Archive for March, 2010

Hurdles in Thinking about Hunger- A Letter to the New York Times

By on 03/30/2010 in Uncategorized with 4 Comments

The New York Times seems quite happy to trot out the standard myths about how Africa is waiting to be tossed the left-belt of genetically modified food. Here’s a response to a piece that the paper published a little while ago, by John Collins Rudolf, that offers perhaps the only attempt we’ve seen at addressing some of the issues that Eric Holt-Gimenez, Annie Shattuck and I raised in our Nation magazine piece a few months back. Predictably, Rudolf offers no new evidence, but the triumph of this dodgy thinking succeeds not through graceful argument, coherence or evidence, but ceaseless and powerful repetition. More below the fold. Keep Reading »

Clinton on Haiti: My Bad

By on 03/24/2010 in Uncategorized with 3 Comments

At the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on 10th March, two Bills – Clinton and Gates – offered their thoughts on New Directions in Global Health. Gates was there, in part, to pitch for the Lugar-Casey Act. Clinton hasn’t left a paper trail, so I’ll be listening to the recorded hearing as I fall asleep tonight. But the Associated Press’ Jonathan Katz has already put his finger on a key admission – the bit where the President said ““I had to live every day with the consequences of the loss of capacity to produce a rice crop in Haiti to feed those people because of what I did; nobody else.” Except, um, it was a policy that Reagan had already put in place. Still, more below the fold. Keep Reading »

Rich Dad, Poor Son, Unlikely

By on 03/23/2010 in Uncategorized with 10 Comments

Rich Dad, Poor Dad was a worldwide publishing phenomenon, allowing Robert Kiyosaki to sell 26 million books packed with the insight he gained through hours of playing Monopoly. Kiyosaki, in turn, trades on and propagates the idea that, yes, you too can become a millionaire through hard work, diligence, and following the advice of your pretend rich dad. This, clearly, is bogus.

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Healthcare Barometrics

By on 03/22/2010 in Uncategorized with 1 Comment

The Congressional healthcare melodrama here in the US took another twist today, with the passage of the House version of the bill. The mediocre bill will become worse in the Senate on Tuesday. The tragedy, of course, is that single-payer healthcare was always the most sensible option. Underlying the dire need for bigger thinking is a recent report from Amnesty International, as covered by a terrific article by Michelle Chen on RaceWire, about maternal mortality rates. According to Amnesty

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Stephen and me

By on 03/17/2010 in Uncategorized with 146 Comments

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Glen Ellyn, IL

By on 02/23/2010 in Events with No Comments

Stuffed and Starved

To show how a few powerful food distributors control the health of the entire world, Raj Patel conducted a global investigation, traveling from the “green deserts” of Brazil and protester-packed streets of South Korea to bankrupt Ugandan coffee farms and barren fields in India.

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Orlando, FL

By on 02/23/2010 in Events with No Comments

Date March 4, 2010, 3:00 p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Location UCF Student Union, Key West Ballroom
Access Open Forum
Topic Stuffed and Starved: The Hidden Battle for the World Food System – more information here: http://www.ucfglobalperspectives.org/events/current/436

Menlo Park, CA

By on 01/27/2010 in Events with No Comments

Monday, March 08, 2010
7:30 PM, Reading and Signing of THE VALUE OF NOTHING
Kepler’s, 1010 El Camino Real, Menlo Park CA 94025