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March 29, 2007

A new dawn of liberalism in American culture?

A snippet of Mark Morford's deliciously twisted take on poll results indicating a resurgence of liberal thinking in America:

Among the right-wing God-lovin' set, there is often little real awareness of planetary health or resource abuse or the notion that birth control is actually a very, very good idea indeed, and therefore it's completely natural to worship at the altar of minivans and SUVs and megachurches and massive all-American entitlement and have little qualm about popping out six, seven, 19 gloopy tots to populate the world with frat boys and Ford F-150 buyers and food court managers.

Sheesh.

August 6, 2006

Can local foods catch on with large institutional food systems?

This local-foods thing is really catching on, at least here in the Bay Area. Kaiser Permanente, who runs 19 hospitals in Northern California, has decided to try a pilot program whereby they'll use local produce from farmers in Fresno County:

The results of Kaiser's experiment will answer a question vital to the future of sustainable agriculture, and to the livelihood of small farmers in California and across America:

Can an institution the size of Kaiser Permanente adopt the Chez Panisse model of buying locally and from many smaller sustainable farms — without busting the budget or bogging down its production of 5,000 to 6,000 inpatient meals every day for 19 Northern California hospitals?

If the pilot program works, Kaiser plans to expand it systemwide and also put it into place in its staff and visitor cafeterias.

This may be a watershed moment for the local foods movement. The idea is to turn the traditional distribution system on its head. The conventional food distribution system is a top-down model — large farms produce one type of food, like tomatoes, and these tomatoes get distributed to many different places. In Kaiser's bottom-up model, many small farms (many of them minority-owned, incidentally) will each send their crops to Kaiser's "big kitchen," where they will be distributed to the hospital's patients (then, if it works, to its workers and guests too).

You might think the cost would be higher, but this is where it gets interesting. Because food has become a more-or-less fungible commodity, then both Kaiser and the farms could come out ahead by opting out of the market: by choosing to buy local, Kaiser may pay more per food item, but on the other hand, doesn't have to pay for transportation from Ohio.

Plus, there is the social benefit of contributing to the local economy and reducing poverty locally.

I'm anxious to see how well this pilot program pans out! Now go read the article.

March 19, 2006

San Francisco 2006 Antiwar Protest Photos

Yesterday, I went to San Francisco and caught a glimpse of the antiwar protests that were going on there. Just to remind you, it is now the third anniversary of the beginning of the war in Iraq. The protest took place along Powell street, and I took these at the intersection of Powell and Market. These are from my Motorola camera phone, but the quality is pretty decent:

Overall it was a very peaceful rally, if not smaller than I would've expected. Nevertheless, there were a couple thousand people there by my naïve estimation. I noted just a few things:

  • It was fun. It seemed like such a party to be caught in the middle of it. It felt like everybody there was "breaking the rules" and getting away with it. It was sort of intoxicating, so I could imagine why these things would be fun to attend;
  • I was very disappointed in the protestors that had inverted American flags. I don't think this is a good way to operate, if you expect your fellow countryman to join your ranks. It would serve the protestors well by refraining from displaying anti-American sentiments, although it could be that the protestors and I fundamentally disagree on a couple things;
  • The pro-war rallyers (last photo) looked like nerdy, ignorant party poopers in relation to the antiwar crowd. At least one had a UC Berkeley College Republican shirt on, and their group displayed scary signs like "Drop bombs, not acid." They need to find themselves a new PR person, one who understands why people go to protests in the first place. Although it's probably true that conservatives, by nature, don't get protests like liberals do.

The police brigade that followed the protestors did seem a little intense, but I guess the city does have to maintain the safety of its citizens and visitors...