Posts tagged with "technology"

Food and Agriculture Visionaries: Shaping the Future of American Food Security

In a recent article on Civil Eats, experts and thought leaders shared their insights on the future of food and agriculture in America. The discussions highlighted the critical connection between agriculture, food security, and the shaping of American culture in the aftermath of the 2024 elections that resulted in a Trump win by a landslide. Let’s delve into the key takeaways, lessons learned, and the need-to-know information about the impact of these visions on American food security under a Trump 2.0 Administration.

“I believe we’ll find our strength in building longer tables where everyone is welcome. By coming together around food, we can find common ground and fuel ourselves to continue fighting for a healthier America. This is a moment to choose compassion over division, to recognize that food is a right, not a privilege. Together, let’s make food our first act of solidarity.” – Chef José Andrés

The leading experts and thought leaders that contributed to the article are:

  • Chef José Andrésfounder of the Global Food Institute at George Washington University
  • Mark Bittman, author and journalist
  • Navina Khanna, executive director and co-founder, HEAL Food Alliance
  • Anna Lappé, executive director of the Global Alliance for the Future of Food
  • Marion Nestle, Paulette Goddard professor of nutrition, food studies, and public health emerita, New York University
  • Raj Patel, ​​author, activist, and research professor in the Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs at the University of Texas, Austin
  • Michael Pollan, author, journalist
  • Ashanté M. Reese, author, associate professor, department of African and African diaspora studies, the University of Texas at Austin
  • Ruth Reichl, writer, cook, editor
  • Teresa Romero, president, United Farm Workers
  • Ricardo Salvador, advisor, Union of Concerned Scientists
  • Alice Waters, chef, author, food activist, and founder of Chez Panisse restaurant

Impact on Food Security

  • Rural America’s Reliance on Obamacare: The experts emphasized the importance of accessible healthcare for rural communities, where a significant portion of the agricultural workforce resides. The stability and well-being of these communities are essential for a robust food system.
  • Shifting Demographics and Climate Change: The experts highlighted the challenges posed by, immigration, an aging farmer population and the increasing impacts of climate change. These factors can disrupt food production and distribution, threatening food security.
  • Innovation and Technology: The role of innovation and technology in agriculture, from precision farming to sustainable practices, these advancements offer solutions to enhance food production while mitigating environmental impact.

The key challenges facing American agriculture and food security include:

  • Rural Healthcare Accessibility: The well-being of rural communities, where a significant portion of the agricultural workforce resides, is crucial for a robust food system. Ensuring access to healthcare in these areas is a challenge. And America’s aging farmer population poses challenges for the future of agriculture. The increasing impacts of climate change can disrupt food production and distribution, threatening food security. Food security is not just about production; it also encompasses access, affordability, and nutrition. Addressing these multifaceted aspects is a challenge and it remains to be seen how the incoming Trump Administration will govern and take on the challenges of food insecurity and agriculture.

“I wish I had a crystal ball to say how food and agriculture issues would play out over the next four years, but all I have to go on is what Trump and his followers say. If we take them at their word, then we must expect them to implement their Project 2025 plan, which replaces one deep state with another that favors conservative business interests and ideology. This calls for replacing staff in federal agencies with Trump loyalists and dismantling them, stopping the USDA from doing anything to prevent climate change, reforming farm subsidies (unclear how), splitting the farm bill to deal separately with agricultural supports and SNAP, reducing SNAP participation by reinstating work requirements and reducing the Thrifty Food Plan, and making it more difficult for kids to participate in school meals.” – Marion Nestle

Need to Know

  • Food Security is a Complex Issue: It’s not just about production. Access, affordability, and nutrition are all critical components of food security. 
  • The potential impact of Trump’s Project 2025: The plan involves replacing federal agency staff with Trump loyalists, dismantling agencies, preventing the USDA from addressing climate change, reforming farm subsidies, splitting the farm bill, reducing SNAP participation, and making it harder for kids to access school meals.
  • House Agriculture Committee Democrats:Trump’s Project 2025 eliminates the Agricultural Risk Coverage (ARC) and Price Loss Coverage (PLC) programs, weakening the farm safety net.”
  • The Future of Agriculture is Interconnected: Healthcare, demographics, climate change, and technology all play a role in shaping the future of food and agriculture. 
  • Collaboration is Key: Solutions require collaboration between farmers, policymakers, researchers, and communities.

Takeaways

  • Invest in Rural Communities: Advocate and continue to call for wise and humane immigration reform, address America’s aging and changing farming community, support rural healthcare and infrastructure is crucial for a resilient food system.
  • Embrace Innovation: Technology and sustainable practices can help address the challenges of climate change and an aging workforce.
  • Prioritize Equity and Access: Ensuring that all Americans have access to healthy, affordable food is essential.

Lessons Learned

  • American Agriculture is at a Crossroads: The choices that will be made under Trump’s Administration will shape the future of food security, the landscape of farming, and the environment.
  • We Can Build a More Resilient Food System: By investing in rural communities, immigration policy, embracing innovation, and prioritizing equity, we can create a food system that nourishes all Americans.

Agriculture and the Shaping of American Culture

Agriculture has always been deeply intertwined with American culture, shaping our values, traditions, and identity. As we navigate the challenges of the 21st century, it’s essential to remember the vital role that agriculture plays in our society. By supporting a sustainable and equitable food system, we can ensure a bright future for American agriculture and the communities it sustains. Stay informed about the issues facing American agriculture and food security. Support policies and initiatives that promote a just and sustainable food system. Together, we can build a future where everyone has access to healthy, affordable food. The future of food security is in our hands.

On the Virtue of Real Action in Place of `Virtue Signaling’

Credit: TIME

When jogging through my neighborhood at sunrise, I often see backyard signs pledging allegiance to a sacred political principle which my neighbors hold dear. The backyard signs communicate what the neighbors want others to think that they care about. However, these signs do little to promote in practice the cause they highlight. The signs are posted because they represent a popular opinion within the community. They would not be posted in a community with a different set of values, to avoid the risk of controversy. Ironically, it is the other community that needs convincing, and where the sign would serve the purpose of engaging in a dialogue to improve the world.

A 2020 Morning Consult poll found that a quarter of adults without children say climate change is part of the reason they didn’t have children. Given the rest of our industrial activities, their choice has little impact on suppressing climate change, akin to the impact of becoming vegan on saving endangered species. But these decisions make people feel and look better within their like-minded communities.

Later in my day, I see many of my colleagues on the academic campus using popular slogans to express their loyalty to trendy principles. The spectacle reminds me of the uniform we used to wear at elementary school to hide our actual socioeconomic backgrounds. This is all good, except that when it comes to the hard work necessary for fulfilling these same principles by actually helping real people, the same colleagues are nowhere to be found.

What is the virtue inherent in `virtue signaling’? Clearly, it is the pleasure of communicating the beauty of ideas that aim to repair a broken world. But without turning them into action, the beautiful ideas resemble an engine that lacks transmission. A car’s transmission is essential for turning the engine’s power into motion on the road. The engine by itself only makes noise.

Why is it then that action is rare? Obviously, because it requires hard work as well as coming up with an effective implementation strategy on how to make a difference.

Over the past decade I had the privilege of serving simultaneously as director of the Institute for Theory and Computation, chair of the Astronomy department and founding director of the Black Hole Initiative at Harvard University. The reason I agreed to serve on all three leadership roles as once, was to improve my environment. They demanded sacrifice of my precious research time. Those who know me would testify that there is nothing more enjoyable for me than being fully immersed in creative scientific work, of which administrative distractions are the foe. But at some phase in my career, I realized that I cannot rely on others to do what needs to be done, and so I welcomed this opportunity to promote excellence and diversity. Most of my leadership efforts were invested in supporting students, postdocs and junior faculty of all backgrounds. The reason was simple: my own upbringing was unprivileged and I knew how difficult it is to make it up the academic ladder. I felt committed to helping fledgling scientists achieve success irrespective of where they started. Helping real people required hard work, unlike `virtue signaling’.

To protect their privacy, I cannot mention the dozens of individuals I was fortunate to help during my leadership roles over the years, but my home office is filled with “Thank-You” notes from all of them. The backyard signs of my neighbors serve a different purpose. These offer a shortcut to feeling better.

Unfortunately, `virtue signaling’ also appears in scientific research because of peer pressure. For example, astrobiologists will lobby for the search of bio-signatures on the surface of Mars, but will shy away from promoting an unapologetic disruptive approach in looking for them. None of the past NASA missions to Mars employed a microscope or added a drop of water in-situ to Martian soil in order to check for any signs of dormant life that might be awaken. The adopted approaches provided a safer path for avoiding controversy, such as the claim by former NASA engineer Gilbert V. Levine who served as the principal investigator Labeled Release experiment on NASA Viking missions to Mars, and explicitly argued in a Scientific American essay in 2019 that he is convinced we already found life on Mars in the 1970s.

Similarly, astrobiologists plan to invest billions of dollars in the search for primitive life in exoplanet atmosphere over the coming decades, but do not allocate even a percent of these funds to the search for intelligent life. To avoid controversy, they regard techno-signatures as risky relative to bio-signatures even though the one biosphere we know, here on Earth, has both.

The pattern repeats farther down. SETI scientists who searched for radio signals unsuccessfully for seven decades mention peripherally the search for technological objects near Earth as an alternative. However, when it comes to analyzing actual data on the anomalous geometry and non-gravitational acceleration of the first reported interstellar object `Oumuamua or the high material strength of the first two interstellar meteors, they join forces with the conservative mainstream of astrobiology and dismiss upfront a possible technological origin without engaging in any further research. The Galileo Project aims to repair this attitude by following the scientific method and seeking new data on anomalous objects near Earth.

In another context, fundamental physics aims to explain reality, yet the mainstream of theoretical physics was engaged for four decades in developing abstract concepts of string theory and the multiverse with no experimental sanity checks. In this community, `virtue signaling’ is to argue that engaging with real experimental data is an option for a physicist, akin to the proposal that the job description of a plumber could include the option of fixing plumbing issues in the Metaverse for the community of subscribers who put Metaverse goggles on their head.

Scientific `virtue signaling’ admits loyalty to the mainstream while whispering — but not pursuing — disruptive innovation, in order to avoid controversy. It offers an easy path of least resistance for scientists to remain popular within the groupthink. It avoids the hard work required to improve on what we know. Herd mentality sometimes masquerades as `open-mindedness’ when it lacks action to change the world.

Artificial intelligence (AI) systems like GPT-4 are trained to imitate humans. As such, they mirror society and are already showing biases and discrimination against various groups of people. By reflecting our image, AI provides a reality check as to the limited effectiveness of `virtue signaling’. Here’s hoping that AI mirrors will bring awareness to the discrepancy between our wishful thinking and the reality surrounding us, so as to trigger action.

The unfortunate nature of `virtue signaling’ is that it does not represent a sincere attempt to repair the world. On occasion, it can lead to the opposite outcome by pushing back against individuals who are actually engaged in an honest effort to promote a change, because they upset the status-quo and create controversy. These individuals are not as popular as `virtue signaling’ advocates. But they carry the actual virtues that others are signaling.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Avi Loeb is the head of the Galileo Project, founding director of Harvard University’s — Black Hole Initiative, director of the Institute for Theory and Computation at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, and the former chair of the astronomy department at Harvard University (2011–2020). He chairs the advisory board for the Breakthrough Starshot project, and is a former member of the President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology and a former chair of the Board on Physics and Astronomy of the National Academies. He is the bestselling author of “Extraterrestrial: The First Sign of Intelligent Life Beyond Earth” and a co-author of the textbook “Life in the Cosmos”, both published in 2021. His new book, titled “Interstellar”, is scheduled for publication in August 2023.

Trump’s Indictment And The Future Of The Republican Party

ePa Live Guest:

Raynard Jackson, a Republican political consultant, lobbyist, and radio host who has served on the presidential campaigns of George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush. Jackson is a native of St. Louis, MO, and is one of the most sought-after conservative speakers in America. He is a frequent public speaker to college students, political & business groups and churches. Jackson has worked on numerous Republican U.S. Senate, gubernatorial, and congressional political campaigns.

He is the president and CEO of Raynard Jackson & Associates, a lobbying firm based in Washington, D.C.  He is a staunch supporter of former President Donald J. Trump and has criticized his critics, including liberal political pundits Joy Reid and Don Lemon, claiming they have done more to hurt Black people than Trump.

Raynard joined ePa Live to discuss the ramifications of the indictment of Trump and gave his predictions about the next presidential election.

Raynard answers ePa Live question of the day:

Raynard Jackson on the ramifications of indicting a former sitting U.S. president:

Raynard Jackson on Tennessee’s House of Representatives expelling two Democratic lawmakers for leading gun control demonstrations from the House floor. Republicans accused the three Democratic lawmakers of bringing “disorder and dishonour to the House”:

Raynard Jackson discusses the 2023 Wisconsin Supreme Court election held on Tuesday, April 4, 2023, to elect a justice to the Wisconsin Supreme Court for a ten-year term. Janet Protasiewicz prevailed in the state’s highly consequential contest for the Supreme Court, which will now be likely to reverse the state’s abortion ban and end the use of gerrymandered legislative maps:

The 2024 presidential election is already shaping up to be one of the most heated political races in American history. Raynard Jackson, Republican political consultant, lobbyist, and radio host offers his predictions on ePa Live:

ePa Live_02252023

ePa Live: Racism & Technology In The Age of AI, Cultural Theft & Social Devaluation

ePa Live Guest:

  • Dr. Niyana “KoKo” Rasayon, MA., PhD., LPCC, Behavioral Neuroscientist; Associate Professor, University of the District of Columbia

Dr. Rasayon has authored two books that build on social neuroscience, “Reality Check: A Manual for the Hue-man Octahedron & The Mystery of Melanin, and The Awakening: OMG The President is Black”. His Master’s thesis examined the psychological characteristics of vegetarians & non-vegetarians. He is a Board-Certified Fellow & Diplomate in Afrikan Centered-Black Psychology. Dr. Rasayon has taught psychology for 16 years, three of which included courses in the U S Pentagon. Dr. Rasayon also completed the first EEG (brain waves) study on culture and learning styles among Afrikan-Amerikan males at Howard University. His work, programs and books can be found at: www.eyesofmaat.com.

This Saturday we will discuss his work, the impact of technology on the brain, healthy ways to co-exist with technology and why Black people are disproportionately and negatively impacted by algorithms and facial technology.  Join the conversation, like, share and subscribe! If you missed it, no worries, check it out below.