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Greg Brown's Weekend Reading and Other Things.... 07/13/2014
Sun, 13 Jul 2014 01:09:04 +0000
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DEAR FRIEND
I had heard of Dr. Vandana Shiva but never paid much attention and only remembered her because
of tilaka on her forehead and her distinctive Indian manner of dress. Then earlier this week I came
across an article — The Surprising Leading Contributor to Pollution: Agriculture - by Dr.
Joseph Mercola who on first glance looked like a huckster of Indian organic herbal supplements.
Except that on this blog he had a web link to a talk that Dr. Vandana Shiva gave earlier this year at
the Food Otherwise conference in the Netherlands on why we need another food system another
agriculture system. As background to my reading/research for interesting items to cover on Weekly
Offerings, I let it play. Dr. Vandana Shiva's premise is that we need another food system because the
current one was never meant to be — "every tool of the current system was designed for war."
WOW
"Pesticides were designed for the concentration camps. The early generation. Then they
were designed for biological warfare and chemical warfare. " WOW again. And she continued,
that it was only after the wrap-up of the War that some of these same war industries transformed
themselves into an agro-chemical industry.
Background: The first synthetic fertilizers were made in the same explosive factories. And this is
why the next time that you read about a terrorist attack, whether it be Afghanistan, India, Nairobi or
Oklahoma chances are it will be a fertilizer bomb. These are weapons of war and they are also toxics
and poisons. And Dr. Vandana Shiva says that we need a food system without poisons. If there is a
single pesticide almost everyone can name, ifs DDT. DDT was one of the first chemicals in widespread
use as a pesticide. Following World War II, it was promoted as a wonder-chemical, the simple solution
to pest problems large and small. Today, nearly 4o years after DDT was banned in the U.S., we
continue to live with its long-lasting effects:
•
Food supplies: USDA found DDT breakdown products in 60% of heavy cream samples,
42% of kale greens, 28% of carrots and lower percentages of many other foods.
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•
Body burden: DDT breakdown products were found in the blood of 99% of the people
tested by CDC.
•
Health impacts: Girls exposed to DDT before puberty are 5 times more likely to develop
breast cancer in middle age, according to the President's Cancer panel.
Banned for agricultural uses worldwide by the 2001 Stockholm Convention on Persistent
Organic Pollutants, the use of DDT is still permitted in small quantities in countries that claim that
they need it. The treatment of DDT under the Stockholm Convention is strongly supported around the
world.
Rachel Carson highlighted the dangers of DDT in her groundbreaking 1962 book Silent Spring.
Carson used DDT to tell the broader story of the disastrous consequences of the overuse of
insecticides, and raised enough concern from her testimony before Congress to trigger the
establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Her work attracted outrage from the
pesticide industry and others. Her credibility as a scientist was attacked, and she was derided as
"hystericalfdespite her fact-based assertions and calm and scholarly demeanor. Following the
hearings, President Kennedy convened a committee to review the evidence Carson presented. The
committee's review completely vindicating her findings.
One of the new EPA's first acts was to ban DDT, due to both concerns about harm to the environment
and the potential for harm to human health. There was also evidence linking DDT with severe declines
in bald eagle populations due to thinning eggshells. Since DDT was banned in the U.S., bald eagles
have made a dramatic recovery.
Recently, Carson's work has again been targeted by conservative groups. Capitalizing on the iconic
status of DDT, these groups are promoting widespread use of the chemical for malaria control as part
of a broader effort to manufacture doubt about the dangers of pesticides, and to promote their anti-
regulatory, free market agenda while attempting to undermine and roll back the environmental
movement's legacy.
Many DDT promoters are also in the business of denying climate change. Attacks on Carson from
groups like The Competitive Enterprise Institute and Africa Fighting Malaria portray DDT as the
simple solution to malaria, and blame Carson for "millions of deaths in Africa." Many of these DDT
promoters are also in the business of denying climate change and defended the tobacco industry by
denying the health harms of smoking.
Today, the agro-chemical industry is unleashing more than 6000 untested chemicals every year. We
should understand that the agro-chemical industry for the most part controls government through its
lobbying, the media through it PR and advertising and university research through its grant programs.
Dr. Vandana Shiva and others say that we can't afford the continuation of these toxics.
As importantly, an agro system designed from inputs that came from war can only function as a mono-
culture. If all that I am thinking about is the nitrogen, phosphorus and potassium we will only grow
crops that can deal with these fixed doses. Whereas if I am growing a corn and a bean, the bean is
fixing nitrogen for me and the two can grow together. As soon as you apply synthetic fertilizers plants
start to compete. In India farmers have been growing pigeon pea and ragi plants as companions for
centuries. The ragi gives you the calcium and iron and the fiber and the pigeon pea give you the
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protein and nitrogen to the soil. And when you use synthetic fertilizers only one crop will do well
because it doesn't allow the cooperation of the soil and the cooperation of the plant to play their
natural roles. Every living system is a self-organizing system. And this is what makes living systems
living. And when anything is self-organized it is based on cooperation. Whereas, any system that is
externally organized must become competitive. And this applies to external input systems in
agriculture and it applies to external inputs in society.
Industrial agriculture is destroying nature's gifts of soil and biodiversity water and even the air and the
climate. Agriculture is water intensive. 70% of water used today globally is for irrigation/agriculture
except that today more and more of the water table is polluted with nitrates creating dead zones in
rivers water bodies and even our oceans. Those momo-cultures based on toxics are destroying
biodiversity both by displacing crops and their varieties and species. We use to eat 8500 species of
plants as human beans. 2000 varieties of rice, 1500 varieties of mangos and more than 1500 varieties
of wheat. Experts estimate that 75% of biodiversity has disappeared in agriculture because of mono-
culture. And we are no our way to 90% as Argentina and the Brazilian Amazon is being destroyed at a
un precedent rate. And chemical sprays destroy more and it is suggested that the recent 75%
destruction of the bee colonies is also part of the collateral damage. The spring of round-up for round-
up ready crops is killing the milkweed which support the monarch butterflies and pollen off Bt-corn is
killing monarch butterfly larvae. So it is not a surprise that 75% of the monarch butterflies are gone
from the Midwest as they have migrated to Mexico. Animals is the same. And trees don't exist in
industrial agriculture. Because with chemicals and largest scaled mono-cultures come mechanization.
And every perennial that we need as hedge roads and field bounds are seen as an interference for the
large tractors, harvesters and other large mono-cultural machinery. So any large scaled industrial
farming system is a desert in every meaningful way.
Living soil has millions and billions of organisms creating our soil fertility. As Charles Darwin said,
"no other species has done so much for this planet as the earthworm." As they create our soil fertility
by turning our earth into dams so water can be store. And by do so, they are doing the work of a
tractor, a dam and a fertilizer factory, all at the same time. And today we dumping urea to kill
earthworms. Urea is essentially a salt and almost all synthetic fertilizers are based on salt. And today
it is estimated that 75% of the soils in the world have been deprived of their organic matter, their living
humus, their soil organisms, they have been compacted and of course because they haven't been able
to aggregate this is leading to soil erosion.
Experts claim that if you add together industrial agriculture and transportation of industrial trade,
they are contributing 40% to the earth's greenhouse gases. This includes the carbon dioxide emissions
from mechanization, long distant transport, concentration of cattle and other livestock as well as the
nitrogen oxides that come from synthetic fertilizers. And nitrogen oxides is more than 300 times more
destabilizing for the climate. For this reason Dr. Vandana Shiva says that industrialized agriculture is
contributing 70% to the ecological devastation to the planet. And it survives because the myth is
believed that the world can't be fed without industrialized agriculture. And I call it a myth because
today in 2014, 70% of the food consumed by the entire 7 plus billion inhabitants comes from small
farms. 30% of the world's food comes from industrialized agriculture, yet 75% of ecological
devastation comes from it. Think about it if this system is allowed to spread to destroy the remaining
25% of the planet, will we get more food or less food? A destroyed planet will give no food at all. Dead
soils, disappearing waters, no seeds, plus a totally chaotic climate is a recipe for disaster if not human
extinction. Remember this industrialized agriculture mono-culture is really only 6o years old and it
has already destroyed 75% of our ecology. How much longer do you think that it will take to destroy
the remaining 25%? Other species will survive, but the life as we know it today, the human species
may have screwed itself.
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No species has deliberately designed its own extinction but through industrial agriculture we are. It is
in the design of industrial agriculture because it first's creed is to place profits over product and as a
result it is destroying the base of farming, ecological systems, as well as not being a productive and
efficient use of resources. Industrial agriculture uses 10 units of energy to produce 1 unit of food,
whereas ecological systems use 1 unit of food to produce 2 units of food.
The mainstay of food security is and should be small farms and urban gardens. Food can only be cared
for on a small scale. Food can only be cared for in decentralized systems. The centralized system of
production and with that centralizing, the centralized system of distribution by its very necessity
means waste. There is no waste in living systems. There is no waste in ecological farming systems.
There is no waste in local food systems. I grow many crops all of them are used, some for the soil,
some for the cow. In India nothing gets wasted because the cow is always waiting. Or the earthworms
are waiting. It only becomes waste when aid sent long distances and stored in centralized systems as
in the large store houses/silos in the Punjab. Or if it is taken by Walmart. Because Walmart will
throwaway half because the apples aren't exactly the right size. A South African told me that overnight
they had to change the trees, variety of their apples because Walmart changed the size of their trucks.
And as you know that 'flavor savor"was designed for transport not for eating as so much food is now.
Breeding today is for trucks not for human beings. How long can it sit on a truck? Then it has to be
the identical size. That is why they didn't like the round tomatoes and Berkeley had a whole study on
tomatoes for packaging and transport.
Farmers should grow as much diverse crops possible and people should eat as much diverse foods as
they can. And when told that organic is too costly Dr. Vandana Shiva says "not for the farmer who
grew it as they have the first right to organic food." And when you measure, not the mono culture
which is yield, the yield per acre, which is repeatedly talked about because the yield is a single
commodity that leaves the farm. So the grain of wheat is measured as yield but not the straw that
should stay on the farm. The corn is measured as yield, but not the straw of corn. So what should be
recycled to the farm is treated as waste and isn't allowed to return to the soil. As a result the mono
culture is harvested by combine harvesters, which leave a huge stalk which they farmers have to burn.
As a result a bio-diverse farm produces more across the board. Also when you have diverse farming at
least one of the crops will thrive/survive nature's challenges. Whereas, when you have only one crop
with external input and the perfect requirement of water, two little rain, too much means disaster for
everything.
Also in the end what matters is now how much we eat but the nutritional content in the food that we
eat. And our food has been systemically de-nutritionaified because of the application of nitrogen
phosphate potassium and no other micro-nutrients and trace elements are going into the soil, our
plants are deprived, our food is deprived and therefore we are deprived of potassium, magnesium,
phosphorus, iron and zinc. We forget that our plants need zinc, soils need zinc and humans need zinc.
Our current system is wiping out nutrition. First by wiping out biodiversity. Then by depleting the
soil, plants and foods of their nutrients. And the focus of yield, yield, yield of single commodities, is
creating huge deficiencies. If there are no greens in the fields, and pesticides like Round-Up kills
everything green, our kids will have vitamin deficiencies. So the obvious solution is grow the greens
again. We know the different foods that will provide the needed nutrients.
We have to change our current farming system. We have to work for greater biodiversity to produce
more food and nutrition using up less of the earth's resources — a smaller foot print and a higher
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output. The current system has a huge footprint with a negative output. There is another reason why
we have to move to a new food system. Industrial fertilization is the science of ignorance. It has no
idea of the actual content of the soil. It science is really how to create a chemical, initial for war
purposes and now for farming. A healthy eco fanning system has no pest. Yes, it has insects but none
will dominate. Whereas when pesticides are used, they not only destroy the targeted pests, they also
destroy other insects, nutrients and organisms that keep the soil alive. It is the ignorance of the
relationship between pests and predators. As well as these same pesticides and industrialize
fertilization is harmful to humans in ways yet to be understood. Today's science is the chemistry of
producing pesticides and not the science of pest control. So we got very violent tools from another
science being applied to the wrong domain ignorant to how the food system works. The biotech
industry gets angry with this assessment. But the truth is that today's biotech is centered on a stupid
way to do things. It is a stupid to get iron in your food to do it through GMO bananas. It is a stupid
way to get Vitamin A from golden rice. It is a stupid way to try and control food pests by putting toxic
genes into plants through BT (Bacillus thuringiensis) toxins. Even more stupid is trying to control
weeds through herbicide resistance. As a result during the last fifteen years half the farms in the
United States are overtaken by super resistant weeds. And today they are engineering genes into corn
with resistance to an ingredient in Agent Orange. And DOW is a big player again.
Today's genetic engineering is about patients. The big players are not really interested in genetic
engineering other than generating patients because by adding a new gene the patient owner can say
that they have invented a "novel crop" and then claim that they were the creators and owners and
therefore they should be able to collect royalties. And Monsanto is on record that they wrote the
Intellectual Property Rights Agreement in the Free Trade Treaty under WTO. Monsanto bragged that
they were the patient, diagnostician, physician all in one. They defined the problem farmer safe seeds.
The solution they offered is that it should now be a crime. As a result five companies control our food
systems through patients. Life should not be controlled by any single company, individual or group.
Life is created by life. And the evolution of biodiversity is the gift that we have received from nature
and our ancestors. It wasn't invented the moment a toxic gene was put into it because that should be
counted as pollution in terms of the biological integrity of that plant or species. We should not accept
patients and GMOs and their dream of collecting tens of billions if not hundreds of dollars in royalties
annually from seed sales. Please realize that seed is good only if it is diverse. Seed is only good if it
evolves and has resilience. Seed is only good if it has quality, taste and nutrition. Uniformity is a
wrong measure for biodiversity. Centralization is a wrong management system for seeds which can
only grow to accordingly to the same soil, the climate, and therefore how can Norway and an island in
Greece be imposed with the same standard by one agency in Brussels. Monopolies, centralization and
mono-cultures go hand and hand and they are the instruments of power. Therefore we have to create
instruments of democracy, diversity and resilience. And the final reason why we have to replace the
old system is because it can only survive by establishing a totalitarian rule. A totalitarianism on our
farms, where farmers cannot grow what they want, in the way they want it and locked into a type of
slavery.
When Dr. Vandana Shiva started to fight for seed freedom she says it is because she saw a parallel. At
that time it was Blacks that were captured in Africa and taken to work on the cotton fields of America
and the sugarcane fields. And she says that it is all of life being enslaved. All species. And that we
have never had an imperialism across the planet. And as a result more than 25o,000 fanners in India
have committed suicide. Dr. Vandana Shiva believes that the standardization of our fruits and
vegetables, a tomato of that size, an apple of that size destroy local food systems. Which she calls sudo-
hygiene. Over the past decades lobbyist are trying to get compulsory registration laws of seeds enacted
in the EU, India and elsewhere, which like when you have a car you have to register it which makes
sense. But if a farmer has a seed from their grandfather or someone else, under compulsory
registration technically they might be forced to go to Brussels to receive permission to grow it. That
compulsory registration is a totalitarianism instrument. This has already happened in the EU where
family owned oak barrels in some wineries are no longer allowed because they can't use oak anymore
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and have to use stainless steel. These are industrial mechanisms to impose industrial production.
Whether it is at the farm in terms of food production or in processing. And what we are seeing is a very
deep vertical integration of the food system. Five companies controlling seed. Five companies
controlling grain trade. Five processors. And five retailers. Twenty companies all integrated with the
other. And in California when there was an effort to enact labeling laws it wasn't just Monsanto
that resisted Coke Cola and Pepsi Cola poured money into the resistance too because they use the high
fructose corn syrup from the GM corn. Their combined efforts won. And they won in terms of force-
feeding bad food to the people.
We know the harms that junk food is creating and the whole obesity issue. This vertical integration
system with the combination of Pepsi and a Walmart and a Carrigan and Monsanto brings i% to the
farmer. 196 of the consumer Euro, Dollar or Rupee. And because it only brings r% it throws people off
the land. It makes small agriculture unviable because of injustice. If small farmers are only receiving
156 we should ask where is the other 99% going in terms of corporate agribusiness profits. No wonder
why Wall Street is backing large food businesses. Dr. Vandana Shiva believes that the world needs is a
5O% model. 50% should go back to the farmer and local economy. And if 5o% goes back to farmers,
many more people will be farming, reversing the mass migration from rural into urban. And yes it
could be said that almost 5o% are currently in the food system today, but they are in the necro-
economy. The necro-economy is the economy of death. They are making the pesticides, they are
spraying the pesticides, they are driving the trucks, and they are making the carbon dioxide, all of the
jobs that are killing the planet. We need to change the current food system. We need to get people as
excited about growing food as young people are about creating apps, ring-tones and making their first
million. Agro-ecology and organic food systems should not just been seen as eccentric, when they can
and should be pathways to many solutions (rural flight, smaller carbon foot-print, jobs, obesity, etc.) to
challenges facing our world today. And food is the place, seed is the place where we have to reclaim
our democracy and stop the totalitarianism being put in place bit by bit because before we know it we
won't be able to make changes. Dr. Vandana Shiva believes that we have only a short period of time to
reclaim our freedom otherwise, "we will have neither have bread or freedom."
6t
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Chances are you don't recognize her face but like Muhammad Ali, Babe Ruth, Billy Jean King, Pele,
Steve Jobs, Nelson Mandela, Pablo Picasso, Vogue Magazine, the Ford Mustang and during his early
years Tiger Woods, she was in that class by herself, an iconoclast who changed the world around them.
The world of modern fashion has always had it stars, Coco Channel, Yves Saint Laurent and Twiggy but
it was Eileen Ford who really changed the world for its models but more importantly, their look. It was
Eileen Ford whose taste and vision of young clean, fresh face Anglo-Nordic thin long neck blond
women with straight noses, Christy Turlington, Lauren Hutton, Cheryl Tiegs, Elle Macpherson Christie
Brinkley and Candice Bergen, the look articulated in America by designer Ralph Lauren and the look
that advertisers beckon to from the 1960s through the 1980s, until the anti-establishment more edgy
look of Iman, Kate Moss and Naomi Campbell made that Wonder bread look passé. It was Eileen Ford
who fiercely protected "her girls" and moved the model agency business from being hucksters, bookers
and pimps to sophisticated brand managers working together with advertising agencies,
photographers and their clients, always pushing the edge of the envelope of compensation for her
models. It was Eileen Ford who tried in vain to broaden her models' world by hosting dinners with
established and up in coming Wall Streeters, doctors, entrepreneurs, athletes and scions/sons of the
rich.
I remember joking in the late 198os with a friend that he had made it because he was being invited to
one of Eileen Ford's famous dinners. I first met Eileen and her husband Jerry in the mid-i97os when
somehow I came on their radar and was invited to several dinners in the 1970s as she had now
expanded her look/roster to include Beverly Johnson and other African American women. We
reconnected when a friend of mine opened her Paris office. But like my dear friend, the legendary
restaurateur Elaine Kaufman, Eileen Ford could be a nasty piece of work if you got on her bad side. So
sooner or later either you or she became bored with each other's company and as her models matured,
came economically independent and times changed, suitors no longer needed Eileen's approval to date
one of her girls. And although the agency is no longer what it once was and Eileen stopped trolling for
the "new look" decades ago, still to this day I run into women whose crowning achievement is that they
were represented by the Ford Model Agency. Eileen Ford created the 20th Century's most successful
modeling agency and in the process changed her industry as well as the taste that we all take for
granted today. For more information on Eileen Ford I invite you to download and read her obituary as
she died last Wednesday at the age of 92.
******
On Wall Street, the Corleone family fits right
in
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In The Godfather, writer Mario Puzo wrote — "The lawyer with the briefcase can steal more money
than the man with the gun." This week Richard Cohen wrote a satirical piece in The Washington
Post — On Wall Street, the Corleone family fits right in — After reading the article, substitute
the word "lawyer"with "banker," "corporate executive" or "Top .i%" and much like Oscar winning
Paddy Chayefsky's brilliant prophetic 1976 film Network staring Faye Dunaway, William Holden, Peter
Finch, and Robert Duvall and features Wesley Addy, Ned Beatty, and Beatrice Straight, directed by the
legendary Sidney Lumet.
The film, when released in 1976, was a scathing satire of American media, showing a world just to the
left of reality where ratings trumped news, where the most powerful communication tool of the time
was used to placate the masses and where TV networks were willing to commit murder in order to get
more eyeballs. I t's a world where a ranting lunatic captures the heart of America and a terrorist cell
gets its own reality show. In 1976 this was broad and crazy; in 2014 it feels like the world in which we
live. Richard Cohen's parody has also proven prophetic as big banks and businesses who have no
allegiance have been caught doing ever type of malfeasance without anyone going to jail. I invite you
to compare.
FADE IN: Michael Corleone's den.
He is at his desk. Facing him are members of his organization. Michael rises and dims the lights. He
starts a PowerPoint display showing the various Mafia families. The chieftains and button men are
puzzled but they say nothing. Michael turns the lights back on. It is clear he is about to say something
important.
Michael: "We're gonna incorporate."
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The capos are shocked. They all start talking at once. "Michael, Michael, what would your old man
say?"
Michael: "The Godfather is dead. So is his way of doing business. Hyman Roth showed me what we
should do. We turn the Corleone family into Corleone Enterprises Ltd. We list it on the stock exchange
along with the other criminals. We do what we have always done, but if we get caught, nobody goes to
jail. We pay a fine and say we're sorry."
"Michael, Michael," Luca Brasi says. "It is not possible. You do the crime, you do the time."
Michael is patient. "The French bank BNP Paribas admitted it broke the law. It copped a plea. It
said it helped Iran avoid sanctions. Iran is our mortal enemy and a country the Corleone family has
no sympathy for. The bank helped our enemy and he who helps our enemy is also our enemy. So
what happened? Tell 'em, Hyman."
Hyman says, "They paid a fine, nearly $9 billion. A piffle for them. But it was treated like the
corporation acted on its own. Nobody was in charge. Nobody benefited. A corporation is the perfect
crime family."
Michael says, "Tell 'em about Credit Suisse."
"It pleaded guilty to tax evasion," Hyman says. "Tax evasion! But no one went to jail. It paid Uncle
Sam almost $2.6 billion and went on its way. Al Capone of blessed memory got it years for tax
evasion. Why? Because even though he controlled all the rackets in Chicago and had politicians and
judges in his pocket, he was not incorporated."
Michael says, "Corporations don't go to jail. And neither do the people who run the corporations.
Banks have paid a fortune in penalties for cheating and lying and selling junk and ruining people's
lives, and nobody goes to jail."
Fredo says, "Being a corporation is never having to say you're sorry."
Michael looks disgusted: "Fredo, you're in the wrong movie."
Luca Brasi says, "I don't know, Michael. It don't seem right. I don't know about these things. You need
someone whacked, I do it. Garroted, that's me. Shot, again that's me. But this, I don't understand. It
just don't seem right."
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Michael ignores him. Wyman, tell 'em the rest."
"We're going to buy a business in Switzerland. When we have control of it, we become a Swiss
corporation and pay taxes there, where they are lower. This is called an inversion and is something
Walgreens says it is now considering. It got tax breaks in Illinois and tax credits and training
money, and it don't matter. It still might go to Switzerland, where the weather, if you ask me, is
lousy."
Fredo interjects. "But we're an Italian family."
Luca Brash "Sicilian!"
Michael signals for quiet. "Globalization means you don't belong to any country. You have
allegiances to no one except your own family or, as it happens, the corporation." Pfizer tried to buy
AstraZeneca so it could move to England. But they stupidly made an offer that AstraZeneca could
refuse — and it did.
"Many companies are doing this and no one says nothing about loyalty to the country or anything
like that. Corporations can do anything they want. We will do the same. We will move where the
taxes are lowest, and we will never speak of this matter outside of the company. We will use our
people in the media who are on our payroll to say that we are studying many options to maximize
stockholder value. You, Fredo, will go on CNBC and not wear a tie so you look cool. All of you,
remember that phrase and use it often: Maximize stockholder value."
"Michael, Michael," Luca Brasi says. "What does it mean?"
"Nothing, everything, anything you want," Michael says. He pauses. "I am no longer Capo di tutti
capi. I am the CEO. Tom Hagen is no longer consigliere. He's the general counsel. All we do is change
the titles but not who we are. We're still criminals."
"Like others on Wall Street, this is the business we've chosen," Hyman Roth says.
How prophetic? Today a number of our biggest banks and international conglomerates have been
caught doing all types of skullduggery and although they have paid hundreds of billions in fines and
restitution little has changed because that is just the cost of doing business. And until the people
running these companies are incarcerated like the common criminals that they are, this criminality is
destine to continue and this is my rant of the week....
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WEEK's READINGS
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Every family, every community and every business needs infrastructure to thrive. Infrastructure
encompasses your local water main and the Hoover Dam; the power lines connected to your house and
the electrical grid spanning the U.S.; and the street in front of your home and the national highway
system.
Once every four years, America's civil engineers provide a comprehensive assessment of the nation's
major infrastructure categories in ASCE's Report Card for America's Infrastructure (Report
Card). Using a simple A to F school report card format, the Report Card provides a comprehensive
assessment of current infrastructure conditions and needs, both assigning grades and making
recommendations for how to raise the grades. An Advisory Council of ASCE members assigns the
grades according to the following eight criteria: capacity, condition, funding, future need, operation
and maintenance, public safety, resilience, and innovation. Since 1998, the grades have been near
failing, averaging only Ds, due to delayed maintenance and underinvestment across most categories.
Now the 2013 Report Card grades are in, and America's cumulative GPA for infrastructure rose slightly
to a D+. The grades in 2013 ranged from a high of B- for solid waste to a low of D- for inland
waterways and levees. Solid waste, drinking water, wastewater, roads, and bridges all saw incremental
improvements, and rail jumped from a C- to a C+. No categories saw a decline in grade this year.
The 2013 Report Card demonstrates that we can improve the current condition of our nation's
infrastructure — when investments are made and projects move forward, the grades rise. For example,
greater private investment for efficiency and connectivity brought improvements in the rail category;
renewed efforts in cities and states helped address some of the nation's most vulnerable bridges; and,
several categories benefited from short-term boosts in federal funding.
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We know that investing in infrastructure is essential to support healthy, vibrant communities.
Infrastructure is also critical for long-term economic growth, increasing GDP, employment, household
income, and exports. The reverse is also true — without prioritizing our nation's infrastructure needs,
deteriorating conditions can become a drag on the economy.
While the modest progress is encouraging, it is clear that we have a significant backlog of overdue
maintenance across our infrastructure systems, a pressing need for modernization, and an immense
opportunity to create reliable, long-term funding sources to avoid wiping out our recent gains. Overall,
most grades fell below a C, and our cumulative GPA inched up just slightly to a Di- from a D four years
ago.
We invite you to take a deeper look at the nation's infrastructure conditions in the 2013 Report Card —
from the state infrastructure facts, to the interactive charts, to our three key solutions. A brief
summary of the findings for each category is below. Click on any heading to get more detailed
information on the category and explore the interactive content. Web Link:
http://www.infrastructurereportcard.org/a/#p/home
Water and Environment
Dams: Dams again earned a grade of D. The average age of the 84,000 dams in the country is 52
years old. The nation's dams are aging and the number of high-hazard dams is on the rise. Many of
these dams were built as low-hazard dams protecting undeveloped agricultural land. However, with an
increasing population and greater development below dams, the overall number of high-hazard dams
continues to increase, to nearly 1.4,000 in 2012. The number of deficient dams is currently more than
4,000. The Association of State Dam Safety Officials estimates that it will require an investment of $21
billion to repair these aging, yet critical, high-hazard dams.
Drinking Water: The grade for drinking water improved slightly to a D. At the dawn of the 21st
century, much of our drinking water infrastructure is nearing the end of its useful life. There are an
estimated 240,000 water main breaks per year in the United States. Assuming every pipe would need
to be replaced, the cost over the coming decades could reach more than $1 trillion, according to the
American Water Works Association (AWVVA). The quality of drinking water in the United States
remains universally high, however. Even though pipes and mains are frequently more than 100 years
old and in need of replacement, outbreaks of disease attributable to drinking water are rare.
Hazardous Waste: There has been undeniable success in the cleanup of the nation's hazardous
waste and brownfields sites. However, annual funding for Superfund site cleanup is estimated to be as
much as $5oo million short of what is needed, and 1,280 sites remain on the National Priorities List
with an unknown number of potential sites yet to be identified. More than 400,00o brownfields sites
await cleanup and redevelopment. The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) estimates that one in
four Americans lives within three miles of a hazardous waste site. The grade for hazardous waste
remained unchanged at a D.
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Levees: Levees again earned a near failing grade of D- in 2013. The nation's estimated 100,000 miles
of levees can be found in all 5o states and the District of Columbia. Many of these levees were
originally used to protect farmland, and now are increasingly protecting developed communities. The
reliability of these levees is unknown in many cases, and the country has yet to establish a National
Levee Safety Program. Public safety remains at risk from these aging structures, and the cost to repair
or rehabilitate these levees is roughly estimated to be $100 billion by the National Committee on Levee
Safety. However, the return on investment is dear — as levees helped in the prevention of more than
$141 billion in flood damages in 2011.
Solid Waste: In 2010, Americans generated 250 million tons of trash. Of that, 85 million tons were
recycled or composted. This represents a 34% recycling rate, more than double the 14.5% in 1980. Per
capita generation rates of waste have been steady over the past 20 years and have even begun to show
signs of decline in the past several years. The grade for solid waste improved in 2013, and it earned the
highest grade of B-.
Wastewater: The grade for wastewater improved slightly to a D. Capital investment needs for the
nation's wastewater and stormwater systems are estimated to total $298 billion over the next 20 years.
Pipes represent the largest capital need, comprising three quarters of total needs. Fixing and
expanding the pipes will address sanitary sewer overflows, combined sewer overflows, and other pipe-
related issues. In recent years, capital needs for the treatment plants comprise about 15%-20% of total
needs, but will likely increase due to new regulatory requirements. Stormwater needs, while growing,
are still small compared with sanitary pipes and treatment plants. Since 2007, the federal government
has required cities to invest more than $15 billion in new pipes, plants, and equipment to eliminate
combined sewer overflows.
Transportation
Aviation: Despite the effects of the recent recession, commercial flights were about 33 million higher
in number in 2011 than in 2000, stretching the system's ability to meet the needs of the nation's
economy. The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) estimates that the national cost of airport
congestion and delays was almost $22 billion in 2012. If current federal funding levels are maintained,
the FAA anticipates that the cost of congestion and delays to the economy will rise from $34 billion in
2020 to $63 billion by 2040. Aviation again earned a D.
Bridges: Over two hundred million trips are taken daily across deficient bridges in the nation's 102
largest metropolitan regions. In total, one in nine of the nation's bridges are rated as structurally
deficient, while the average age of the nation's 607,380 bridges is currently 42 years. The Federal
Highway Administration (FHWA) estimates that to eliminate the nation's bridge backlog by 2028, we
would need to invest $20.5 billion annually, while only $12.8 billion is being spent currently. The
challenge for federal, state, and local governments is to increase bridge investments by $8 billion
annually to address the identified $76 billion in needs for deficient bridges across the United States.
However, with the overall number of structurally deficient bridges continuing to trend downward, the
grade improved to C+.
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Inland Waterways: Our nation's inland waterways and rivers are the hidden backbone of our
freight network — they carry the equivalent of about 51 million truck trips each year. In many cases, the
inland waterways system has not been updated since the 1950s, and more than half of the locks are
over 5o years old. Barges are stopped for hours each day with unscheduled delays, preventing goods
from getting to market and driving up costs. There is an average of 52 service interruptions a day
throughout the system. Projects to repair and replace aging locks and dredge channels take decades to
approve and complete, exacerbating the problem further. Inland waterways received a D- grade once
again as conditions remain poor and investment levels remain stagnant.
Ports: This new category for 2013 debuted with a grade of C. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
estimates that more than 95% (by volume) of overseas trade produced or consumed by the United
States moves through our ports. To sustain and serve a growing economy and compete internationally,
our nation's ports need to be maintained, modernized, and expanded. While port authorities and their
private sector partners have planned over $46 billion in capital improvements from now until 2016,
federal funding has declined for navigable waterways and landside freight connections needed to move
goods to and from the ports.
Rail: Railroads are experiencing a competitive resurgence as both an energy-efficient freight
transportation option and a viable city-to-city passenger service. In 2012, Amtrak recorded its highest
year of ridership with 31.2 million passengers, almost doubling ridership since 2000, with growth
anticipated to continue. Both freight and passenger rail have been investing heavily in their tracks,
bridges, and tunnels as well as adding new capacity for freight and passengers. In 2010 alone, freight
railroads renewed the rails on more than 3,100 miles of railroad track, equivalent to going coast to
coast. Since 2009, capital investment from both freight and passenger railroads has exceeded $75
billion, actually increasing investment during the recession when materials prices were lower and
trains ran less frequently. With high ridership and greater investment in the system, the grade for rail
saw the largest improvement, moving up to a C+ in 2013.
Roads: Targeted efforts to improve conditions and significant reductions in highway fatalities
resulted in a slight improvement in the roads grade to a D this year. However, forty-two percent of
America's major urban highways remain congested, costing the economy an estimated $ioi billion in
wasted time and fuel annually. While the conditions have improved in the near term, and federal,
state, and local capital investments increased to $91 billion annually, that level of investment is
insufficient and still projected to result in a decline in conditions and performance in the long term.
Currently, the Federal Highway Administration estimates that $170 billion in capital investment would
be needed on an annual basis to significantly improve conditions and performance.
Transit: The grade for transit remained at a D as transit agencies struggled to balance increasing
ridership with declining funding. America's public transit infrastructure plays a vital role in our
economy, connecting millions of people with jobs, medical facilities, schools, shopping, and recreation,
and it is critical to the one-third of Americans who do not drive cars. Unlike many U.S. infrastructure
systems, the transit system is not comprehensive, as 45% of American households lack any access to
transit, and millions more have inadequate service levels. Americans who do have access have
increased their ridership 9.1% in the past decade, and that trend is expected to continue. Although
investment in transit has also increased, deficient and deteriorating transit systems cost the U.S.
economy $90 billion in 2010, as many transit agencies are struggling to maintain aging and obsolete
fleets and facilities amid an economic downturn that has reduced their funding, forcing service cuts
and fare increases.
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Public Facilities
Public Parks and Recreation: The popularity of parks and outdoor recreation areas in the United
States continues to grow, with over 14o million Americans making use of these facilities a part of their
daily lives. These activities contribute $646 billion to the nation's economy, supporting 6.1 million
jobs. Yet states and localities struggle to provide these benefits for parks amid flat and declining
budgets, reporting an estimated $18.5 billion in unmet needs in 2011. The federal government is also
facing a serious challenge as well since the National Park Service estimates its maintenance backlog at
approximately $n billion. The grade for parks remained unchanged at a C-.
Schools: Almost half of America's public school buildings were built to educate the baby boomers — a
generation that is now retiring from the workforce. Public school enrollment is projected to gradually
increase through 2019, yet state and local school construction funding continues to decline. National
spending on school construction has diminished to approximately $10 billion in 2012, about half the
level spent prior to the recession, while the condition of school facilities continues to be a significant
concern for communities. Experts now estimate the investment needed to modernize and maintain our
nation's school facilities is at least $270 billion or more. However, due to the absence of national data
on school facilities for more than a decade, a complete picture of the condition of our nation's schools
remains mostly unknown. Schools received a D again this year.
Energy
Energy: America relies on an aging electrical grid and pipeline distribution systems, some of which
originated in the 188os. Investment in power transmission has increased since 2005, but ongoing
permitting issues, weather events, and limited maintenance have contributed to an increasing number
of failures and power interruptions. While demand for electricity has remained level, the availability of
energy in the form of electricity, natural gas, and oil will become a greater challenge after 2020 as the
population increases. Although about 17,000 miles of additional high-voltage transmission lines and
significant oil and gas pipelines are planned over the next five years, permitting and siting issues
threaten their completion. Thus, the grade for energy remained a D+.
Conclusion
Infrastructure is the foundation that connects the nation's businesses, communities, and people,
driving our economy and improving our quality of life. For the U.S. economy to be the most
competitive in the world, we need a first class infrastructure system — transport systems that move
people and goods efficiently and at reasonable cost by land, water, and air; transmission systems that
deliver reliable, low-cost power from a wide range of energy sources; and water systems that drive
industrial processes as well as the daily functions in our homes. Yet today, our infrastructure systems
are failing to keep pace with the current and expanding needs, and investment in infrastructure is
faltering. We must commit today to make our vision of the future a reality — an American
infrastructure system that is the source of our prosperity.
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Americans Think We Have the World's Best
Colleges. We Don't.
Inline image 3
Americans have a split vision of education. Conventional wisdom has long held that our K-12 schools are
mediocre or worse, while our colleges and universities are world class. While policy wonks hotly debate K-12
reform ideas like vouchers and the Common Core state standards, higher education is largely left to its own
devices. Many families are worried about how to get into and pay for increasingly expensive colleges. But the
stellar quality of those institutions is assumed. Yet a recent multinational study of adult literacy and numeracy
skills suggests that this view is wrong. America's schools and colleges are actually far more alike than people
believe — and not in a good way. The nation's deep education problems, the data suggest, don't magically
disappear once students disappear behind ivy-covered walls.
The standard negative view of American K-12 schools has been highly influenced by international comparisons.
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, for example, periodically administers an exam
called PISA to 15-year-olds in 69 countries. While results vary somewhat depending on the subject and grade
level, America never looks very good. The same is true of other international tests. In PISA's math test, the
United States battles it out for last place among developed countries, along with Hungary and Lithuania.
America's perceived international dominance of higher education, by contrast, rests largely on global rankings of
top universities. According to a recent ranking by the London-based Times Higher Education, 18 of the world's
top 25 universities are American. Similarly, the Academic Ranking of World Universities, published annually by
Shanghai Jiao Tong University, gives us 19 of 25. But there is a problem with this way of thinking. When
President Obama has said, "We have the best universities," he has not meant: "Our universities are, on average,
the best" — even though that's what many people hear. He means, "Of the best universities, most are ours." The
distinction is important.
PISA samples the whole population of students. When Mr. Obama said, "In eighth-grade math, we've fallen to
ninth place," he was referring to the average score of eighth graders. He didn't say anything about how many of
the world's 13-year-old math geniuses were American. International university rankings, moreover, have little to
do with education. Instead, they focus on universities as research institutions, using metrics such as the number
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of Nobel Prize winners on staff and journal articles published. A university could stop enrolling undergraduates
with no effect on its score. We see K-12 schools and colleges differently because we're looking at two different
yardsticks: the academic performance of the whole population of students in one case, the research performance
of a small number of institutions in the other.
In the past, workers with an average education and average skills, doing an average job, could earn an average
lifestyle. But, today, average is officially over. Being average just won't earn you what it used to. It can't when
so many more employers have so much more access to so much more above average cheap foreign labor, cheap
robotics, cheap software, cheap automation and cheap genius. Therefore, everyone needs to find their extra —
their unique value contribution that makes them stand out in whatever is their field of employment. Average is
over as a result of the hyper-internationalization/globalization of business. Yes, new technology has been eating
jobs forever, and always will. As they say, if horses could have voted, there never would have been cars. But
there's been an acceleration. In the 10 years ending in 2009, [U.S.] factories shed workers so fast that they
erased almost all the gains of the previous 70 years; roughly one out of every three manufacturing jobs — about
6 million in total — disappeared.
We are a country not living up to its full potential. And although China, India and Brazil are currently doing well
but because of their inherent fundamental differences we can't copy their practices to enjoy similar success. As
noted economist Thomas Friedman says, the history that we need to reread is our own and the country that we
need to rediscover is America because we didn't become the richest and most successful country in the world by
accident — we had a formula for success. It was the greatest public-private partnership in the history of the
world. People will claim that their success was solely do their own efforts, but would they have been as
successful if they had been born during a civil war in rural areas of Africa because the Public Side of this was
built on five pillars.
1. Educate our people up and beyond whatever the technology is whether it was the cotton gin or the
laptop computer.
2. Have the world's best infrastructure to enhance commerce and communications
3. Have the world's most open immigration policy as more than one quarter of the new companies
open each year in Silicon Valley is started by immigrates
4. Have the best rules for investing to attract capital and to prevent recklessness
5. Have the world's most government funded research to push out the boundaries in science and
technology so entrepreneurs could benefit from the best opportunities and build them into new
companies....
This was how we created the richest country on earth. We actually had a formula had a success and the reason
we are where we are today if you look at all five pillars the arrow is pointing down for all five. And today we
have not been able to arise to the challenges we face today and address with the collective action required
because all of our problems today are so big that they require collective action. And those challenges are:
1. The merging of globalization and the IT revolution
2. Our debt and deficit and the whole entitlements question, the burden that we don't want to pass on
to our future generations to make them debt slaves
3. How do we power our future, grow our Middle Class with enough clean energy so that we don't tip
the planet into climate change.
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These are the three great challenges that we face today. There is a huge inflection point that the country and the
rest of the entire world went through during the last decade. And that is we basically went from a connected
world to a hyper-connected world and it is changing everything. As Friedman says.... think about it.... a decade
ago for most people didn't know that Facebook exist, Twitter was a sound, the cloud was in the sky, 4G was a
parking place, Linked In was a prison, an applications was what you sent to colleges and for most people Skype
was a typo. And all of this just happened in the last decade if not less. And it has taken the world from
connected to hyper-connected. And this has fundamentally changed the labor market. Because more and more
bosses today have access from not only hyper-connected automation, software and robots, and not just cheap
labor anymore but also cheap genius. If ten years ago globalization was affecting blue collar workers, today it
is really hitting white collar workers because of this hyper-connectivity and if graded on a curve, the curve has
essentially risen. And as a result, average is over.... Because if you just do average work now, you won't
receive average returns. Not in a hyper-connected world. Thomas Friedman uses Grinnell College which is a
liberal arts college in Iowa with 1600 students and last year 8.3% of the applications at Grinnell came from
China and of those 43% had perfect 800 on their math SAT's scores as an example. This isn't MIT or Stanford,
Grinnell is a little liberal arts college in the middle of Iowa. The entire curve has risen and applicants in the
Midwest are literally competing with their counterparts in Shanghai, Mumbai, Kiev, Johannesburg and Tokyo.
This is not a metaphor. This is the reality if you want to go to Grinnell College in Iowa.
The Kurdish people, or Kurds are an ethnic group in Middle East, mostly inhabiting a region
known as Kurdistan, which includes adjacent parts of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey. The number of
Kurds living in Southwest Asia is estimated around 3o million, with another one or two million living
in diaspora. Kurds are the fourth largest ethnicity in Western Asia after the Arabs, Persians, and
Turks. Kurds comprise anywhere from 18% to 25% of the population in Turkey, 15-20% in Iraq, 9%
in Syria, 7% in Iran and 1.3% in Armenia. In all of these countries except Iran, Kurds form the second
largest ethnic group. Roughly 55% of the world's Kurds live in Turkey, about 18% each in Iran and
Iraq, and a bit over 5% in Syria. The Kurds have had partial autonomy in Iraqi Kurdistan since 1991.
Nationalist movements in the other Kurdish-populated countries (Turkey, Syria, Iran) push for
Kurdish regional autonomy or the creation of a sovereign state.
The Kurds as an ethnic group first appeared in the medieval period. The Kurdish people are believed to
be of heterogenous origins combining a number of earlier tribal or ethnic groups including Median,
Lullubi, Guti, Cyrtians, Carduchi. In the early Middle Ages, the Kurds sporadically appear in Arabic
sources, though the term was still not being used for a specific people; instead it referred to an
amalgam of nomadic western Iranic tribes, who were distinct from Persians. However, in the High
Middle Ages, the Kurdish ethnic identity gradually materialized, as one can find clear evidence of the
Kurdish ethnic identity and solidarity in texts of the 12th and 13th century, though, the term was also
still being used in the social sense.
As Iraq veers further toward a breakup, one group is maneuvering the crisis with far more leverage
than the others: Iraqi Kurds. And in the contested oil-rich region of Kirkuk, Iraq's Kurdish minority
has been steadily consolidating control for weeks. On the southern edge of the province, in an area
once secured by central government forces, Kurdish soldiers are reinforcing a shaky bother separating
them from their new southern neighbors, the Sunni militants of the Islamic State. Massoud Barzani,
president of the largely autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government, has repeatedly suggested he will
soon initiate a referendum on the region's independence, which would likely pass, local officials and
analysts say.
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The Kurds have already governed their territory, a land of wheat fields and rugged mountains that
extends from Iraq's northern and western border with Turkey to the Iranian border in the east, for
more than two decades. They have overseen a construction boom, built an oil industry and maintained
security, even as fresh turmoil has wracked much of the rest of the country. Yet for many Kurds, the
Iraqi region of Kurdistan could never be complete without Kirkuk. Under Saddam Hussein's brutal
Arabization campaigns, many Kurds were forced to leave. The ethnically mixed area has been the flash
point of a bitter territorial dispute.
A week ago, Barzani told a closed-door meeting of the Kurdish parliament that he would only pursue
independence after formalizing Kurdish control of Kirkuk and other disputed areas, according to two
legislators who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of political sensitivities. And a move to
annex Kirkuk could ignite fighting with Baghdad, which is intent on holding on to the territory —
particularly Kirkuk's resources — and could alienate Western allies, who fear that Iraq's fracturing
could further threaten regional security.
Washington has urged the country's factions to work together toward forging a new government that
would see the country's Shiite Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki step aside. "A united Iraq is a stronger
Iraq," State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki told reporters last week. But Iraq's parliament failed
to reach an agreement this week on the government's top posts.
Also in a statement last week, Maliki reminded Iraqis that his party holds the largest majority in
parliament and that it would not accept "conditions"set by opposition members, despite escalating
pressure to step aside. "I will never give up my candidacy for the post of prime minister,"he said.
The country's top Shiite cleric, Ayatollah Ali Sistani, who has appeared to endorse Maliki's removal,
issued a statement Friday calling the political deadlock "a regrettable failure." Meanwhile, scattered
fighting and airstrikes continued across the country as Iraq's Shiite-dominated armed forces, with the
help of Shiite militias, struggled to recapture territory seized by the Islamic State.
Last week on Friday, the army reclaimed control of Saddam Hussein's birthplace of Awja, a Sunni Arab
stronghold north of Baghdad, the Iraqi armed forces and residents told Reuters. But several days of
attacks have so far failed to dislodge the militants from the larger city of Tikrit, just north of Awja, and
other areas they control. In the Kurdish regions in particular, Iraqis of all ethnicities and religions talk
increasingly of the emergence of three states. "The United States really has to be realistic,"said
Najmiddin Karim, the Kurdish governor of Kirkuk. "This thing about `sovereignty,' this thing about
the borders of Iraq, Iraq `unity'— I mean this is just an old story."
But to effectively manage their own country, the Kurds need a reliable cash flow. Baghdad still
controls the region's budget, which has gone unfunded for the past six months amid disputes over oil
and turf. Kurdish leaders say they have had to borrow billions to pay salaries. The Kurds have begun
to establish an independent revenue stream by building their own oil sector. In May, they began
exporting through a new pipeline to Turkey, bypassing Baghdad's control — sales that have so far
garnered $93 million, according to Turkish Energy Minister Taner Yildiz. But to replace the money
the Kurds have customarily received from Baghdad — about $i billion per month — they need to raise
their oil sales dramatically. The enormous oil fields of Kirkuk, newly secured by the Kurds, can
currently produce more oil than all the other fields in the Kurdistan region combined.
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In the past, the federal government has exported Kirkuk's oil through a pipeline to Turkey, which is
now inoperable because it runs through territory controlled by the Islamic State. The Kurds are now
building a new pipeline that will link Kirkuk with the Kurdistan region's independent pipeline to
Turkey, according to both Kurdish leaders and technical officials from Iraq's federal North Oil Co.,
which has historically managed Kirkuk's oil. The project is at least three months from completion,
North Oil Co. officials said.
But getting the pipeline up and running is more about political will than technical capabilities.
Kurdish leaders have negotiated with the federal oil ministry over how they might help export Kirkuk
oil, but they have not agreed on terms. "Nobody wants a war with Baghdad, so this will have to be
done carefully,"a senior Kurdish official said, speaking on the condition of anonymity because of
political sensitivities. Ramzy Mardini, an Iraq expert and nonresident fellow at the Atlantic Council,
said he believes the Kurds are pushing for economic gains and greater control, without having to
shoulder the responsibilities of full statehood. "They're looking to extract the economic benefit from
Kirkuk and consolidate their hold on the city, without running for the exit,"Mardini said.
An independent Kurdistan would have to effectively manage Kirkuk's ethnically and religiously diverse
population—a microcosm of Iraq's larger divisions. The province's Kurdish governor is widely
popular, and Sunni Arabs and Turkmen residents of Kirkuk said in interviews that they were pleased
with the new Kurdish hold on the city, citing better security than they had under Maliki. But some
Arabs expressed concern that Kurdish political leaders could monopolize power should Kirkuk become
part of a fully independent Kurdish state. "People are safe but afraid,"said Sami Najim, a Sunni Arab
grocery store owner. "The only people who have benefitted in the past are the Shiites and the Kurds."
Meantime Israel warily watching the advance of Islamist terrorists across Iraq, appears to be inching
toward supporting independence for Kurdistan, a position that would put it at odds with the United
States over the partition of Iraq. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called for it a week ago Sunday.
And while Israel's foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, back-pedalled from the comment on Monday,
analysts here say Netanyahu is just recognising what is already taking place. Mr. Netanyahu's call last
Sunday for Kurdish independence came just days after Israel bought a delivery of oil directly from
Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region. This is possible because of another rapid shift: Kurds have
expanded into oil-rich territory in Iraq, and Turkey has mended ties with the Iraqi Kurdish
government, even allowing the Kurds to export oil via Turkey, bypassing the Iraqi government.
Israel was Kurdistan's first customer. By accepting the oil in the southern port of Ashkelon, Israel gave
financial backing to the Kurdish region. The United States has disapproved of direct Kurdish oil sales,
fearing that bypassing the central government in Baghdad will only accelerate the crumbling of a
united Iraq. "It is upon us to support the international efforts to strengthen Jordan and support the
Kurds' aspiration for independence," Mr. Netanyahu said Sunday. Israel and the Kurds have a long
history, based on mutual suspicion of the region's Arab nations. However, the sale of oil and
Netanyahu's comments on Sunday broke the tradition of keeping the cooperation covert and hinted at
a more assertive Israeli position on the issue of Kurdish independence.
Finally, the breakup of Iraq and an independent Kurdistan in Iraq with or without territories elsewhere
neither hurts nor helps us other than possibly helps stabilize Iraq and the surrounding region. Yes, the
U.S. needs to draw a line around its allies — the Gulf States and the kingdom of Jordan — and help
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ensure that the ISIS problem is contained at their borders. But what happens inside Iraq is not our
concern, although we might want to quietly tweak this or that aspect of the facts on the ground. As a
result, it is pointless for another American to die in that miserable place. The Balkans, said Bismarck,
wasn't worth the bones of a single Pomeranian grenadier. All the less so Mesopotamia.
The New Map of the Middle East
Why we should not fight the inevitable break-up of Iraq.
******
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Oil pumps stand al the Chevron Corp. Kern River oilfield in Bakersfield, California.
Starting with calls in the 2008 presidential election to "drill, baby, drill!," politicians and industry
leaders alike now hail "one hundred years of gas" and anticipate the U.S. regaining its crown as the
world's foremost oil producer. Much of this optimism is based on the application of technologies like
hydraulic fracturing ("fracking") and horizontal drilling to previously inaccessible shale reservoirs, and
the development of unconventional sources such as tar sands and oil shale. "Drill, baby, drill!" was
first used at the 2008 Republican National Convention by former Maryland Lieutenant Governor
Michael Steele, who was later elected Chairman of the Republican National Committee. The slogan
expressed support for increased drilling for petroleum as a source of additional energy.
As a result the U.S. is again the world's biggest oil producer this year after overtaking Saudi Arabia and
Russia as extraction of energy from shale rock spurs the nation's economic recovery. U.S. production
of crude oil, along with liquids separated from natural gas, surpassed all other countries this year with
daily output exceeding 11 million barrels in the first quarter, the bank said in a report today. The
country became the world's largest natural gas producer in 2010. The International Energy Agency
said in June that the U.S. was the biggest producer of oil and natural gas liquids. "The U.S. increase in
supply is a very meaningful chunk of oil,"Francisco Blanch, the bank's head of commodities research,
said by phone from New York. "The shale boom is playing a key role in the U.S. recovery. If the
U.S. didn't have this energy supply, prices at the pump would be completely unaffordable."
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Oil extraction is soaring at shale formations in Texas and North Dakota as companies split rocks using
high-pressure liquid, a process known as hydraulic fracturing, or fracking. The surge in supply
combined with restrictions on exporting crude is curbing the price of West Texas Intermediate,
America's oil benchmark. The U.S., the world's largest oil consumer, still imported an average of 7.5
million barrels a day of crude in April, according to the Department of Energy's statistical arm.
Having surpassed Saudi the U.S. oil output will continue to surge to 13.1 million barrels a day in 2019
and plateau thereafter, according to the IEA, a Paris-based adviser to 29 nations. The country will lose
its top-producer ranking at the start of the 2030s, the agency said in its World Energy Outlook in
November. "It's very likely the U.S. stays as No. 1 producer for the rest of the year" as output is set to
increase in the second half, Blanch said. Production growth outside the U.S. has been lower than the
bank anticipated, keeping global oil prices high, he said. Partly as a result of the shale boom, WTI
futures on the New York Mercantile Exchange remain at a discount of about $7 a barrel to their
European counterpart, the Brent contract on ICE Futures Europe's London-based exchange. WTI was
at $103.74 a barrel as of 4:13 p.m. London time.
Islamist Insurgency. "The shale production story is bigger than Iraqi production, but it hasn't made
the impact on prices you would expect,"said Blanch. "Dypically such a large energy supply growth
should bring prices lower, but in fact we're not seeing that because the whole geopolitical situation
outside the U.S. is dreadful." Territorial gains in northern Iraq by a group calling itself the Islamic
State has spurred concerns that oil flows could be disrupted in the second-largest producer in the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries after Saudi Arabia. Exports from Libya have been
reduced by protests, while Nigeria's production is crimped by oil theft and sabotage. Libya will resume
exports as soon as possible from two oil ports in the country's east after taking back control from
rebels who blocked crude shipments for the past year, Mohamed Elharari, spokesman for the state-run
National Oil Corp., said by phone yesterday from Tripoli.
Record Investment. "There's a very strong linkage between oil production growth, economic growth
and wage growth across a range of U.S. states," Blanch said. Annual investment in oil and gas in the
country is at a record $200 billion, reaching 20 percent of the country's total private fixed-structure
spending for the first time, he said. A U.S. Commerce Department decision to allow the overseas
shipment of processed ultra-light oil called condensate has fanned speculation the nation may ease its
four-decade ban on most crude exports. Pioneer Natural Resources Co. and Enterprise Products
Partners LP will be allowed to export condensate, provided it is first subject to preliminary distillation,
the companies said June 25. The decision was "a positive first step" to dispersing the build-up of
crude supply in North America, Bank of America said in a report on June 27. The U.S. could
potentially have daily exports of 1 million barrels of crude, including 300,000 of condensate, by the
end of the year, according to a June 25 report from Citigroup Inc.
Even Michael Steele has to be surprise.
THIS WEEK's QUOTE
When I was growing up, my parents told me, 'Finish your
dinner. People in China and India are starving.' I tell my
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daughters, 'Finish your homework. People in India and China
are starving for your job.'
Thomas Friedman
BEST VIDEO OF THE WEEK
Elephant Painting an Elephant - UNBELIEVABLE
I really couldn't believe this video. Only four species are self-sentient.
Humans, dolphins, parrots, and elephants. Meaning they know it is themselves in a
mirror and they can recognize others as well. But still this shows they can think!!
Web Link: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?v=566075863484336
GREAT MAGIC TRICK
THIS WEEK's MUSIC
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St
Inline image 5
In the pantheon of jazz trumpeters, Freddie Hubbard stands as one of the boldest and most
inventive artists of the bop, hard-bop and post-bop eras. Although influenced by titans like Miles
Davis and Clifford Brown, Hubbard ultimately forged his own unique sound — a careful balance of
bravado and subtlety that fueled more than fifty solo recordings and countless collaborations with
some of the most prominent jazz artists of his era. Shortly after his death at the end of 2008, Down
Beat called him "the most powerful and prolific trumpeter in jazz." Embedded in his massive body of
recorded work is a legacy that will continue to influence trumpeters and other jazz artists for
generations to come.
Hubbard was born on April 7, 1938, In Indianapolis, Indiana. As a student and band member at
Arsenal Technical High School, he demonstrated early talents on the tuba, French horn, and
mellophone before eventually settling on the trumpet and flugelhorn. He was first introduced to jazz
by his brother, Earmon, Jr., a piano player and a devotee of Bud Powell. Hubbard's budding musical
talents caught the attention of Lee Katzman, a former sideman of Stan Kenton. Katzman convinced the
young trumpeter to study at the Arthur Jordan Conservatory of Music with Max Woodbury, the
principal trumpeter of the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra.
As a teenager, Hubbard worked and recorded with the Montgomery Brothers — Wes, Monk and Buddy.
His first recording session was for an album called The Montgomery Brothers and Five Others. Around
that same time, he also assembled his first band, the Jazz Contemporaries, with bassist (and manager)
Larry Ridley, saxophonist/flutist James Spaulding, pianist Walt Miller and drummer Paul Parker. The
quintet became recurring players at George's Bar, the well-known club on Indiana Avenue. In 1958,
Hubbard moved to New York at age 20 and quickly established himself as one of the bright young
trumpeters on the scene, astonishing critics and fans alike with the depth and maturity of his playing.
Within the first two years of his arrival in the Big Apple, he landed gigs with veteran jazz artists Philly
Joe Jones, Sonny Rollins, Slide Hampton and Eric Dolphy. He joined Quincy Jones in a tour of Europe
that stretched from 1960 to 1961.
Per a recommendation from Miles Davis, Hubbard was signed to Blue Note, where he recorded Open
Sesame, his solo debut, in 1960 at the age of 22. The album, which also featured Tina Brooks and
EFTA00721063
McCoy Tyner, marked the launch of one of the most meteoric careers in jazz. Within a year's time,
Hubbard followed up with his second and third recordings — Goin' Up (1960), with Tyner and Hank
Mobley, and Hub Cap (1961), with Julian Priester and Jimmy Heath.
In 1961, Hubbard released what many consider to be his masterpiece, Ready For Freddie, which
marked his first Blue Note collaboration with Wayne Shorter. Later that same year, he joined Art
Blakey's Jazz Messengers. In the span of a few short years, this hard-blowing young lion had quickly
established himself as an important new voice in jazz.
Hubbard left the Jazz Messengers in 1964 to form his own small group, whose ranks included Kenny
Barron and Louis Hayes. Throughout the remainder of the decade, he also played in bands led by a
variety of other high-profile jazz artists. He was a significant presence on Herbie Hancock's Blue Note
recordings, beginning with Takin' Off (1962) — Hancock's debut as a leader — and continuing on
Empyrean Isles (1964) and Maiden Voyage (1965). Hubbard's other noteworthy session work in the
1960s included Ornette Coleman's Free Jazz(1960), Oliver Nelson's The Blues and the Abstract Truth
(1961), Eric Dolphy's Out To Lunch (1964), and John Coltrane's Ascension (1965).
He achieved his greatest popular success in the 1970s with a series of crossover albums on Atlantic and
en Records. His early '70s jazz albums for en - Red Clay (1970), Straight Life (1970) and First Light
(1971) — were particularly well received (First Light won a Grammy for Best Instrumental Jazz
Performance). Later in the decade, he returned to the acoustic, hard-bop idiom with the V.S.O.P.
quintet, which teamed him with members of the 1960s Miles Davis Quintet: Herbie Hancock, Wayne
Shorter, Tony Williams and Ron Carter. Hubbard also stepped briefly into the pop arena when he
played a solo on "Zanzibar," a track from Billy Joel's Grammy-winning 1978 album, 52nd Street.
As the '80s got under way, Hubbard was once again leading his own group, playing at concerts and
festivals in the U.S. and Europe. He frequently collaborated with Joe Henderson, playing a repertory of
hard-bop and modal-jazz pieces. Other associations throughout the decade included Monterey Jazz
Festival dates with Bobby Hutcherson; studio projects with Woody Shaw and Benny Golson; and a live
recording in Holland (Feel the Wind) with Blakey in 1988.
In 1990, he appeared in Japan in an American-Japanese concert package that also featured Elvin
Jones, Sonny Fortune, George Duke, Benny Green, Ron Carter and Rufus Reid. He also performed at
the Warsaw Jazz Festival — a date that was recorded and released in 1992.' Other pursuits in the early
'9os included the formation of a new band of emerging young artists: Christian McBride, Javon
Jackson, Carl Allen and Benny Green. He continued to seek out fresh young talent as the decade
unfolded by collaborating with the New Jazz Composers Octet. Hubbard performed and recorded with
the Octet — a collective led by fellow trumpeter David Weiss — for the last decade of his career,
culminating with his final recording, On The Real Side, released in 2008.
Despite failing health as the new century got under way, Hubbard continued to carry the jazz torch by
participating in clinics and residencies at various colleges around the country to share the wealth of his
knowledge with up-and-coming artists. In 2006, the National Endowment for the Arts granted
Hubbard its highest honor in jazz, the NEA Jazz Masters Award. He suffered a heart attack in late
November 2008 in Sherman Oaks, California, and died a few weeks later, on December 29, at the age
of 70.
EFTA00721064
At his peak, Freddie Hubbard was a brilliant virtuoso performer with a rich, full tone that remained
consistent in slow passages as well as fast ones. As one of the greatest hard-bop trumpeters of his era,
he created impassioned blues lines without sacrificing the context of the music he was playing. He was
perhaps one of the greatest technical trumpeters ever to play in the jazz idiom, and arguably the most
influential.
I first met Freddie Hubbard when as a young wantabe teenage musician I started hanging out with
Sam Rivers, Don Cherry, Omette Coleman, Jeremy Steig, Archie Shepp and others in Greenwich
Village, New York and after studying his play I realized that there was another level of chops which I
didn't have and never would. With this realization I focused my efforts in film and television leaving
music for the Masters like Freddie Hubbard. With this I invite you to enjoy the music of Mr. Freddie
Hubbard and as a bonus included is a wonderful 24 minute live version of Maiden Voyage with
Herbie Hancock - Piano, Greg Osby - Soprano & Alto Sax and Buster Williams — Bass. Enjoy
Freddie Hubbard — Red clay -- http://youtu.be/_w-31Y-9c90
Freddie Hubbard & The Allyn Ferguson Big Band — Birdland
httithyoutu.be/I2m59RWYR2I
Freddie Hubbard & The Allyn Ferguson Big Band - Ride Like The Wind --
http://youtu.be/WWwzs0AuiTA
Freddie Hubbard — First Light -- http://youtu.be/cz09vMNHaRM
Freddie Hubbard Stet — Thermo -- http://youtu.be/BOR8FhWZrXs
Freddie Hubbard
Freddie Hubbard
Freddie Hubbard
Freddie Hubbard
— A night in Tunisia -- http://youtu.be/a3HZIW7fyWY
— Misty -- http://youtu.be/LXqQIUAAOLA
- Born to be Blue -- http://youtu.be/n_5MGQKWcYO
— Uncle Albert/Admiral Halsey -- http://youtu.be/rA-yPEEknd4
Freddie Hubbard — People Make the World Go Round -- http://youtu.be/SZUaY0rhWfk
Freddie Hubbard Stet — Skydive -- http://youtu.be/evCvMVovWUc
Freddie Hubbard — Little sunflower
http://youtu.be/IARiMWOvbPk
Freddie Hubbard with the Oscar Peterson Quartet -
http://y • utu.be/afYdNyaeZf8
Portrait (*fenny --
Herbie Hancock Freddie Hubbard Joe Henderson -
http://ym
e/FSj4oLRbQhg
Herbie Hancock 4tet — Maiden Voyage [1988] -- hattpid:/yli ouVtuo.byea/mgee
—
SZVpMmQqk
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I hope that you have enjoyed this week's offering and
wish you and yours a wonderful week....
Sincerely,
Greg Brown
Gregory Brown
Chairman & CEO
GlobalCso Patinas. L LC
EFTA00721066
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