From
Rice Farmer
Collapse
Headlines
##
Global Ponzi meltdown/House of Cards ##
The
future of retail. Get ready for it. -- RF
##
Airline Death Spiral ##
Porter
Airlines is now charging passengers a $25 fee for their first checked
bag on domestic flights, the first Canadian airline to do so.
##
Fault lines/flashpoints/powder kegs/military/war drums ##
Iraq
has asked the United States for attack aircraft, aerostats and
armored vehicles, with a combined worth of nearly $1 billion,
through the Foreign Military Sales program.
About 6,000
U.S. troops are expected to participate in the exercise, along with
3,000 from Jordan and some 3,200 from more than 20
partner-nations, totaling more than 12,000 troops.
##
Global unrest/mob rule/angry people/torches and pitchforks ##
##
Energy/resources ##
Here's
a really good article. It's even better than the title suggests
because it's very helpful in developing a comprehensive understanding
of our precarious energy situation. An important point mentioned is a
corollary of one I have made: Most of our progress has been made
possible by cheap, plentiful energy, not by technology. I have stated
that although the general belief is that technology begets energy, in
reality cheap, plentiful energy has made technological advances
possible. -- RF
South
asked to cut power usage (Thailand)
A
new academic report warns that countries in Europe are increasingly
running low on energy reserves, and an advocacy group says that
as a result, “Energy Dependence Day” is arriving earlier each
year.
According
to companies represented by the Queensland Resources Council,
after running a ruler over their respective balance
sheets, around 25% of coal output in Queensland, Australia is
produced at a loss. The figure is even worse for thermal
coal producers as 50% of all production on a free on board (FOB)
basis is being dug up and processed at a financial loss.
ExxonMobil’s
Canadian outfit is considering plans for the deepest offshore well
ever to be drilling in the Arctic.
##
Got food? ##
Water
shortage: Food crops under threat (Pakistan)
##
Environment/health ##
##
Intelligence/propaganda/security/internet/cyberwar ##
Blowtorches,
tweezers and glue: These are just a few of the items used to create
those mouth-watering restaurant ads.
From
last year: NSA
Busted Conducting Industrial Espionage In France, Mexico,
Brazil, China and All Around the World
A
rising class of apps called smart apps promise to make users'
lives easier by essentially acting as personal assistants. Yet, users
may be uncomfortable with the amount of personal information required
to make them work.
##
Systemic breakdown/collapse/unsustainability ##
Even
Japan's much-shorter maglev train project won't be finished.
Grandiose plans like this are typical of the now-past era of
plentiful and cheap energy, but many people are still mentally living
in the past and can't see the anachronism. It's this sort of thinking
that leads to gross over-expansion and collapse. -- RF
Although
I still maintain that expensive energy is the primary factor behind
the loss of skills, here is another. -- RF
##
Japan ##
Yawn.
-- RF
You
can't make this stuff up. -- RF
Almost
all workers, including managers required to deal with accidents,
defied orders and fled the Fukushima No. 1 nuclear plant at a
critical juncture when the disaster was unfolding in March 2011,
documents showed.
##
China ##
##
UK ##
Shale
gas explorer IGas says it is considering offering households
near fracking sites free energy efficiency measures, as part of
planned "community benefits"
##
US ##
At
the center of the discounter's domestic woes is its appeal
among shoppers who are facing stagnant wage growth and simply
can't afford to spend on discretionary items—or in some cases,
food.
Middle-class
seniors and the growing wave of baby boomers behind them want to
stay in their homes and communities as they grow old, but
escalating costs of everything from food to medication to property
taxes; battered retirement portfolios; and dwindling
savings have today's older Americans looking to become ad hoc
landlords or tenants, even if the practice sometimes is
forbidden by zoning restrictions.
Each
year since the recession officially ended in the summer of 2009, Wall
Street and Washington have tried to dupe investors into
believing a second half recovery was in store for the stock
market and economy. However, this promise has failed to
come into fruition each year, as annual GDP growth has not
reached north of trend growth (3%) since 2005.
And
finally...
Video
mocking "Great" British cuisine goes viral across China
with nearly 800,000 hits
RT
News - May 20, 2014 (17:00 MSK)
For
RT news GO HERE
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