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Excerpt: "The latest scientific research suggests that a previously discounted factor is helping to destabilize the food system: climate change."

Victor Valenzuela selects wheat plants for breeding at the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center in Mexico. (photo: Josh Haner/NYT)
Victor Valenzuela selects wheat plants for breeding at the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center in Mexico. (photo: Josh Haner/NYT)



A Warming Planet Struggles to Feed Itself

By Justin Gillis, The New York Times

05 June 11

he dun wheat field spreading out at Ravi P. Singh's feet offered a possible clue to human destiny. Baked by a desert sun and deliberately starved of water, the plants were parched and nearly dead.

Dr. Singh, a wheat breeder, grabbed seed heads that should have been plump with the staff of life. His practiced fingers found empty husks.

"You're not going to feed the people with that," he said.

But then, over in Plot 88, his eyes settled on a healthier plant, one that had managed to thrive in spite of the drought, producing plump kernels of wheat. "This is beautiful!" he shouted as wheat beards rustled in the wind.

Hope in a stalk of grain: It is a hope the world needs these days, for the great agricultural system that feeds the human race is in trouble.

The rapid growth in farm output that defined the late 20th century has slowed to the point that it is failing to keep up with the demand for food, driven by population increases and rising affluence in once-poor countries.

Consumption of the four staples that supply most human calories - wheat, rice, corn and soybeans - has outstripped production for much of the past decade, drawing once-large stockpiles down to worrisome levels. The imbalance between supply and demand has resulted in two huge spikes in international grain prices since 2007, with some grains more than doubling in cost.

Those price jumps, though felt only moderately in the West, have worsened hunger for tens of millions of poor people, destabilizing politics in scores of countries, from Mexico to Uzbekistan to Yemen. The Haitian government was ousted in 2008 amid food riots, and anger over high prices has played a role in the recent Arab uprisings.

Now, the latest scientific research suggests that a previously discounted factor is helping to destabilize the food system: climate change.

Many of the failed harvests of the past decade were a consequence of weather disasters, like floods in the United States, drought in Australia and blistering heat waves in Europe and Russia. Scientists believe some, though not all, of those events were caused or worsened by human-induced global warming.

Temperatures are rising rapidly during the growing season in some of the most important agricultural countries, and a paper published several weeks ago found that this had shaved several percentage points off potential yields, adding to the price gyrations.

For nearly two decades, scientists had predicted that climate change would be relatively manageable for agriculture, suggesting that even under worst-case assumptions, it would probably take until 2080 for food prices to double.

In part, they were counting on a counterintuitive ace in the hole: that rising carbon dioxide levels, the primary contributor to global warming, would act as a powerful plant fertilizer and offset many of the ill effects of climate change.

Until a few years ago, these assumptions went largely unchallenged. But lately, the destabilization of the food system and the soaring prices have rattled many leading scientists.

"The success of agriculture has been astounding," said Cynthia Rosenzweig, a researcher at NASA who helped pioneer the study of climate change and agriculture. "But I think there's starting to be premonitions that it may not continue forever."

A scramble is on to figure out whether climate science has been too sanguine about the risks. Some researchers, analyzing computer forecasts that are used to advise governments on future crop prospects, are pointing out what they consider to be gaping holes. These include a failure to consider the effects of extreme weather, like the floods and the heat waves that are increasing as the earth warms.

A rising unease about the future of the world's food supply came through during interviews this year with more than 50 agricultural experts working in nine countries.

These experts say that in coming decades, farmers need to withstand whatever climate shocks come their way while roughly doubling the amount of food they produce to meet rising demand. And they need to do it while reducing the considerable environmental damage caused by the business of agriculture.

Agronomists emphasize that the situation is far from hopeless. Examples are already available, from the deserts of Mexico to the rice paddies of India, to show that it may be possible to make agriculture more productive and more resilient in the face of climate change. Farmers have achieved huge gains in output in the past, and rising prices are a powerful incentive to do so again.

But new crop varieties and new techniques are required, far beyond those available now, scientists said. Despite the urgent need, they added, promised financing has been slow to materialize, much of the necessary work has yet to begin and, once it does, it is likely to take decades to bear results.

"There's just such a tremendous disconnect, with people not understanding the highly dangerous situation we are in," said Marianne B�nziger, deputy chief of the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center, a leading research institute in Mexico.

A wheat physiologist at the center, Matthew Reynolds, fretted over the potential consequences of not attacking the problem vigorously.

"What a horrible world it will be if food really becomes short from one year to the next," he said. "What will that do to society?"

'The World Is Talking'

Sitting with a group of his fellow wheat farmers, Francisco Javier Ramos Bours voiced a suspicion. Water shortages had already arrived in recent years for growers in his region, the Yaqui Valley, which sits in the Sonoran Desert of northwestern Mexico. In his view, global climate change could well be responsible.

"All the world is talking about it," Mr. Ramos said as the other farmers nodded.

Farmers everywhere face rising difficulties: water shortages as well as flash floods. Their crops are afflicted by emerging pests and diseases and by blasts of heat beyond anything they remember.

In a recent interview on the far side of the world, in northeastern India, a rice farmer named Ram Khatri Yadav offered his own complaint about the changing climate. "It will not rain in the rainy season, but it will rain in the nonrainy season," he said. "The cold season is also shrinking."

Decades ago, the wheat farmers in the Yaqui Valley of Mexico were the vanguard of a broad development in agriculture called the Green Revolution, which used improved crop varieties and more intensive farming methods to raise food production across much of the developing world.

When Norman E. Borlaug, a young American agronomist, began working here in the 1940s under the sponsorship of the Rockefeller Foundation, the Yaqui Valley farmers embraced him. His successes as a breeder helped farmers raise Mexico's wheat output sixfold.

In the 1960s, Dr. Borlaug spread his approach to India and Pakistan, where mass starvation was feared. Output soared there, too.

Other countries joined the Green Revolution, and food production outstripped population growth through the latter half of the 20th century. Dr. Borlaug became the only agronomist ever to win the Nobel Peace Prize, in 1970, for helping to "provide bread for a hungry world."

As he accepted the prize in Oslo, he issued a stern warning. "We may be at high tide now," he said, "but ebb tide could soon set in if we become complacent and relax our efforts."

As output rose, staple grains - which feed people directly or are used to produce meat, eggs, dairy products and farmed fish - became cheaper and cheaper. Poverty still prevented many people in poor countries from buying enough food, but over all, the percentage of hungry people in the world shrank.

By the late 1980s, food production seemed under control. Governments and foundations began to cut back on agricultural research, or to redirect money into the problems created by intensive farming, like environmental damage. Over a 20-year period, Western aid for agricultural development in poor countries fell by almost half, with some of the world's most important research centers suffering mass layoffs.

Just as Dr. Borlaug had predicted, the consequences of this loss of focus began to show up in the world's food system toward the end of the century. Output continued to rise, but because fewer innovations were reaching farmers, the growth rate slowed.

That lull occurred just as food and feed demand was starting to take off, thanks in part to rising affluence across much of Asia. Millions of people added meat and dairy products to their diets, requiring considerable grain to produce. Other factors contributed to demand, including a policy of converting much of the American corn crop into ethanol.

And erratic weather began eating into yields. A 2003 heat wave in Europe that some researchers believe was worsened by human-induced global warming slashed agricultural output in some countries by as much as 30 percent. A long drought in Australia, also possibly linked to climate change, cut wheat and rice production.

In 2007 and 2008, with grain stockpiles low, prices doubled and in some cases tripled. Whole countries began hoarding food, and panic buying ensued in some markets, notably for rice. Food riots broke out in more than 30 countries.

Farmers responded to the high prices by planting as much as possible, and healthy harvests in 2008 and 2009 helped rebuild stocks, to a degree. That factor, plus the global recession, drove prices down in 2009. But by last year, more weather-related harvest failures sent them soaring again. This year, rice supplies are adequate, but with bad weather threatening the wheat and corn crops in some areas, markets remain jittery.

Experts are starting to fear that the era of cheap food may be over. "Our mindset was surpluses," said Dan Glickman, a former United States secretary of agriculture. "That has just changed overnight."

Forty years ago, a third of the population in the developing world was undernourished. By the tail end of the Green Revolution, in the mid-1990s, the share had fallen below 20 percent, and the absolute number of hungry people dipped below 800 million for the first time in modern history.

But the recent price spikes have helped cause the largest increases in world hunger in decades. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations estimated the number of hungry people at 925 million last year, and the number is expected to be higher when a fresh estimate is completed this year. The World Bank says the figure could be as high as 940 million.

Dr. Borlaug's latest successor at the corn and wheat institute, Hans-Joachim Braun, recently outlined the challenges facing the world's farmers. On top of the weather disasters, he said, booming cities are chewing up agricultural land and competing with farmers for water. In some of the world's breadbaskets, farmers have achieved high output only by pumping groundwater much faster than nature can replenish it.

"This is in no way sustainable," Dr. Braun said.

The farmers of the Yaqui Valley grow their wheat in a near-desert, relying on irrigation. Their water comes by aqueduct from nearby mountains, but for parts of the past decade, rainfall was below normal. Scientists do not know if this has been a consequence of climate change, but Northern Mexico falls squarely within a global belt that is expected to dry further because of human emissions of greenhouse gases.

Dr. Braun is leading efforts to tackle problems of this sort with new wheat varieties that would be able to withstand many kinds of stress, including scant water. Descendants of the plant that one of his breeders, Dr. Singh, found in a wheat field one recent day might eventually wind up in farmers' fields the world over.

But budgets for this kind of research remain exceedingly tight, frustrating agronomists who feel that the problems are growing more urgent by the year.

"There are biological limitations on how fast we can do this work," Dr. Braun said. "If we don't get started now, we are going to be in serious trouble."

Shaken Assumptions

For decades, scientists believed that the human dependence on fossil fuels, for all the problems it was expected to cause, would offer one enormous benefit.

Carbon dioxide, the main gas released by combustion, is also the primary fuel for the growth of plants. They draw it out of the air and, using the energy from sunlight, convert the carbon into energy-dense compounds like glucose. All human and animal life runs on these compounds.

Humans have already raised the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere by 40 percent since the Industrial Revolution, and are on course to double or triple it over the coming century. Studies have long suggested that the extra gas would supercharge the world's food crops, and might be especially helpful in years when the weather is difficult.

But many of those studies were done in artificial conditions, like greenhouses or special growth chambers. For the past decade, scientists at the University of Illinois have been putting the "CO2 fertilization effect" to a real-world test in the two most important crops grown in the United States.

They started by planting soybeans in a field, then sprayed extra carbon dioxide from a giant tank. Based on the earlier research, they hoped the gas might bump yields as much as 30 percent under optimal growing conditions.

But when they harvested their soybeans, they got a rude surprise: the bump was only half as large. "When we measured the yields, it was like, wait a minute - this is not what we expected," said Elizabeth A. Ainsworth, a Department of Agriculture researcher who played a leading role in the work.

When they grew the soybeans in the sort of conditions expected to prevail in a future climate, with high temperatures or low water, the extra carbon dioxide could not fully offset the yield decline caused by those factors.

They also ran tests using corn, America's single most valuable crop and the basis for its meat production and its biofuel industry. While that crop was already known to be less responsive to carbon dioxide, a yield bump was still expected - especially during droughts. The Illinois researchers got no bump.

Their work has contributed to a broader body of research suggesting that extra carbon dioxide does act as plant fertilizer, but that the benefits are less than previously believed - and probably less than needed to avert food shortages. "One of the things that we're starting to believe is that the positives of CO2 are unlikely to outweigh the negatives of the other factors," said Andrew D. B. Leakey, another of the Illinois researchers.

Other recent evidence suggests that longstanding assumptions about food production on a warming planet may have been too optimistic.

Two economists, Wolfram Schlenker of Columbia University and Michael J. Roberts of North Carolina State University, have pioneered ways to compare crop yields and natural temperature variability at a fine scale. Their work shows that when crops are subjected to temperatures above a certain threshold - about 84 degrees for corn and 86 degrees for soybeans - yields fall sharply.

This line of research suggests that in the type of climate predicted for the United States by the end of the century, with more scorching days in the growing season, yields of today's crop varieties could fall by 30 percent or more.

Though it has not yet happened in the United States, many important agricultural countries are already warming rapidly in the growing season, with average increases of several degrees. A few weeks ago, David B. Lobell of Stanford University published a paper with Dr. Schlenker suggesting that temperature increases in France, Russia, China and other countries were suppressing crop yields, adding to the pressures on the food system.

"I think there's been an under-recognition of just how sensitive crops are to heat, and how fast heat exposure is increasing," Dr. Lobell said.

Such research has provoked controversy. The findings go somewhat beyond those of a 2007 report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the United Nations body that episodically reviews climate science and advises governments.

That report found that while climate change was likely to pose severe challenges for agriculture in the tropics, it would probably be beneficial in some of the chillier regions of the Northern Hemisphere, and that the carbon dioxide effect should offset many problems.

In an interview at the University of Illinois, one of the leading scientists behind the work there, Stephen P. Long, sharply criticized the 2007 report, saying it had failed to sound a sufficient alarm. "I felt it needed to be much more honest in saying this is our best guess at the moment, but there are probably huge errors in there," Dr. Long said. "We're talking about the future food supply of the world."

William E. Easterling, dean of earth sciences at Pennsylvania State University and a primary author of the 2007 report, said in an interview that the recent research had slightly altered his perspective. "We have probably to some extent overestimated" the benefits of carbon dioxide in computerized crop forecasts, he said. But he added that applying a "correction factor" would probably take care of the problem, and he doubted that the estimates in the report would change drastically as a result.

The 2007 report did point out a hole in the existing body of research: most forecasts had failed to consider several factors that could conceivably produce nasty surprises, like a projected rise in extreme weather events. No sooner had the report been published than food prices began rising, partly because of crop failures caused by just such extremes.

Oxfam, the international relief group, projected recently that food prices would more than double by 2030 from today's high levels, with climate change responsible for perhaps half the increase. As worries like that proliferate, some scientists are ready to go back to the drawing board regarding agriculture and climate change.

Dr. Rosenzweig, the NASA climate scientist, played a leading role in forming the old consensus. But in an interview at her office in Manhattan, she ticked off recent stresses on the food system and said they had led her to take a fresh look.

She is pulling together a global consortium of researchers whose goal will be to produce more detailed and realistic computer forecasts; she won high-level endorsement for the project at a recent meeting between British and United States officials. "We absolutely have to get the science lined up to provide these answers," Dr. Rosenzweig said.

Promises Unkept

At the end of a dirt road in northeastern India, nestled between two streams, lies the remote village of Samhauta. Anand Kumar Singh, a farmer there, recently related a story that he could scarcely believe himself.

Last June, he planted 10 acres of a new variety of rice. On Aug. 23, the area was struck by a severe flood that submerged his field for 10 days. In years past, such a flood would have destroyed his crop. But the new variety sprang back to life, yielding a robust harvest.

"That was a miracle," Mr. Singh said.

The miracle was the product not of divine intervention but of technology - an illustration of how far scientists may be able to go in helping farmers adapt to the problems that bedevil them.

"It's the best example in agriculture," said Julia Bailey-Serres, a researcher at the University of California, Riverside, who has done genetic work on the rice variety that Mr. Singh used. "The submergence-tolerant rice essentially sits and waits out the flood."

In the heyday of the Green Revolution, the 1960s, leaders like Dr. Borlaug founded an international network of research centers to focus on the world's major crops. The corn and wheat center in Mexico is one. The new rice variety that is exciting farmers in India is the product of another, the International Rice Research Institute in the Philippines.

Leading researchers say it is possible to create crop varieties that are more resistant to drought and flooding and that respond especially well to rising carbon dioxide. The scientists are less certain that crops can be made to withstand withering heat, though genetic engineering may eventually do the trick.

The flood-tolerant rice was created from an old strain grown in a small area of India, but decades of work were required to improve it. Money was so tight that even after the rice had been proven to survive floods for twice as long as previous varieties, distribution to farmers was not assured. Then an American charity, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, stepped in with a $20 million grant to finance final development and distribution of the rice in India and other countries. It may get into a million farmers' hands this year.

The Gateses, widely known for their work in public health, have also become leading backers of agricultural projects in recent years. "I'm an optimist," Mr. Gates said in an interview. "I think we can get crops that will mitigate many of our problems."

The Gates Foundation has awarded $1.7 billion for agricultural projects since 2006, but even a charity as large as it is cannot solve humanity's food problems on its own. Governments have recognized that far more effort is needed on their part, but they have been slow to deliver.

In 2008 and 2009, in the midst of the political crises set off by food prices, the world's governments outbid one another to offer support. At a conference in L'Aquila, Italy, they pledged about $22 billion for agricultural development.

It later turned out, however, that no more than half of that was new money not previously committed to agriculture, and two years later, the extra financing has not fully materialized. "It's a disappointment," Mr. Gates said.

The Obama administration has won high marks from antihunger advocates for focusing on the issue. President Obama pledged $3.5 billion at L'Aquila, more than any other country, and the United States has begun an ambitious initiative called Feed the Future to support agricultural development in 20 of the neediest countries.

So far, the administration has won $1.9 billion from Congress. Amid the budget struggles in Washington, it remains to be seen whether the United States will fully honor its pledge.

Perhaps the most hopeful sign nowadays is that poor countries themselves are starting to invest in agriculture in a serious way, as many did not do in the years when food was cheap.

In Africa, largely bypassed by the Green Revolution but with enormous potential, a dozen countries are on the verge of fulfilling a promise to devote 10 percent of their budgets to farm development, up from 5 percent or less.

"In my country, every penny counts," Agnes Kalibata, the agriculture minister of Rwanda, said in an interview. With difficulty, Rwanda has met the 10 percent pledge, and she cited a terracing project in the country's highlands that has raised potato yields by 600 percent for some farmers.

Yet the leading agricultural experts say that poor countries cannot solve the problems by themselves. The United Nations recently projected that global population would hit 10 billion by the end of the century, 3 billion more than today. Coupled with the demand for diets richer in protein, the projections mean that food production may need to double by later in the century.

Unlike in the past, that demand must somehow be met on a planet where little new land is available for farming, where water supplies are tightening, where the temperature is rising, where the weather has become erratic and where the food system is already showing serious signs of instability.

"We've doubled the world's food production several times before in history, and now we have to do it one more time," said Jonathan A. Foley, a researcher at the University of Minnesota. "The last doubling is the hardest. It is possible, but it's not going to be easy."

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+19 # MidwestTom 2015-05-21 14:23
I agree with Reich on this one. However, as I see it the small businesses of today are 90% Republican, and they realize that the giants contribute to who ever will push their agenda whether Democrat or Republican. In '08 Democrats got more from Wall Street than Republicans, and Hillary has already gotten 10's of millions from Wall Street, a number that will add a "0" before the election.

Big business does not worry about all of the rules with $500 to $10,000 fines that government keeps passing. The government knows that they cannot pick a small fight with Ford or Exxon and win, but they can scar the shit out of Al's bakery if he doesn't have MSDS forms on hand for his floor wax.

The last two years are the first time since WWII that small business closings are now exceeding startups by larger numbers every month. This does not bode well forth future.
 
 
+9 # sea7kenp 2015-05-21 17:20
Where's your source that Democrats got "MORE" than Republicans, from Wall Street? (They [dems] got a "good chunk", but I'll only believe "More", from a good source).

Thank you.

Kenneth Parker
 
 
+1 # MidwestTom 2015-05-21 19:47
I am looking for the overall wall street numbers, but this article by CNN reports that Goldman Sacks employees donated four times as much to Obama than they did to McCain.

http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/04/20/obama.goldman.donations/

So GS is a good start on proof.
 
 
0 # bingers 2015-05-24 17:16
And the military gave far more to Obama than McCain. So?
 
 
0 # MidwestTom 2015-05-21 19:49
Found it, and you will be shocked by the numbers:

http://townhall.com/tipsheet/katehicks/2011/10/12/by_the_numbers_who_did_wall_street_buy_in_2008
 
 
+1 # opinionaire 2015-05-22 07:38
Just read this article and--not knowing the site--read some others. This author appears to be both smug and a member of the right wing apologists crowd. Since this is my first foray to this site, I cannot be sure, but am quite familiar with numbers manipulation. I cannot put much credence behind this report without a triangulating one.
 
 
+3 # reiverpacific 2015-05-22 10:05
Quoting opinionaire:
Just read this article and--not knowing the site--read some others. This author appears to be both smug and a member of the right wing apologists crowd. Since this is my first foray to this site, I cannot be sure, but am quite familiar with numbers manipulation. I cannot put much credence behind this report without a triangulating one.


You are obviously blinded and blinkered if you consider Dr. Reich to be Right-Wing apologist OR smug.
We get several trolls who fit that description on this site and they invariably -with but one or two exceptions- dash in from the shadowy sidelines, hurl an insult at rational voices and dash back again without ant backup, rhyme nor reason and never respond to any challenges from readers or posters.
 
 
+2 # opinionaire 2015-05-22 12:45
Gee, I was referring to the statement above the remark I made, the "townhall.com" article. I imagined that was clear by the placement, but apparently you took it to mean a slam of Dr. Reich. It was not.
 
 
0 # reiverpacific 2015-05-22 15:33
Quoting opinionaire:
Gee, I was referring to the statement above the remark I made, the "townhall.com" article. I imagined that was clear by the placement, but apparently you took it to mean a slam of Dr. Reich. It was not.


So who "authored" the article from which you culled y'r opinion; Santa McClause?
 
 
+2 # opinionaire 2015-05-22 15:51
I have to assume you are still acting on the belief that I am criticizing Dr. Reich's article. I was referring to the one to which MidwestTom provided a link, the Town Hall site and the article authored by Kate Hicks in 2011.
 
 
+1 # reiverpacific 2015-05-22 16:58
Quoting opinionaire:
I have to assume you are still acting on the belief that I am criticizing Dr. Reich's article. I was referring to the one to which MidwestTom provided a link, the Town Hall site and the article authored by Kate Hicks in 2011.

Ah -well now you explained it.
I think I wasn't the only one to be confused though.
OK -'nuff said; thanks.
 
 
+1 # bingers 2015-05-24 17:18
The next time Town Hall tells the truth will be the first time, Using them for backup is proof you have nothing to offer.
 
 
+1 # MidwestTom 2015-05-21 20:03
While we are on giving I found a table on the Sunlight Foundation site breaking down which twenty congress members received most of their donations from toe top 1% of the top 1%, and democrats were eleven go the top 20, with =Nancy Pelosi receiving over 40% of her donations from the very wealthiest .

http://sunlightfoundation.com/blog/2013/06/24/1pct_of_the_1pct/

The much repeated argument that the wealthy favor Republicans is bunk when one looks at the numbers.
 
 
+12 # Texas Aggie 2015-05-21 22:14
I notice your conspicuous omission of the recent elections since 2008 where Wall St. gave to the repubs much more than to the Democrats. Has it not occurred to you that Obama got so much from them in 2008 because they realized that McCain/Palin was a disaster in the making? Then when one of their own was running, they went back to form. And in all the interelections they also gave to the repubs.

Have you forgotten Boehner and McYertles' conference with the bankers where they promised to let them write their own legislation in return for financial support?
 
 
+17 # moby doug 2015-05-21 15:06
Small Republican businessmen, motivated by racism, knownothingism, xenophobia, religious prejudice, loathing for workers' rights & civil rights, sexism, cultural bigotry, provincialism, fear of the "other," etc., will nonetheless continue to back the corporate fascist GOP.....even as Wall Street big money continues to screw little money.
 
 
+3 # WestWinds 2015-05-22 02:55
Quoting moby doug:
Small Republican businessmen, motivated by racism, knownothingism, xenophobia, religious prejudice, loathing for workers' rights & civil rights, sexism, cultural bigotry, provincialism, fear of the "other," etc., will nonetheless continue to back the corporate fascist GOP.....even as Wall Street big money continues to screw little money.


--- Yes, very true. They would rather destroy themselves financially than let go of their prejudices, hatreds and ideological biases. I've seen examples of it here in Central Florida where they turn away 'undesirable' customers and vote for political representatives who not only despise them but constantly vote against the best interests of the small business community. I marvel at it; like a wolf biting itself to death.
 
 
0 # dipierro4 2015-05-22 22:38
Perhaps better said, the realignment that Dr. Reich hopes for will be a gradual process. Yes, small business people are more susceptible to culture-war manipulation and race-baiting, and often find themselves opposed to Big Business on cultural and racial issues, perceiving Big Business to be aligned with progressives on those issues.

That is not to say that change is impossible, though. There is some diversity among small business owners, and the more progressive participants will have some amount of influence in their various organizations, etc. And small business owners are like the rest of us: Some will have gay sons; some will have daughters who marry undocumented immigrants; and the cultural views will change when the realities are close to home.

But I agree that the realignment will not magically happen when all the small business owners suddenly have a moment of enlightenment about the economic self-interest realities. That is overly optimistic.
 
 
+14 # reiverpacific 2015-05-21 15:35
I've know this for years, havin' been a Socialist, "Self-exploited " small business owner approx' 2/3 of my working life in the US, UK and around the world.
In my 'umble opinion from experience, it's the Rotaries and other self-styled business associations who tend to club together smugly and circle their myopic wagons in any given community, yet who model themselves after the corporate lifestyle and tread what seems to be the safe, conformist non-creative path that has attracted them almost by rote to the Republican unscrupulous, ethically bereft "Winner-take-al l" mentality and are kidding themselves.
I hope that Dr. Reich is calling it right and that the last "Great recession" much of the residual effect which are still with us, has taught many of these types a bit of a lesson, even if the shock of discovering that their Wall Street and Banking casino-house heroes are rotten to the core beneath their patina of well-dressed, establishment-p retty respectability, like a shiny fruit that hung too long before it dropped off the tree or vine and splatted it's useless contents onto the ground
 
 
+7 # Malcolm 2015-05-21 17:18
I've heard stories like that about Rotary, and they may be true-in some Rotaries. But my wife's been a Rotarian for eons here in CONSERVATIVE Grants Pass, and it's not that way AT ALL.

Her club sends money to places like Bhotechaur, Nepal, where they raised funds to build an amazing clinic, which we now get to totally rebuild after the quake. She led a trip to the Philippines called "Group Study Exchange", where young Oregonians got to meet their counterparts in that country. Then, Grants Pass Rotarians (including my wife and I) hosted six Philippinos here under GSE.

Rotary had one of the best exchange student programs I've ever heard of, too.

They've also raised vast sums of money to drill wells, install water systems, and get people cleaner burning wood stoves, to improve kids' lungs and reduce deforestation by reducing wood requirements.

I can't list all the good they do!

If there's any of the good ol' boy shit you refer to, I've certainly never gotten wind of it.

Please don't paint all Rotarians with the same broad brush!s
 
 
+12 # reiverpacific 2015-05-21 18:20
Quoting Malcolm:
I've heard stories like that about Rotary, and they may be true-in some Rotaries. But my wife's been a Rotarian here in CONSERVATIVE Grants Pass, and it's not that way AT ALL.

Her club sends money to places like Bhotechaur, Nepal, where they raised funds to build an amazing clinic, which we now get to totally rebuild after the quake. She led a trip to the Philippines called "Group Study Exchange", where young Oregonians got to meet their counterparts in that country. Then, Grants Pass Rotarians (including my wife and I) hosted six Philippinos here under GSE.

Rotary had one of the best exchange student programs I've ever heard of, too.

They've also raised vast sums of money to drill wells, install water systems, and get people cleaner burning wood stoves, to improve kids' lungs and reduce deforestation by reducing wood requirements.

I can't list all the good they do!

If there's any of the good ol' boy shit you refer to, I've certainly never gotten wind of it.

Please don't paint all Rotarians with the same broad brush!


My apologies to y'r good wife -and I have warned others about that broad brush.
But I'm only writing from personal experience (including where I live now) and did mention "other self-styled business associations". The Portland Business Alliance is notorious in it's reactionary stances.
Still, glad I was wrong in a good cause and I appreciate you both calling me out and teaching me something concurrently.
 
 
+8 # Malcolm 2015-05-21 18:50
Thanks, reiverpacific. I'm also glad all Rotaries aren't cut from the same plaid :)

It's a good laddie ye are!
 
 
0 # WestWinds 2015-05-22 03:16
#Malcolm: "...If there's any of the good ol' boy shit you refer to, I've certainly never gotten wind of it. ..."

--- Here where I live in the Deep South, I have watched small business suffer to the extent that most of Main Street stood as empty shells. I have also seen several in-town veterinarians, and also dentists who subscribed to the corporate meme go from clients six deep at the front counter to all lights off and one warm body receptionist. I have often thought it was some kind of a plot on the part of the corporations to get the small businesses to commit seppuku. I have often wondered how these small business people could continue in the downward spiral and stay the course. But I think they belong to these groups and are lead down the garden path with false praise and support to get exactly the result the corporations wanted. I can see this with the (human) doctors who all but trash their own practice and then the Regional Medical Centers swoop in, buy up their practice and put the doctors on salary. Now the doctors are owned and are obliged to do any rotten thing these Regional Medical Centers want. We've got one of these in the next town up and the doctors regularly pad their bills (and are a bunch of nasty wiseguys.) They think they are being hip, slick and kewl when actually they've slit their own throats and are happily ignorant and arrogant about it. (Sheesh, what's in the drinking water? Must be Kool-Aid!)
 
 
+1 # Malcolm 2015-05-23 09:46
Glad I fled the South in 1968. Life is so much more rewarding on the West Coast:)

Sorry you're dealing with all that stuff, Westwinds.
 
 
+15 # Buddha 2015-05-21 16:15
This is what happens when you create an Oligarchy. It isn't just the poor working class whose voice gets ignored, it is small businesses who cannot be heard over the torrent of money and power controlled by Big Business and the Ultra-Rich. This is why small business creation is at multi-decade lows, and our median net wealth has crashed to 19th in the world.
 
 
+5 # WestWinds 2015-05-22 03:28
#Buddha:

--- When I first moved here, they were holding state hearings over some tax they were going to levy against the small business community. I watched for hours as small business owners came forward, flowing tears, begging them not to do it.

Well, needless to say, the folks out in Tallahassee did it to them, but then over the years, the small business owners have doubled down on their stay the course and have paid terrible prices for their choices. It's like they just cannot connect the dots between the Republicans and their own failed or failing businesses. But try and talk to them and they are as stubborn as any mule. I think the churches play a role in this with their "Satan is testing you" brainwashing, but because football and church are the only two outlets down here, they go with what they've been indoctrinated with down through the years. Watching things like this has brought me to the conclusion that religion taken too literally is just not a good thing.
 
 
+6 # Buddha 2015-05-22 11:33
When Obama claimed "They get bitter, they cling to guns or religion or antipathy to people who aren't like them or anti-immigrant sentiment or anti-trade sentiment as a way to explain their frustrations", he was spot-on, hence the outrage.
 
 
+1 # dipierro4 2015-05-22 23:02
Agreed; except that as to anti-trade sentiment, we have common ground with them, even if we don't entirely share the same reasoning.
 
 
+18 # RLF 2015-05-21 16:25
The unsung result of the elimination of Glass/Steagal is that instead of investing in their local businesses the banks invest funds on Wall St. Deposits that used to finance construction, garages, restaurants is now sent to Goldman-Sucks to be bet against by billionaires and thier hedges...small towns, small business, small banks all lose.
 
 
+6 # Corvette-Bob 2015-05-21 17:01
The problems with these small business men is that they all see themselves as Donald Trump and the next deal will make themselves as rich so they continue to align with the big boys even if they are small and are being taken advantaged. For years the small businessmen have been lied to and taken advantage of by the Republican Party.
 
 
0 # Malcolm 2015-05-21 18:54
Excuuuuuse ME? Don't lay your shit on "these small businessmen" because it outs you as a reactionary ignoramus.

Just like any other people, there are good and bad small businessmen.
 
 
+1 # WestWinds 2015-05-22 03:37
#Malcolm:

--- Hold on a minute, Malcolm. Corvett-Bob has a valid point. I've seen it in action here myself. Maybe it's a regional thing but he's exactly correct. The small business people around here are into "put yourselves in charge of the mindless, unwashed masses" (Dale Carnegie 101) blindly following the corporate playbook and have so abused their client base that their parking lots are standing totally empty and, in some cases, they are working for someone else trying to keep their doors open. So, from what I've seen over the last decade of living here, Corvette-Bob is spot on.
 
 
+2 # Malcolm 2015-05-22 07:04
Really? "They ALL see themselves as Donald trump"?

And if ALL the small business people where you live are as you describe, that's pretty weird. Inbreeding, maybe? Clones?
 
 
-1 # WestWinds 2015-05-22 09:48
#Malcolm:

--- Most of the people here come from strong English backgrounds and the English vote Conservative no matter how bad it gets because they are told the (R) support their values.

English society was built on the manorial system where you had your betters and then there was a cast system below. It's in place here, but with the exception that the Black residents are considered every bit as slaves today as back then; they believe that Cain slew Abel and was turned Black (Genesis 4: "set a mark upon" him so he would be recognized,) for his punishment and therefore Blacks need to be kept in their place.

They may not see themselves as Donald Trump but they admire the ultra wealthy and despise poor people. It's all a part of their Calvinist thinking that God rewards *good* people and punishes *bad* people with poverty. They see themselves as meting out God's punishments and feel totally justified in doing terrible things to others because of this. Example: A dentist will sabotage a person's teeth because they are a Liberal cum Socialist.
 
 
+2 # dbrize 2015-05-22 12:11
Quoting WestWinds:
#Malcolm:

--- Most of the people here come from strong English backgrounds and the English vote Conservative no matter how bad it gets because they are told the (R) support their values.

English society was built on the manorial system where you had your betters and then there was a cast system below. It's in place here, but with the exception that the Black residents are considered every bit as slaves today as back then; they believe that Cain slew Abel and was turned Black (Genesis 4: "set a mark upon" him so he would be recognized,) for his punishment and therefore Blacks need to be kept in their place.

They may not see themselves as Donald Trump but they admire the ultra wealthy and despise poor people. It's all a part of their Calvinist thinking that God rewards *good* people and punishes *bad* people with poverty. They see themselves as meting out God's punishments and feel totally justified in doing terrible things to others because of this. Example: A dentist will sabotage a person's teeth because they are a Liberal cum Socialist.


Please. There currently exist 30 million or so small businesses in the US. Another 20 million or so self employed.

We are to believe a few minuscule anecdotes even if true, condemns them all? This proposition is beyond silly. "They" are not some monolithic entity set up to oppose your political desires. Sheesh.
 
 
0 # bingers 2015-05-24 17:24
Sorry man, I meant to give you an up vote and my hand slipped, so discount one of those undeserved negs.
 
 
0 # bingers 2015-05-24 17:25
Quoting bingers:
Sorry man, I meant to give you an up vote and my hand slipped, so discount one of those undeserved negs.


Meant for WestWinds.
 
 
-10 # perkinsej 2015-05-21 17:50
Wrong again. I don't think our expert has kept up to date on business history. If he reads Mansel Blackford's history of small business, he will discover that small firms fared well because they become suppliers of the larger enterprises. Actally everyone benefited as Adam Smith predicted.
 
 
+6 # Texas Aggie 2015-05-21 22:19
Excuse me, but you seem to be forgetting some major problems. The most important is that Big Bidness now pays on 120 days, but charges on 30, so the small suppliers only get paid four months after they send the bill, but are obligated to pay Big Bidness within thirty days. You can't run a business like that and do well.
 
 
+2 # Malcolm 2015-05-22 07:07
Another way businesses can be successful is to pay for things immediately, by check or cash, or by credit card, and pay the credit card bills immediately, so you don't pay the usurious interest charges.

Always works for me.
 
 
+1 # jim@drdemocracy 2015-05-22 10:36
It's not possible to confirm Midwest Tom's assertion that Dems get more funding from Wall Street than Repubs because Tom is just repeating a lie told by Jim Demint.

http://www.politifact.com/wisconsin/statements/2014/apr/16/jim-demint/not-many-times-more-democrats-sometimes-do-raise-m/
 
 
+3 # Buddha 2015-05-22 11:36
Well, that is also because the GOP likes to roll using opaque "SuperPacs" that do not have any limits or requirement for disclosure of donors (funny how it is the GOP blocking the DISCLOSE Act which would mandate transparency on these), whereas Dems use more the traditional transparent mechanisms of donation. So you of course will see it look like Dems are receiving more from Wall St. But this is changing, the facts are BOTH political parties are pretty much bought-and-sold , pretending differently is being horribly naive.
 

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