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Free panel discussion Monday: Reconsidering the War on Drugs

A discussion on the state of drug policy and how it affects you, 7 p.m. Monday, November 11 at  UICA, 2 West Fulton, Grand Rapids, Michigan 49503. Sponsored by the ACLU of Michigan.The Western Branch of the ACLU of Michigan is working to protect the public by advocating more reasonable drug policies.

There are 2.3 million people behind bars in the USA — triple the number of prisoners in 1987 — and 25 percent of those incarcerated are locked up for drug offenses.This war has become a war on people, specifically Black people. Let’s look at alternatives to incarceration and address the problem of drug abuse and misuse. This event is free and open to the public.

Panelists Include:

  • Heather Garretson, J.D., Associate Professor Thomas M. Cooley, School of Law
  • Carl S. Taylor, PhD, Professor, Department of Sociology, Michigan State University
  • Hon. Patrick Bowler, Retired Judge/Consultant, MADCP – Michigan Association of Drug Court Professional State Judicial Outreach Liaison

Join us Saturday! Cook, Eat & Talk and first food justice class

Cook, Eat & Talk: Rose’s Delights baker demos pumpkin bread and healthy desserts. 12:30 – 2:30 p.m. Saturday Nov. 9 at Sherman Street Church, 1000 Sherman St. SE.

Free five-week class: Food Politics and the Food Justice Movement: Moving Forward, 10 a.m. to noon on Saturdays beginning Nov. 9 at Garfield Park Lodge, 334 Burton St. SE 

     Our Kitchen Table invites you to join us for this five week class that investigates the current food system and food policy, looks at food justice responses around the country and discusses what a food justice and food sovereignty movement in West Michigan could look like. This is the third time that OKT has engaged Jeff Smith of the Grand Rapids Institute for Information Democracy to teach the class.
     Whether you are a professional actively involved in local efforts to eliminate hunger and undernutrition or a lay person who wants to know what you can do to increase your neighborhood’s access to healthy foods, this class will open your eyes to how the industrial food complex works and how you can challenge it.
     As a primary source for the class, participants will be reading the book “Food Justice: Food, Health and the Environment,” by Robert Gottlieb and Anupama Joshi. You can buy the book on Amazon.com.

New European legislation on the ‘Marketing of seeds’ is a threat to Food Security and Democracy

Reposted from  SeedFreedom.org

Join the European citizen’s appeal for SEED FREEDOM AND FOOD DEMOCRACY

This petition was launched on the 2nd October 2013 – Gandhi’s Birth Anniversary.

We are reminded that in the spirit of Gandhi, civil disobedience is necessary, when unjust laws undermine our common goods.

Seeds are a common good. They are a gift of nature and the result of centuries of hard work of farmers around the planet who have selected, conserved and bred seeds. They are the source of life and the first link in our food chain.
This common good is in danger. European legislation has been increasingly restricting access to seeds in the past decades, with industrial agriculture becoming the dominant model of farming. Only seed varieties which fit this model may be marketed in the EU. They must pass complicated and costly tests and registration procedures and their cultivation depends on chemicals. This legislation has dramatically reduced diversity of seed varieties which is seriously threatening our food security. Seeds are no longer in the hands of farmers and gardeners. A handful of global seed companies are controlling and monopolizing the market: The same six multinationals control 75% of all private sector plant breeding research; 60% of the commercial seed market and 76% of global agrochemical sales. (ETC Group).

The new legislative proposal of the European Commission is making things worse. It is further restricting and reducing agro-biodiversity and the free access to seeds for farmers and citizens, and encourages multinational seed companies to claim exclusive rights on the marketing of seeds. On the other hand seeds which carry a broad variety of pest resistance and the ability to adapt to climate change are increasingly excluded from the market or restricted to so called niche markets. This legislation not only affects Europe but the entire planet.

We firmly reject this seed monopoly law. At a time when the UN recognizes that the future of food is agro-ecological, local and diverse, the European Commission proposal will criminalize the growing and vibrant alternatives based on seed freedom and food democracy. At a time when consumers are making a choice for local, ecological, healthy, tasty, nutritious and chemical-free and GMO-free food, the proposed EU seed law is robbing consumers of their food freedom. 72% of the world’s food comes from small farms – We are not a niche – We are the future!

Make your voice heard!
Sign this appeal to:

  • Reject the European Commission “Seed Monopoly Law” and Demand your right to vibrant, healthy, chemical-free and GMO-free seeds and food.
  • In the spirit of Gandhi, call for civil disobedience against unjust seed laws and declare:We will not recognise any law that illegitimately makes seed the exclusive private property of corporations, contradicts the overall objective of conservation and enrichment of diversity strengthens a failed system of industrial agriculture, and ignores vibrant and healthy alternatives creating sustainable communities and food security in all regions of the world.

“As long as the superstition remains that unjust laws must be obeyed, so long will slavery exist”. Mahatma Gandhi

#seedfreedom

This entry was posted on October 30, 2013, in Policy.

Free webinar on how chemical exposure is contributing to obesity

Great Lakes Green Chemistry Network   ~   Michigan Green Chemistry Clearinghouse Webinar

Thursday, October 31, 2013

 “Transgenerational Inheritance of Prenatal Obesogen Exposure”
BRUCE BLUMBERG, PHD.

Departments of Developmentaland Cell Biology,Pharmaceutical Sciencesand Biomedical Engineering
University of California, Irvine

3:30 p.m. Eastern Standard

A growing body of science is demonstrating that lifestyle factors are not the only contributors to the obesity problem in the U.S. This webinar will discuss the links between exposure to environmental endocrine disrupting chemicals and the development of obesity. Dr. Blumberg will explain his obesogen hypothesis, which holds that exposure to chemical obesogens can reprogram metabolism to favor the storage of excess fat, despite normal diet and exercise. In addition, his research has recently shown that prenatal exposure to such obesogens can have permanent effects on the exposed individuals, their children and grandchildren.Bruce Blumberg is Professor in the Departments of Developmental and Cell Biology, Pharmaceutical Sciences and Biomedical Engineering at the University of California, Irvine, CA. His current research focuses on the role of nuclear hormone receptors in development, physiology and disease. Dr. Blumberg was appointed as a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 2012.

Space is limited.
Reserve your Webinar seat now at:
https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/320765856

You’re invited! “Food Politics and the Food Justice Movement: Moving Forward”

Class meets 10 a.m. to noon on Saturdays beginning Nov. 9 at Garfield Park Lodge, 334 Burton St. SE (skipping the Saturday after Thanksgiving). OKT is underwriting the cost of this class so participation is free.
     Our Kitchen Table invites you to join us for this five week class that investigates the current food system and food policy, looks at food justice responses around the country and discusses what a food justice and food sovereignty movement in West Michigan could look like. This is the third time that OKT has engaged Jeff Smith of the Grand Rapids Institute for Information Democracy to teach the class.
     Whether you are a professional actively involved in local efforts to eliminate hunger and undernutrition or a lay person who wants to know what you can do to increase your neighborhood’s access to healthy foods, this class will open your eyes to how the industrial food complex works and how you can challenge it.
     As a primary source for the class, participants will be reading the book “Food Justice: Food, Health and the Environment,” by Robert Gottlieb and Anupama Joshi. You can buy the book on Amazon.com.

Food Stamp Corporate Welfare

Reposted from Black Agenda Report, Wed, 10/16/2013 – 00:48 — Margaret Kimberley

If you think the SNAP food stamps debate is about poor people’s need to eat, you’re wrong. It’s about big corporations’ need to profit. “Xerox, JPMorgan Chase and eFunds Corporation have all successfully turned poverty into a profit center.” So have Coca Cola, Kroger, Wal-Mart, Kelloggs and a large slice of the rest of the Fortune 500 corporations.

by BAR editor and senior columnist Margaret Kimberley

Discussions about government spending are inherently bogus because the elephant in the room, big business, is absent.”

The federal and state governments operate under a system which is of the corporations, by the corporations, and for the corporations. Ordinary governmental functions which could easily be carried out with public money are instead privatized, depriving the public sector of revenue and jobs and making the neediest citizens unnecessarily dependent on the private sector. Governmental largesse on behalf of big business is focused primarily on poor people, the group most at the mercy of the system. Corporations collect child support payments and then imprison the poor people who can’t pay. While imprisoned, another corporation provides what passes for medical care. The crime is a perfect one.

When the Republicans demanded cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), better known as food stamps, the debate revolved around human need versus the call for fiscal austerity. Scarcely anyone mentioned that JPMorgan Chase, Xerox and eFunds Corporation make millions of dollars off of this system meant to help the poor.

It all came to light on October 12th, when many SNAP recipients in the states of Alabama, California, Georgia, Iowa, Illinois, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Maryland, Mississippi, New Jersey, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Texas and Virginia were unable to make purchases with their Electronic Benefits Transfer (EBT) cards because of a computer system malfunction at Xerox.

may at first have seemed odd for a Fortune 500 corporation to have anything to do with the SNAP program, but Xerox, JPMorgan Chase and eFunds Corporation have all successfully turned poverty into a profit center. Food stamps were once literally stamps until the 1996 welfare reform act required all state SNAP benefits to be digitized. At that point JPMorgan, Xerox and eFunds were quite literally in the money. Only the state of Montana administers its own SNAP program. Every other state pays one of these three corporations millions of dollars in fees to do what they could do themselves. Since 2007, Florida has paid JP Morgan $90 million, Pennsylvania’s seven-year contract totaled $112 million and New York’s seven-year contract totaled $126 million.

Every policy decision in state capitols and Washington DC is made with the needs of big business in mind.”

Food stamps are not the only government program that is administered by private corporations. WIC payments and child support collections are also moneymakers for Xerox and the rest of the financial services industry.

Like so many other debates in America, discussions about government spending are inherently bogus because the elephant in the room, big business, is absent. Millions of Americans are angry because food stamp recipients can use their benefits to buy junk food but don’t realize that they are able to do so because corporate America wouldn’t have it any other way.

Coca Cola, Kroger, Walmart, Kelloggs and other corporations have all lobbied the United States Department of Agriculture and congress to prevent any measures being put in place that would restrict SNAP use to healthy food choices. It isn’t difficult to understand why this is the case. They want to make as much money as possible and won’t abide anything that impedes their ability to keep turning huge profits. In just one year, nine Walmart Supercenters in Massachusetts received more than $33 million in SNAP revenues, which is more than four times the amount of SNAP benefits received at all farmers’ markets nationwide.

The recent congressional fracas about food stamp expenditures was like the shutdown debate, all for show. The Republican right wing advocates the most extreme anti-government positions in order to satisfy their base. Democrats rightly complain about cruelty to the poor but while the drama goes on the real welfare cheats keep cashing in, unlikely to be disadvantaged by either side after the dust settles.

If Americans knew that tasks easily carried out by their states were contracted out to big business, they would be very angry. That explains why no one tells them the truth. Governors, state legislators, and members of Congress are unlikely to expose their own timidity and corruption and the corporate media do as little reporting on serious issues as they can possibly get away with.

It is no exaggeration to say that every policy decision in state capitols and Washington DC is made with the needs of big business in mind. Wars against drugs and dead beat dads may resonate with the public, but the end result always includes a means of increasing corporate profits.

No matter what happens after the shut down kabuki theater ends, Walmart will not lose one penny of its food stamp revenues. No one on Capitol Hill will mess with the 1%. The business of America is still business.

Margaret Kimberley’s Freedom Rider column appears weekly in BAR, and is widely reprinted elsewhere. She maintains a frequently updated blog as well as athttp://freedomrider.blogspot.com. Ms. Kimberley lives in New York City, and can be reached via e-Mail at Margaret.Kimberley(at)BlackAgendaReport.com.

Attend “Dialogue on the Rights of Mother Earth” via livestream

The Seventh Generation Fund for Indigenous Peoples, together with other United States Social Forum Organizers invite you to

Dialogue on the Rights of Mother Earth

Friday, October 11th

1:00-6:00 pm PST at Humboldt State University’s Native Forum

Via Live Stream 4:00-9:00 pm EST

Please join this collaborative dialogue to explore responses to today’s environmental, social and cultural crises. Like the U.S. Social Forum, this event brings diverse groups together to share insights, perspectives, and visions that can help us build movements for social transformation. Remote participants can engage in dialogue via Live Stream and web chat.

The collaborative dialogue features Native and non-Native speakers from local communities, social justice activists, environmentalists and artists on the topic of the Rights of Mother Earth. Presentations will discuss the groundwork already laid in South America to advance this paradigm-shift, and speakers will consider what the respecting the Rights of Mother Earth might look like, in particular on California’s North Coast.

The first change in consciousness necessary is to create a new paradigm that respects the Rights of Mother Earth. We need to recognize that we are all part of an indivisible, living Earth community of interrelated and independent beings with a common destiny. The only way to create balance with the forces that nurture and sustain life is to recognize the rights of all beings and systems of Mother Earth and not only those of human beings.

Presenters include:

  • Tonya Gonnella Frichner (Onondaga)
  • Luis Macas (Saraguro) Ecuador
  • Chris Peters (Pohlik-lah/Karuk)
  • Oren Lyons (Onondaga)
  • Michael YellowBird (Arikara/Hidatsa)
  • Kaitlin Sopoci-Belknap
  • Morgan Corviday Hollis
  • Dania Rose Colegrove (Hupa/Yurok/Karuk)

Livestream portal link at 7genfund.org.

Collaborating Partners:
*Big Lagoon Rancheria *Department of Social Work at Humboldt State University *Northern California Tribal Court Coalition *Multicultural Center at Humboldt State University *Ink People Center for the Arts *Humboldt BayKeeper *North Coast Environmental Center *Mad River Alliance *Environmental Protection Information Center (EPIC) *Earth Law Center *Move to Amend *American Indian Movement – West *Department of Native American Studies at Humboldt State University *Tonatierra Community Development Institute *Democracy Unlimited of Humboldt County *American Indian Law Alliance *Got Water! *HSU College of Professional Studies  *Pitzer College *United States Social Forum

Victory: Senate to Kill Monsanto Protection Act Amid Outrage

Reposted from NationofChange 
By Anthony Gucciardi

In a major victory brought upon by serious activism and public outrage, new legislation changes will shut down the Monsanto Protection Act rider that granted Monsanto protection from legal action and was set to renew on September 30th.

This unprecedented move shows the true power of the anti-GMO, anti-Monsanto movement, and how elected officials are now being forced to side with the concerned population over the money-spewing Monsanto. After all, it was Monsanto who purchased its way into the initial Senate spending bill legislation via a rider dubbed the ‘Monsanto Protection Act’ through Senator Roy Blunt.

Officially labeled the Farmer Assurance Provision under Sec. 735 of the Senate Continuing Resolution spending bill, Senator Blunt was conveniently given over $64,000 by Monsanto before he handed the biotech corporation the ability to write its own legislation for the Monsanto Protection Act. And as I told you back in March here on the frontlines of anti-GMO activism, the financial payload dished out by Monsanto was enough to secure a major victory for corporations over both the public and even the federal government.

It was last March that Obama signed the initial Senate spending bill into law, subsequently bringing the Monsanto Protection Act rider into legal validity as well. But the rider only extended until September 30th of this year, and it was up to Monsanto to pull another slippery legislative trick out of their sleeves in order to pass a Monsanto Protection Act 2.0 renewal. Once again, however, Monsanto executives underestimated the power of the alternative news community and the intelligence of those who do not want to eat contaminated food.

And as a result, Senators are being forced to respond in a big way. As one Senator put it:

“That provision will be gone,” said Sen. Mark Pryor (D-Ark.) told Politico.

There is even discussion of how the Monsanto Protection Act came to exist in the first place, and more importantly how we can hold the politicians responsible.

“Short-term appropriations bills are not an excuse for Congress to grandfather in bad policy,” said Colin O’Neil, director of government affairs for the Center for Food Safety.

Once again, we have achieved a major victory in the fight against Monsanto and GMOs at large. As information on the subject continues to spread like intellectual wildfire, Monsanto’s days as a food supply hog consistently dwindle.

 

Free webinar, Sustainable Biomaterials: Criteria, Benefits, Challenges and Market-Based Tools”

3 p.m. Thursday, September 19, 2013

Brenda Platt, Program Director, Waste to Wealth and Sustainable Plastics,
Co-Director Institute for Local Self Reliance

Plastics derived from fossil fuels are nonrenewable, may leach toxic chemicals, harm marine life, and increase reliance on imported fossil-fuel-based feedstocks.  The developoment of bioplastics and other biobased materials hold great promise to mitigate many of these problems by offering the potential for renewability, biodegradation, and path away from harmful chemicals.They are not, however, an automatic panacea. As the interest in biomaterials grows, concerns regarding sourcing and end-of-life issues surrounding these materials follow, such as food competition, GMOs, and compostibility vs. recyclability.The Sustainable Biomaterials Collaborative (SBC) has developed tools to help producers, purchasers, and consumers  navigate the maze of biobased materials  entering the marketplace. Its purchasing specifications, for instance, are designed to promote products that are sustainable from cradle to cradle: from field and manufacturing to recovery.In this webinar presentation, Brenda Platt, co-chair of the Sustainable Biomaterials Collaborative, will discuss the SBC’s efforts to promote market-based tools such as purchasing guidelines and Working Landscape Certificates, an innovative program that allows buyers of biobased products to support sustainable agricultural practices.

In addition to co-chairing the Sustainable Biomaterials Collaborative, Brenda Platt is the co-director of the nonprofit Institute for Local Self-Reliance, based in Washington, DC, and heads up its Sustainable Plastics Project.  She has worked 26 years on waste reduction, recycling and composting issues

Space is limited.
Reserve your Webinar seat now at:
https://www1.gotomeeting.com/register/182650512

House Republicans Push To Include Monsanto Protection Act In New Spending Bill

Earlier this year, Merkley and Senate Agriculture Committee Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) took to the Senate floor to publicly oppose including the provision in any subsequent legislation.

Re-posted from Huffington Post

WASHINGTON — House Republicans will include an extension of the so-called Monsanto Protection Act in the spending bill designed to avert a government shutdown, according to text of the legislation released Wednesday by House Appropriations Chairman Hal Rogers (R-Ky.).

The Monsanto measure was originally enacted into law in March by being slipped into the previous spending resolution, which is now set to expire.

Since its quiet passage, the Monsanto Protection Act has become a target of intense opposition. Monsanto is a global seed and herbicide company that specializes in genetically modified crops. The law effectively prevents judges from placing injunctions on genetically modified seeds even if they are deemed unsafe. Monsanto has argued that it is unfair to single out the company in the nickname for the law, which is officially known as the Farmer Assurance Provision, when other major agribusiness players also support it.

Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) has waged a campaign against the measure and told HuffPost he plans to fight its reenactment.

“The proposed House continuing resolution includes an extension of the Monsanto Protection Act, a secret rider slipped into a must-pass spending bill earlier this year,” Merkley said. “I will fight the House’s efforts to extend this special interest loophole that nullifies court orders that are protecting farmers, the environment, and public health.”

Colin O’Neil, a lobbyist for the Center for Food Safety, said in a statement, “It is extremely disappointing to see the damaging ‘Monsanto Protection Act’ policy rider extended in the House spending bill. Hundreds of thousands of Americans called their elected officials to voice their frustration and disappointment over the inclusion of the ‘Monsanto Protection Act’ this past spring. Its inclusion is a slap in the face to the American public and our justice system.”

But Jennifer Hing, a spokeswoman for the House Appropriations Committee, said the panel doesn’t expect the Senate to balk at the inclusion of the Monsanto provision. “We have received no indication that this is a concern,” she said. “It’s a very traditional [continuing resolution] in every sense of the word. It simply continues existing law. Anything that was enacted in FY13 continues to be enacted.”

The latest continuing resolution — a Capitol Hill term for a bill to keep funding the government until a new budget is passed — would last through Dec. 15, at which point a new CR or a more robust spending bill would be needed to avoid a shutdown.

Hing said the only significant changes the spending bill would make to existing law were included so that federal agencies could manipulate their budgets under sequestration “to continue government functions that would otherwise have catastrophic, unintended, or irreversible impacts on government programs.” For example, agencies would be able to maintain current staffing levels on the border and prepare for bio or chemical weapons attacks.

Earlier this year, Merkley and Senate Agriculture Committee Chairwoman Debbie Stabenow (D-Mich.) took to the Senate floor to publicly oppose including the provision in any subsequent legislation.

“The Monsanto Protection Act refers to a policy rider the House slipped into the recently passed continuing resolution and sent over to the Senate. Because of the time-urgent consideration of this must-pass legislation — necessary to avert a government shutdown — this policy rider slipped through without examination or debate,” Merkley noted on the floor in June.

“I wish to assure my friend that I think it would be inappropriate for that language to be adopted in a conference committee or otherwise adopted in a manner designed to bypass open debate in the relevant committees and this chamber,” Stabenow told Merkley. “I will do my best to oppose any effort to add this kind of extension in the conference committee on this farm bill or to otherwise extend it without appropriate legislative examination.”

A prior attempt to repeal the provision was opposed by Sen. Roy Blunt (R-Mo.), and Sen. Thad Cochran (R-Miss.) blocked it on the floor.

In an interview with HuffPost at the time, Blunt made the case for the Monsanto Protection Act, arguing that it aimed to protect farmers who purchased seeds that were later deemed unsafe.

“I was raised — my mom and dad were dairy farmers — once you’ve made a decision to plant a crop for that year, you can’t go back and undo that decision,” he said. Requiring Monsanto or other seed companies to compensate farmers for lost income wasn’t a viable strategy, he added, if the seeds had once been approved. “You can’t sue them for selling a crop that the federal government said is OK to plant,” he said.

The Monsanto Protection Act allows the secretary of agriculture to block a judicial injunction and allow planting of a strain of seeds. The U.S. Department of Agriculture called the provision redundant, Blunt said, in the sense that all it did “was repeat authority that the secretary in a hearing the other day, before the Agri[culture] Approp[riations] committee the other day, said he already had.”

“And it didn’t require the secretary to do anything that the secretary thought was the wrong thing to do,” Blunt continued. “Which is one of the reasons I thought it was fine. I checked with USDA, or my staff did, and USDA said, ‘You know, we don’t think you need to do that because we can already do it.’ The other view of that was, well, if you can already do it, then it makes everything come together, it’s OK to restate authority they already had.”

Earlier this year, a repeal petition announced by Merkley’s office quickly garnered more than 100,000 signatures, including support beyond his Oregon constituents. A petition put out by Food Democracy Now, which organized a protest at the White House shortly after the measure became law in March, similarly picked up a quick 100,000 signatures. A petition pushed by CREDO Action, an online progressive group with some three million members, has more than a quarter million signatures.

“That’s big for us, the fact that it went from zero to 100,000 just in 24 hours,” Becky Bond, the head of CREDO, told HuffPost at the time. “People are really passionate about this issue. A lot of time people feel helpless with regard to corporate decisions … The fact that there’s someone in the Senate who’s fighting for this is exciting to people, and they’re eager to get their names on it.”

This story has been updated with comment from a House Appropriations Committee spokeswoman.

CLARIFICATION: Language describing proposed changes to current law in the House spending bill has been clarified.