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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
42 w

Where did the myth of overpopulation come from?
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expose-news.com

Where did the myth of overpopulation come from?

Population alarmists who buy into the overpopulation myth believe that the world’s growing population will strip the Earth of its useable resources and will outpace innovation and rates of production. This, they […]
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Intel Uncensored
Intel Uncensored
42 w

New Fear Campaign for Bird Flu Vax – Dr. Peter McCullough
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New Fear Campaign for Bird Flu Vax – Dr. Peter McCullough

by Greg Hunter, USA Watchdog: Dr. Peter McCullough is a renowned cardiologist who has been fighting the government CV19 vax propaganda from the beginning.  Dr. McCullough is on record saying “The CV19 vaccine did not help a single person.”  Now, Dr. McCullough is fighting a new false government narrative on the Bird Flu.  They just […]
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The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side
42 w

How One Indian State Went 100% Organic
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How One Indian State Went 100% Organic

In Pelling, a town in Western Sikkim in India with the best views of the Himalayan peak Kanchenjunga, Tsering Bhutia gazes at the terraced field behind his house. “We’ve grown organic black cardamom for years,” he says. “But ever since a blight destroyed my crop, I’ve been contemplating making a homestay here instead…” About two miles away, Rinchen Lama adds homegrown vermicompost to her field. “The squash I grow is the most delicious you’ll ever eat,” she says. “But my kids also like other vegetables, so I get them from the market.”  In a state that officially went 100 percent organic in 2016, and won what many regard as the Oscar for best public policies — the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation’s Future Policy Gold Award — in 2018, such stories paint an honest picture of the challenges that arise in fundamentally altering how our food is grown. But this change is necessary: An estimated 52 percent of agricultural land across the globe is moderately to severely degraded due to monoculture, chemical pesticide and fertilizer use, and groundwater extraction — and this will accelerate unless these practices change. And in 2019, a United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report found that commercial food production over the last 50 years has driven more biodiversity loss globally than any other activity.  Sowing after the rains. Credit: Mevedir When it comes to organic farming, Australia leads the world’s tally with 53 million hectares under cultivation, and at 4.7 million hectares, India stands a far second (the United States, at 2.06 million hectares, is ninth). Not many countries and regions have managed to transition to 100 percent organic food production, as it is tricky and initially expensive. Here’s how Sikkim succeeded where Sri Lanka failed disastrously.  Lessons from a failed experiment In 2021, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, president of Sri Lanka, declared an overnight ban on the use and import of chemical fertilizers and other crop inputs in the country. A survey at the time found that over 90 percent of the two million farmers in the island nation used chemical fertilizers and 85 percent expected huge reductions in their harvest if they stopped suddenly.  Indeed, the ban, coupled with the higher production expenses, devastated food production. The government was not able to supply enough organic fertilizers, or import sufficient soil nutrients to satisfy farmers’ requirements, before banning agrochemicals. Consequently, the production of rice (a significant staple on Sri Lankan plates) dropped by half, and the production of tea, Sri Lanka’s largest cash crop, fell by 18 percent. In 2022, food shortages and a worsening foreign exchange crisis forced the government to call off its experiment with organic farming. The World Food Programme estimated that in 2023, 17 percent of its population of 22 million remained food-insecure, an improvement on 2022’s figure of 28 percent.  Mevedir officials inspecting a chilly crop. Credit: Mevedir In comparison, Sikkim chose the slow route: Back in 2003, the state gave itself a decade to transition to 100 percent organic. The odds were in its favor. Sikkim is India’s most sparsely populated state (86 people per square kilometer, as per the 2011 census, compared to 828 in the North Indian state of Uttar Pradesh). Its mainly subsistence farms were, and continue to be, spread thinly across mountainous terrain, which makes supplying inorganic fertilizers expensive. Consequently, using homegrown organic manure and vermicompost (compost created from worm waste) was very much the norm. In fact, Sikkimese farmers were already using less nitrogenous and phosphatic fertilizers in 2003: merely 9.9 kg per hectare of cropped area, compared to Punjab (172 kg per hectare) and Haryana (150.4 kg per hectare). It also helped that the local populace already understood the value of organic food. “As children, we were taught that basti (local) vegetables grown without any chemical inputs by small farmers, were the best vegetables to eat,” says Renzino Lepcha, CEO of Mevedir, an organic agri-business and certification agency in Sikkim. “And we chose them over those imported from the plains.”  “We’ve borrowed this earth from our future generations…” The state’s organic journey kicked off in 2004, with an action plan in which the then-chief minister Pawan Chamling wrote, “[W]e have not inherited this earth from our forefather but have borrowed it from our future generations, it is our duty to protect it by living in complete harmony with nature and environment.” This lofty idea was accompanied by pragmatism: At this juncture, the subsidy on chemical fertilizer was merely reduced (it was fully banned in 2014). The state government developed 100 model villages where organic farming was demonstrated, and as most landholdings were small, encouraged farmer-producer groups to collectively apply for organic certification. This was provided initially through certification agencies like Mevedir, and later, starting in 2015, through the newly-minted Sikkim State Organic Certification Agency. Crushed by negative news? Sign up for the Reasons to be Cheerful newsletter. [contact-form-7] In 2010, the Sikkim Organic Mission, the nodal agency that implemented the state’s organic policy, was formed. “We underwent many training modules and learned about different aspects of organic farming — making fertilizers and crop medicines from cow dung and urine, multi-cropping, crop rotation, composting, etc.,” Bhutia, the farmer in Pelling, recalls. “Most of these were easy, and cheap to adopt.” By 2016, when the state government and contracted agencies had certified more than 75,000 hectares of land, the state was declared to have become 100 percent organic.  But even though the transition was leisurely and well-planned, Sikkim faced — and continues to face — challenges.  “Why export organic pineapples — and eat non-organic fruit at home?” In 2022, 82 percent of the respondents in a study of the state by the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and the Environment (ATREE), a nonprofit focused on conservation and sustainable development, reported that they still source their staple food from the market or through the public distribution system. “And this is not necessarily organic,” Sarala Khaling, an ecologist and interdisciplinary researcher at ATREE, says. “Farmers are growing more cash crops than food crops,” she says, describing the state’s changing foodscape, which is influencing what farmers are choosing to grow — or not grow. “I’ve seen many farms abandoned for reasons including economic unviability, climate uncertainty, reduced land holding sizes and loss of interest in farming among the youth.”  Ploughing the fields after the monsoon. Credit: Mevedir This declining interest in farming has been exacerbated by a drop in agricultural production between 2017 and 2020, and the lack of agricultural infrastructure to make agribusinesses financially feasible (which could make farming more attractive to the younger generation). “Initially in 2006, we started sending ginger and turmeric to Holland and Germany by air,” Lepcha says. “But in the absence of any cold chain infrastructure, our export volumes were so small that they weren’t commercially viable.”   There has been a decline in political interest in organic farming in Sikkim as well. In the 2019 Assembly elections, the political party Sikkim Democratic Front, led by the erstwhile chief minister Pawan Chamling, lost to the Prem Singh Golay-led Sikkim Krantikari Morcha. Chamling, a farmer who had served five consecutive terms as chief minister of Sikkim, had spearheaded and overseen the transition to organic. But the new government, Lepcha observes, has different priorities. “Five years ago, the Krishi Bhawan (Department of Agriculture) used to be buzzing with daily meetings, training sessions and seminars on organic agriculture,” he says. “Today, there are hardly any.” The return of the bees On the bright side, studies and field observations indicate that Sikkim’s fragile mountain ecology is thriving today. “We can actually see on the ground that going organic has improved the soil quality and biodiversity in the areas that we work,” Lepcha says. Mevedir presently works with 30 farmer groups across three districts in Sikkim. “Most farmers we work with experience the positive effects of going organic, and it certainly helps that homemade crop inputs are way cheaper than buying their chemical counterparts,” he says.  A bumper crop of maize drying on a farmer’s house. Credit: Mevedir Rain-fed agriculture has helped reduce the need for irrigation and conserve water, a scarce commodity in the Himalayas. Some reports suggest that since 2014, bee populations have been rebounding, with yields of pollinator-dependent cardamom increasing by more than 23 percent. The organic tag is also fueling an increase in wellness tourism, and tourist arrivals in the state have increased by 25 percent since 2016. Khaling sounds a warning note here, however, saying that she is apprehensive about “opening the floodgates of an ecologically fragile zone to mass tourism.” Even though the government focus on organic agriculture has lessened, Lepcha says that farmers supplying to Mevedir continue to practice it. Marginal farmers like Bhutia and Lama prefer the organic way as well.  “Sikkim isn’t a failed model, but it isn’t easily replicable either!” Sikkim’s unique traits — low population density, small landholding size, large natural resource base, historical prevalence of organic farming and most importantly, political will — have lubricated its organic journey. However, as GV Ramanajanegulu of the Hyderabad-based Center for Sustainable Agriculture points out, these traits also make its organic transition hard to replicate. “But while the state’s organic transition may not have been 100 percent successful, it is proof that if a government has the will, it can intervene and transform farming,” he says.  The Sikkim case highlights another key takeaway: Going organic is much more than simply using organic agricultural inputs. It is as much about changing how we grow as it is about changing what we actually eat. Lama’s children groan every time there is squash for dinner, and at Mevedir’s organic vegetable outlet in Gangtok, Lepcha is seeing a growing demand for exotic and out-of-season vegetables like tomatoes. “While this demand exists, vendors in Sikkim will be forced to import from other parts of the country,” he says.  Become a sustaining member today! Join the Reasons to be Cheerful community by supporting our nonprofit publication and giving what you can. Join Khaling and her colleagues at ATREE suggest that it would be more transformative to broadly uphold all the principles of agroecology (the complex interrelationship between people, food  production, livelihoods and the environment) instead of narrowly focussing on organic farming alone. “Replenishing the water and soil used for farming, eating what we’re producing, allowing biodiversity and domestic animals to thrive alongside farms and most of all, ensuring that farming practices improve the lives and lifestyles of the farmers themselves, could improve the Sikkim model,” she says.   Meanwhile, Lama’s children noisily protest against squash being on their dinner menu yet again, and once again, for a little variety, she buys some potatoes from the local market to cook into a curry.  The post How One Indian State Went 100% Organic appeared first on Reasons to be Cheerful.
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Front Page Mag Feed
Front Page Mag Feed
42 w

Why Dems Lose Trust in the Media Around Elections
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Why Dems Lose Trust in the Media Around Elections

Only 1 in 10 Republicans trust the media. The post Why Dems Lose Trust in the Media Around Elections appeared first on Frontpage Mag.
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Front Page Mag Feed
42 w

Biden-Harris Admin Blocking Israel From Taking Out Iran’s Nukes Over Election Impact
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Biden-Harris Admin Blocking Israel From Taking Out Iran’s Nukes Over Election Impact

"to avoid the perception of 'political interference in the U.S. elections'” The post Biden-Harris Admin Blocking Israel From Taking Out Iran’s Nukes Over Election Impact appeared first on Frontpage Mag.
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42 w

Kamala Plagiarized Book From Wikipedia
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Kamala Plagiarized Book From Wikipedia

If Kamala had written her book today, it would have been plagiarized from ChatGPT. The post Kamala Plagiarized Book From Wikipedia appeared first on Frontpage Mag.
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42 w

Kamala Offers Black Men $20 Billion if They’ll Vote for Her
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Kamala Offers Black Men $20 Billion if They’ll Vote for Her

Also she promises to help them find work as drug dealers. The post Kamala Offers Black Men $20 Billion if They’ll Vote for Her appeared first on Frontpage Mag.
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Daily Wire Feed
Daily Wire Feed
42 w

Viral Account Pushing Pro-Kamala Misinformation Was Launched By Biden Admin Employee
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Viral Account Pushing Pro-Kamala Misinformation Was Launched By Biden Admin Employee

When Kamala Harris took Joe Biden’s spot at the top of the Democratic presidential ticket, she also replaced him as the focus of Democrats’ favorite X account.  In July, the popular “Biden’s Wins” account rebranded itself to “Kamala’s Wins,” and now boasts that it’s the “largest online community supporting soon to be President Kamala Harris.” With over 765,000 followers, the account sits at the center of a Democratic influence operation, pushing false narratives to millions of potential voters. And its founder, a Biden-Harris administration staffer, may be violating federal law by running it. The Biden’s Wins account was launched in January 2022 by Ethan Wolf, a recent college graduate who was working as deputy political director for Illinois Democrat Brad Schneider’s reelection campaign. Wolf’s account quickly became “a favorite of White House staffers” such as Ron Klain, Biden’s former chief of staff, and in July 2022, his account was profiled by POLITICO. By September 2022, Wolf was invited to the White House “for a private briefing with the President, Vice-President, Ron Klain,” Wolf said on Facebook. A month later, Wolf was back at the White House for another content creator briefing, posing for photos with top White House officials and Doug Emhoff. I am once again asking you to stand with President Biden and me. Retweet and vote in the poll below. https://t.co/1aJHPNLnNP pic.twitter.com/ztbOvXrNUe — Ethan Wolf ?? (@ethanmwolf) March 28, 2024 Just over a year after launching the account praising Biden, Wolf had earned himself a job in the administration. In June 2023, Wolf was hired as a “communications specialist” in the U.S. Department of Commerce’s International Trade Administration, where he makes $94,000 a year, according to disclosure forms.  The timing of these events raises questions about the Biden-Harris administration’s relationship with Wolf. The Harris campaign, responding to one of the many viral lies that originated with his account, told PolitiFact it is not affiliated with Kamala’s Wins, though it seems that Harris and the administration have worked closely with Wolf from the beginning of his career, when he was fresh out of Ohio State University. An administration official posting from the Kamala’s Wins account while working at the Commerce Department would be an apparent violation of the Hatch Act, which bars federal employees from engaging in political activity while on duty or in a federal building. Asked about Wolf’s employment and political activity, a Commerce Department spokesman told The Daily Wire: “All Department of Commerce employees are subject to the Hatch Act, which is the law that governs political activities for federal employees.” Wolf, who could not be reached for comment, would not be the first member of the Biden-Harris administration to violate the Hatch Act. In October 2022, Klain was found to have violated the Hatch Act with a post from that previous May. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra was charged with a violation in April 2023, and White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre just two months later. Jean-Pierre’s predecessor, Jen Psaki, received a warning about violating the Hatch Act in 2021. Nor would Kamala’s Wins be the only thing that potentially put Wolf on the wrong side of the Hatch Act. He has repeatedly shared political content from his personal X account during work hours, as recently as September 25.  Wolf, Pete Buttigieg, and Democrat influencer Harry Sisson at the White House in 2022 (Ethan Wolf/Facebook) Wolf appears to have launched the Biden’s Wins account as part of a business strategy.  The same year he launched the account, Wolf also formed a company called “Democratic Wins Media LLC.” The Biden’s Wins X account seems to have been part of that operation: in June 2023, the account and several other “wins” accounts — “Democratic Wins,” “Pete’s [Buttigieg] Wins,” and “[Hillary] Clinton’s Wins” — reposted a campaign video for Shadia Martini, a Democratic candidate for Michigan state representative. Two days later, Martini’s campaign paid Wolf’s company $2,000. Since transforming into Kamala’s Wins, the account has been a major source of false information. The account was widely fact checked after it erroneously claimed that a number of NFL quarterbacks, including Joe Burrow, were part of a “White Dudes for Harris” fundraising call.  The account has promoted the false claim that former President Donald Trump is attached to Project 2025, and repeated frequently debunked claims about Trump’s 2017 remarks in Charlottesville, Virginia. The account has frequently misconstrued facts to present Harris’ record in a positive light, falsely claiming that Biden-Harris administration policies have caused inflation and grocery prices to plummet, and led to a reduction in violent crime. Wolf’s political work for Biden and Harris began as a 20-year-old Ohio State University student in 2020, when he launched “Jews 4 Joe” to help elect Biden. He told POLITICO that his work was what initially put him on the White House’s radar.  Happy birthday, @POTUS. Thanks for all your doing for our great nation. Special thank you for giving young leaders a seat at your table. pic.twitter.com/7zaRSFzBm5 — Ethan Wolf ?? (@ethanmwolf) November 20, 2023 Wolf also appears to have launched an X account that same year called Jews 4 Kanye, a reference to the openly anti-Semitic rapper Kanye West. The account’s bio reads: “Jews love Kanye & Kanye loves the Jews.” One of the account’s only six followers is an Ohio State classmate of Wolf’s. Posts from Kamala’s Wins account continue to reach millions of people a day in the final stretch of the campaign. Over the past weekend, the account posted repeatedly that Trump is “senile.” In his personal capacity, Wolf insisted in February 2024 that Biden was mentally competent, just five months before a series of embarrassing mental gaffes forced Biden to suspend his presidential campaign. 
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YubNub News
YubNub News
42 w

Kamala Harris Considering Interview with Joe Rogan
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Kamala Harris Considering Interview with Joe Rogan

Copycat Kamala strikes again! After President Trump agreed to appear on Joe Rogan’s podcast, Kamala Harris is now reportedly in talks with Rogan for a sit-down interview, too. According to a report…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
42 w

Bill Clinton’s Campaign Speech for Kamala BACKFIRES, Gets Turned into the Perfect Trump Ad!
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Bill Clinton’s Campaign Speech for Kamala BACKFIRES, Gets Turned into the Perfect Trump Ad!

Bill Clinton visited Georgia today to campaign for Kamala Harris. Well, that’s what he was officially there to do…but his speech took a different turn when he admitted that Laken Riley, the young…
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