conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote2016-06-14 11:08 pm

Finished Detectives in Togas

The girls were suitably happy with the ending, even though they guessed it ages ago with very little to go on. This is good, because Ana's book club assigned A Tree Grows in Brooklyn, so we're starting that tomorrow.

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Fish Can Recognize Human Faces, Study Says

How Intel Makes a Chip

X-ray snapshot of butterfly wings reveals underlying physics of color

Finding Tatooine: Planet discovered that orbits 2 suns

Exploring the Painted Mansions of the Rajasthani Desert

Bird brain? Ounce for ounce birds have significantly more neurons in their brains than mammals or primates

When Dating Algorithms Can Watch You Blush

Cereal science: How scientists inverted the Cheerios effect

Revealed: Cambodia's vast medieval cities hidden beneath the jungle

The Boys Who Loved Birds

The stray dog’s smile made him famous. Now, police say he looks too dangerous to stay in his new home.

Tea, Pride, Mystery: For One Family That Fled The Nazis, A Tin Canister Held It All

Title I: Rich School Districts Get Millions Meant for Poor Kids

As The Number Of Homeless Students Soars, How Schools Can Serve Them Better

Millions of American children missing early lead tests

Eastern US needs 'connectivity' to help species escape climate change

Biggest US coal company funded dozens of groups questioning climate change

Ivory Coast farmers face eviction, extortion in drive to save forests

Europeans Want a More Active E.U., Poll Finds

Legal Medical Abortions Are Up In Texas, But So Are DIY Pills From Mexico

'I'm an abortion travel agent' and other tales from Texas' new desert

Arsonists have attacked five Planned Parenthood clinics around the country since last July, wreaking hundreds of thousands of dollars in damage, closing down the facilities, and sowing fear among staff and providers.

Obama administration not pursuing executive order to shut Guantanamo

Anxieties are growing over Beijing's activities in the waterways across East Asia.

Gunmakers' shares jump after Orlando nightclub massacre

Libyan forces taking back ISIS stronghold

Flow of civilians from Iraq's Falluja slows as IS tightens grip

Traffickers exploiting young refugees in French camps, says Unicef

NATO to send troops to deter Russia, Putin orders snap checks

Ivory coast farmers

[identity profile] elenbarathi.livejournal.com 2016-06-15 08:51 pm (UTC)(link)
"Around 80 percent of Ivory Coast's primary forest, once the largest in West Africa, has been chopped down in the five decades since independence, amid an agricultural expansion that helped make it the world's top cocoa producer and most important economy in Francophone West Africa.

With new illegal plantations coming into production every season, officials privately acknowledge that around a third of cocoa output, which reached a record 1.8 million tonnes last season, now originates from protected land."
... and we're supposed to feel sorry for the poor illegal farmers, who have, alas no recourse when their illegal crops are destroyed and their illegal profits taken? Are we also to feel sorry for the poor poachers of elephant and rhino tusks then? How about the poor traffickers in albino body parts? Wah, their children are starving and they have no other way to make a living!

It would be nice if the pathetic governments of these wretched Third World countries made any provision for their poor, so they would not have to survive on bush-meat, crime and contraband while wreaking wanton environmental devastation. However, they don't, and there is damn little a US citizen can do to change that.

Therefore, since the world has both an egregious over-abundance of humans and a terrifyingly-compromised global ecology, I say that humans who will not stop destroying the irreplaceable forest can go to jail and/or die and reduce the surplus population, whichever is easiest. Harsh, I know, and YMMV, but there it is.

Note that I say the exact same thing about the white American poachers, polluters and water-thieves right here on my own Olympic Peninsula. Homo sapiens is an aggressively invasive species; control measures have to be equally aggressive.
“These folk are hewers of trees and hunters of beasts; therefore we are their unfriends, and if they will not depart we shall afflict them in all ways that we can.”
~J.R.R. Tolkien, The Silmarillion

[identity profile] elenbarathi.livejournal.com 2016-06-15 10:55 pm (UTC)(link)
That's one option, and I'm all in favor of boycotts. I already don't buy chocolate, though not because of the illegal cocoa trade. But expecting humans in general to stop being eager to buy cheap things is like expecting them to stop being eager to have sex: good luck with that, because the urge is built into our Bandar-log biology, which does not take much heed of long-term consequences. Social prescriptions that involve fundamental changes to human nature are doomed to fail.

I say, how can we make things that carry a huge cost somewhere else more expensive? Like, say, making and enforcing laws against importing illegally-grown cocoa or any products made with it? Seizing all such shipments, freezing the company's assets, and bringing charges against it? I'm all in favor, and if someone wants to thrash the CEOs, make them strip, and set their clothes on fire, I wouldn't think that too unjust. It would certainly curtail the illegal cocoa trade more effectively than doing that to the farmers does.

[identity profile] elenbarathi.livejournal.com 2016-06-16 04:54 am (UTC)(link)
I certainly agree, but then the question arises: if we set enough CEOs' clothes on fire that they totally stopped buying cocoa from illegal farmers, what would those illegal farmers do to feed themselves instead? Move to the city and do crime and contraband there?

I do begrudge people trying to earn enough to feed themselves by destroying the environment, and I favor draconic sanctions against it, both at home and abroad. (Don't even get me started about drylands cattle ranching...) However, I grant that people do have to have some way to feed themselves, and those unfortunate enough to be born in the Third World don't have many options.

I've come to think that capitalism and socialism are not opposing or mutually-exclusive systems, but rather two poles of the same system, that function best in dynamic balance. It's good for people to be able to improve their fortunes by thrift and hard work, and keep a fair share of what they make. It's also good for people to contribute to their society, so that the general standard of living continues to rise for everyone. That's what these stupid Randroids fail to grok: laissez-faire capitalism inevitably creates an underclass living on crime and contraband, which is not to anyone's advantage.
"I like to pay taxes. With them, I buy civilization."
~Oliver Wendell Holmes

[identity profile] elenbarathi.livejournal.com 2016-06-16 11:56 am (UTC)(link)
They're only okay with it because they take such a short-sighted view that they don't realize the pitchforks are coming. (http://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2014/06/the-pitchforks-are-coming-for-us-plutocrats-108014)

*grins* Yeah, great quote, eh?

I want to see the rich paying a lot more taxes, but I also want to see the young doing a lot more work. If it were up to me, I'd make Youth Service mandatory for all citizens from the time they leave high school till their 21st birthday, which would sure buy a lot of civilization.

[identity profile] elenbarathi.livejournal.com 2016-06-17 01:24 am (UTC)(link)
It sure looks to me like the pitchforks are stirring (https://youtu.be/IUeNhfHXnrU), and that this is why our friendly neighborhood police departments are all armed to the teeth with weapons of war these days.

Making it mandatory till age 21 for everyone not in high school would have a number of salutary effects. The first, most notable one would be to get all the teen runaways, throw-aways and drop-outs off the streets, out of their bad neighborhoods, and into productive work, with room, board, and medical care. The second, equally salutary, would be to get all the children of privilege out of their fancy homes and neighborhoods, and away from their helicopter parents, to engage in productive work, etc. as equals with the underprivileged.

I definitely would want it mandatory for everyone, so it's not a program "for the poor". If the rich kids have to serve just the same, conditions and resources will be a lot better for all participants.

The third salutary result would be keeping people out of the military until they're 21, because they would not be eligible to enlist till after they'd completed their youth service. 18 is just too young to go to war; they come home broken for life.

The fourth salutary result would be on-the-job training for all kinds of trades. A lot of people are essentially done with their academic education by age 14 - why have vo-tech schools, when they could go straight into real jobs, where they'd learn more while actually accomplishing something?

The fifth salutary result would be fostering a spirit of community throughout the nation. It's harder to take infrastructure for granted when one has helped build it with one's own hands. It's also a lot harder to discount and disenfranchise the younger generation when they're out there in uniform, visibly serving their country.

We could have an awesome infrastructure, and an economy with plenty for everybody, if we had the rich paying the tab, and the young and strong doing the work.
Edited 2016-06-17 01:29 (UTC)