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	<title>Nourish(meant) Narratives &#187; a failing food system</title>
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		<title>New World Article: Fair Food</title>
		<link>http://nourishmeant.org/blog/archives/258</link>
		<comments>http://nourishmeant.org/blog/archives/258#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Sep 2009 01:14:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>nourish(meant)</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[a failing food system]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I just listened to an amazing program produced as a part of the Bioneers readio series.  It was about Food Justice and the plight of migrant farm workers in America.  The piece details how numerous farm workers live under the conditions of modern-day slavery, and also describes their struggle for recognition of their humanity and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I just listened to an amazing program produced as a part of the <a href="http://www.bioneers.org">Bioneers</a> readio series.  It was about Food Justice and the plight of migrant farm workers in America.  The piece details how numerous farm workers live under the conditions of modern-day slavery, and also describes their struggle for recognition of their humanity and for justice.  Check out the full story, told by organizer and farmer worker Lucas Benitas, <a href="http://www.bioneers.org/radio/2009-series/episode-6-fair-food">here.</a></p>
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		<title>Article on small scale dairy + how to build your own root cellar</title>
		<link>http://nourishmeant.org/blog/archives/143</link>
		<comments>http://nourishmeant.org/blog/archives/143#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 02 Jul 2009 03:15:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>graham</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[a failing food system]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[world]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://nourishmeant.org/blog/?p=143</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[An update from bush Alaska:
1) an old blog post by Erika Howsare (who wrote about us) on small scale cheese production, the ills of pasturazation, and local food.  Thanks Lindsey!  Find it here.
2) a article from Mother Earth news on how to build your own basement root cellar.
http://www.motherearthnews.com/Do-It-Yourself/2004-12-01/Build-a-Basement-Root-Cellar.aspx
Good stuff on both.
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>An update from bush Alaska:</p>
<p>1) an old blog post by Erika Howsare (who wrote about us) on small scale cheese production, the ills of pasturazation, and local food.  Thanks Lindsey!  Find it <a href="http://www.c-ville.com/index.php?cat=121304064644348&amp;z_Issue_ID=1890111061832220&amp;ShowArchiveArticle_ID=1890111061842729">here.</a></p>
<p>2) a article from Mother Earth news on<a href="http://www.motherearthnews.com/Do-It-Yourself/2004-12-01/Build-a-Basement-Root-Cellar.aspx"> how to build your own basement root cellar</a>.</p>
<p>http://www.motherearthnews.com/Do-It-Yourself/2004-12-01/Build-a-Basement-Root-Cellar.aspx</p>
<p>Good stuff on both.</p>
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		<title>Food Sovereignty Article</title>
		<link>http://nourishmeant.org/blog/archives/134</link>
		<comments>http://nourishmeant.org/blog/archives/134#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 26 Jun 2009 21:44:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>nourish(meant)</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[a failing food system]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[world section]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[
Check out this great article, nabbed from the Chronicles of Urban Evolution blog.  It has great insights on a more holistic approach to solving problems in our world food system.  Enjoy!
Food sovereignty

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

“Food sovereignty” is a term coined by members of Via Campesina in 1996 [1] to refer to a policy framework [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div class="snap_preview">
<p><span style="color: #33cccc;">Check out this great article, nabbed from the <a href="http://urbanevolution.wordpress.com/2009/05/27/food-sovereignty/">Chronicles of Urban Evolution</a> blog.  It has great insights on a more holistic approach to solving problems in our world food system.  Enjoy!</span></p>
<h1>Food sovereignty</h1>
<div>
<h3>From <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_sovereignty">Wikipedia</a>, the free encyclopedia</h3>
<div><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_sovereignty#searchInput" target="_blank"></a></div>
<div>“<strong>Food sovereignty</strong>” is a term coined by members of Via Campesina in 1996 <sup>[1]</sup> to refer to a policy framework advocated by a number of farmers, peasants, pastoralists, fisherfolk, indigenous peoples, women, rural youth and environmental organizations, namely the claimed “right” of peoples to define their own food, agriculture, livestock and fisheries systems, in contrast to having food largely subject to international market forces.</div>
<div><a name="1217d5d8a3b3d588_1217bd3ec87215fe_Principles"></a></div>
<h2>Principles</h2>
<div>Via Campesina’s seven principles of food sovereignty include:</div>
<ol>
<li><strong>Food: A Basic Human Right.</strong> Everyone must have access to safe, nutritious and culturally appropriate food in sufficient quantity and quality to sustain a healthy life with full human dignity. Each nation should declare that access to food is a constitutional right and guarantee the development of the primary sector to ensure the concrete realization of this fundamental right.</li>
<li><strong>Agrarian Reform.</strong> A genuine agrarian reform is necessary which gives landless and farming people – especially women – ownership and control of the land they work and returns territories to indigenous peoples. The right to land must be free of discrimination the basis of gender, religion, race, social class or ideology; the land belongs to those who work it.</li>
<li><strong>Protecting Natural Resources.</strong> Food Sovereignty entails the sustainable care and use of natural resources, especially land, water, and seeds and livestock breeds. The people who work the land must have the right to practice sustainable management of natural resources and to conserve biodiversity free of restrictive intellectual property rights. This can only be done from a sound economic basis with security of tenure, healthy soils and reduced use of agro-chemicals.</li>
<li><strong>Reorganizing Food Trade.</strong> Food is first and foremost a source of nutrition and only secondarily an item of trade. National agricultural policies must prioritize production for domestic consumption and food self-sufficiency. Food imports must not displace local production nor depress prices.</li>
<li><strong>Ending the Globalization of Hunger.</strong> Food Sovereignty is undermined by multilateral institutions and by speculative capital. The growing control of multinational corporations over agricultural policies has been facilitated by the economic policies of multilateral organizations such as the WTO, World Bank and the IMF. Regulation and taxation of speculative capital and a strictly enforced Code of Conduct for TNCs is therefore needed.</li>
<li><strong>Social Peace.</strong> Everyone has the right to be free from violence. Food must not be used as a weapon. Increasing levels of poverty and marginalization in the countryside, along with the growing oppression of ethnic minorities and indigenous populations, aggravate situations of injustice and hopelessness. The ongoing displacement, forced urbanization, repression and increasing incidence of racism of smallholder farmers cannot be tolerated.</li>
<li><strong>Democratic control.</strong> Smallholder farmers must have direct input into formulating agricultural policies at all levels. The United Nations and related organizations will have to undergo a process of democratization to enable this to become a reality. Everyone has the right to honest, accurate information and open and democratic decision-making. These rights form the basis of good governance, accountability and equal participation in economic, political and social life, free from all forms of discrimination. Rural women, in particular, must be granted direct and active decisionmaking on food and rural issues.</li>
</ol>
<div>Food sovereignty is increasingly being promoted as an alternative framework to the narrower concept of food security, which mostly focuses on the technical problem of providing adequate nutrition. For instance,<span style="color: #000000;"> a food security a</span>genda that simply provides surplus grain to hungry people would probably be strongly criticised by food sovereignty advocates as just another form of commodity dumping, facilitating corporate penetration of foreign markets, undermining local food production, and possibly leading to irreversible biotech contamination of indigenous crops with patented varieties. U.S. taxpayer subsidized exports of Bt corn to Mexico since the passage of NAFTA is a case in point.</div>
<div>Visit<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_sovereignty"> here </a>for the rest of the article and for more resources!</div>
</div>
</div>
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		<title>swine flu and the meat industry</title>
		<link>http://nourishmeant.org/blog/archives/38</link>
		<comments>http://nourishmeant.org/blog/archives/38#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 05 May 2009 22:39:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>nourish(meant)</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[a failing food system]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[world section]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[meat industry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[public health]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[swine flu]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Swine Flu Crisis Lays Bare the Meat Industry’s Monstrous Power
By Mike Davis, Comment Is Free. Posted April 28, 2009.
An Important article.  You can find the original at http://www.alternet.org/healthwellness/138798?page=2
As our friend steph put it, “Public Health Fail.”

The Mexican swine flu, a genetic chimera probably conceived in the faecal mire of an industrial pigsty, suddenly threatens to give the whole [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="storyheadline"><strong>The Swine Flu Crisis Lays Bare the Meat Industry’s Monstrous Power</strong></p>
<p class="storybyline"><strong>By <a title="View all stories by Mike Davis" href="http://www.alternet.org/authors/640/">Mike Davis</a>, <a href="http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/index.html">Comment Is Free</a>. Posted <a title="View all stories published on April 28, 2009" href="http://www.alternet.org/ts/archives/?date%5BF%5D=04&amp;date%5BY%5D=2009&amp;date%5Bd%5D=28&amp;act=Go/">April 28, 2009</a>.</strong></p>
<p class="storyheadline"><span style="color: #33cccc;">An Important article.  You can find the original at http://www.alternet.org/healthwellness/138798?page=2</span></p>
<p class="storyheadline"><span style="color: #33cccc;">As our friend steph put it, “Public Health Fail.”</span></p>
<div class="teaserleft">
<p>The <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009/apr/27/swine-flu-mexico">Mexican swine flu</a>, a genetic chimera probably conceived in the faecal mire of an industrial pigsty, suddenly threatens to give the whole world a fever. The initial outbreaks across North America reveal an infection already travelling at higher velocity than did the last official pandemic strain, the 1968 Hong Kong flu.</p>
<p>Stealing the limelight from our officially appointed assassin, H5N1, this porcine virus is a threat of unknown magnitude. It seems less lethal than <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2003/apr/27/sars.johnaglionby">Sars</a> in 2003, but as an influenza it may be more durable than Sars. Given that domesticated seasonal type-A influenzas kill as many one million people a year, even a modest increment of virulence, especially if combined with high incidence, could produce carnage equivalent to a major war.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, one of its first victims has been the consoling faith, long preached by the World Health Organisation, that pandemics can be contained by the rapid responses of medical bureaucracies, independent of the quality of local public health. Since the initial <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/theguardian/1999/aug/07/weekend7.weekend2">H5N1 deaths in Hong Kong in 1997</a>, the WHO, with the support of most national health services, has promoted a strategy focused on the identification and isolation of a pandemic strain within its local radius of outbreak, followed by a thorough dousing of the population with antivirals and (if available) vaccine.</p>
<p>An army of sceptics has contested this viral counter-insurgency approach, pointing out that microbes can now fly around the world (quite literally in the case of avian flu) faster than WHO or local officials can react to the original outbreak. They also pointed to the primitive, often non-existent surveillance of the interface between human and animal diseases. But the mythology of bold, preemptive (and cheap) intervention against avian flu has been invaluable to the cause of rich countries, like the US and UK, who prefer to invest in their own biological Maginot lines rather than dramatically increasing aid to epidemic frontlines overseas, as well as to big pharma, which has battled developing-world demands for the generic, public manufacture of critical antivirals like Roche’s Tamiflu.</p>
<p>The swine flu may prove that the WHO/Centres for Disease Control version of pandemic preparedness – without massive new investment in surveillance, scientific and regulatory infrastructure, basic public health, and global access to lifeline drugs – belongs to the same class of Ponzified risk management as Madoff securities. It is not so much that the pandemic warning system has failed as it simply doesn’t exist, even in North America and the EU.</p>
<p>Perhaps it is not surprising that Mexico lacks both capacity and political will to monitor livestock diseases, but the situation is hardly better north of the border, where surveillance is a failed patchwork of state jurisdictions, and corporate livestock producers treat health regulations with the same contempt with which they deal with workers and animals. Similarly, a decade of urgent warnings by scientists has failed to ensure the transfer of sophisticated viral assay technology to the countries in the direct path of likely pandemics. Mexico has world-famous disease experts, but it had to send swabs to a Winnipeg lab in order to ID the strain’s genome. Almost a week was lost as a consequence.</p>
<p>But no one was less alert than the disease controllers in Atlanta. According to the Washington Post, the CDC did not learn about the outbreak until six days after Mexico had begun to impose emergency measures. There should be no excuses. The paradox of this swine flu panic is that, while totally unexpected, it was accurately predicted. Six years ago, Science dedicated a major story to evidence that “after years of stability, the North American swine flu virus has jumped onto an evolutionary fasttrack.”</p>
<p>Animal husbandry now more closely resembles the petrochemical industry than the happy family farm.</p></div>
<p>Since its identification during the Great Depression, H1N1 swine flu had only drifted slightly from its original genome. Then in 1998 a highly pathogenic strain began to decimate sows on a farm in North Carolina and new, more virulent versions began to appear almost yearly, including a variant of H1N1 that contained the internal genes of H3N2 (the other type-A flu circulating among humans).</p>
<p>Researchers interviewed by Science worried that one of these hybrids might become a human flu (both the 1957 and 1968 pandemics are believed to have originated from the mixing of bird and human viruses inside pigs), and urged the creation of an official surveillance system for swine flu: an admonition, of course, that went unheeded in a Washington prepared to throw away billions on bioterrorism fantasies.</p>
<p>But what caused this acceleration of swine flu evolution? Virologists have long believed that the intensive agricultural system of southern China is the principal engine of influenza mutation: both seasonal “drift” and episodic genomic “shift.” But the corporate industrialisation of livestock production has broken China’s natural monopoly on influenza evolution. Animal husbandry in recent decades has been transformed into something that more closely resembles the petrochemical industry than the happy family farm depicted in school readers.</p>
<p>In 1965, for instance, there were 53m US hogs on more than 1m farms; today, 65m hogs are concentrated in 65,000 facilities. This has been a transition from old-fashioned pig pens to vast excremental hells, containing tens of thousands of animals with weakened immune systems suffocating in heat and manure while exchanging pathogens at blinding velocity with their fellow inmates.</p>
<p>Last year a commission convened by the Pew Research Center issued a report on “industrial farm animal production” that underscored the acute danger that “the continual cycling of viruses … in large herds or flocks [will] increase opportunities for the generation of novel virus through mutation or recombinant events that could result in more efficient human to human transmission.” The commission also warned that promiscuous antibiotic use in hog factories (cheaper than humane environments) was sponsoring the rise of resistant staph infections, while sewage spills were producing outbreaks of E coli and pfiesteria (the protozoan that has killed 1bn fish in Carolina estuaries and made ill dozens of fishermen).</p>
<p>Any amelioration of this new pathogen ecology would have to confront the monstrous power of livestock conglomerates such as Smithfield Farms (pork and beef) and Tyson (chickens). The commission reported systemic obstruction of their investigation by corporations, including blatant threats to withhold funding from cooperative researchers .</p>
<p>This is a highly globalised industry with global political clout. Just as Bangkok-based chicken giant Charoen Pokphand was able to suppress enquiries into its role in the spread of bird flu in southeast Asia, so it is likely that the forensic epidemiology of the swine flu outbreak will pound its head against the corporate stonewall of the pork industry.</p>
<p>This is not to say that a smoking gun will never be found: there is already gossip in the Mexican press about an influenza epicentre around a huge Smithfield subsidiary in Veracruz state. But what matters more (especially given the continued threat of H5N1) is the larger configuration: the WHO’s failed pandemic strategy, the further decline of world public health, the stranglehold of big pharma over lifeline medicines, and the planetary catastrophe of industrialised and ecologically unhinged livestock production.</p>
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		<title>new World section and an article on swine flu and the meat industry</title>
		<link>http://nourishmeant.org/blog/archives/12</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 04 May 2009 22:25:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>graham</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[a failing food system]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Nourish(meant) Narratives has just added a &#8220;World&#8221; section that will be updated periodically with important world news the Nourish(meant) team wishes to share with its readers.  Please check out the current article that links swine flu and industrial meat production.
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Nourish(meant) Narratives has just added a &#8220;World&#8221; section that will be updated periodically with important world news the Nourish(meant) team wishes to share with its readers.  Please check out the current article that links swine flu and industrial meat production.</p>
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