Sidetalk

Food insecurity in America

April 22, 2008 · No Comments

With food riots going on all over the world in emerging nations and food scarcities in still more countries, there is a sudden focus on the future of America’s food security.  This attention is also being drawn to the food issue because of the rising prices of food noticed by everyone who goes grocery shopping. 

Because of rising wheat prices, bakeries across the United States have been forced to post signs apologizing for their prices to consumers, and restaurant owners are fearful prices will cause consumers to eat out less.  An article in the Guardian reported that “the last time America’s grain silos were so empty was in the early seventies, when the Soviet Union bought much of the harvest.”  And American officials warn it will only grow worse.  “There’s going to be real food inflation in this country,” said C. Larry Pope, president and chief executive of U.S. beef processor Smithfield Foods (USAToday).  Although analysts have labeled the food crisis a “perfect storm of conditions,” they recognize that it will take more than just good weather and lowering the food prices to stop the continuing shortages—it would involve a reassessment of world policy toward foodstuffs.

Categories: Economy

Concentration camp hit by scrap metal thieves

April 22, 2008 · No Comments

Scrap metal thieves are becoming increasingly audacious, with some even stealing from cemeteries and memorials. Now some 1,000 bronze plaques have gone missing from the former concentration camp at Theresienstadt. Semi-precious metal, as it happens, is everywhere. It can be found on church roofs; copper pipes run through many a house wall; and wiring is almost ubiquitous. Scrap metal thieves, though, have recently discovered a valuable new source of copper: Cemeteries and memorials.  This week, a particularly audacious bandit apparently made off with over 1,000 bronze plaques from the Holocaust memorial Theresienstadt just outside of Prague.

Jan Munk, director of the Theresienstadt memorial site, with one of the damaged monuments.

Categories: Economy