“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.” -Alvin Toffler

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

Dept of Energy. Opportunities: Business and Higher Education, Prize Sharing of $10-million

 

Energy LogoU.S. Department of Energy

Registration is Open! Join Us for DOE's 2023 MBE Connect Summit!

Have you registered to join DOE’s first-ever MBE Connect Summit?   

You are receiving this message because you have signed up to receive information from the U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Economic Impact and Diversity 

Register for DOE’s 2023 MBE DOE Connect Summit! Registration is now open for the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Economic Impact and Diversity’s 2023 MBE DOE Connect Summit. This event is geared toward minority business, minority serving institutions, non-profit organizations and Community Development Financial institutions within the energy sector. We hope to connect and build meaning relationships with DOE program offices and representative from various federal agencies.  

Here’s what you need to know: 

When: (In Person) February 23, 2023, 8am – 5pm, (Virtual) February 28, 2023, 8am - 5pm  

Where: Forrestal Building, US Department of Energy - 1000 Independence Ave SW, Washington, DC 20024/ Online 

Purpose: Minority Business Enterprises and higher education institutions will learn how to interface with DOE, the Federal family, Green Banks, and Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs) to discover where the industry and billions of dollars in funding opportunities are going.  

Accessibility: Mirrored programing will be presented virtually on 2/28/23 via recorded sessions during the in-person conference.  Sessions will be translated to multiple languages.  

This summit is free, and registration is required. To register for the virtual day, please click here.

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Energy LogoU.S. Department of Energy

Technology Commercialization Internship Now Accepting Applications. The Office of Technology Transitions Technology Commercialization Internship is a unique paid opportunity for undergraduate STEM and business students to explore and contribute to advances at the intersection of business and innovative clean energy technologies. Interns undergo intensive training as they join the world-class National Laboratory sys. tem, boost entrepreneurial thinking, and explore market opportunities.

This internship focuses on the business side of technology commercialization where interns will learn skills such as customer discovery, value propositions development, and market sizing. Students will be paired with cutting edge technologies at National Labs in fields spanning machine learning, artificial intelligence, data science, biofuels, and more.

Apply before Jan. 16, 2023

Request for Information: Accelerating Innovations in Emerging Technologies. The Office of Science invites interested parties to provide input relevant to developing approaches for:

  • Accelerating innovations in emerging technologies to drive scientific discovery to sustainable production of new technologies across the innovation continuum
  • Training a science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) workforce to support 21st century industries
  • Meeting the nation’s needs for abundant clean energy, a sustainable environment, and national security.

Respond by Dec. 23, 2022.

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Mickey LeelandU.S. Department of Energy

U.S. Department of Energy’s Mickey Leland Energy Fellowship
Audience
: Undergraduate and Graduate Students Who Are U.S. Citizens
Application Deadline: Jan. 16, 2023

Application Link: www.energy.gov/fe/mlef
Contact: mlef@hq.doe.gov

The U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE) Mickey Leland Energy Fellowship (MLEF) Program is currently accepting applications for their Summer 2023 program. This 10-week summer research fellowship is for undergraduate and graduate students in STEM majors seeking to gain experience in energy research. Participants complete a cutting edge research project at one of DOE's national laboratories or at DOE headquarters under the mentorship of our scientists and engineers. Stipend provided. Participants may be eligible to receive travel and housing assistance.


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Energy Solar FlyerU.S. Department of Energy

On December 12, the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) released new funding for the Small Business Innovation Research and Small Business Technology Transfer (SBIR/STTR) Phase I program for Fiscal Year 2023. The SBIR/STTR programs are competitive funding opportunities that encourage U.S.-based small businesses to engage in high-risk, innovative research and technology development with the potential for future commercialization.

SBIR/STTR provides funding in two phases: Small businesses can receive up to $200,000 in Phase I to prove the feasibility of an idea; successful awardees can then receive up to $1.1 million in Phase II for prototype development.

Mandatory letters of intent for this funding opportunity are due Tuesday, January 3, 2023 at 5 p.m. ET. Please review the FOA for more information.

In the Solar Energy Technologies Office (SETO), funding is awarded to companies that are working to advance the affordability, reliability, and performance of solar technologies on the grid. SETO seeks solutions in the following subtopics, found under :

  • Wide-Bandgap Power Electronics 
  • Photovoltaic (PV) Recycling 
  • Solar Systems Resilient to Weather-related or Cyber Threats
  • Heliostat Components and Systems for Low-Cost, Autonomous, and High-Concentration Solar Collectors 
  • Concentrating Solar-Thermal Power (CSP) Technologies for Gen3 CSP or Industrial Decarbonization 
  • Solar Hardware and Software Technologies: Affordability, Reliability, Performance, and Manufacturing 
  • Transferring Novel Solar Technologies from Research Laboratories to the Market(open to STTR applications only)

SETO, through the American-Made Network, is providing free Application Education Services. You can email the following points of contact for more details.

Learn more about this funding opportunity and view the slides from SETO’s informational webinar.  

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L Prize FlyerL-Prize Deadlines Approaching

The U.S. Department of Energy L-Prize® challenges industry to bring forward new innovations to realize the full potential of advanced lighting systems for commercial buildings. The competition has three distinct phases: Concept Phase winners were announced in February 2022, the Prototype Phase opened in June 2022, and the Manufacturing and Installation Phase is expected to open in September 2023. Participation in the Concept Phase is not required to participate in the Prototype Phase.

The L-Prize Prototype Phase “Intent to Submit” deadline is January 13, 2023.

The Prototype Phase introduces two tracks, one for luminaires and the other for connected systems, and competitors are invited to submit working prototypes for evaluation. A total prize pool of $2 million for this phase will be split among up to six competitors across the two tracks. Here is everything you need to know to enter:

  • Visit the L-Prize website and register on the HeroX platform. Click on “Solve this Challenge” and accept the competitor agreement in order to access the full capabilities of the website.
  • Click on “Begin Entry” and complete the Intent to Submit form, providing a brief description of your intended luminaire or connected system. You do not need to have your complete submission package ready at this time. The complete submission package is due in May 2023; see the L-Prize Official Rules for more details.
  • If you have any questions that you think are not answered after reading the L-Prize Official Rules, and after searching the HeroX Forum Q&A, please email LPrize@nrel.gov

The public comment period for the L-Prize Manufacturing and Installation Phase requirements closes January 13, 2023. The final phase of the L-Prize will reward production and installation of real products meeting the L-Prize technical requirements. DOE will evaluate entries on technical performance and innovation in addition to U.S. manufacturing content, deployment strategy, and innovative installation models. Up to four competitors will share an award of $10 million. The public comment period to provide inputs on the Manufacturing and Installation Phase requirements closes on January 13, 2023. Complete the Comment Form on the L-Prize website and share your input.

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Monday, December 19, 2022

DHS Opens 23.1 Small Business Innovation Research Solicitation December 19, 2022


12/19/2022

S&T Header banner



News Release: DHS Opens 23.1 Small Business Innovation Research Solicitation

Washington – The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) 23.1 Solicitation is now open and accepting applications from U.S. small businesses interested in submitting research proposals for seven diverse homeland security technology needs.

“One of the best ways for small business to begin partnering with DHS is with the non-dilutive funding through the SBIR program, which is designed to engage them in federal research and development,” said Dusty Lang, DHS SBIR Director. “Publishing the annual solicitation is an exciting time for our program as we prepare to foster new relationships with small businesses in support of the pursuit of innovation.”

The solicitation is published on SAM.gov and details the following topics:

  • DHS231-001 - Accurate and Real-time Hardware-assisted Detection of Cyber Attacks
  • DHS231-002 - Air Cargo Manifest Analysis to Aid Screeners
  • DHS231-003 - First Responder Credentialing
  • DHS231-004 - Machine Learning Based Integration of Alarm Resolution Sensors
  • DHS231-005 - Mission Critical Services Server-to-Server Communication, voice communications, 3GPP-Standards
  • DHS231-006 - Reduced Order Modeling of Critical Infrastructure Protect Surfaces
  • DHS231-007 - Theoretical Classification Methodologies to Enable Detection with Predicted Signatures

The DHS SBIR Program is a competitive contract awards program that encourages agile and innovative U.S. small businesses to participate in federal research and development projects, as well as private sector commercialization of SBIR-funded solutions.

During the solicitation period, DHS will accept proposals for topics until 1 PM ET on January 17, 2023. Proposals must be submitted through the online proposal submission system at: https://sbir.dhs.gov/sbir/public.

For more information about the DHS SBIR program, the Deconstructing SBIR webinar series offers more insights and information. Join the mailing list to keep up to date on the latest news at: https://sbir.dhs.gov.

About DHS S&T

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Science and Technology Directorate (S&T) mission is to enable effective, efficient, and secure operations across all homeland security missions by applying scientific, engineering, analytic, and innovative approaches to deliver timely solutions and support departmental acquisitions. Created by Congress in 2003, S&T conducts basic and applied research, development, demonstration, testing and evaluation activities relevant to support Homeland Security and first responder operations and protect critical infrastructure. For more information about S&T, visit scitech.dhs.gov.

 




Two Years ago. A historical collaboration: Operation Asentiementos, NOSACONN, BEMA International. December 2020/

 


Sunday, December 18, 2022

UMOJA Market. While shopping stop by the :BEMA International office on the lower level.

 

 1231 Good Hope Rd SE Washington D.C., DC 20020
Day two of the #UmojaMarket is hscenter.com/about/ere! Stop by for your last minute shopping needs now until 7 PM. Happy Holidays 
— at Anacostia Arts Center.

---------------------------

 

 

Black Emergency Managers Association International
Washington, D.C.


 

bEMA International

Cooperation, Collaboration, Communication, Coordination, Community engagement, and  Partnering (C5&P)

 

A 501 (c) 3 organization

We must act as if we answer to, and only answer to, our ancestors, our children, and the unborn. — Amilcar Cabra

 


Environmental, Wate & Food Insecurity. Million-dollar fines on billion-dollar profiteering

Change the paradigm.

The price of a million-dollar fine for any violation of environment, on water, on soil, in the air 

 VS 

....a billion or multi-billion dollar profit.

  • What would you do?
  • Accept the fine or violation that would be just a small fraction of your profits?

Change the paradigm, 

Environmental agencies at the local and federal level.  

  • make the fine or violation at a minimum 20% of a companies annual profits for violation for environmental cleanup.  
  • Watch the difference

That would be communities taking control.  The community imperative.

-------------------------------------------  

Black Emergency Managers Association International                 
Washington, D.C.                                                                    

bEMA International

Cooperation, Collaboration, Communication, Coordination, Community engagement, and  Partnering (C5&P)

 

A 501 (c) 3 organization

 



Food Insecurity: U.S. The 'free' market: Hogtied, shot, and drowned. Million-dollar fines on billion-dollar profiteering won’t deter it

 [..."It’s not OK, he says, “to stay within the boundaries of your own farm, not make any waves. There is a price to be paid for silence and complacency.”]...Don Kimbrell, Happy, Texas

 

The ‘free’ market: hogtied, shot, & drowned

 December 16, 2022 



Photo by Shimmerx Lyan on Unsplash

I’ve never been a farmer, but I’ve learned quite a bit about being one from the many I’ve known. Start with High and Lillie, my parents, both of whom were raised on hardscrabble Texas farms and had a trove of stories about the ups and downs of that experience. Also, during my growing-up years in Denison, Texas, I had extended stays on the nearby farm of my Aunt Eula and Uncle Ernest, chipping in on the cotton picking, corn hoeing, and chicken tending. Of course, none of these connections give me claim to being a Son of the Soil, but I was able through my time with these relatives to soak awhile in the unique satisfaction that farm life can bring.
 

Cartoon by Brian Duffy

 

I also got a sense from their kitchen- table talk of how farming can be a mighty hard row to hoe, for there’s a constant threat that some combination of bad weather, bankers, bugs, commodity brokers, and politicians will hit you from out of nowhere, plucking your profits and threatening your family’s livelihood. A Woody Guthrie song expresses the lament of many a hard luck farmer:


Drought got my crops and Mr. Banker’s at my door

And I ain’t got no home in this world anymore. 

Yet, against all odds, family farmers all across our land persevere, in part because they tend to be “optimistic fatalists” (meaning they understand what’s gonna happen is gonna happen, but even if it’s bad now, they dare to believe next year might be better). And they buffer it all with an indomitable sense of humor. In my days as Texas Agriculture Commissioner, and in the many years since that I’ve continued as a family farm advocate, they’ve always had another line or joke to try out on me:


  • A reporter asked a farmer what her family would do if they won a million dollars in the lottery: “Well, I guess we’d just keep farming ’til the money ran out.”
  • During the 1970s and ’80s, when global grain traders had busted farm prices, I was asked at an Iowa ag protest if I knew the difference between a farmer and a pigeon. I did not. “A pigeon can still make a deposit on a John Deere,” the farmer said, chortling at the bitter truth of it.
  • “You can make a small fortune in agriculture,” a Georgia farmer drawled on my radio talk show in 2000, “but the problem is you have to start with a large fortune.” 

DINNER PLATE DISTORTIONS

In this winter holiday season of good eats–from pumpkin everything to good-luck black-eyed peas–it’s fitting for us to focus a Lowdown “State-of-the-Plate” issue on the situation of these hardy producers … and on the dicey food future they (and we) face. The media and politicians have rightly been bemoaning the painful inflationary surges in the price of eggs, milk, meat, veggies, and other foodstuffs. Yet, little attention has been given to the curious fact that those who actually produce our food are mired in a disastrous, multi-year decline in the money they’re paid for their commodities. That farm prices can fall while consumer prices rise is an anti-competitive distortion so severe that farmers are now only getting 14 cents of each dollar we consumers spend for food! This disparity has bankrupted thousands of farm families and left hundreds of thousands more on the brink of broke.

Enjoying Hightower? How about a weekly email that gives you the full scoop?

What’s going on? Where’s it headed? Do we care? What to do?

Let’s consider some of the developments shaping our food future, particularly that monster at the door (which the corporate ag and political establishments want us to pretend is not there): Monopoly.

COME A TY-YA YIPPY YI YO!

The high food prices that are set by concentrated corporate power are painfully squeezing most of our household budgets, but for small and family farmers and ranchers, corporate price fixing is a ravenous two-headed monster chomping away at their income.


  • BITE 1: Monopolistic sellers gouge food producers with overcharges for crop loans, seeds, tractors, fuel, feed, and practically every other farming essential.
  • BITE 2: Monopsonistic meatpackers, processors, grain traders, supermarket giants, fast food chains, and a cabal of other commodity buyers systematically underpay families for what they produce.

"Two wrongs don't make a right, but three left turns do." --Jim Hightower

Thus, we have the ridiculous anomaly of consumers needing a bank loan to buy a steak dinner, while cattle raisers are losing money on the beef they produce.


Through a series of mergers and predatory power grabs during the past three decades, a handful of global meatpacking conglomerates now controls the sale (and pricing) of beef, pork, and poultry in the US: JBS and Marfrig (Brazil), Tyson and Cargill (US), and Smithfield (China). For example, just four giants have locked up 85% of beef sales, but their real market control over cattle raisers is even more absolute, because they divide up the country to avoid competing against each other. So, when a rancher takes a herd to a regional sales auction, instead of finding four bidders, there is one. Take the low price offered, or–“git along little dogie”–take your herd back to the ranch.

 

Then, those same monopsonistic cattle buyers turn into monopolistic beef sellers, conspiring to fix the wholesale prices of meat that supermarkets and other retailers buy. And, of course, that monopoly-inflated wholesale price is passed on at the retail level to us consumers, leading to today’s screams of anger at the meat counter. Such monopoly pricing is now a common “business practice” in the world of Big Meat, and it’s leading to a flood of lawsuits. This year, Smithfield agreed to pay $75 million to settle a lawsuit accusing it and competitors of conspiracy to limit supply in order to inflate prices; this on top of previous settlements totaling $125 million. JBS settled similar price-fixing charges for $32.75 million.

 

But do the math. Far from a deterrent, multimillion-dollar fines are a miniscule cost of doing business for these cartels. As they’ve eliminated real competition, organized gouging got easy and outlandishly profitable, as revealed in the gross totals they grabbed during the pandemic surge of meat price inflation. While meat prices rose 12.3% for the year ending March 31:

 

  • JBS reported $4.4 billion profits–70% over previous year.
  • Tyson raked in $4.1 billion profits– 91% over previous year.
  • Cargill banked a $4.9 billion net income (year ending May 2022) –60%over previous year.


Market concentration is where today’s State-of-the-Plate inflation is coming from, and million-dollar fines on billion-dollar profiteering won’t deter it. The concentration itself is illegal, so enforce the law: Bust the monopolists!

Of course, corporate apologists insist that nothing is amiss, that the ever-rising prices for food are just part of the natural ebb and flow of the free market. But– hello–the “free” market has been hogtied, shot, and drowned by agribusiness middlemen.

Indeed, two groups of progressive economists (Roosevelt Institute and Economic Policy Institute) have recently documented that more than half the overall inflation that Americans are now enduring (substantially led by food costs) is caused by monopoly profiteering. There’s even a name for it: Greedflation.


ASK A CHICKEN FARMER 

Very few consumers–whether buying a supermarket bird to roast at home or grabbing an order of fast-food nuggets–are aware that they are feeding the greedy maw of Big Chicken. It’s an industrialized, monopolized, factory system of poultry production that has become notorious for torturing the millions of animals it processes and exploiting the thousands of workers whose dangerous conditions and poverty-level pay subsidize the profits of its genteel Wall Street investors. Only four processing giants–Cargill, JBS, Perdue, and Tyson–control 60% of this multibillion-dollar poultry market.


But … where do they get their chickens?


From a vast, almost-invisible network of “contract farmers”–largely low-income rural families, primarily in the South. Under contract to one of the giants, they feed and care for very large flocks of baby chicks until slaughter age, when the corporation transports them to a killing factory. The processor’s promise to buy the grown birds–a guaranteed market!– entices the farmers to sign on. But the deal rests on corporate quicksand, for:

 

1- Processors require growers to purchase sprawling, expensive chicken houses and other infrastructure, ensnaring families in debt from the very start.

 

2 - Growers don’t own the chicks, don’t choose the breed, or control the living conditions, but they assume the risk of bird deaths.

 

3 - Corporations dictate the quality and quantity of feed and drugs contractors must use.

 

4 - Processors agree to buy the birds, but the corporation essentially controls the price using an opaque and arbitrary calculation that leaves thousands of contract farmers mired in perpetual debt to the processor.

 

Beyond unfair, the payment system is vicious and demeaning. While processors have named it “the poultry tournament,” there’s nothing sporting about it. They base each contractor’s pay on the delivered birds’ weight–even though heft is determined by genetics, diet, and other factors controlled by the corporation. Turning payment into a nasty game, processors pit poor farmers against each other by docking the pay of those whose birds come in below average, then awarding that penalty as a bonus to those whose flocks top average weight. What fun! For processors.

 

More than 90 percent of the chickens that we Americans buy are raised by contract farmers under this system of corporate feudalism.


Wear it like you mean it.


Gear for progressive populists in the Lowdown store.


At last, though, after decades of the government doing zero to stop this blatant abuse of farmers, the US Agriculture Department issued a set of rules in May requiring Big Chicken to improve “transparency” in the contracting and tournament process. That’s good–progress even! But while achieving even a little bit of progress in battling monopoly abuse is good, we should not confuse small steps with real change. As noted by the farm advocacy group Food and Water Watch, “simply requiring companies to tell producers they’re going to be discriminated against doesn’t fix this broken system.” The malicious corporate con of tournament pricing must be banned.


SEEDS OF PROGRESS


For farmers and ranchers (as well as for city gardeners), spring is a time of planning and planting. And this coming spring is shaping up as a momentous time to plant the seeds for a new day of fairness and justice in our vast food economy. To do just that, Willie Nelson’s Farm Aid organization and the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition (NSAC) are calling on farm, food, climate, and social justice activists from across the country to come together in Washington next March for a 3-day mobilization called “Farmers for Climate: Rally for Resilience.”


Some combination of a grassroots awakening, people’s policy palooza, music fest, and national political movement launch, the mobilization will focus on the substance of a new 5-year farm bill, which Congress will be writing in 2023. Rather than leave this vital task to corporate lobbyists and business-as-usual lawmakers, Farm Aid, NSAC, and about a dozen other organizations will bring us “outsiders” into the process to demand and write a new policy based on family farms, climate resilience, and economic democracy.


This will be the largest direct-action farm and food mobilization since the tractorcades of the late ’70s, which culminated in 50,000 mad-as-hellers (including me) and 5,000 tractors descending on Congress to make it include some progressive reforms in the farm bill of that era. Forty years later though, the interrelated crises of farmers and climate have become far more exigent, making a bold, progressive farm policy essential to alleviate both. But getting there is up to us. Left on their own, most lawmakers will dance to the tune of corporate donors, sticking with status-quo policies of industrial ag that are forcing good family farmers off the land and fueling global warming. So we have to show up, make some noise and push our own solutions.


One who’s urging all of us to be there is Don Kimbrell, a farmer who was part of that tractorcade rebellion four decades ago. Back then, he drove his old John Deere tractor some 1,500 miles from his home in Happy, Texas, to be part of the action in DC. Don plans to show up again next March (though not on that venerable tractor), because it’s important to take a stand for future generations. It’s not OK, he says, “to stay within the boundaries of your own farm, not make any waves. There is a price to be paid for silence and complacency.”


MAKE SOME WAVES! 

Always a big deal, the farm bill governs a huge range of ag and food programs, including nutrition, forestry, crop insurance. But with our industrial ag system now responsible for 11% of greenhouse gas emissions, next year’s legislation is also key to our climate future. Fortunately, our friends at the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition (sustainableagriculture.net) are on the case.


Coalition members have been in DC this year lobbying for the Agricultural Resilience Act, “a farmer-driven, science-based roadmap for reaching net-zero greenhouse gas emissions in U.S. agriculture by 2040.” We like NSAC’s vision for US ag where: “a safe, nutritious, ample, and affordable food supply is produced by a legion of family farmers who make a decent living pursuing their trade, while protecting the environment, and contributing to the strength and stability of their communities.”

 

But it’ll take some horsepower to push that kind of thinking into law, so NSAC has partnered with Farm Aid (farmaid.org) to rally Congress and the rest of us eaters behind needed reforms during the first week of March 2023. Details of the three-day Farmers for Climate event are still coming together, but from the FarmAid stage in Raleigh, the partners announced “a mobilization the likes of which we have not seen since the 1970s.”

 

Let’s show up for that!

 

OUT OF THIS WORLD AGRICULTURE

 

Our food future–the very nature of victuals and the values that will guide production–remains undecided, with two major camps pushing widely contrasting visions: (1) a community-based system of agriCULTURE, with farm families working the soil in cooperation with nature; and (2) a corporate-controlled agriTECH system guided by Wall St. speculators and nature-altering engineers.

 

For a glimpse of where each approach would take us, consider present efforts to adapt two of our most important staples, tomatoes and potatoes, to the realities of climate change.

 

First, say hello to “space tomatoes,” under development by an astrobiologist for Heinz Inc, the multibillion-dollar ketchup monopolist that controls 70% of the US market. Anticipating that global warming will make much of Earth inhospitable to farming, the tomato giant has already produced a few bottles of ketchup containing love apples grown under Mars-like conditions.

 

It has already chosen a brand name: “Heinz: Marz Edition.” Cute, but red planet ag requires more than a marketing slogan, for it entails beaucoup unresolved issues of finance, production, transportation, and absurdities. For example, soil. Mars has none–only a mantle of loose rock that lacks even one speck of the organic matter essential to growing food. Also, Mars has no rain, no atmospheric protection from the sun’s ultraviolet radiation, and no warmth (it averages 81 degrees below zero). All nutrients and climate to make a tomato plant survive on Mars, much less produce fruit, would have to be fabricated, along with the robotic “farmers” who’d raise it. Then there’s the pricey issue of shipping the red planet condiment back to terra firma, as well as the even more difficult matter of Heinz finding a market of vain billionaires (besides Elon Musk) spacey enough to splurge on what would be a multimillion-dollar bottle of Marz-up.

 

Meanwhile, a world away from Heinz, indigenous scientists, seed savers, and growers in America’s arid Southwest are finding a food future right here on our fast-warming planet by reviving and replanting their past. In particular, they’re reintroducing an ancestral spud that has been cultivated as far back as 11,000 years ago. Dubbed the Four Corners Potato, it contains triple the protein and double the calcium of today’s red potatoes and can thrive in the desert region where Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico, and Utah converge, for it not only prefers minimal moisture, but even survives persistent drought by going dormant until rain returns.

 

The value of such natural resilience was cast aside, however, by the financiers and engineers of today’s model of massive, industrialized, monocropping farm corporations. We might yet get lucky, though, for many Native elders have continued over the generations to grow a few of the unique, ancient potatoes, saving and passing on the seeds to the next generation … and to us. So now, nonprofit efforts like the Potato Cultivation Project of the Utah Dine Bikeyah’s Traditional Food Program are encouraging farmers and communities to plant the heritage Four Corners variety. “Our ancestors left these seeds for us,” says the director of the program, “[so] we can return to those sustainable practices.”





UDHR 75 2022-23 #Stand Up for Human Rights

 “The Universal Declaration of Human Rights is a miraculous text,” said Volker Türk, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights. “At a time when the world emerged from cataclysmic events, the Declaration set out universal rights and recognized the equal worth of every person.”

On Human Rights Day (10 December), UN Human Rights will launch a year-long campaign to promote and recognise the 75th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR 75), which will be celebrated on 10 December 2023. The year-long campaign will showcase the UDHR by focusing on its legacy, relevance and activism using the slogan, “Dignity, Freedom, and Justice for All.”

“The Declaration – which was drafted by representatives from all over the world – embodies a common language of our shared humanity, a unifying force at the heart of which lies human dignity and the duty of care we owe each other as human beings,” Türk said.

It is the global blueprint for international, national, and local laws and policies. The Declaration is also a foundation of the 2030 Agenda for sustainable development, which promotes an economy that invests in human rights and works for everyone.

The UDHR 75 campaign will increase global awareness of the UDHR by showing how the Declaration has guided the work of the Office. It will then promote the universality of human rights and empower everyone, especially young people, to stand up for human rights.

Since the adoption of the UDHR in 1948, human rights have been more guaranteed and recognised around the world including improvements in the rights of women, children, and young people, of indigenous people to guard and maintain their land and culture, and the abolition of the death penalty in many countries.

But the promise of the UDHR, of dignity and equality in rights, has been under attack. The world is facing a climate crisis, the COVID-19 pandemic, increasing conflicts, economic instability, misinformation, racial injustice, and global setbacks on women’s rights. People are frustrated and have lost trust with what’s being seen as the inaction and irrelevance of governments and institutions in protecting human rights. Young people don’t feel heard or know the existence of the Declaration.

“Even as the 30 articles of the Declaration have sparked transformation in all areas of our lives, the embers of racism, misogyny, inequality, and hatred continue to threaten our world,” Türk said. “The language and spirit of the Declaration have the potential to overcome division and polarization. It can make peace with nature, our planet, and point the way to sustainable development for future generations.”

https://www.ohchr.org/en/get-involved/stories/udhr-75-dignity-freedom-and-justice-all



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