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Military Planes are Flying Overhead Now

Posted on Nov 30th, 2007 by Jahrun : Wizard Jahrun

I want to tell all you Zaadzsters something.

Over the last 3 days, military planes of all shapes and sizes have been flying low overhead, morning, noon and night, heading primarily from the direction of Harrisburg, eastward toward Philadelphia.

This is not only unusual, but rather startling. The next "event" is near.

The modulation of psychotropic  vibrations have intensified these last 6 months. Can you feel it? Notice the rise in confusion? We must find our SELVES and find the infinite peace there to tune-out the buzz.

We must stand in peace, but we must stand. We must catalyze peace. Stop consuming. Quit your jobs. Awaken others. Heal.

Please see this article and check-out the video links:
http://www.newstarget.com/022308.html

Kucinich the New Age leader?
http://www.co-intelligence.org/CIPol_DKucinich6.12.html
http://www.fas.org/sgp/congress/2001/hr2977.html


Namaste.

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MoveOn - Take a Stand Day

Posted on Aug 30th, 2007 by Jahrun : Wizard Jahrun

Two nights ago I attended the Take a Stand Day at a local church here in Reading, PA, an event coordinated through MoveOn.org. I wanted to get a sampling of peace and protest perspective here in my area.

Guest speaker after guest speaker voiced their melodramas over federal budget, paling VA benefits, lost sons, wrongness of the war. A mother and daughter spoke to promote the food bank at the church, their face and jowls fusing almost without a neck into their shoulders, each respectively 100 to 150 pounds overweight.

Sitting in the front pew, immersed in a growing singe of topical and inhalant irritation from perfumes and colognes, I turned around the room to see the unhealthiness of everyone. Feeling light-headed and a growing burning sensation on my skin, I rose-up to leave the event.

Last night I received a follow-up email soliciting my survey of the event and felt so compelled to voice in contrast to my witness of public perspective, a radically different perspective in my reply.

The current geo-political militarization, police state, economical and biospheric conditions directly reflect a sickness of the pervading necro-consumer greed of INDIVIDUAL people.

Individuals are poisoning themselves, their children, and the Earth. They support a monoculturism of fast food, housing, animals and plants. They continue fueling their cars, thereby voting with each dollar to fuel and support the engine whose destruction they say they want to stop.

To pull the plug on war, the people must radically change their lifestyle in order to get underneath the problem. Shouting at and protesting the undesirable manifestations surfacing from the core problem will not make the problem go away.

Individuals must increasingly turn-off their TVs, grow their own food, stop poisoning themselves with the chem-pharma "pay to get sick and then pay for drugs" scam. Stop buying bottled water and do not drink from the public water supply. Stop applying topical agents to their skin, stop buying "fragranced" laundry, personal care products and all manner of air toxifiers. They must start buying organic produce grown locally. Stop eating meat, fish and poultry! Start practicing yoga and meditation. They must start exercising and riding bike or walking everywhere possible up to 15 mile radius. They must learn to know the natural aspects of where they live and feel the need to restore nature. They must educate themselves more highly to know the "truth" and take right action, then be at peace.

The human race has a sickness for which there is little hope. We as a world must adopt the 13-moon calendar and abandon the Julian/Gregorian calendar as it denaturalizes and desensitizes our perception of the "now" and our connection with Oneness.

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Dreamspell - Activity Day Sheet

Posted on Aug 6th, 2007 by Jahrun : Wizard Jahrun

Dreamspell Oracle DaysheetPrint this Oracle Daysheet image on a standard 8.5 x 11 white paper. Use it along with colored pencils or pens as a framework for establishing your own daily practice for bringing synchronic order into your life!

BEST RESULTS FOR PRINTING:
1)  Click on this image to see the largest original size.
2)  Right-click (Mac users option click) this image and choose "Save Picture as. . ." to save a copy on your own computer. Having the image on your own computer will make it easier for you to print copies when you want without having to come back here.
3)  Print one initial copy to ensure it prints properly. I recommend using an ink-jet printer instead of color laser.
4)  When presented with print options, select Fast Normal instead of Normal quality to save time printing and to use less ink.
5)  Once you are satisfied with the results, you can print a number of copies using the same instructions. I usually print 20 or more at a time and then use a 3-hole punch to make holes along the top.

This calendar is one of the homeschool activities that Helena and Ruby do on a daily basis. It raises awareness of the physical and energistic body, as well as our energistic connection with the physical and energistic planet! See a Helena's Daysheet from this morning as an example.

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Hiroshima

Posted on Aug 6th, 2007 by Jahrun : Wizard Jahrun
Today marks the anniversary of the Hiroshima bombing.

I ask that you please take 12 minutes and watch these three videos in the order presented:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8XGjkyZU2oY&mode=related&search=

http://www.truemajority.org/bensbbs/

http://www.truemajority.org/fun/oreotrans.php

Use them to feel strong, to actively and ethically stand-up to represent a new world of peace.

Namaste.
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Tagged with: War

ZAADZ CONSUMER STRIKE

Posted on Jul 31st, 2007 by Jahrun : Wizard Jahrun
In response to http://grantdwalker.zaadz.com/blog/2007/7/the_bargain

We must get underneath the problem!

Think of the potential of Zaadzsters to SEED an indefinite economic strike where we all simultaneously leave our jobs, stop paying bills, stop driving, and stop spending. WE MUST ALL JUST STOP WHAT WE ARE DOING and focus full-time on planting, singing, meditating and loving, all together.

JUST STOP SPENDING AND CONSUMING NOW.

We need this message to percolate to the top of all Zaadz readership!

Connect with gardeners and organic farms ASAP. We must prepare for winter.
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Benzyl Alcohol is POISON!

Posted on Jul 30th, 2007 by Jahrun : Wizard Jahrun

Anyone who has taken a high school chemistry class has probably heard of benzene: a highly volatile and extremely carcinogenic solvent. Yet so many Americans are applying it to their faces, scalps, and bodies on a daily basis in the form of Benzyl Acetate and Benzyl Alcohol. Recently it has been the cause of infant deaths during hospitalization where IV medicines were used containing Benzyl Alcohol as a preservative! Simply outrageous.

Just read the ingredients on your shampoo, cologne, perfume, laundry supplies.

Even claimed organic products such as JASON shampoo. Just read the ingredients.

When this ingredient is airborne in my vicinity, my skin feels like a rash of fire!

See:
http://www.cleanyourhomewithoutchemicals.com/FabricSofteners.htm
http://www.geocities.com/fragranceallergy/SweetPoison.html

ENLIGHTENED BUT CAN'T FEEL?

THINK ABOUT NEW BORN SKIN AND WHAT YOU ARE DOING TO THE NEXT GENERATION WITH YOUR MIND NUMBING CONSUMERISM!

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Vernon Howard Quote

Posted on Jul 24th, 2007 by Jahrun : Wizard Jahrun
"The whole problem is to get an unaware person to see that he is unaware, which is not easy. How can he see what he will not see? But there are ways, and one of them is to listen to the lesson of suffering. But even this lesson is resisted, for people love their pains in preference to reality. This is because they have not as yet tasted freedom. An animal accustomed to the confining comforts of his cage will fear the open spaces, and will snap at whoever tries to force him out."

- Vernon Howard, Pathways to Perfect Living, p. 138

I highly suggest that everyone on Zaadz subscribe to the New Life Foundation daily quote service. There is no advertising, soliciting of any kind. These quotes are synchronistic, containing timely messages for you each morning. To subscribe, simply send a blank message to:
SecretsofLife-on@mail-list.com
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Tagged with: Quote, Denial, Freedom, Suffering

Michael Moore's SICKO

Posted on Jul 23rd, 2007 by Jahrun : Wizard Jahrun

Last night, I went to the Goggleworks to see the Sicko movie with Amastesia and Henriette.

I highly recommend seeing it. Most (I say most here) of Michael's selected case studies were suffering primarily from their own choosing of a typical American consumer lifestyle. Poor diet. No exercise. Obese. You get the idea. Michael himself looked a hundred pounds overweight.

People of the United States have a memetic sickness, a multi-generational disease of the mind that continues the mass trend toward sickness at all levels of life: cell, organ, organism, family, society, region, country, continent and planet. Institutionalized healthcare is not a solution to remedy poor lifestyle choices!

Though I agree that the U.S. should have a socialized healthcare system like much of the rest of the world, it remains paradoxically in a state of gridlock until people start making consumer choices that are healthy at every level of life.

See previous blog entry Each Consumer Dollar is a Vote.


The U.S. is self-sympathetic, and most of you are afraid to do the hard work of taking proactive accountability for your own health. Until you all radically change, the federal government, hand-in-hand with billion-dollar corporations, are going to keep putting a different spin on things, fooling you into thinking some progress is about to be made. They OWN you because of your debts to your mind and body, and your fears about finding your true self.

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Tagged with: Health

Each Consumer Dollar is a Vote

Posted on Jul 21st, 2007 by Jahrun : Wizard Jahrun
Time to get up off your meditation cusion and go out to the store. So, what are you going to buy? Gonna get some gas from the Middle East on your way? Then what goes in your cart? Genetically modified fruits and vegetables sprayed heavily with pesticides and fossil fuel fertilizers? Detergents? Dryer sheeets and fabric softenersMeat, chicken or fish? Milk products? Products having "fragrance" as an ingredient? Products having artificial colors, sugar, corn syrup? How about soy? Bottled water? Cooking oils in plastic bottles - whoa? Okay, so you're about ready to leave the store, how about some slash-and-burn-rainforest cup of coffee at the mini StarCrooks kiosk on your way out of the grocery? Are you driving with a cell phone glued next to your brain? Do you know of anyone with cancer or diseases of the nervous system? Thyroid disorders? Fibroids?

Is it myopic to be an aspiring buddhini, yogini, warrior princess, goddess or lover and yet buy bottled water and what about "cleanse" drinks? Drinking chlorinated or flouridated water? Would anyone in their right mind knowingly poison themselves, their children, each other, or the Earth? Water. Think about it. Ludicrous. You're paying for what makes-up 85% of your body! And what are you getting? Have you been clicking on the links? Think about water as it is to our lives and the extremity of your enslavement when buying it in a plastic bottle.

Time to wake up and start acting with integrity as stewards and emissaries of this planet through consumer consciousness and deed. Are you buying clothes or other products made by toddlers in a sweatshop who are chained to a workbench for 12 hours every single day, with little or no break to eat or urinate, who are regularly beaten? I'll bet that you are. Yes, keep meditating on world peace, but then reverberate with responsible affirmative consumer action!

Listen to me and listen well. . . the fat-cat chemical-pharmaceutical moguls smoking the cigars are bellowing with laughter at your peesly "rising-up for world peace" because YOU aren't really getting any smarter or more responsible about your hypnotic consumer habits and the practices all around you that YOU endorse through YOUR purchase, ingestion, use, waste, and persisted through YOUR fear-kept ignorance and silence. Do you even know about Codex Alimentarius? Would Jesus, Buddha, or any truly enlightened being, advocate that you or your church spray broad leaf killer and toxic fertilizers on the lawn? Where do those chemicals go I wonder? Into the air, skin and soil? Into the stream valleys and aquafers? Your well water?

Why do you buy, ingest and pollute with these things? Because of your parents or friends? Because of mass media conditioning? Don't you have a mind? Is it being wasted? Is your dollar bill a terrorist or a Buddah? Have you noticed rampant urban sprawl of new-home-disease and monoculturism of trees, plants and strip-mall plazas? Have you noticed cars growing in size proportionate to the growing size of people's girth and stupidity? Have you even looked at a hybrid car?

YOGA AND PRAYER ARE NOT ENOUGH.

YOU MUST RADICALLY CHANGE YOUR CONSUMER HABITS NOW!

FOR GOODNESS SAKE, JUST STOP BUYING!

WAKE UP AND ACT RESPONSIBLY AS A CARING EARTH CITIZEN.

EDUCATE YOURSELF AND YOUR CHILDREN AND START SPEAKING OUT!

CONSUME LESS! AND FIND A RELIABLE SOURCE OF FRESH, FILTERED WATER.

START A GARDEN AND BUY ORGANIC AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE.

TALK TO YOUR GROCERY MANAGER.

SPEND MORE QUALITY TIME AT HOME.

GET OUTSIDE TO LEARN ABOUT THE PLANET WHERE YOU LIVE.

BUY YOUR GAS AT CITGO THEN WALK, RUN, SKATE OR RIDE YOUR BIKE.

GET EVERY "FRAGRANCED" PRODUCT OUT OF YOUR HOME AND CAR.

GET THE TOXIC CLEANING PRODUCTS OUT OF YOUR HOME.
(Don't just throw toxic products in the trash, take them to a HAZMAT facility.)

STOP WATCHING TV AND READING THE NEWS AND OTHER INFORMATIONAL POISON!

GET RID OF YOUR CELL PHONE, IT IS THE EAR AND EYE OF BIG BROTHER.
(Even with your phone off, the passive ID circuit reports to local towers and your position is logged.)

STAY AWAY FROM STRONG ELECTRO-MAGNETIC FORCES!
(Stay far away from cell phones, microwaves, coiled electric wires, refrigerators, power lines. You mean you can't feel it? Are you numb? Heard of leukemia?)

BLOW THE HATCH ON 90% OF YOUR STUFF.
(Give it to others in need. Suddenly you begin to see them.)

STOP LOOKING FOR STUFF TO BUY!
(Can you pack a lunch? See if you can get by one week without an expenditure. Are you addicted to buying things? Has it really helped you or has your incessant, self-serving greed put your kids in day care?)

TAKE YOUR CHILDREN OUT OF PUBLIC SCHOOL AND BEGIN HOMESCHOOLING NOW!
(Are you dumb as well as numb? The most evil pollution in the universe self-replicates.)

DO NOT BE AFRAID TO FACE THE TRUTH.

SIT STILL AND STOP CHASING AROUND.

LISTEN TO YOUR HEART. 

PUT YOUR HOUSE IN ORDER.

BE ETHICAL.

BE REAL.
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Tagged with: Health, Consumerism

Eating Fossil Fuels, by Dale Allen Pfeiffer

Posted on Jul 21st, 2007 by Jahrun : Wizard Jahrun

October 3 , 2003, 1200 PDT, (FTW) -- Human beings (like all other animals) draw their energy from the food they eat. Until the last century, all of the food energy available on this planet was derived from the sun through photosynthesis. Either you ate plants or you ate animals that fed on plants, but the energy in your food was ultimately derived from the sun.

It would have been absurd to think that we would one day run out of sunshine. No, sunshine was an abundant, renewable resource, and the process of photosynthesis fed all life on this planet. It also set a limit on the amount of food that could be generated at any one time, and therefore placed a limit upon population growth. Solar energy has a limited rate of flow into this planet. To increase your food production, you had to increase the acreage under cultivation, and displace your competitors. There was no other way to increase the amount of energy available for food production. Human population grew by displacing everything else and appropriating more and more of the available solar energy.

The need to expand agricultural production was one of the motive causes behind most of the wars in recorded history, along with expansion of the energy base (and agricultural production is truly an essential portion of the energy base). And when Europeans could no longer expand cultivation, they began the task of conquering the world. Explorers were followed by conquistadors and traders and settlers. The declared reasons for expansion may have been trade, avarice, empire or simply curiosity, but at its base, it was all about the expansion of agricultural productivity. Wherever explorers and conquistadors traveled, they may have carried off loot, but they left plantations. And settlers toiled to clear land and establish their own homestead. This conquest and expansion went on until there was no place left for further expansion. Certainly, to this day, landowners and farmers fight to claim still more land for agricultural productivity, but they are fighting over crumbs. Today, virtually all of the productive land on this planet is being exploited by agriculture. What remains unused is too steep, too wet, too dry or lacking in soil nutrients.1

Just when agricultural output could expand no more by increasing acreage, new innovations made possible a more thorough exploitation of the acreage already available. The process of "pest" displacement and appropriation for agriculture accelerated with the industrial revolution as the mechanization of agriculture hastened the clearing and tilling of land and augmented the amount of farmland which could be tended by one person. With every increase in food production, the human population grew apace.

At present, nearly 40% of all land-based photosynthetic capability has been appropriated by human beings.2 In the United States we divert more than half of the energy captured by photosynthesis.3 We have taken over all the prime real estate on this planet. The rest of nature is forced to make due with what is left. Plainly, this is one of the major factors in species extinctions and in ecosystem stress.

The Green Revolution

In the 1950s and 1960s, agriculture underwent a drastic transformation commonly referred to as the Green Revolution. The Green Revolution resulted in the industrialization of agriculture. Part of the advance resulted from new hybrid food plants, leading to more productive food crops. Between 1950 and 1984, as the Green Revolution transformed agriculture around the globe, world grain production increased by 250%.4 That is a tremendous increase in the amount of food energy available for human consumption. This additional energy did not come from an increase in incipient sunlight, nor did it result from introducing agriculture to new vistas of land. The energy for the Green Revolution was provided by fossil fuels in the form of fertilizers (natural gas), pesticides (oil), and hydrocarbon fueled irrigation.

The Green Revolution increased the energy flow to agriculture by an average of 50 times the energy input of traditional agriculture.5 In the most extreme cases, energy consumption by agriculture has increased 100 fold or more.6

In the United States, 400 gallons of oil equivalents are expended annually to feed each American (as of data provided in 1994).7 Agricultural energy consumption is broken down as follows:

  • 31% for the manufacture of inorganic fertilizer
  • 19% for the operation of field machinery
  • 16% for transportation
  • 13% for irrigation
  • 08% for raising livestock (not including livestock feed)
  • 05% for crop drying
  • 05% for pesticide production
  • 08% miscellaneous8

Energy costs for packaging, refrigeration, transportation to retail outlets, and household cooking are not considered in these figures.

To give the reader an idea of the energy intensiveness of modern agriculture, production of one kilogram of nitrogen for fertilizer requires the energy equivalent of from 1.4 to 1.8 liters of diesel fuel. This is not considering the natural gas feedstock.9 According to The Fertilizer Institute (http://www.tfi.org/), in the year from June 30 2001 until June 30 2002 the United States used 12,009,300 short tons of nitrogen fertilizer.10 Using the low figure of 1.4 liters diesel equivalent per kilogram of nitrogen, this equates to the energy content of 15.3 billion liters of diesel fuel, or 96.2 million barrels.

 Of course, this is only a rough comparison to aid comprehension of the energy requirements for modern agriculture.

In a very real sense, we are literally eating fossil fuels. However, due to the laws of thermodynamics, there is not a direct correspondence between energy inflow and outflow in agriculture. Along the way, there is a marked energy loss. Between 1945 and 1994, energy input to agriculture increased 4-fold while crop yields only increased 3-fold.11 Since then, energy input has continued to increase without a corresponding increase in crop yield. We have reached the point of marginal returns. Yet, due to soil degradation, increased demands of pest management and increasing energy costs for irrigation (all of which is examined below), modern agriculture must continue increasing its energy expenditures simply to maintain current crop yields. The Green Revolution is becoming bankrupt.

Fossil Fuel Costs

Solar energy is a renewable resource limited only by the inflow rate from the sun to the earth. Fossil fuels, on the other hand, are a stock-type resource that can be exploited at a nearly limitless rate. However, on a human timescale, fossil fuels are nonrenewable. They represent a planetary energy deposit which we can draw from at any rate we wish, but which will eventually be exhausted without renewal. The Green Revolution tapped into this energy deposit and used it to increase agricultural production.

Total fossil fuel use in the United States has increased 20-fold in the last 4 decades. In the US, we consume 20 to 30 times more fossil fuel energy per capita than people in developing nations. Agriculture directly accounts for 17% of all the energy used in this country.12 As of 1990, we were using approximately 1,000 liters (6.41 barrels) of oil to produce food of one hectare of land.13

In 1994, David Pimentel and Mario Giampietro estimated the output/input ratio of agriculture to be around 1.4.14 For 0.7 Kilogram-Calories (kcal) of fossil energy consumed, U.S. agriculture produced 1 kcal of food. The input figure for this ratio was based on FAO (Food and Agriculture Organization of the UN) statistics, which consider only fertilizers (without including fertilizer feedstock), irrigation, pesticides (without including pesticide feedstock), and machinery and fuel for field operations. Other agricultural energy inputs not considered were energy and machinery for drying crops, transportation for inputs and outputs to and from the farm, electricity, and construction and maintenance of farm buildings and infrastructures. Adding in estimates for these energy costs brought the input/output energy ratio down to 1.15 Yet this does not include the energy expense of packaging, delivery to retail outlets, refrigeration or household cooking.

In a subsequent study completed later that same year (1994), Giampietro and Pimentel managed to derive a more accurate ratio of the net fossil fuel energy ratio of agriculture.16 In this study, the authors defined two separate forms of energy input: Endosomatic energy and Exosomatic energy. Endosomatic energy is generated through the metabolic transformation of food energy into muscle energy in the human body. Exosomatic energy is generated by transforming energy outside of the human body, such as burning gasoline in a tractor. This assessment allowed the authors to look at fossil fuel input alone and in ratio to other inputs.

Prior to the industrial revolution, virtually 100% of both endosomatic and exosomatic energy was solar driven. Fossil fuels now represent 90% of the exosomatic energy used in the United States and other developed countries.17 The typical exo/endo ratio of pre-industrial, solar powered societies is about 4 to 1. The ratio has changed tenfold in developed countries, climbing to 40 to 1. And in the United States it is more than 90 to 1.18 The nature of the way we use endosomatic energy has changed as well.

The vast majority of endosomatic energy is no longer expended to deliver power for direct economic processes. Now the majority of endosomatic energy is utilized to generate the flow of information directing the flow of exosomatic energy driving machines. Considering the 90/1 exo/endo ratio in the United States, each endosomatic kcal of energy expended in the US induces the circulation of 90 kcal of exosomatic energy. As an example, a small gasoline engine can convert the 38,000 kcal in one gallon of gasoline into 8.8 KWh (Kilowatt hours), which equates to about 3 weeks of work for one human being.19

In their refined study, Giampietro and Pimentel found that 10 kcal of exosomatic energy are required to produce 1 kcal of food delivered to the consumer in the U.S. food system. This includes packaging and all delivery expenses, but excludes household cooking).20 The U.S. food system consumes ten times more energy than it produces in food energy. This disparity is made possible by nonrenewable fossil fuel stocks.

Assuming a figure of 2,500 kcal per capita for the daily diet in the United States, the 10/1 ratio translates into a cost of 35,000 kcal of exosomatic energy per capita each day. However, considering that the average return on one hour of endosomatic labor in the U.S. is about 100,000 kcal of exosomatic energy, the flow of exosomatic energy required to supply the daily diet is achieved in only 20 minutes of labor in our current system. Unfortunately, if you remove fossil fuels from the equation, the daily diet will require 111 hours of endosomatic labor per capita; that is, the current U.S. daily diet would require nearly three weeks of labor per capita to produce.

Quite plainly, as fossil fuel production begins to decline within the next decade, there will be less energy available for the production of food.

Soil, Cropland and Water

Modern intensive agriculture is unsustainable. Technologically-enhanced agriculture has augmented soil erosion, polluted and overdrawn groundwater and surface water, and even (largely due to increased pesticide use) caused serious public health and environmental problems. Soil erosion, overtaxed cropland and water resource overdraft in turn lead to even greater use of fossil fuels and hydrocarbon products. More hydrocarbon-based fertilizers must be applied, along with more pesticides; irrigation water requires more energy to pump; and fossil fuels are used to process polluted water.

It takes 500 years to replace 1 inch of topsoil.21 In a natural environment, topsoil is built up by decaying plant matter and weathering rock, and it is protected from erosion by growing plants. In soil made susceptible by agriculture, erosion is reducing productivity up to 65% each year.22 Former prairie lands, which constitute the bread basket of the United States, have lost one half of their topsoil after farming for about 100 years. This soil is eroding 30 times faster than the natural formation rate.23 Food crops are much hungrier than the natural grasses that once covered the Great Plains. As a result, the remaining topsoil is increasingly depleted of nutrients. Soil erosion and mineral depletion removes about $20 billion worth of plant nutrients from U.S. agricultural soils every year.24 Much of the soil in the Great Plains is little more than a sponge into which we must pour hydrocarbon-based fertilizers in order to produce crops.

Every year in the U.S., more than 2 million acres of cropland are lost to erosion, salinization and water logging. On top of this, urbanization, road building, and industry claim another 1 million acres annually from farmland.24 Approximately three-quarters of the land area in the United States is devoted to agriculture and commercial forestry.25 The expanding human population is putting increasing pressure on land availability. Incidentally, only a small portion of U.S. land area remains available for the solar energy technologies necessary to support a solar energy-based economy. The land area for harvesting biomass is likewise limited. For this reason, the development of solar energy or biomass must be at the expense of agriculture.

Modern agriculture also places a strain on our water resources. Agriculture consumes fully 85% of all U.S. freshwater resources.26 Overdraft is occurring from many surface water resources, especially in the west and south. The typical example is the Colorado River, which is diverted to a trickle by the time it reaches the Pacific. Yet surface water only supplies 60% of the water used in irrigation. The remainder, and in some places the majority of water for irrigation, comes from ground water aquifers. Ground water is recharged slowly by the percolation of rainwater through the earth's crust. Less than 0.1% of the stored ground water mined annually is replaced by rainfall.27 The great Ogallala aquifer that supplies agriculture, industry and home use in much of the southern and central plains states has an annual overdraft up to 160% above its recharge rate. The Ogallala aquifer will become unproductive in a matter of decades.28

We can illustrate the demand that modern agriculture places on water resources by looking at a farmland producing corn. A corn crop that produces 118 bushels/acre/year requires more than 500,000 gallons/acre of water during the growing season. The production of 1 pound of maize requires 1,400 pounds (or 175 gallons) of water.29 Unless something is done to lower these consumption rates, modern agriculture will help to propel the United States into a water crisis.

In the last two decades, the use of hydrocarbon-based pesticides in the U.S. has increased 33-fold, yet each year we lose more crops to pests.30 This is the result of the abandonment of traditional crop rotation practices. Nearly 50% of U.S. corn land is grown continuously as a monoculture.31 This results in an increase in corn pests, which in turn requires the use of more pesticides. Pesticide use on corn crops had increased 1,000-fold even before the introduction of genetically engineered, pesticide resistant corn. However, corn losses have still risen 4-fold.32

Modern intensive agriculture is unsustainable. It is damaging the land, draining water supplies and polluting the environment. And all of this requires more and more fossil fuel input to pump irrigation water, to replace nutrients, to provide pest protection, to remediate the environment and simply to hold crop production at a constant. Yet this necessary fossil fuel input is going to crash headlong into declining fossil fuel production.

US Consumption

In the United States, each person consumes an average of 2,175 pounds of food per person per year. This provides the U.S. consumer with an average daily energy intake of 3,600 Calories. The world average is 2,700 Calories per day.33 Fully 19% of the U.S. caloric intake comes from fast food. Fast food accounts for 34% of the total food consumption for the average U.S. citizen. The average citizen dines out for one meal out of four.34

One third of the caloric intake of the average American comes from animal sources (including dairy products), totaling 800 pounds per person per year. This diet means that U.S. citizens derive 40% of their calories from fat-nearly half of their diet. 35

Americans are also grand consumers of water. As of one decade ago, Americans were consuming 1,450 gallons/day/capita (g/d/c), with the largest amount expended on agriculture. Allowing for projected population increase, consumption by 2050 is projected at 700 g/d/c, which hydrologists consider to be minimal for human needs.36 This is without taking into consideration declining fossil fuel production.

To provide all of this food requires the application of 0.6 million metric tons of pesticides in North America per year. This is over one fifth of the total annual world pesticide use, estimated at 2.5 million tons.37 Worldwide, more nitrogen fertilizer is used per year than can be supplied through natural sources. Likewise, water is pumped out of underground aquifers at a much higher rate than it is recharged. And stocks of important minerals, such as phosphorus and potassium, are quickly approaching exhaustion.38

Total U.S. energy consumption is more than three times the amount of solar energy harvested as crop and forest products. The United States consumes 40% more energy annually than the total amount of solar energy captured yearly by all U.S. plant biomass. Per capita use of fossil energy in North America is five times the world average.39

Our prosperity is built on the principal of exhausting the world's resources as quickly as possible, without any thought to our neighbors, all the other life on this planet, or our children.

Population & Sustainability

Considering a growth rate of 1.1% per year, the U.S. population is projected to double by 2050. As the population expands, an estimated one acre of land will be lost for every person added to the U.S. population. Currently, there are 1.8 acres of farmland available to grow food for each U.S. citizen. By 2050, this will decrease to 0.6 acres. 1.2 acres per person is required in order to maintain current dietary standards.40

Presently, only two nations on the planet are major exporters of grain: the United States and Canada.41 By 2025, it is expected that the U.S. will cease to be a food exporter due to domestic demand. The impact on the U.S. economy could be devastating, as food exports earn $40 billion for the U.S. annually. More importantly, millions of people around the world could starve to death without U.S. food exports.42

Domestically, 34.6 million people are living in poverty as of 2002 census data.43 And this number is continuing to grow at an alarming rate. Too many of these people do not have a sufficient diet. As the situation worsens, this number will increase and the United States will witness growing numbers of starvation fatalities.

There are some things that we can do to at least alleviate this tragedy. It is suggested that streamlining agriculture to get rid of losses, waste and mismanagement might cut the energy inputs for food production by up to one-half.35 In place of fossil fuel-based fertilizers, we could utilize livestock manures that are now wasted. It is estimated that livestock manures contain 5 times the amount of fertilizer currently used each year.36 Perhaps most effective would be to eliminate meat from our diet altogether.37

Mario Giampietro and David Pimentel postulate that a sustainable food system is possible only if four conditions are met:

1.   Environmentally sound agricultural technologies must be implemented.

2.   Renewable energy technologies must be put into place.

3.   Major increases in energy efficiency must reduce exosomatic energy consumption per capita.

4.   Population size and consumption must be compatible with maintaining the stability of environmental processes.38

Providing that the first three conditions are met, with a reduction to less than half of the exosomatic energy consumption per capita, the authors place the maximum population for a sustainable economy at 200 million.39 Several other studies have produced figures within this ballpark (Energy and Population, Werbos, Paul J. http://www.dieoff.com/page63.htm; Impact of Population Growth on Food Supplies and Environment, Pimentel, David, et al. http://www.dieoff.com/page57.htm).

Given that the current U.S. population is in excess of 292 million, 40 that would mean a reduction of 92 million. To achieve a sustainable economy and avert disaster, the United States must reduce its population by at least one-third. The black plague during the 14th Century claimed approximately one-third of the European population (and more than half of the Asian and Indian populations), plunging the continent into a darkness from which it took them nearly two centuries to emerge.41

None of this research considers the impact of declining fossil fuel production. The authors of all of these studies believe that the mentioned agricultural crisis will only begin to impact us after 2020, and will not become critical until 2050. The current peaking of global oil production (and subsequent decline of production), along with the peak of North American natural gas production will very likely precipitate this agricultural crisis much sooner than expected. Quite possibly, a U.S. population reduction of one-third will not be effective for sustainability; the necessary reduction might be in excess of one-half. And, for sustainability, global population will have to be reduced from the current 6.32 billion people42 to 2 billion-a reduction of 68% or over two-thirds. The end of this decade could see spiraling food prices without relief. And the coming decade could see massive starvation on a global level such as never experienced before by the human race.

Three Choices

Considering the utter necessity of population reduction, there are three obvious choices awaiting us.

We can-as a society-become aware of our dilemma and consciously make the choice not to add more people to our population. This would be the most welcome of our three options, to choose consciously and with free will to responsibly lower our population. However, this flies in the face of our biological imperative to procreate. It is further complicated by the ability of modern medicine to extend our longevity, and by the refusal of the Religious Right to consider issues of population management. And then, there is a strong business lobby to maintain a high immigration rate in order to hold down the cost of labor. Though this is probably our best choice, it is the option least likely to be chosen.

Failing to responsibly lower our population, we can force population cuts through government regulations. Is there any need to mention how distasteful this option would be? How many of us would choose to live in a world of forced sterilization and population quotas enforced under penalty of law? How easily might this lead to a culling of the population utilizing principles of eugenics?

This leaves the third choice, which itself presents an unspeakable picture of suffering and death. Should we fail to acknowledge this coming crisis and determine to deal with it, we will be faced with a die-off from which civilization may very possibly never revive. We will very likely lose more than the numbers necessary for sustainability. Under a die-off scenario, conditions will deteriorate so badly that the surviving human population would be a negligible fraction of the present population. And those survivors would suffer from the trauma of living through the death of their civilization, their neighbors, their friends and their families. Those survivors will have seen their world crushed into nothing.

The questions we must ask ourselves now are, how can we allow this to happen, and what can we do to prevent it? Does our present lifestyle mean so much to us that we would subject ourselves and our children to this fast approaching tragedy simply for a few more years of conspicuous consumption?

Author's Note

This is possibly the most important article I have written to date. It is certainly the most frightening, and the conclusion is the bleakest I have ever penned. This article is likely to greatly disturb the reader; it has certainly disturbed me. However, it is important for our future that this paper should be read, acknowledged and discussed.

I am by nature positive and optimistic. In spite of this article, I continue to believe that we can find a positive solution to the multiple crises bearing down upon us. Though this article may provoke a flood of hate mail, it is simply a factual report of data and the obvious conclusions that follow from it.

-----

ENDNOTES

1 Availability of agricultural land for crop and livestock production, Buringh, P. Food and Natural Resources, Pimentel. D. and Hall. C.W. (eds), Academic Press, 1989.

2 Human appropriation of the products of photosynthesis, Vitousek, P.M. et al. Bioscience 36, 1986. http://www.science.duq.edu/esm/unit2-3

3 Land, Energy and Water: the constraints governing Ideal US Population Size, Pimental, David and Pimentel, Marcia. Focus, Spring 1991. NPG Forum, 1990. http://www.dieoff.com/page136.htm

4 Constraints on the Expansion of Global Food Supply, Kindell, Henry H. and Pimentel, David. Ambio Vol. 23 No. 3, May 1994. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences. http://www.dieoff.com/page36htm

5 The Tightening Conflict: Population, Energy Use, and the Ecology of Agriculture, Giampietro, Mario and Pimentel, David, 1994. http://www.dieoff.com/page69.htm

6 Op. Cit. See note 4.

7 Food, Land, Population and the U.S. Economy, Pimentel, David and Giampietro, Mario. Carrying Capacity Network, 11/21/1994. http://www.dieoff.com/page55.htm

8 Comparison of energy inputs for inorganic fertilizer and manure based corn production, McLaughlin, N.B., et al. Canadian Agricultural Engineering, Vol. 42, No. 1, 2000.

9 Ibid.

10 US Fertilizer Use Statistics. http://www.tfi.org/Statistics/USfertuse2.asp

11 Food, Land, Population and the U.S. Economy, Executive Summary, Pimentel, David and Giampietro, Mario. Carrying Capacity Network, 11/21/1994. http://www.dieoff.com/page40.htm

12 Ibid.

13 Op. Cit.  See note 3.

14 Op. Cit.  See note 7.

15 Ibid.

16 Op. Cit. See note 5.

17 Ibid.

18 Ibid.

19 Ibid.

20 Ibid.

21 Op. Cit. See note 11.

22 Ibid.

23 Ibid.

24 Ibid.

24 Ibid.

25 Op Cit. See note 3.

26 Op Cit. See note 11.

27 Ibid.

28 Ibid.

29 Ibid.

30 Op. Cit. See note 3.

31 Op. Cit. See note 5.

32 Op. Cit. See note 3.

33 Op. Cit. See note 11.

34 Food Consumption and Access, Lynn Brantley, et al. Capital Area Food Bank, 6/1/2001.  http://www.clagettfarm.org/purchasing.html

35 Op. Cit. See note 11.

36 Ibid.

37 Op. Cit. See note 5.

38 Ibid.

39 Ibid.

40 Op. Cit. See note 11.

41 Op. Cit. See note 4.

42 Op. Cit. See note 11.

43 Poverty 2002. The U.S. Census Bureau. http://www.census.gov/hhes/poverty/poverty02/pov02hi.html

35 Op. Cit. See note 3.

36 Ibid.

37 Diet for a Small Planet, Lappé, Frances Moore. Ballantine Books, 1971-revised 1991. http://www.dietforasmallplanet.com/

38 Op. Cit. See note 5.

39 Ibid.

40 U.S. and World Population Clocks.  U.S. Census Bureau. http://www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html

41 A Distant Mirror, Tuckman Barbara. Ballantine Books, 1978.

42 Op. Cit. See note 40.

© Copyright 2004, From The Wilderness Publications, www.copvcia.com. All Rights Reserved. May be reprinted, distributed or posted on an Internet web site for non-profit purposes only.

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