More than just a radio show! Political commentary and satire with an irreverent twist - formerly webcast on RadioBoise.org, and broadcast on Radio Free Moscow KRFP-FM, and Northwest Indy Radio KAYO-LP, 94.3 FM in Aberdeen, Hoquiam, and Olympia, WA at 92.9 FM. Regular segments included serial political drama, spoofs, skits, and reports on breaking your corporate chains, growing crops, backyard chickens, and local issues. The show ran from Sep 2005 till Jun 2008.
26 December 2006
Snow Blow Hard - Extras
12 December 2006
True Crime of Homeland Security Links - No-Fly Episode
This week's Code Level Red is partly inspired on the notorious excesses of Homeland Security's no-fly list denied (sort-of) by this squirmingly defensive FBI press release. Not that we're "anti-FBI." Indeed, we celebrate the Bureau's efforts to root out public corruption in our side-story based on the University of California San Francisco employee indicted for selling confidential bid information But ultimately, even the Government Accountability Office has a hard time calling the program success in this Terrorist Watch List Screening: Efforts to Help Reduce Adverse Effects... report which should open in pdf for ya.
The big inspiration, however, is the story Amy Goodman has been telling on her book tour of the guy strong armed for wearing an anti-nazi t-shirt. To read the non-fictionalized version see Raed Jarrar's Blog where he tells it in his own words. Finally, watch out for Artists Against the War and their dangerous T shirts.
Updated True Crimes of Homeland Security Links for Premiere Episode - "Breach 'Em"
Interfaith Sanctuary
This week we interview Ed Keener, president of the Interfaith Sanctuary board. This is the group that houses Boise's homeless without forcing them to subscribe to any religious activities or imposing any lifestyle rules. This is the second winter this massive operation is being undertaken. Only two paid staff positions coordinate the approximate 70 volunteers that are needed every week to make the shelter work. These are great people doing great things - why not contribute? You can make a financial contribution or find out how to volunteer or donate food, clothing, or other supplies to this cause at the Interfaith Sanctuary website.
Some statistics on housing and hunger (thanks to the Idaho Foodbank:
- A minimum wage worker earns about $11,000 per year. In 1996, the most recent year for which these figures are available, 46% of all jobs in Idaho paid less than the $9.22 needed for a single adult in 1996. The same year, 74% paid less than the $14.42 needed for an adult with two children. (University of Washington Job Gap Study)- 20% of Idaho’s households don’t make the $20,534 ($9.87 per hour) per year needed to rent a two-bedroom house. In Ada and Canyon counties, the necessary income is $23,200 per year. (University of Washington Job Gap Study)
- A newer study found that in 2003, 28% of Idaho renters don’t make the $10.13 per hour ($19,449.60) per year needed to pay rent and utilities for a two-bedroom apartment. This is an increase of 26 cents per hour from 2002. Idaho renters must earn at least $11.20 per hour to earn enough for a two-bedroom apartment. (Boise Neighborhood Housing Services and National Low Income Housing Coalition)
- This means that on average in Idaho minimum-wage workers must work 87 hours a week at $5.15 per hour to pay the rent. In Ada and Canyon counties, it is 98 hours per week; Bannock is 76 hours; Nez Perce is 79 hours. Madison County has the lowest rents and requires an average of 69 hours; Blaine County is highest at 119 hours. (National Low Income Housing Coalition 2004)
- In Ada County the average rent for two-bedroom apartment was $654 per month, $512 in Bannock, $527 in Nez Perce, $795 in Blaine (highest), $462 in Madison (lowest). (National Low Income Housing Coalition)
- On any given night, there are approximately 2,000 homeless people in Boise. (Boise City, 2005) In 2004, 18 homeless people died in the Boise area, up from 12 deaths in 2003. (Idaho Statesman)
- 20.7% of Idahoans (269,000 people) have no health insurance, compared to the national average of 17.6%. (U.S. Census)
- Bankruptcies in Idaho have risen from 7,119 in 2000 to 9,660 in 2003, the ninth highest total in the country. (Administrative Office of U.S. Courts)
- Idaho’s welfare laws rate 51st compared to all other states and Washington, D.C. when ranked for their likelihood to encourage and support families’ efforts to become economically self-sufficient. (Tufts University’s Center on Hunger and Poverty)
- Idaho was graded as an "F" for having the worst post-welfare reform social safety net (tied with Indiana and Wyoming) among the 50 states. (Center for Third World Organizing)
- Idaho is 11th in the nation in the rate of bankruptcy, 25% higher than it is in the nation as a whole. The bankruptcy rate is increasing over time, too – up 30% from 2000. (Center for American Progress)
- Despite the growing number of food banks and food-recovery programs, the U.S. food service and retail industries throw away 96,000,000,000 pounds of food each year. That is almost 26% of all the food produced for consumption each year. (Former Secretary of Agriculture Dan Glickman) America’s Second Harvest affiliates distributed 1.4 billion pounds of food in 2001. [yours truly's partner personally oversaw the disposal of hundreds of pounds of perfectly good produce at Fred Meyer in just one month. Employees were threatened with immediate dismissal if any of the produce were taken home and were forbidden to give it away.]
05 December 2006
Farm Report - Lang Bide Kale!
We couldn't resist throwing in these two links to non-commercial websites run by fellow gardeners who they share our fascination with Kale growing in snow
Bucky's link-of-the-week
True Crime of Homeland Security Links
This week's Homeland Security: Code Level Red is almost entirely based on true stories. Honest. In some case we can't reveal our sources (such as our Sagebrush Variety operative working as an "agent" for the FBI) but following is the thoroughly documented inspiration for this week's episode "Footballers."
Our Agent Bailey's misdeeds are based on
Former University of Idaho Football Player Sues Federal Government.
Abdullah Al-Kidd has now started a lawsuit against former U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft.
This weeks "balance" story of an FBI investigation based on like, evidence, and targeting actual bad guys comes from this
FBI Investigates Rep. Curt Weldon
The phony threat was based on this story
'Dirty bombs' threat against stadiums was inspired by 'writing duel'
And the crazy comic relief shizzit element was inspired by last month's chemical spill along the Greenbelt. We actually wrote this episode the week this story came out but we had a backlog of material. Alas, we just can't keep up with all the civil rights abuse, public corruption and real-life absurdity out there.
BSU's Arbiter reports on Strange odor on Cesar Chavez Lane causes subsequent investigation
And The TV people's coverage of the same story. Be sure to check out the googy video if you've got the bandwidth.
Robert rides his bike through BSU along the Greenbelt a few times a week and he was convinced that the dorm residents were ordering onion pizzas delivered all day and night.
03 December 2006
Ukiah Digby for Coroner Links
29 October 2006
Addition Facts Bayhouse on Electricity
25 October 2006
Show 59
Welcome Back, Otter
23 October 2006
Farm Report Links
17 October 2006
Bucky's Links of The Week
10 October 2006
Pollution Report 10/10/06
All of the items on the Pollution Report and more can be researched further on the DEQ website.
10/13: The Idaho DEQ is seeking public comment on its draft certification of a federal permit regulating discharge of municipal stormwater to the Portneuf River. The federal permit authorizes the cities of Pocatello and Chubbuck, Bannock County, and the Idaho Transportation Department District 5 to discharge municipal storm water to the Portneuf River, Pocatello Creek, and other associated waters.
10/13: Fiberglass Systems fabrication facility in Boise seeks to renew its air quality permit by consolidating all of its existing air permits and state and federal air quality requirements into one document.
10/16: The Jerome Cheese facility in Jerome submitted an air quality permit to construct application so it can install new drying equipment.
10/18: Coeur d'Alene Fiber Fuels facility in Hauser submitted an application for an air quality permit to construct so it can build a wood pellet producing facility.
10/20: The Lignetics of Idaho facility in Kootenai applied for an air quality permit to construct so it can regulate emissions resulting from the installation of a new dryer line and additional equipment at its Kootenai facility. Under the proposed permit, the facility will be required to comply with air quality rules. The state will conduct periodic inspections to ensure permit conditions are met.
10/25: The DEQ is seeking public comment on draft legislation authorizing creation of a state program to manage underground storage tanks (USTs) in Idaho. USTs store petroleum products or certain other hazardous liquids that can harm the environment and human health if the contents are released into the environment. Idaho has about 3,500 regulated USTs.10/30: The DEQ is seeking public comment on its draft water quality certification of four draft permits regulating aquaculture facility discharges to surface waters throughout Idaho. The permits authorize permitted aquaculture facilities and fish processors to discharge treated wastewater to surface waters throughout Idaho.
Voyage to the Bottom of the Barrel
09 October 2006
Sagebrush Variety Show Farm Report Links
Bucky Buckaw's World Egg Day Links for
11 September 2006
Farm Report Links
05 September 2006
Pollution Report
All of this week's items on the Pollution Report and more can be researched further on the DEQ website.
9/8: DEQ seeks comment on proposed permit to construct and Tier II air quality permit for Woodgrain Millwork, Nampa.
9/15: DEQ seeks comment on draft guidance on point of use drinking water treatment systems in Boise.
9/15: Public comment period extended on draft wastewater reuse permit modification for the Amalgamated Sugar Co. operation northeast of Paul. The draft permit modification would allow year-round irrigation of wastewater at the sugar beet processing facility.
9/25: DEQ is seeking public comment on a draft partial-permit regulating radioactive waste storage and closure activities at an Idaho National Laboratory (INL) facility. The draft partial-permit outlines the procedures for storage of calcined solids and closure of its Calcine Solids Storage Facility.
Andrea Alday's Vegan "Fish" Pate Recipe
1 lb firm or extra firm tofu, drained
1/2 cup loosely packed fresh dill leaves
juice of 1 lemon
1 T capers, rinsed and drained
1/2 sheet sushi nori, crumbled
salt to taste
Put all the ingredients into a food processor, reserving a small chunk of the tofu (about 1/4) and process till the tofu is creamy. Season with salt as desired. Add the remaining tofu and buzz till worked in but small pieces remain. Chill in refirgerator and serve cold with raw vegetables, bread, crackers, etc.
Character Profiles: Linden and Marteline
01 September 2006
Red Trees
29 August 2006
Time to Think About Cold Weather Crops
Broccoli romanesco
Cole Crops or Brassicas like Broccoli, Brussels Sprouts, Cabbage, Cauliflower, Kohlrabi. You can also frow another crop of leaf lettuce, spinach, and radish if you sow NOW. (This is assumung the first frost comes in mid-October.) Rutabagas are supposed to be planted in the fall only, and you might be able to get away with planting turnips and mustard greens, too. Now's also the time to plant garlic and shallot bulbs for their emergence in spring.Sagebrush Gear Available
Bucky's Quail Chick Photos
28 August 2006
Vote for Ukiah Digby for Coroner!
26 August 2006
Sagebrush Pesticide Links
22 August 2006
Pesticide Carnival
15 August 2006
CIEDRA Bill
Your help is urgently needed NOW - today! - to stop CIEDRA from passing the United States Senate. By taking just a few moments of your time to make calls to Senator Larry Craig's local and Washington offices, you can not only save Idaho's Boulder-White Cloud mountains from being privatized; you can also protect the Wilderness Act as we know it. Please take the opportunity to act today.
Make no mistake: the future of our public lands and the qualities we enjoy and treasure about them will be changed forever if we do not act immediately to STOP CIEDRA in the Senate.
Representative Mike Simpson (R-ID) rushed CIEDRA to the House floor as a "non-controversial" bill on a day when a majority of Representatives weren't even present to vote against it. He has been fast-tracking this horrific bill without meaningful debate because he knows that the more people learn about CIEDRA, the less they like it.
We cannot allow HR 3603 to sail through the Senate the way it did in the House of Representatives. CIEDRA is a controversial bill. It can be stopped if we speak in opposition with a strong and united voice.
Please join your fellow conservationists, friends and family in turning up the volume now. YOU CAN STOP CIEDRA IN THE SENATE BY PLACING YOUR CALLS NOW.
Below are guidelines with the steps and background on how calls to Congress are received.
After you've made your calls, please ask at least two more people to call Senator Craig. Ask them to ask two people, each of whom should ask two more people, and so on. In this way, 2 + 2 can grow to become many more than 4.
Please take the time today to make the calls and contact your friends. Your focused action will STOP CIEDRA NOW!
Here's a sample script for making your calls to Senator Craig to STOP CIEDRA NOW!
WHEN CALLING SENATOR CRAIG, TELL HIM: "I'm calling to thank Senator Craig for opposing CIEDRA. There are a number of reasons to oppose CIEDRA, but most important to me is that it gives away public land and erodes protections for the Sawtooth National Recreation Area that Senator Craig has staunchly supported."
Call Senator Craig's Washington DC office at (202) 224-2752
AND
The office listed below nearest to where you live:
Boise (208) 342-7985
Coeur d'Alene (208) 667-6130
Lewiston (208) 743-0792
Twin Falls (208) 734-6780
Pocatello (208) 236-6817
Idaho Falls (208) 523-5541
NEVER CALLED A SENATOR BEFORE? IT’'S SIMPLE! HERE’S WHAT TO EXPECT.
From Senator Craig's website http://craig.senate.gov/email/ "When you call my office:
Please be patient as there may be other callers ahead of you, or your call may have to be interrupted briefly to place other incoming calls on hold. If you are calling to voice your opinion on an issue, please be prepared to provide your name and address, or remain anonymous if you prefer. All information provided is kept confidential. If needed, I will respond to your message quickly and thoughtfully and in writing. No matter the issue, my staff will be friendly and polite. I hope you will show them the same respect."
Your call will probably go something like this:
You: "Hello, my name is so and so. I'd like speak with your Environmental Legislative Aid, please.
[You will then be transferred to that person or their voicemail. You may be asked by the person answering the phone what the issue is that you are calling about. Tell them you are calling in regards to CIEDRA].
You (to the Environmental Aide): "Hello, xxx. My name is so and so and I'm calling to thank Senator Craig for his past support of wilderness and to urge him to OPPOSE CIEDRA. There are a number of reasons to oppose CIEDRA, but most important to me is that it gives away public land and erodes protections for the Sawtooth National Recreation Area that Senator Craig has staunchly supported."
If possible, please share your experience in making the call and the response of the staffer with whom you spoke. Email colleen@wildrockies.org and put "Called Sen. Craig" in the Subject line so we can track the number of calls made to the Senator's office.
Pass it on
After you’ve made your calls, PLEASE send this request to call Senator Craig to at least two other people and ask them to make calls just as you did. Ask them to ask their friends to make two calls, too!
Like you, we are grassroots activists in this fight to save the heart of Idaho. We don't have money for slick advertising, telemarketing calls, and paid lobbyists. The more noise we make, the more we can equal this very lopsided playing field.
Finally, thank you.
[unapologetically plagiarized from the Committee to Save the Sawtooth National Recreation Area (CSSNRA)]
07 August 2006
Endangered Chicken Links
Under The Pavement
11 July 2006
Corporate Prime: The Making of
04 July 2006
Anacreon in Heaven
Here are the lyrics to one stanza of the English drinking song on which the Star-Spangled Banner is solidly based:
The news through Olympus immediately flew;
When Old Thunder pretended to give himself Airs
If these Mortals are suffer'd their Scheme to pursue,
The Devil a Goddess will stay above Stairs.
"Hark! already they cry,
"In Transports of Joy
"Away to the Sons of Anacreon we'll fly,
"And there, with good Fellows, we'll learn to intwine
"The Myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's Vine.
Visit the link above for the full lyrics.
Apparently, it was de rigeur in colonial days to write new lyrics to existing songs. And in 1812, Francis Scott Key concretized that characteristic American tendency to plagiarize in our national anthem.
Click here for a midi file of the song (which sounds exactly like our national anthem).
27 June 2006
From Bucky Buckaw: Show Links
21 June 2006
RadioBoise website is back
13 June 2006
RadioBoise.org Server Is Being Quirky
For the record, we've been updating our website but the changes aren't coming up. RadioBoise's host changed their servers recently, so until tha issue is resolved, check this blog for the latest info!
This is what's on this week (June 13):
-part 6 of the current serial drama, Corporate Prime, written by Kevin Bayhouse
-the latest Sagebrush Variety Show Farm (cilantro)
-Bucky Buckaw's Backyard Chicken Broadcast on chicks
-a special edition Sagebrush Pollution Report on the Atlanta Gold mine proposal
-a rant from Kevin on the current governor
-a new Suburbia Watch
Don't forget you can listen to Sagebrush on Tuesday at 4pm PDT on Radio Free Moscow 92.5 FM
Oh, and most of the guitar in the scene transition music in Corporate Prime nowadays is played by Khalil (with tweaking by Gwen).12 June 2006
That Thai "Pesto" Recipe
30 May 2006
The Secondmen
29 May 2006
Essay of the Week: Subtitle D Landfill Burial
25 May 2006
Khalil's Band in this week's BW
24 May 2006
Energy in Corporate Prime
23 May 2006
WWP's Katie Fite interview
Western Watersheds Project
RangeNet
Waste of the West: Public Lands Ranching
Alliance for the Wild Rockies
Owyhee Initiative: A Quick Overview
21 May 2006
Bucky's Supplementary Links for Episode 37
15 May 2006
Bucky's Episode 36 Links for
Heres the link to the NY Times article Migrating Birds Didn't Carry Flu that inspired my spoof of the week. Of course you have to sign up as a free member to view it although I've been told that if you google the title of their articles you might get a direct link.
Whenever I mention any bird flu link I always do an obligatory shout out to the master of all bird flu (and public health) blog, Effect Measure. He's kinda soft on factory farming compared to me but he really knows his science and is one of the few people who actually understands the concept of "objectivity" so I figure if I'm not contradicting Effect Measure I'm probably being pretty reasonable.
Arugula
The variety we grow at Sagebrush Variety Show Farm is called selvatica aka wild arugula. It takes a little longer to germinate than the cultivated kind, but once you plant it, it'll easily self-sow itself year after year. Even though it's supposed to be an annual, it perennializes, which means the roots don't die in the winter and grow leaves again every spring.
A good way to eat it is in a salad--by itself or with other greens--with a dressing made of olive oil, fresh lemon juice, and grated raw garlic. For a creamier variation that sticks better to the leaves, whip some applesauce into the dressing.
Arugula is also good in sandwiches or chopped into pasta salads. You can make a pesto out of it, too.
Here's a link to groovy arugula nutrition facts.
11 May 2006
Sagebrush Resource
On a previous edition of the Sagebrush Variety Show we featured an interview with Alan Durning, President of Northwest Environment Watch on sustainability issues and trends in the Northwestern region known as Cascadia. Podcast Sagebrush Variety Show #30 to hear it.
Just a few weeks later the Sagebrush players received an an email from Alan Durning explaining that after 14 years as Cascadia's sustainability think tank, Northwest Environment Watch has changed its name to Sightline Insitute. (they say the name Sightline better reflects what they do in helping us see a clear way to a better future for us all).
The name change is just an opener to the big news that they’ve revamped their website Sightline.org to make the most of the institutes comprehensive research, statistics, news and dialogue.
There are some excellent new features.
Like the Maps and Graphics Center with close to 100 maps, charts, and animations illustrating trends such as gasoline consumption, changes in human health, and pollution in northwesterners. All available for downloading and printing or computer vieiwng. The graphic maop of clearcutting in the Central Cascade forest is a real eye-opener ad is the chart showing the increased levels of PBDE levels in blood and tissue samples of north american humans since the 1980’s. PBDE is a flame retardent chemical used in many priducts that can cause neurological and reproductive damage.
The publications section features Sightline books and reports available in full text pdf, on each of the issues that they track--such assprawl and transportation, energy, health, and economy.
An active blog—called the Daily Score—with running commentary on the latest news. Some of the latest entries include Alan’s frankly funny yet inspiring diary of his families attempts to live a year in Seattle without owning a car, a report on the latest scientific findings regarding bird intelligence (Sagebrush’s own Bucky Buckaw already knows birds are at least as smart as humans but it’s nice to see the scientific com muntiy catching up), and a really great explanation of how “booming conomy” can mean different things depending on who’s talking and that GDP doesn’t necesarilly mean good for working schmoes.
The name Cascadia refers to an ecological, economic and cultural region including British Columbia, Idaho, Washington, and Oregon which is most instructive to look at as a whole. However, the new website function that allows viewers to browse or search for Idaho-related information only, for example, is a useful way to manage the wealth oif information Sightline offers.
Sagebrush Variety show highly reccomends our viewers make use of the website. There’s an incentive to join as an emailsubscribers in that subscribers get special features-such as complete access to Sightline’s work, including free pdfs of books and reports; and downloads of high-quality maps, charts, and graphics, their email newsletters, and the abilty to add your own comments to their blog.
Plant sales and planning for the season
Listeners who heard our interview with Diane Jones of Draggin' Wing Farms might be interested to know that there will be a native plant sale this weekend.
Saturday & Sunday, May 13 & 14, 9 am to 3 pm at Castle Drive and Hill Rd. The farm is just off that intersection on Stinger St but there will be signs directing you there.
Also, Draggin' Wing Farm neighbors Peaceful Belly Farm will be selling heirloom tomato plants at $4 each.
Don't feed your loved ones a trite tomato - grow your own! (or at least get some decent varieties from farmers markets/stands)
The Sagebrush Players support backyard gardening and xeriscaping. In fact, we've been growing our own tomatoes already at Sagebrush Variety Show Farms. This year's tomato varieties:
Red Brandywine - the king of heirloom tomatoes
Green Zebra - not an heirloom, but still worth growing for its green color with yellow stripes, great flavor, and ease to grow
Paul Robeson - smallish black heirloom from Russia named after the singer, communist, and equal rights activist
Black from Tula - larger black, Ukrainian heirloom
Black Prince - a smallish red-brown heirloom from Irkutsk that does particularly well in Idaho.
(okay, so we have a thing for black tomatoes)
Yellow Bell - a productive, yellow paste heirloom from Tennessee that grows well here. Great for stuffing with hummus on the run, too.
Big Rainbow - large, multicolored heirloom
Orange Banana - prolific, orange, heirloom paste tomato that's also good for eating and drying.
Striped Cavern - orange-striped red tomato that is shaped like a bell pepper and hollow inside.
Evergreen Emerald - largish all-green tomato
Just reading the brief descriptions of this handful of varieties should make you angry about how corporate farming and food distribution has robbed us of the diversity in our produce--and this is just looking at tomatoes.
08 May 2006
Sagebrush vs. the Laws of Thermodynamics
Listeners who missed last week's premiere of Corporate Prime, our latest serial drama, can check it out again this week. We lost our regular battle with Entropy this week, so last week's show will be re-broadcast.
April and Khalil have finals, Jeremy was kidnapped by his mates for his birthday, Lea is spending a few weeks on the coast for her health, Curtis is helping refugees plant a community garden, and Kevin, Robert, and Gwen are being their usual overextended selves.
Corporate Prime, written by Kevin, is a straight drama (no comedy this time) about life after Peak Oil, after the corporations succeed in taking over all aspects of our lives, and after the U.S. loses its place as the imperial superpower. All this takes place in Idaho, starting in New Arco City. Okay, well, it has a tiny bit of humor in it.
Some listeners might be disappointed to learn that there are no characters based on Dirk Kempthorne this time, but if you really are looking for entertainment based on the Bush administration's latest cabinet appointment, we recommend that you listen to Snow Blow Hard: Xmas with a Vengeance or its sequel, Eternal Quest, for a character very much based on the public figure, in a very satirical way, of course, using examples from real life to move the story along. Alas, we can't tell you which are true and which are fiction, but just keep in mind that often life is stranger than fiction.
I will give you a few hints, though. Kempthorne is indeed very much preoccupied about being perceived as an important person. And you can read about his dream to travel the nation by selling burgers from a grease truck in any newspaper. And what politician is complete without their very own scandal? As a testament to his cognitive skills, allow me to quote him on CAFTA: "I support free trade and fair trade." And I have repeatedly spotted Dirk in the seasonal crap section of Fred Meyer staring at clearance holiday items, as if they were cultural artifacts on display in a museum. And he did have a pet highway project that could best be described as "cockamamie."
I could go on and on, but you could just listen to the shows. Just download them! And don't forget about the Kempthrone's Castle skits, either, which are fictitious proclamations that take place on the grounds of the former Simplot mansion.
19 April 2006
Bucky Scooped Jim Hightower
12 April 2006
Sagebrush Week of 4/10/06
03 April 2006
Bucky's April Avian Flu Links
28 March 2006
2006 Captain Hook Awards
- Worst Threat to Food Sovereignty: Syngenta
- Greediest Biopirate: J Craig Venter
- Biggest Threat to Genetic Privacy: Google: Indexing Your Genes
- Extreme Makeover Award: Delta & Pine Land
- Most Shameful Act of Biopiracy: US Government
- Worst Déjà Vu: Human Genographic Project
- Access of Evil Award: Canada, Australia, New Zealand
- Biggest Tiny Claim On Nature: Nanosys, Inc.
- Worst Betrayal: Genencor et al.
- Most Hypocritical - Joint Winners: University of California-Davis and The Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO)
25 March 2006
The Commercial Empire Strikes Back
Khalil's rant on why big-box stores sap the local economy applies not only to Wal-Marts, but also any national chain stores, fast-food joints, and shopping centers. Here are the stats:
small retail stores (local) average +$326 per 1000 sq ft
large retail chains average -$468 per 1000 sq ft
fast-food chains average -$5168 per 1000 sq ft
shopping centers average -$314 per 1000 sq ft
These numbers in red are deficits passed onto the local taxpayers, mainly in the form of road building and maintenance and crime-related costs. Never mind all the other dollars lost from not using local vendors and suppliers such as printers and advertisers.
Some links:
Local ownership pays off for communities
As police costs rise, towns reconsider big boxes
21 March 2006
Alan Thein Durning Interview
- pollution
- health
- economy
- population
- energy
- sprawl
- forests
Dirk Kempthorne Spotlight
20 March 2006
National Animal Identification System (NAIS) Episode
15 March 2006
Terry Shepard, Friends of the Liberty Tree
08 March 2006
Sagebrush Variety Show on Radio Free Moscow
This Week's Sagebrush
02 March 2006
Alan Thein Durning in Idaho
We mentioned that the piece we did on coffee was based on Stuff: The Secret Lives of Everyday Things by John C. Ryan and Alan Thein Durning. Thurning will speak at BSU on Friday, March 3 at 7pm in the Student Union Building--and it's free. We highly recommend going.
There will also be a reception with Durning that Idaho Smart Growth is hosting on Saturday, March 4 5:00-6:30 pm at the Idaho Integrated Design Lab at the corner of 6th and Main in Boise. To RSVP for this event ($40) call the ISG office at 333-8066.
Sagebrush will be there, of course, so if you can't make either event, you will get to hear about it on RadioBoise.org!
28 February 2006
New segments this week
- the Sagebrush Sprawl Monitor #2 - this will be a recurring report on real estate development. This week Kevin Bayhouse gives an update on the Hammer Flat propposed subdivision. Opponents of it can find more information at www.savetheplateau.org.
- the Sagebrush Pollution Report #2 - another newly introduced regular segment that looks at Idaho's polluters and reminds listeners of public comment opportunities regarding polluter permit renewals and expansion. Much of this can be found at the DEQ public input site.
26 February 2006
Additional Webcast Time
15 February 2006
Sagebrush Production Update
We're working on some great new material we will begin webcasting in mid-March, including Corporate Prime, a serial drama taking place in a post-apocalyptic, post-peak oil setting; our Idaho-ified adaptation of The Dolphinarium, a 1995 BBC radio play by Steve Walker; issue collages on shoes, newspapers, and feminism; more interviews; and, of course, the conclusion to Eternal Quest.
Don't forget to read through this blog for background on issues covered in past episodes. If you don't see them on the front page, search for them (at top). Feel free to download our archived shows to catch up on all the programs. If you like what you hear, don't forget to tell your friends about us!
14 February 2006
Diane Jones Interview
07 February 2006
News Jumble
Raven Usher Interview
Conscious Consumer: Slave Chocolate
- Project Hope and Fairness, with associated blog by Prof. Tom Neuhaus reporting from Africa
- Chocolate and Slavery: Child Labor in Cote d'Ivoire
- Global Exchange: Did Child Slaves Harvest Your Latest Chocolate Treat?
- Is your chocolate fair trade or slave trade?
- One of the earliest explorations of slave chocolate, including company information on their ingredients
10 January 2006
14 Worst Corporations of 2005
Caterpillar
Chevron
Coca-Cola
Dow Chemical
DynCorp
Ford Motor Company
KBR (Kellogg, Brown and Root): A Subsidiary of Halliburton Corporation
Lockheed Martin
Monsanto
Nestle
Philip Morris USA and Philip Morris International (a.k.a. The Altria Group Inc.)
Pfizer
Suez-Lyonnaise Des Eaux (SLDE)
Wal-Mart
05 January 2006
Coffee Piece
Coffee is heavily based on Stuff: The Secret Lives of Everyday Things by John C. Ryan and Alan Thein Durning (1997). Their website has a bunch of neat and informative resources on product lifecycles and sustainability.
Fascinating overview of the history of coffee
Fair trade coffee is coffee that is traded by bypassing the coffee trader and therefore giving the producer (and buyer) higher profits. Fair Trade does not necessarily mean that the extra money trickles down to the people who harvest the coffee.
Selections from Mamdou Habib’s affadavit on his torture in Egypt and Guantanamo:
Phillip Ruddock, the Australian Attorney General on Habib’s physical condition after release from
Testimonials from Gemima Mukashyaka on
War on Drugs info
In vitro and ex vivo antihydroxyl radical activity of green and roasted coffee. Daglia M, Racchi M, Papetti A, et al. J Agric Food Chem. 2004 Mar 24;52(6):1700-4.
Effect of roasting on the antioxidant activity of coffee brews. del Castillo MD,
Comparison of the antioxidant activity of commonly consumed polyphenolic beverages (coffee, cocoa, and tea) prepared per cup serving. Richelle M, Tavazzi I, Offord E. J Agric Food Chem. 2001 Jul;49(7):3438-42.
Does caffeine intake protect from Alzheimer's disease? Maia L, de Mendonca A. Eur J Neurol. 2002 Jul;9(4):377-82.
Coffee consumption and risk for type 2 diabetes mellitus. Salazar-Martinez E, Willett WC, Ascherio A, Manson JE, Leitzmann MF, Stampfer MJ, Hu FB. Ann Intern Med. 2004 Jan 6;140(1):I17.
And, finally, yes, you really can get your own civet coffee. We totally missed another bizarre coffe variation, "Weasel Coffee":
"Wild Weasels roam the coffee plantations and eat the ripe coffee beans, but rather than digest them the weasel regurgitates them and vomits them up! Due to the fact the cherries have been in the weasels gastric juices, it seems to dramatically alter the taste of the coffee once brewed."