Mon 07 Apr 2008 |
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Pre-conference Gathering at the Temple |
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| July 12th thru 17th, 2008
I have made arrangements with Matt W. of the Temple of the Way of the Light to host a low-cost pre-conference jungle retreat for the C-Realm listeners. Here's the information Matt provided on cost:
The price would be $30 per day to include everything - to
be honest, we would like to provide the best possible experience to
anyone coming with ayahuasca ceremonies each night (if wanted), 3
different floral baths to help cleanse / purify before the conference,
understanding of the various medicinal plants, private consultations
with the Curanderos and confirmation of each person's animal spirit. We also now have a new partner involved at the Temple; a great guy also
from the UK called Alex Good. Alex has run a lodge in the Andes for 5
years so has plenty of experience with all things "Peruvian". He will
facilitate and lead groups, translate, deal with logistics and
generally ensure everything runs smoothly. He is also "on the path"...
To
put this in perspective, on the days when the conference breaks for
ceremonies you are expected to pay the Curanderos $20 - $40 for the
ceremony in which you participate. The offer that Matt and the other Temple partners have made for the
C-Realm listeners is lodging, food, cleansing rituals, group ayahuasca
ceremonies, and individual consultations with Curanderos for $30 a day.
We're planning on a five day retreat, so that's $150, or about what
you'd spend to stay one night in a decent hotel in a US city.
The timing of this event is coordinated with the 4th Annual
International Amazonian Shamanism Conference, but conference attendance
is not required in order to partcipate in this pre-conference retreat. This is not the same pre-conference "tune-up" adverstised on the official conference website. |
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Vector: George Dvorsky
Snagged and mashed verbage:
On Friday March 28th Anders Sandberg debated the future of farming on BBC Radio 4 with Robin Maynard, of the Soil Association and Professor Les Firbank from the Institute of Grassland and Environmental Research.
Will
the future of farming be glass skyscrapers full of plants and chickens,
hi-tech genetically modified crops, or a return to traditional methods
and wisdom? Charlotte Smith examines some of the suggested ways we
might feed the world in years to come.
Link: http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/podcasts/radio4/farming/farming_20080329-0635.mp3
I forwarded George's email to former C-Realm guest Eric Boyd who had the following to say on the topic of vertical farming:
Thanks, I gave it a listen. I personally think that "Vertical Farming" is a ridiculous idea, mostly because of the power requirements. I mean, you've got to provide artificial light for the plants on most of the floors, and that's going to be *extremely* intensive use of electricity.
You basically need to provide 1kW/m^2, which amounts to ~4MW per acre. If you've got any size farm, you're talking about entire power plants. Not to mention the capital cost of building skyscrapers. It's beyond silly. But certainly there is a role for farming in the city - just look at the Cuba model.
I do think the discussion on GMOs was correct - Europe is becoming an island of expensive food, and it's going to hold them back if they can't bring themselves to accept it.
My take:
The discussion of mushroom picking robots relates directly to my conversation with Colin Tudge in episode 77: AI (Agricultural Intelligence), and the discussion of vertical farming resonates with a discussion thread in the C-Realm Forum that turned acrimonious and pointlessly adversarial. This is the same thread for which I solicited some outside opinions and received some whoppers from Dmitry Orlov and Albert Bates.
I'm
repeating myself here, but playing the role I've adopted for myself
involves a lot of repetition. I agree with Colin Tudge in that I'm open
to technological enhancements that will enable independent farmers to
produce more and better food with less drudgery to feed their local
communities. I am in no way interested in mega-scale, tech-centric
agribusiness schemes intended to maintain the behemoth of highly
centralized and largely de-peopled, corporate industrial farming. I
want to see a widespread and rapid shift to a more localized and human scale system of food production. Or using Thomas Homer-Dixon's
vocabulary, I want to see a reversal in the trend of trading the
resiliency of decentralized agriculture for the seeming efficiency
gained by scaling up, centralizing, and removing humans from the
practice of food cultivation.
Finally, as many thoughtful
people have pointed out, the problems that face us call out not for
monolithic universal prescriptions but for a panoply of adaptive
responses, i.e. an ecology of solutions (now there's a good title for an episode of the podcast). |
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 Mon 17 Mar 2008 |
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kmo @ 2008-03-17T17:09:00 |
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| I received the following from C-Realm guest Ayasmina:
Legislators in Peru chew coca to defy UN
Reuters Published: Friday, March 14, 2008
LIMA -- Lawmakers defiantly chewed coca in Peru's Congress Thursday while criticizing a UN recommendation to criminalize traditional uses of the plant.
The coca leaf, the raw ingredient of cocaine, is used by millions of people to stave off hunger and fight altitude sickness. It is also used in teas, cooking and by fortune tellers.
"The coca leaf has existed for thousands and thousands of years. It's part of our agriculture, our food and our medicine. It's sacred," Congresswoman Hilaria Supa told Reuters before the start of Thursday's session. "The United Nations doesn't know our culture. It doesn't understand our values," she said.
Supa offered coca to colleagues on the Congress floor from small hats.
To which Ayasmina added:i have been following this story for some time and am appalled! i think it's great for the peruvian legislators to take a stand, though i certainly hope that things don't descend into a state of civil chaos and 'anti-gringo' sentiment, the extreme likes of which peru has experienced in the past, largely due to the hypocrisy of US entanglement with the coca plant.
it just goes to show that there is not just one, but many medicines which are currently under attack and deserving of our attention, especially in the international arena, which is where these pressures stem from, not from the local cultures and people themselves. and i think it is fair to say that the global interests at play have precious little to do with the preservation of medicine, technology, culture, and overall well-being.
this is indeed a 'global era', one in which the UN (US?) seems poised to pick up the gauntlet of the war on plants. i believe in letting sleeping dogs lie -- that is, if traditional practice can soar under the radar, then good -- but clearly, this is not the case here, and so i believe one good turn deserves another. in other words, since there have been international proclamations & recommendations made, i do not believe it should be solely up to indigenous people to defend their practice on the world stage, which is not a level playing field to begin with.
since the allegations of the ills of coca belong to a paradigm that is utterly alien to their way of life and belief, and underscore a hidden agenda which is embarrassingly evident, i believe that those of us abroad who represent the "other side of the coin", as it were, have a certain responsibility to represent here, and to stand in the light of the truth that their practice is also ours, that their reverence for this unparalleled food, medicine, and sacrament is also our own.
in view of this, i plan to attend and document this year's International Forum on the Coca Leaf, which is slated to take place in lima in mid-june. it is my hope to be able to learn of ways in which we can be of use in this movement, and to be able to share these insights and strategies with our communities, both here and there. i also hope to be able to incorporate some new issues and perspectives into my presentations at the the first annual Convergence Conference, organized by sita and hosted by Espiritu de Anaconda, july 10 - 18 (http://www.amazonconvergence.com/), and at the 4th annual Conference on Amazonian Shamanism, july 19 - 27 (http://www.soga-del-alma.org/ConferenceSite/presenters.html).
then there is the Global Integrative Traditional Medicine Conference (whew!), scheduled for september 26 - 28 in vancouver (http://www.crish.org/documents/GITM_call_for_abstracts_final.pdf), during which, as most of you know, ken has received approval to hold a one-day seminar on traditional amazonian medicine in which many of us will be taking part.
i feel these forums can create an ideal opportunity for many voices and interests to come forward together in concert, conversation and communion to explore many of the aspects and angles so germane to the current debate on freedom & control, as pertains to our relationship with the plants in particular, and our global outlook in general.
i recognize there is so much to be learned on this subject, and hope to acquire more tools for understanding its intricate design. being so relatively new to this path, i am grateful for all that has been shared with and imparted upon me. i hope to reciprocate in kind, and, as always, welcome any and all comments and feedback from any and all sources, in furtherance and elucidation of this work.
in this spirit, i wish everyone my best, and look forward to more communication on these and other topics.
yours ever, ~yasmeen
Ayasmina sent this out to a variety of folks, including ethnobotanist Dr. James Duke, whose reply found its way to my inbox:Coca, like cannabis, and poppy is a great medicinal plant, rarely if ever abused, but often used ,by the locals where it occurs, but often abused by us gringoes. We North Americanos spend as much money on illegal drugs as we spend licit pharmaceuticals, yet ironically the latter evidence-based medicines kill ten times more of us. Grass and coca leaf probably kill fewer people than peanuts (which I love). They force us to take Diamox when proscribing the better cheaper coca leaf. All the profit for coke and grass and heroin sales goes to organized crime and puts N. America noteworthily highest in the world for incarceration with 1 % (maybe it's more) of our males incarcerated, too often for dealing in grass which is safer and probably a better medicine than many competing pharmaceuticals . Marihuana seed, which I am eating as a snack right now are loaded with omega-3's whcih will help gringoes with over 50 ailemtns. yet it has to be grown in Canada, thatnks to an overprotective DEA putting all these petty criminals in jail while leaving the megacriminals (Big Pharma) off the hook. Read Greg Critser Generation Rx. To see who the real criminal "drug" dealers are.
And from Dennis McKenna, who has just arrived in Basel, Switzerland for the World Psychedelic Forum:Yasmeen,
Thanks for sending this, though the message is discouraging and depressing. I'm glad you are going to attend that forum, it's important to stand with indigenous peoples on this issue. As I said in our little talk, these sacred plants are our bioweapons. Though it's unfortunate terminology, but if the Death Culture insists on making these organisms equivalent to WMD, then that makes those of us who are allies of the plants terrorists. So be it. But I would prefer, in a rational world, to have a dialog based on real concerns and not shot through with slogans and talk past each other rhetoric. In fact, maybe I should say that I would prefer a rational world, and leave it at that.
Just got to Basel yesterday; still recovering from jet lag, it is a brutal flight, and trying to get used to this German keyboard, as I am unable to get mY own mac on the Internet. Working on it...
Best, Dennis
Further reading: http://www.narconews.com/Issue39/article1459.html |
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 Mon 17 Mar 2008 |
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My Past Self: What a Tool. |
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