipating-government.html
Can Totnes Feed Itself
Totnes, the first UK transition town, has produced a paper asking whether the town and surrounding district can feed itself. This adds to the work already done by Simon Fairlie and others on a national scale, and the report East Anglia Food Links has produced asking the same question of Norwich. It's a tricky question to answer, and can't be separated from asking should we feed ourselves (again, there's another brilliant blog post from Colin on the subject http://campaignforrealfarming.blogspot.com/2009/06/can-britian-feed-itself-should-britain.html). Here's hoping the conversations continue, and that the Agrarian Renaissance can help find the answer and make it happen.
The ongoing Biochar saga
Biochar, or Terra Preta, was a brilliant and appropriate technology used throughout the Amazon basin for centuries. Intuitively, it should have massive potential as an on-farm system to help use waste to improve soil, producing usable fertility and energy at the same time (and locking up carbon as it goes). But it now risks becoming the next non-solution in the race to find a fix-all. Plans to create massive plants to process huge amounts of specially grown crops, with the sole aim of sequestering carbon to be traded on global markets (and, maybe, improving a bit of soil on the side) make a nonsense of all that could have been good about this recent rediscovery. Current technology is, at best, 50% efficient, meaning half the carbon is pumped straight into the atmosphere (which is about the worst thing we could do for the climate). The technology's “commercial potential” risks creating a reason to clear-fell forests and replace them with plantations which is only matched by biofuels, soya and palm oil. Finally, emerging evidence suggests that such a cack-handed intervention in the carbon cycle risks depleting oxygen far quicker than it might sequester carbon, and that would mean real disaster as the living plants that really do lock up carbon would find it ever harder to grow.
StroudCo's food hub
This autumn will see the launch of a new food hub in Stroud. Owned by producers and consumers, and not-for-profit, it will allow local people to order food for collection from wholesalers and local producers. Producers will enter what's available when, and then pick and deliver to order, so it should be great for local farmers as well as new entrants and smaller scale producers. Loads of work has gone into it, and they've developed some clever systems and software, which they're eager to share with any other communities that think a new food hub might be their thing. It's fantastic work and exactly the kind of system the Agrarian Renaissance hopes to help develop, propagate and make happen!

How You Can Help

Become a New Agrarian
If you're interested in becoming more involved in the Agrarian Renaissance, and even in contributing your sweat equity to get things really moving, please contact Tim Waygood (tim.waygood@agrarianrenaissance.co.uk) or Sam Henderson (sam.henderson@agrarianrenaissance.co.uk)
Keep a look out and sign up
Details on becoming an Agrarian Renaissance Pioneer will be coming soon. Get ready to sign up and tell your friends, colleagues, associates, rabbits and relations...

Monday, 5 October 2009

From the Soil Association - News



"Putting Syngenta in charge of UK research into the causes of honeybee deaths is arguably the equivalent of putting the tobacco companies in charge of research into lung cancer."
Graham White, a beekeeper and environmental author, commenting on Syngenta funding research into the disappearance of honeybees, The Herald, 4 October 2009


Monty Don calls on gardeners to down spades and let nature take its course
Soil Association president, garden writer and television presenter Monty Don has called on gardeners to stop their diligent digging and weeding in favour of letting nature take its course…His comments come as scientific research revealed that the average British garden often contains more wildlife than the countryside, which has been stripped of life by intensive farming.
Daily Telegraph (3 Oct, p.7)

'I've had it with conventional gardening'
The thinking woman's pin-up, writer and former TV presenter Monty Don reveals his a change of heart. “Fighting nature is a losing battle,” he says, “whether you are growing wheat or wisteria.” Cassandra Jardine reports: ‘This comes as a shock, not least because Monty spent years at the BBC’s Berryfields garden preaching about how to keep down weeds or divide irises. His new role as president of the Soil Association was bound to reinforce any eco-leanings, but his obsession with getting things precisely right was never just a pose. That much is evident from every page of his new book, The Ivington Diaries…’
Daily Telegraph Gardening (3 Oct, G.1-3)

My secret life: Monty Don
The Independent Magazine (3 Oct, p.7)

Beekeepers tell pesticide firm to buzz off
One of the world’s biggest pesticide companies, Syngenta, has been accused of a “howling conflict of interest” for funding research into the disappearance of honeybees – a problem which some people claim it may have helped cause. Syngenta, based in Basel, Switzerland, last year clocked up £7.3 billion worth of sales in more than 90 countries. Among the products it markets to farmers are insecticides which have been blamed for harming honeybees. It now also co-funds a £1m project in the UK, announced last week, to research the decline of the bees…A film due to open in cinemas this week highlights the global plight of the honeybee and argues that insecticides are partly to blame. Called Vanishing Of The Bees, it is backed by the Co-operative retail group, which has a strict policy on the use of pesticides on the fruit and vegetables it sells, including a total ban on the use of several chemicals… A coalition of environmental groups has launched a campaign for a ban on neonicotinoids in the UK. The group includes the Soil Association, which certifies organic food. Its Scottish director, Hugh Raven, said Syngenta had made its position clear by opposing a ban on neonicotinoids: “The taint of commercial interest has undermined this research before it’s even started.”
The Herald (4 Oct)

Would David Cameron be green in government?
David Cameron has insisted that the environment features strongly in preparations for power, says Geoffrey Lean.
Daily Telegraph (3 Oct, p.22)

No truth in 'mischievous' bird life reports
Organic Farming's supporters have slammed ‘mischievous and misleading' newspaper reports alleging that some farmland birds winter less well on farms managed to organic guidelines. The story, first carried in The Times newspaper - but reproduced in The Scottish Farmer 19 Sept - alleged that organic doctrine required farmers to plough in their arable fields before winter, denying several bird species the winter feed offered by spilled grain in stubble. Furious organic farmers wasted no time in contacting The Scottish Farmer to point out that the exact opposite is true - organic farmers traditionally undersow and leave their stubbles in place - and that whoever was propagating the story had brazenly turned the facts on their heads.
Soil Association Scotland director Hugh Raven condemned the story as 'seriously misleading', and pointed out that it was recognised scientific fact - backed up by exhaustive research - that organic systems encouraged all types of wildlife: “The benefits of organic farming for biodiversity are well-known, and recognised in the Scottish Government's support for organic farming.”
Scottish Farmer (3 Oct)

Hunger for biofuels will gobble up wheat surplus
Britain’s self-sufficiency in wheat will end next year, because a giant new biofuel refinery needs so much of the staple crop that home-grown supplies will be exhausted feeding both the factory and the nation.

Environmental campaigners have voiced concern about the planned biofuel plant. A spokesman for Friends of the Earth said that the organisation was opposed to the use of biofuels in petrol. “Using wheat for fuel involves the displacement of agricultural land used for food production. At the end of that displacement chain you need to create new farmland and that usually means cutting down forests.”
The Times (5 Oct, p.43)

United we stand, divided costs more
The past few years have seen a surge in the number of co-operatives formed by small firms and sole traders with the aim of improving their performance — by cutting overheads, boosting purchasing power and strengthening their hand in negotiating contracts. Known as co-operative consortia, they work in the same egalitarian way as other co-ops, such as housing and community groups, with all members sharing the benefits, but the emphasis is squarely on the bottom line. In North York Moors National Park, seven hill farmers have joined forces to gain greater negotiating power when selling their traditionally reared lamb to Asda. The co-op — called, Seven Hill Farmers — began supplying 300 lambs a week to 32 Asda stores last month.
The Sunday Times (4 Oct, p.11)
Click here to find out more about food buying groups and community supported agriculture.

The great drought: Disaster looms in East Africa
Rotting carcasses testify to the scale of the disaster looming in East Africa.
Daniel Howden reports from Marsabit, Kenya where an extraordinary drought is drying up rivers, and grasslands, scorching crops and threatening millions of people with starvation.
The Independent (3 October, pp.4-5)

Sauvignon blanc comes to Britain
A winery is to plant Britain’s first commercial sauvignon blanc grapes in potentially the clearest demonstration yet of how climate change could transform the countryside and agriculture.
The Sunday Times (Oct 4, p.11)
England’s winemakers enjoy bumper crop
The Independent (Oct 3, p. 23)

Homer Simpson to teach us healthy living
The Department of Health is to sponsor episodes of The Simpsons in an attempt to improve the nation’s diet and increase exercise levels.
The Sunday Times (4 Oct, p.7)

Will compost bins bring ecological salvation?
How can we reduce the estimated 4.1m tonnes of food which goes to landfill every year in Britain? Lucy Siegle on the return of the slop bucket.
The Observer Magazine (4 Oct, p.65)

Farming Today
Website summary:It is conker season, but children may be disappointed this year as horse chestnut trees face a little invader with big consequences. Charlotte Smith finds out what is being done to control the rapid spread of 'leaf miner'. Also, Charlotte asks whether NIMBYS (Not In My Back Yard) are friend or foe of the countryside.
BBC Radio 4, listen again (5 Oct)

And finally...
Nudes take root in vineyard
Naked volunteers pose for Spencer Tunick in a vineyard in Fuisse, Burgundy. The US photographer, best known for his installations that feature large numbers of nude people in unorthodox settings and artistic formations, held the session for a Greenpeace campaign highlighting climate change.
The Guardian (5 Oct, p.25)