Our normally staid Marin Independent Journal, a bulwark against sensationalist news, printed the following mid-page headline yesterday morning:
2 Hospitalized in Gunbattle: Resident, 90, and suspect exchange fire in Greenbrae
Wow! Sleepy bedroom communities don't get much safer than Greenbrae in wealthy Marin County, California. Here's what happened. The victim, "a former member of the Marin County
sheriff's air patrol, was able to get one of several guns in his home
and shot the suspect." The suspect then shot the victim and drove off. Fortunately, both men were only mildly injured (see link). The suspect called for medical attention for the three bullet wounds he sustained and was arrested.
Greenbrae is full of limousine liberals. The victim lived only a few blocks away from the previous residence of Senator Barbara Boxer! What were the chances of the suspect burglarizing the home of perhaps the only Greenbrae resident carrying firearms? I am impressed with the courage of the 90-year-old man. May we all be able to defend our homes in our later years.
Showing posts with label crime. Show all posts
Showing posts with label crime. Show all posts
Friday, January 6, 2012
Monday, November 21, 2011
Crime and the End of Cheap Food
Please see the PDF document "foodprices," Crime and the Price of Wheat in 14th-Century Norfolk, England here. The linked chart is from Sherman et al., World Civilizations, Sources, Images and Interpretations, V.I, 4th ed., McGraw-Hill, New York, 2006. It shows a strong correlation between the price of wheat and number of crimes committed in Norfolk.
If we make the reasonable proposition that human nature has not changed much in 700 years, we have much to worry about.
Michael Pollan has inferred that low food prices have kept the American middle class from revolting against the politicians, since middle class incomes have stagnated over the last decade. (See The Food Movement, Rising here.) In fact, he claims that cheap food is at least partly responsible for low wages.
Well, the cheap food party is over. The nanny state looks to raise prices by taxing what it considers "unhealthy." (See my satirical post on the subject here.) Additionally, global food prices are being pressured upward by voracious demand from Asia. Produce and cereal prices have risen astronomically in the last few years, and I see few reasons for that long-term trend to change. As we move past peak oil and energy and fertilizer prices increase, it costs more to grow food. Lastly, national US debt has swollen 40 percent higher over the last three years, (see the link here) and that will lead eventually to higher inflation and higher food prices. Unfortunately, desperate times lead to desperate people in both the 14th and 21st centuries.
I'm not the only one that senses impending problems.
If we make the reasonable proposition that human nature has not changed much in 700 years, we have much to worry about.
Michael Pollan has inferred that low food prices have kept the American middle class from revolting against the politicians, since middle class incomes have stagnated over the last decade. (See The Food Movement, Rising here.) In fact, he claims that cheap food is at least partly responsible for low wages.
Well, the cheap food party is over. The nanny state looks to raise prices by taxing what it considers "unhealthy." (See my satirical post on the subject here.) Additionally, global food prices are being pressured upward by voracious demand from Asia. Produce and cereal prices have risen astronomically in the last few years, and I see few reasons for that long-term trend to change. As we move past peak oil and energy and fertilizer prices increase, it costs more to grow food. Lastly, national US debt has swollen 40 percent higher over the last three years, (see the link here) and that will lead eventually to higher inflation and higher food prices. Unfortunately, desperate times lead to desperate people in both the 14th and 21st centuries.
I'm not the only one that senses impending problems.
A chain of three stores that sells survival food and gear reports a jump in sales to people who are getting prepared for the “possible collapse” of society.See the article here.
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