Food, inc., the future of food, and waste = food

There is only one thing to say about the documentary Food, Inc. Watch the trailer, see the film, and then decide for yourself what you think about the food you eat, how food is farmed, how livestock becomes the meat you eat, and the future of our food.  

Thanks to award-winning filmmaker Robert Kenner, food advocates and investigative journalists Eric Schlosser, author of Fast Food Nation, and Michael Pollan, author of “Omnivore’s Dilemma,” and socially concerned farming entrepreneurs such as Stonyfield Farm’s Gary Hirshberg and Polyface Farms‘ Joel Salatin, we have an up-to-date look at the food industry that is feeding us all and how it is regulated.

For further information, and especially if you are organically conscious or gastronomically ambitious, watch the documentary The Future of Food either on Google Video or YouTube or, buy the film.

You might also be interested in a documentary that was aired on French television in March 2008, called “Controlling Our Food.”

If you are still hungry for more, watch “Waste = Food,” a documentary that will change the way you think about production and consumption.

It’s worth a google search to learn about our leading agricultural companies to become aware of the stages our food undergoes from production to processing to product.

You can find out more and get other ideas about food prices, food crisis, and other food issues in a collection of articles on washingtonpost.com.

Houses of the holy

Once upon a time, notably before the Renaissance, and as evidenced for instance in massive, phenomenal cathedrals of Medieval times, there was the “master builder,” who both designed and supervised everything connected with the building of architectural structures of the day.  The finished product was the sole vision of the master builder, and the result was a highly coherent product in both design and structure.  The artist and engineer were all rolled together into one.

At some point, architect and builder separated into different areas, as did art and science, and the kind of basic holism once exhibited by a single master builder came to be achieved through collaboration by experts in different fields.  It was the rise of Cartesian dualism, known in philosophy as the mind/body split, when abstract thought departed from physical reality.

Sometimes these days, art seems to be so different from science that the two can barely address each other.  Formal academic disciplines have fragmented into thousands of areas which at times seem to have little in common.  However, the vision of holism, like that of the master builder, seems to live on, and there is evidence of it everywhere.  

In graduate school, I did an interdisplinary degree in the School of Architecture, one of the most multidisciplinary academic programs at the University of Texas.  There, if not before, the boundaries between art and science were obliterated forever in my mind.  With a love of art and design, and a background in math and science, I came to see all art as science and all science as art, each just a fragments of a greater whole.  There is almost nothing more beautiful than a thrilling mathematical proof, and there is an equal revelation in great art, especially the kind that stimulates one to think “how did they do that?”  Physics and a great piece of art, spirituality and mathematical harmony, to me, have everything to do with each other.

My recent post about Earthships stems from one of those thrilling observations containing that kind of holistic wonderment, and here is another, in this post.

On a recent Sunday, several friends and I got together for brunch at El Sol y La Luna, a local restaurant that has just moved to a new location on 6th Street in Austin, TX. The restaurant is filled with art and amazing tile creations by local artists among the many friends of the restaurant.

We finished our meal and inspected the restaurant’s tiles, paintings and artwork.  Upon leaving, one thing led to another as it usually does, and we wound up in South Austin viewing some of the most amazing apparently spontaneous creations I’ve ever seen.

Artist Stefanie Distefano’s creativity is spilling out all over.  After extensively mosaic tiling and mirroring her own house which she proclaims on her porch to be of the “Houses of the Holy,” she went out into the street with it, decorating the sidewalk and bridge adjacent to her property. 

She describes a small struggle with the City of Austin about the exuberant decoration she provided free of charge, since it is an atypical thing that the City just didn’t know how to handle.  But no one could argue that what is there isn’t a marvelous display of innovation and creativity, and for that alone but so very much more, the effort is applauded.  So, much to her surprise, they let it stay on and under the bridge.  Stefanie is definitely doing her part to do what the popular slogan says, and that is, to “Keep Austin Weird!”

I find it thrilling to see cities all over the country displaying art into the streets, allowing painted murals on the walls of old or formerly drab structures, and promoting artists to use the city as a palate for creative expression.  In 1999, Chicago had 300 huge, decorated fiberglass cows that appeared overnight on Michigan Avenue in the Chicago Cow Project, one of the greatest public art projects of the decade.  Raleigh, NC followed suit with in 2001 with the Red Wolf Ramble Public Art, peppering the town with over 100 red wolves.  Austinites might remember the artfully designed Guitar Project where fantastically decorated fiberglass guitars lined sidewalks of the city in a great celebration of the live music capital of the world.  

I think Stefanie’s public mosaics are a one-woman master-builder type of display, where she designs, engineers, and executes the final product with just a little help from her friends. Efforts like this, to me, erase the boundaries between art and science, and suggest a coming holism for our consciousness, i.e., getting it all together and going public with our inner lives. You can read more about Stefanie’s consciousness spilling out into public space and see many more photos of her mosaics and art at Flamingoranch.com.  

Salt: one man on the earth in the universe

My friend and photographer Zigy Kaluzny had an older brother who lived in Australia for many years. Frequently during our 30-year friendship, Zigy would venture from the US to visit him there for a month, sometimes more.

A nomadic type, Zigy loves to adventure by motorcycle to explore distant lands, and the more remote the better. In my most recent memory he and a friend spent a couple of weeks in Utah and before that, he packed up his biking armor and went a couple of times for a couple of months to New Zealand.

With a companion or sans, it is this kind of travel that fills Zigy’s soul with happiness and an appreciation of the real, real world — as opposed to the one the rest of us are reading about in the news. When he is traveling he sends emails and photos, and I find myself mentally going along for the ride, experiencing the nuances of the local people, cafes and regional beauty wherever he is. This kind of vicarious travel is much different from following a photojournalist in a war zone, and I have to thank Zigy for the mental landscape he provides for those of us who in spite of ourselves are newsjunkies.

Because of his deep connections to Australia and New Zealand, Zigy is a vortex for all things Down Under, and this morning he sent me something I want to share with EarthSky readers. It is the work of Sydney photo-artist and cinematographer Murray Fredericks, who for 6 years has kept a video diary of his annual 5-week solo pilgrimage to Lake Eyre in the remote north corner of South Australia. Each year, Murray camped alone by the lake in this absolute desolate wilderness, each time producing video, stills, and time-lapsed photography. He now has a phenomenal body of work. The resulting documentary, named SALT, is soon to be released, but much of the project can be seen already online.

In my opinion, SALT contains some of the most stunning imagery ever captured by one man with one camera. Cinematographically, Murray’s vision and lens are the equivalent of an earthbound personal Hubble. Watch the intriguing trailer, read a synopsis about Murray’s pilgrimages and the lake, about his work behind the camera on the movie, and see photos and time-lapsed video clips of the beautiful, remote, and surreal landscape of South Australia.

Producer and co-director Michael Angus, who wrote the synopsis on the site, ends it with a sentence that speaks of the flavor of Murray’s life and work: “One man, alone on the surface of the earth, in the middle of the universe.”

Thanks to Zigy for sending information about the SALT images and documentary, and for raising our awareness about such a beautiful and remote spot on this earth.

Pink Flamingos, by Tony Beckwith

PINK FLAMINGOS by Tony Beckwith

At the bottom of the garden
under the eaves
near the palm festooned with leaves
two pink flamingos stoop to graze
and pass the time on summer days

They watch the shadows cruising by
and muse on how it feels to fly

I’d join them if I knew the lingo.
Wish I’d learned to speak flamingo!

2045: the coming singularity and full-blown, conscious machines

Right now we are getting our information in bits and pieces from everywhere. It can seem overwhelming, and scattered, but we are compelled (at least, I am) to consume multiple forms of information. We have TV and radio, Google and other search engines, email updates, tips of interest in direct mail, our cel phones and landlines, and input from social networking tools like MySpace and Facebook. There is a morphing global mind that has begun taking shape on Twitter, which is like a cyber tickertape, [here is an interesting Twitter story] and maybe we even still read a print newspaper or a paper magazine. We have an entire library at our fingertips with Kindle, and friends tell us about what they’re working on or about something they heard. The grapevine lives! I give anyone permission right now to create the next step in our progression to a singular mind and union of all information, machines and human spirits and to name it “Grapevine,” of course with 10% of all profits coming to me. Thank you.

Now, to the point of this post. Thanks to one of my email updates, I watched a 6:45 minute video interview with inventor and futurist Raymond Kurzweil, (who is in lots of videos) who predicts that by 2045 machines will acquire full-blown artificial intelligence. He names this moment ‘the singularity,’ a term usually referring to the point at which a mathematical object cannot be defined or, in astronomy, a region in space known as a black hole, from which nothing, not even light can escape. However, the term singularity in a technological context was first used by mathematician John von Neumann in 1950, who said technological advancement was moving at an ever-more-rapid pace, which suggested to him the history of the human race is approaching some essential singularity in the future “beyond which human affairs as we know them cannot continue.”

Verner Vinge, contemporary of Kurzweil and also a mathematician, as well as a computer scientist and science fiction writer, calls the future technological singularity “the Post-Human Era,” when machines will have superhuman intelligence, be completely conscious, and will be able to self-replicate. In his book, “The Coming Technological Singularity: How to Survive in the Post-Human Era,” Vinge says humans will then be mere bystanders in history, and believes artificial intelligence (AI) will surpass human intelligence as early as 2020. Exponential growth in technology (as opposed to linear growth) will be responsible for an as-yet unfathomable explosion of consciousness in non-human forms that Vinge and Kurzweil are trying to fathom anyway. Relax, don’t panic yet. It’s not a Y2k or the scary side of the 2012 predictions, though they may turn out to have been very small potatoes (or not). He says he thinks the coming singularity is “the most likely non-catastrophic outcome of the next few decades.” There is an article in Computer World magazine about Vinge that is greatly worth reading.

Still, it sounds scary, this coming singularity, as if humans will not get to be here too. But Kurzweil says we most certainly will be here, and by 2045 progress in technology will have helped humans conquer disease, aging, and maybe even death itself. Living forever may not be just a fantasy.

At 61, Kurzweil is popping vitamins and staying healthy in every way he can because he wants to be here to experience the great moment when the singularity arrives. In a great article, writer Gary Wolf of Wired Magazine sums up Kurzweil’s reasoning, and I agree: “If the singularity is going to render humans immortal by the middle of the century, it would be a shame to die in the interim.”

Kurzweil says being a singularitarian is lonely because it’s such a strange idea. In my opinion, living forever amongst machines who render us useless might indeed be more lonely than just having a weird idea, especially if your buddies don’t make it to the finish line. But, if given the chance, I believe I would opt in. And really, would we be useless? Actually, I’m already pretty useless in the conventional sense, and find the more useless I get, the more hours in the day I wish there were. Living forever would at least eliminate time constraints.

So, I have to stop writing now and go take some vitamins.

Do all roads lead to politics?

I got lost in cyberspace this morning and suddenly found myself upon the shores of McClatchy, an online political newspaper in Washington DC.  McClatchy has a daily editorial cartoon and a great archive of humor.

While surfing through their searingly funny dailies, I found a few created by Joe Pett of Kentucky.com.  His statements are often about global sustainability, technological and environmental issues with a political bent.  

This brought me to the hypothesis that all roads might possibly lead to politics, the last stop-off before wisdom.  Why?  Because if you care about anything, then you care about what is possible; and if you care about what is possible, then you probably want to do something about it.  And if you want to do something about it, then you begin to care about politics which is, literally, the art of the possible. Hence, we contemplate “action vs. inaction, and what will happen as a result of implementing either or both. 

What’s more in this little exercise of conditional logic, if you observe the possible unfolding for long enough, [then] you will no doubt gain wisdom. That would be after you have made mountains of mistakes and maybe wound up on many a one-way street or even at a dead end. And then, of course, you have to remember what happened if you are to prevent the same lapse or failure from happening again. I’ve changed gears and put myself in reverse so many times trying to stay on the road to wisdom that I’ve just about worn out my transmission.

But to continue: at the juncture — where politics might take an endless detour to nowhere instead of to wisdom — may be exactly where we find ourselves this moment. The question is how to get ourselves firmly headed to a banquet at wit’s end without completely screwing it all up on a joy ride with politics? Please send ideas to me at zpycer@aol.com and I will spread them like leaflets.

But I have digressed, as politics often does, from my original intent in this post. With Earthsky in mind, one of Joe Pett’s cartoons caught my eye, and I thought it was worth going to his archive page to see more.  

For some more fun inside a political barrel of monkeys, check out McClatchy’s cartoon archive and their blog called Washington Planet.

Wired for hubble

Wired Magazine today published a celebration of the 20th year of service of the Hubble Space Telescope.  

Of the 570,000 images captured by Hubble, Wired presents a gallery of twelve stunning celestial portraits.  

Take a moment to read the article by Betsy Mason, scroll through the photos, and if you are adventuresome, google NASA Hubble Images or go to Hubblesite and surf to the outer limits of beauty to your heart’s content!  

More than skin deep

It is my opinion that the adage from Ecclesiastes, “there is nothing new under the sun” simply isn’t true anymore, at least not here on this earth at this point in time. One of the best things about being alive today is that with ever-increasing frequency one can stumble upon something that is brand new.

Last week while reading the New York Times I was thunderstruck by something truly ingenious in an article is entitled “The Inner Beauty of a McNugget: A Cultural Scan.” Perhaps it takes the mind of an artist to figure out something mind-blowingly innovative to do with medical technology that makes a splash in the visual world of art photography, which is exactly what Satre Stuelke, a former art professor at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan turned medical student at Weill Cornell Medical College, has done.

In 2007 Mr. Stuelke began scanning pop objects, food and mechanical devices via Computed Tomography, commonly known as CT scan, and the results are fascinating. He examines an endless stream of subjects ranging from toasters and Barbie dolls to toy cars, rubber duckies, and cel phones. Did you ever wonder if there is inner beauty in a Swanson’s Hungry Man fried chicken TV dinner? Well, there is.

I’ve always been curious about how things are made, but I admit I’ve never once thought about what would happen if you could X-ray all sorts of weird stuff to see what’s inside. But, really, why not? Is it because CT scans are not generally accessible? I don’t know, but when I think about it, it’s sort of baffling that no one has done it before, at least not in such a dramatic, stunning, and artistic way.

Mr. Stuelke’s special contribution is revealing the beauty of the guts and bolts inside common and uncommon objects using an array of crisply saturated colors to enhance the images. He has produced results that are some of the most beautiful and interesting imagery I believe I’ve ever seen. I’m not exactly sure why I find these so far out, but, well, I do. There’s something extraordinary about the sheer simplicity of the idea, and yet, the whole thing just completely surprises and fascinates me, and I could stare at the images for hours. And really, who knew that Barbie actually has a skull inside her head and bones in her limbs? No rib cage, but no matter — that she has even a partial skeleton is amazing. That revelation alone is worth a considerable amount of mental digestion time and it yields such a sweet aftertaste. Bravo Mattel, and thank you Mr. Stuelke!

The NYT article has an accompanying gallery of images, and you can find many more plus little rotating movies and technical information on Mr. Stuelke’s site, radiologyart. I also enjoyed another blog item about this artistic and analytical breakthrough on The Escape Complex.

Dolphins: not so tiny bubbles

Over 3 million people have already watched the YouTube video of dolphins engaging in their characteristic behavior of blowing bubbles, but if you haven’t seen it, I hope you will watch it immediately! It is delightful, interesting, intriguing, and fascinating, and there is commentary in a longer version about how and why they do it. There are several versions of this extraordinarily beautiful phenomenon, and a short segment of an “awesome underwater bubble ring” all by itself that I found spell-binding. There is a website devoted to dolphins and their bubble blowing you can find here.

Japan: irrepressibly innovative, even about homelessness

one of the most modern cities in the worldIt seems impossible that Japan, with 100% literacy and some of the most sophisticated infrastructure & technology in the world, could (already) have a homeless problem. It does.

Just after publication of the March 2009 “homelessness” issue of THE DIGITAL JOURNALIST, for which I am E-Bits Editor, our Editor & Publisher Dirck Halstead received an email from photojournalist James Whitlow Delano about his ongoing project concerning homelessness in Japan. Delano has worked in Southeast and Central Asia, Africa and Europe, and his photographs have appeared in LE MONDE, TIME, NEWSWEEK, various travel and photographic magazines. He was featured in the January 2009 issue of THE DIGITAL JOURNALIST. If you’ve not seen it before, THE DIGITAL JOURNALIST is an online magazine for visual journalism, conceived by founder Halstead to serve as the LIFE magazine of cyberspace. Now 72, Halstead at age 17 became LIFE’s youngest combat photographer when he covered the Guatemalan Civil War. He went on to become UPI’s bureau chief in Saigon during the Vietnam War, and served from Nixon through Clinton as a White House Photographer for TIME.

Of the homeless in Japan, Delano observes, “As with everything else in Japan, it is not surprising to find that there is a uniquely Japanese way to be homeless, or, more accurately, without abode.” He notes that the concept of ‘saving face‘ is so ingrained into the Japanese culture that its homeless population will resort to anything rather than the humiliation of asking for help from family or friends. Consequently, at least some of these unfortunate but creative souls are finding overnight shelter in such unlikely spots as Internet cafes, where use of a semi-private, bean-bag cushioned booth can be rented for five hours for the 1,200-1,500 Yen, the equivalent of $12-$15 in US currency, and where those with no place to go can sleep, shower, eat, and even surf the net overnight in relatively luxurious surroundings.

I was in Japan for a little over a month in 1991. While there I spent one night in a Tokyo spa called Utopia. I didn’t sleep there because I was homeless, but because my friend and I chose to treat ourselves to the experience of the 5-floor facility that had absolutely everything a spa offers and where you could stay overnight in surreal surroundings of pampered luxury and emerge the next morning refreshed and ready to resume the rapid pace of Japanese urban living — something that was very popular with the young business set in Tokyo at the time.

During my experience of vintage 1991 Japan I never saw an Internet cafe (the concept wasn’t even named until 1994), nor did I see even one homeless person, but that was then and this is now. Since then, and particularly recently, the numbers of both been on the rise. How paradoxical, that with the emergence of more and more amazing technological advances, the society that supports it is under ever-increasing assault. It is the best of times and it is the worst of times, a paradoxical thought Dickens applied to another type of revolution. These are revolutionary times, indeed. And as much as they are evolutionary, they are devolutionary.

Delano’s photographs of the homeless offer a stunning portrait of Japanese culture under economic and social pressures that have taken hold in the US, are well-underway and have already gone global. Also, I highly recommend a visit to Delano’s home site to see more of his highly relevant, socially conscious work from around the world.




About

Writer, editor, photojournalist, and cartoonist, Beverly Spicer is E-Bits Editor for The Digital Journalist, an online magazine for visual journalism at http://digitaljournalist. org. She is a diarist of almost 200 volumes of illustrated journals and author of two books. Her undergraduate degree is in physiological psychology and biology, and she holds a Master of Science in Architecture in interdisciplinary studies, combining architecture, neuroscience, and Middle Eastern studies.

My Topics

Meta