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AN ALCOHOL PROBLEM??

CURRENT EVENTS
"If all the automobiles in the United States were fueled with 100 percent ethanol, a total of about 97 percent of U.S. land area would be needed to grow the corn feedstock. Corn would cover nearly the total land area of the United States."

Ethanol Fuel from Corn Faulted as ‘Unsustainable Subsidized Food Burning’David Pimental, a leading Cornell University agricultural expert, has calculated that powering the average U.S. automobile for one year on ethanol (blended with gasoline) derived from corn would require 11 acres of farmland, the same space needed to grow a year's supply of food for seven people. Adding up the energy costs of corn production and its conversion into ethanol, 131,000 BTUs are needed to make one gallon of ethanol. One gallon of ethanol has an energy value of only 77,000 BTUS. Thus, 70 percent more energy is required to produce ethanol than the energy that actually is in it. Every time you make one gallon of ethanol, there is a net energy loss of 54,000 BTUs.Mr. Pimentel concluded that "abusing our precious croplands to grow corn for an energy-inefficient process that yields low-grade automobile fuels amounts to unsustainable subsidized food burning".  Neither increases in government subsidies (to corn-based ethanol fuel), nor hikes in the price of petroleum can overcome what Cornell University agricultural scientist, David Pimentel, calls a fundamental input-yield problem: It takes more energy to make ethanol from grain than the combustion of ethanol produces.At a time when ethanol-gasoline mixtures (gasohol) are touted as the American answer to fossil fuel shortages by corn producers, food processors and some lawmakers, Cornell’s David Pimentel, one of the world’s leading experts in issues relating to energy and agriculture, takes a longer range view."Abusing our precious croplands to grow corn for an energy-inefficient process that yields low-grade automobile fuel amounts to unsustainable, subsidized food burning", says the Cornell professor in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. Pimentel, who chaired a U.S. Department of Energy panel that investigated the energetics, economics and environmental aspects of ethanol production several years ago, subsequently conducted a detailed analysis of the corn-to-car fuel process. His findings are published in the September, 2001 issue of the Encyclopedia of Physical Sciences and Technology.Among his findings are:
  • An acre of U.S. corn yields about 7,110 pounds of corn for processing into 328 gallons of ethanol. But planting, growing and harvesting that much corn requires about 140 gallons of fossil fuels and costs $347 per acre, according to Pimentel’s analysis. Thus, even before corn is converted to ethanol, the feedstock costs $1.05 per gallon of ethanol.
  • The energy economics get worse at the processing plants, where the grain is crushed and fermented. As many as three distillation steps are needed to separate the 8 percent ethanol from the 92 percent water. Additional treatment and energy are required to produce the 99.8 percent pure ethanol for mixing with gasoline.
  • Adding up the energy costs of corn production and its conversion to ethanol, 131,000 BTUs are needed to make 1 gallon of ethanol. One gallon of ethanol has an energy value of only 77,000 BTU. "Put another way", Pimentel says, "about 70 percent more energy is required to produce ethanol than the energy that actually is in ethanol. Every time you make 1 gallon of ethanol, there is a net energy loss of 54,000 BTU".
  • Ethanol from corn costs about $1.74 per gallon to produce, compared with about 95 cents to produce a gallon of gasoline. "That helps explain why fossil fuels-not ethanol-are used to produce ethanol", Pimentel says. "The growers and processors can’t afford to burn ethanol to make ethanol. U.S. drivers couldn’t afford it, either, if it weren’t for government subsidies to artificially lower the price".
  • Most economic analyses of corn-to-ethanol production overlook the costs of environmental damages, which Pimentel says should add another 23 cents per gallon. "Corn production in the U.S. erodes soil about 12 times faster than the soil can be reformed, and irrigating corn mines groundwater 25 percent faster than the natural recharge rate of ground water. The environmental system in which corn is being produced is being rapidly degraded. Corn should not be considered a renewable resource for ethanol energy production, especially when human food is being converted into ethanol".
  • The approximately $1 billion a year in current federal and state subsidies (mainly to large corporations) for ethanol production are not the only costs to consumers, the Cornell scientist observes. Subsidized corn results in higher prices for meat, milk and eggs because about 70 percent of corn grain is fed to livestock and poultry in the United States. Increasing ethanol production would further inflate corn prices, Pimentel says, noting: "In addition to paying tax dollars for ethanol subsidies, consumers would be paying significantly higher food prices in the marketplace".
  • Nickels and dimes aside, some drivers still would rather see their cars fueled by farms in the Midwest than by oil wells in the Middle East, Pimentel acknowledges, so he calculated the amount of corn needed to power an automobile:
  • The average U.S. automobile, traveling 10,000 miles a year on pure ethanol (not a gasoline-ethanol mix) would need about 852 gallons of the corn-based fuel. This would take 11 acres to grow, based on net ethanol production. This is the same amount of cropland required to feed seven Americans.
  • If all the automobiles in the United States were fueled with 100 percent ethanol, a total of about 97 percent of U.S. land area would be needed to grow the corn feedstock. Corn would cover nearly the total land area of the United States.
 For further information, contactRoger Segelken 
Phone: 607-255-9736 
E-Mail
: hrs2@cornell.edu
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TODAY'S TIMES

CURRENT EVENTS
Stonewalled by the C.I.A.

Washington

MORE than five years ago, Congress and President Bush created the 9/11 commission. The goal was to provide the American people with the fullest possible account of the “facts and circumstances relating to the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001” — and to offer recommendations to prevent future attacks. Soon after its creation, the president’s chief of staff directed all executive branch agencies to cooperate with the commission.

The commission’s mandate was sweeping and it explicitly included the intelligence agencies. But the recent revelations that the C.I.A. destroyed videotaped interrogations of Qaeda operatives leads us to conclude that the agency failed to respond to our lawful requests for information about the 9/11 plot. Those who knew about those videotapes — and did not tell us about them — obstructed our investigation.

There could have been absolutely no doubt in the mind of anyone at the C.I.A. — or the White House — of the commission’s interest in any and all information related to Qaeda detainees involved in the 9/11 plot. Yet no one in the administration ever told the commission of the existence of videotapes of detainee interrogations.

When the press reported that, in 2002 and maybe at other times, the C.I.A. had recorded hundreds of hours of interrogations of at least two Qaeda detainees, we went back to check our records. We found that we did ask, repeatedly, for the kind of information that would have been contained in such videotapes.

The commission did not have a mandate to investigate how detainees were treated; our role was to investigate the history and evolution of Al Qaeda and the 9/11 plot. Beginning in June 2003, we requested all reports of intelligence information on these broad topics that had been gleaned from the interrogations of 118 named individuals, including both Abu Zubaydah and Abd al Rahim al-Nashiri, two senior Qaeda operatives, portions of whose interrogations were apparently recorded and then destroyed.

The C.I.A. gave us many reports summarizing information gained in the interrogations. But the reports raised almost as many questions as they answered. Agency officials assured us that, if we posed specific questions, they would do all they could to answer them.

So, in October 2003, we sent another wave of questions to the C.I.A.’s general counsel. One set posed dozens of specific questions about the reports, including those about Abu Zubaydah. A second set, even more important in our view, asked for details about the translation process in the interrogations; the background of the interrogators; the way the interrogators handled inconsistencies in the detainees’ stories; the particular questions that had been asked to elicit reported information; the way interrogators had followed up on certain lines of questioning; the context of the interrogations so we could assess the credibility and demeanor of the detainees when they made the reported statements; and the views or assessments of the interrogators themselves.

The general counsel responded in writing with non-specific replies. The agency did not disclose that any interrogations had ever been recorded or that it had held any further relevant information, in any form. Not satisfied with this response, we decided that we needed to question the detainees directly, including Abu Zubaydah and a few other key captives.

In a lunch meeting on Dec. 23, 2003, George Tenet, the C.I.A. director, told us point blank that we would have no such access. During the meeting, we emphasized to him that the C.I.A. should provide any documents responsive to our requests, even if the commission had not specifically asked for them. Mr. Tenet replied by alluding to several documents he thought would be helpful to us, but neither he, nor anyone else in the meeting, mentioned videotapes.

A meeting on Jan. 21, 2004, with Mr. Tenet, the White House counsel, the secretary of defense and a representative from the Justice Department also resulted in the denial of commission access to the detainees. Once again, videotapes were not mentioned.

As a result of this January meeting, the C.I.A. agreed to pose some of our questions to detainees and report back to us. The commission concluded this was all the administration could give us. But the commission never felt that its earlier questions had been satisfactorily answered. So the public would be aware of our concerns, we highlighted our caveats on page 146 in the commission report.

As a legal matter, it is not up to us to examine the C.I.A.’s failure to disclose the existence of these tapes. That is for others. What we do know is that government officials decided not to inform a lawfully constituted body, created by Congress and the president, to investigate one the greatest tragedies to confront this country. We call that obstruction.

Thomas H. Kean and Lee H. Hamilton served as chairman and vice chairman, respectively, of the 9/11 commission.

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SUGGEST A NEW A.G.!

CURRENT EVENTS

Last week's unfortunate series of events, culminating in the resignation of Attorney General Paul Morrison, was and is a sad time for everyone involved.  However, we must remember how far we have come and continue our work to keep our state Attorney General's office focused on enforcing our laws and both protecting and serving the people of Kansas.

While in office, Paul Morrison and his dedicated, professional staff worked tirelessly to rebuild a broken, ineffective Attorney General's office - and we must make sure that their progress continues. 

Last year, the Attorney General's office had no means to protect Kansans from the developing threat of internet fraud. Now we have a Cyber Crimes Unit that specifically targets online predators and internet scams.  Where none existed before, we now have a Domestic Violence Unit that provides necessary resources to our county law enforcement teams.  And we now have an effective Consumer Protection Department and a professional Victims' Rights Department staffed with law enforcement officials who are ready to help Kansans and their families when faced with tragedy.

In the coming weeks, our Governor has a big decision to make.  She must find a leader who is prepared to build upon the progress of the last year.  She must select someone who will continue to focus the attention of this office on protecting Kansans and their families.

Governor Sebelius has asked that I reach out to all Democrats and gather suggestions for who we feel is best qualified to serve as the next Attorney General of Kansas.  Please consider who will work to ensure the safety, well-being and happiness of all Kansans and also be an excellent representative of our Party.  Email your ideas to lgates@ksdp.org.

Thank you for your input and I look forward to hearing from you.

Sincerely,

Larry Gates
Chairman
Kansas Democratic Party
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WWJB....What Would Jesus Buy?

CURRENT EVENTS

Just in time for Christmas comes something that Christians worldwide will consider to be an abomination: crucifixes and other religious articles made in deplorable sweatshops in China. They are being sold not only in America’s Christian stores - but even in churches.

A highly-respected workers’ rights group, The National Labor Committee, has documented the brutal sweatshop conditions at the Junxingye factory in Southern China. Here, young women workers - many only teenagers - are forced to toil from 8 am to 11:30 pm, seven days a week, making Christian artifacts.

They’re paid 26 ½ cents an hour - less than half of China’s miserly minimum wage. Out of this meager pay, workers are docked for bad food and bunks in cramped, filthy dorms. This lowers their pay to nine cents an hour - less than $10 a week. They get no sick days, holidays, or maternity leave - and, ironically, they have no religious rights.

The National Labor Committee found crucifixes from this factory being sold at New York’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral - for $29.95 apiece! The Cathedral has now pulled these products from its gift shops, which is an essential ethical step, but barely a start. The church must use its full moral authority and enormous purchasing power to clean up China’s sweatshop factories engaged in religious commerce.

Far worse than any one gift shop is the Association for Christian Retail - a consortium of some 2,000 religious stores that do nearly $5 billion a year in sales of Christian products. Like Wal-Mart, this profitable economic entity has shifted its manufacturing en masse to China, yet it has not revealed the addresses of its factories, much less the labor conditions in them.

This is one association that should ask itself: What Would Jesus Do? For information, call the National Labor Committee <http://www.nlcnet.org/>: 212-242-3002.

Jim Hightower

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WHAT ABOUT REAL WORLD PROBLEMS?

CURRENT EVENTS

'Compass' movie latest target of conservatives

 

By Colleen Surridge

Parsons Sun

Every day in America youths are subjected to magazines, books, music, video games and television that portrays or condones all manner of immoral and illegal behavior, yet conservative organizations somehow target only one or two movies or books a year.

In recent years, the Harry Potter series was condemned for the author's supposed attempts to arouse in readers an interest in witchcraft.

Now, the movie "The Golden Compass" and the books it is based on have been boycotted by some because of some people's belief that the author is using it as a venue to steer youths toward atheism, which is a belief that there is no God.

Author Phillip Pullman is a proclaimed atheist, but his trilogy, "His Dark Materials," has been on school and public library shelves for years without a whisper of disapproval.

However, Catholic League president Bill Donohue declares the first book in the series, which has been transferred to the big screen, a stealth campaign by Pullman to lure children to atheism.

"Atheism for kids. That is what Phillip Pullman sells," Donohue said in a statement published by the Catholic News Agency. "The trilogy, 'His Dark Materials,' was written to promote atheism and denigrate Christianity, especially Roman Catholicism. The target audience is children and adolescents. Each book becomes progressively more aggressive in its denigration of Christianity and promotion of atheism."

He cautions the movie is a watered-down version to deceive people into buying the books for their children.

An e-mail campaign is circulating concerns about the movie, to be released next week, warning that it is about killing God.

The Rev. Jason Borkenhagen, pastor at St. Patrick's Catholic Church in Parsons, has received some of those e-mails, along with other e-mails that try to answer the accusations of the movie.

The e-mails never deny that the books and movie denote an anti-Catholic, anti-Christian and atheistic sentiments, Borkenhagen said. In fact, he said, the book uses a Catholic term of magisterium, which describes the teaching authority of the church, as something evil, he said.

"It is not a leap of faith to say that is what this person thinks about the church," Borkenhagen said.

The epic fantasy is steeped in religious undertones and does place the "holy church" as controlling any theology that goes against its beliefs.

It also depicts the papacy as having been done away with and "a tangle of courts, colleges and councils collectively known as the magisterium had grown in its place."

Pullman writes, "It is always possible for independent agencies to grow up under the protection magisterium, and the oblation board ... was one of those."

The oblation board is the controlling evil force in Pullman's first book.

Borkenhagen said one priest wrote in response to the controversy that at least it has people talking, but he said people talking is not always a good thing.

Still, Borkenhagen questioned ridiculing the "The Golden Compass" when society is saturated with similar material available to youths.

"I wouldn't single out this movie. There are all sorts of messages out there in movies, music and games that are dangerous. As a society, we are not careful enough about checking things out that our children will be exposed to," Borkenhagen said. "A parent should always review first what kids are going to see, and pick out what needs to be discussed. They can't make the distinctions we as adults can make, so certainly great care should be taken."

Parsons Middle School and high school librarian Robie Martin said she has read the books and bought them for both schools several years ago.

"They have circulated very well, especially the first book, 'The Golden Compass,'" she said.

While she states the other two books in the trilogy might give some parents a cause for concern, "As a librarian, teacher and a parent, I would be more concerned about the music that kids are listening to now than the books. My view is they are a well-crafted fantasy, but as with any type of entertainment, parents need to be vigilant monitoring what their children are reading, watching and listening to. I would be less fearful of the books than music, videos and computer games kids are playing. I didn't find anything that kept me from recommending it to my own children.

"In the later books, a reader can sense more the darker element, but I think its premise there is for children to make good choices and do the right thing. That is still the feeling I took away from it," she said. "If parents have any questions, though, they should first read the books, and if it does not fit their choices for their children, don't let them read it."

While alarms are being sounded by some adults - some of whom admit they have not read the trilogy - youths who have already read the books found the trilogy to be nothing more than an epic fantasy that has had no bearing on their religious beliefs.

Randy Cavender, a junior at Labette County High School, is one.

"It's a good book. I liked the whole trilogy and my mom likes it, too," said Cavender, who first read the trilogy three years ago, and about a year ago bought the trilogy to re-read it.

Cavender explained the plot of the books, including the role of the lead character, Lyra, as unknowingly being chosen by God to stop her father who is an enemy of God.

"This is a book about the battle between good and evil, and Pullman wrote it well," Cavender said. "There is no message that I found that was anti-Christian."

The books are written for older youths, written well, and Cavender said he would recommend them to others.

While he warns readers may become absorbed in them because they are good books, he said there was no hidden messages that made him turn from his belief in God and decide to follow the path of atheism.

"And, when I found out they were making the movie, I said, 'I've got to see that,'" he said. "I am planning on seeing it as soon as it's out."

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Parsons KS terrible legacy....

CURRENT EVENTS

UNFRIENDLY FIRE: CLUSTER BOMBS KEEP KILLING – by Frida Berrigan 

Jesus Suarez del Solar died instantly. The Lance Corporal was an early casualty of the U.S. war in Iraq, but he was not killed by enemy fire.  

The 20-year-old stepped on our own unexploded ordnance on March 27, 2003. It is likely that the bomblet that killed Jesus was just one of thousands that the United States scattered in the early days of Operation Iraqi Freedom. The Air Force dropped cluster bombs where he was patrolling just days before, and these deadly weapons leave behind tens or hundreds of thousands of unexploded bomblets which can be detonated days or even years later. 

During 2003, the U.S. dropped or fired nearly 11,000 cluster bombs. These may have accounted for well over 200,000 individual bomblets.  Although varied in size and configuration, a cluster munition is essentially a large canister-as long as 13 feet and weighing up to 1,000 pounds-packed with little exlosives. Designed to break open in mid-air, Its bomblets disperse over areas as large as two or three football fields. The bomblets-a single canister holds hundreds- range in size from the equivalent of a soda can down to a flashlight battery, and each is filledwith shrapnel and an explosive charge.  

Cluster bombs are intended to explode on impact. But, according to independent and military analyses, failure rates range from 5 to 15 percent. In the field, the rate can climb as high as 40 percent when the submunition is buffeted by wind or rain, falls on uneven or soft terrain or encounters other environmental factors. This means that every cluster bomb attack leaves large numbers of dangerous unexploded bomblets. 

A 2006 Handicap International report estimated that nearly 3,000 Iraqis have been victims of cluster bombs since 2003. The report goes on to fault U.S. and Iraqi officials for failing to adequately track unexploded ordnance casualties.  

Even without that tracking, one thing is clear-- the number of cluster bomb-related deaths will continue to rise. The United States' use of them in Iraq exposes civilians to decades of danger.  

A closer look at Cambodia-where the U.S. dropped cluster bombs extensively between 1969 and 1973-- forecasts a grim future. That war is long over, but the weapons still kill. In 2005, three Cambodian boys were playing with steel balls.  The balls were thirty year old BLU-63s, some of tens of thousands dropped on their country long before they were born. The bomblets exploded. One boy died of massive abdominal injuries, and the two other boys were seriously injured. Handicap International asserts that over the last 40 years, in former warzones throughout the world, civilians have accounted for 98% of cluster bomb casualties. 

But, civilians are not the only ones in danger. Like Jesus, U.S. service men and women are threatened. A USA Today report estimated at the end of 2003 that at least eight U.S. soldiers had been killed by unexploded bomblets. But, the Pentagon does not track cluster bomb casualties among U.S. soldiers, making it almost impossible to update or confirm these figures.  

As one of the world's top manufacturers of cluster weapons, the United States should be leading the efforts to protect its own soldiers and civilians from these deadly little weapons. Eighty-two countries are now working together on an international agreement to ban cluster munitions, and the United States should be at the table.  

The Bush Administration has so far refused to join the negotiations; but, there is some good news. The Senate passed a one-year de facto moratorium on the export of cluster bombs in September. This crucial first step must be followed with more concrete action-like the Cluster Munitions Civilian Protection Act which is now gathering co-sponsors.  

Passage of this bill would be a fitting tribute to Lance Corporal Jesus Suarez del Solar and other servicemen and women killed by our own bombs, and would help ensure that forty years from now children can safely play where war once raged.  


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