October 16, 2019

Monsoon—Zero Hunger

Jeff Key—October 2019

 

October 16 is World Food Day—with the goal of Achieving Zero Hunger


“There’s enough on this planet for everyone’s needs but not for everyone’s greed."                                                                                                                              Mohandas Gandhi

When people were hungry, Jesus didn’t say, “Now is that political, or social?”  He said, “I will feed you.”                                                               Bishop Desmond Tutu, 1984 Nobel Peace Prize recipient.

Currently, more than 815 million people do not have enough to eat. Some 155 million children under the age of five – 23% – are chronically malnourished. One in two infant deaths worldwide are caused by hunger.                                                        (Source: United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization)



Why, in this “world of plenty” is there still a global hunger problem, and what can we do to help achieve the goal of Zero Hunger?
With political instability and climate change on the rise (higher temperatures, drought, flooding, increased CO2 levels, deforestation, sea level rise, water scarcity) more rural communities are under siege leading to lower crop yields, people being displaced, and mass migration.  More than three-quarters of the world’s chronically malnourished children live in conflict-affected regions.
There are solutions that can be implemented now:
• First and foremost—Reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
Change our diet. Develop plant-based meat substitutes. Cows emit methane—animal waste produces nitrous oxide—both add to greenhouse gas emissions.
• Stop Deforestation—cutting down forests for pastureland releases more CO2 in the air.

• Reduce food waste— Roughly one third of the food produced in the world for human consumption every year is wasted — approximately 1.3 billion tons.
• More training for farmers in crop/livestock management and market awareness.
• Empower rural women and girls—give them skill training.


As Greta Thurnberg, Swedish teen activist, stated, “You must unite behind the science. You must take action. You must do the impossible. Because giving up can never be an option.”

September 03, 2019

Firesounds

“We will be known forever by the tracks we leave.”  Dakota Sioux proverb

Firesounds—crackling, sizzling, snapping, smoldering—
the sounds of another dry, consuming fire season are upon us once again.

July 2019 was the hottest month on record for the planet. It was so hot in the Catalan region of Spain that a pile of manure self-ignited and started a blaze that consumed 10,000 acres.

This devastation is now global with wildfires spreading from above the Arctic Circle in Alaska to Brazil’s Amazon rainforest. Acres have burned in the Canary Islands of Spain, Portugal’s Castelo Branco District, the Chiquitania region of Bolivia, northern Siberia, and of all places—Western Greenland.


The fire season in California already underway. According to Cal-Fire and the US Forest Service, as of August 18, 2019 over 4,000 fires have been recorded in the state totaling an estimated 51,000+ acres. This devastation includes the Tucker Fire in Modoc County at 14,000 acres and the Caliente Fire in San Diego with over 500 acres.  

California is a perennial tinderbox, having experienced some of the worst wildfires on Earth.



Are these wildfires the result of climate change, human-made causes, 
lack of government funding and support………or most likely, all of the above?


Firesounds

She raised her head.
Her nose began to twitch.
Her hackle stood on edge.

Air, gathering in lumps
got caught in her lungs.
A guttural sound, somewhere
between a growl and a yelp
burst from her throat.

Her eyes began to cloud—
stung by a whispering haze.
Danger was near—
she was trying to warn us.

The hue on the horizon
turned from ochre to umber.
The earth beneath her feet was crying.

Firesounds danced through the night—
a howl cut through the trees—
a pulsing tempo surged with the wind—
a cacophony humming  in restless harmony.

                                —Jeff Key, 2019

August 12, 2019

Jeff Key—August 2019


North Korean Leader Kim Jong Un stated that the “Nuclear Button is on his desk at all times.” Will someone please inform him that I too have a Nuclear Button, but it is a much bigger & more powerful one than his, and my Button works!                                         @realDonaldTrump  Jan 2018

Two things are infinite. The universe and human stupidity……and I’m not so sure about the universe.                                                                                   —Albert Einstein

So far humans have not been able to harness atomic power safely and the question remains—can the atom save or doom us as a civilization?

a hiss from its core—seeking a purpose in life—we fall in its wake
      From Unhinged, A Haiku Tsunami by Jeff Key

The race is on as scientists contemplate how to harness the power of the atom. Do we fuse the atom to create clean power, or do we split the atom to induce a nuclear reaction that could destroy the planet?


Nuclear Facts:
•On August 2, 2019 the US withdrew from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Agreement, citing long-running Russian violations.

• On August 8, 2019 an explosion occurred at a naval weapons site near the Arctic Circle in Russia during the test of a nuclear-powered cruise missile. Five scientists died and radiation levels near the site rose 200 times normal.

In southern France, ITER (“The Way” in Latin), 35 nations are collaborating to build a magnetic fusion device that has been designed to prove the feasibility of fusion as a carbon-free source of energy based on the same principle that powers our Sun. (source: www.iter.org)

The United States was the first country to develop nuclear weapons, detonating the first fission devices in 1945 in Hiroshima and Nagaski, Japan.

• As of 2018, the United States had an estimated 6,500 nuclear warheads, including retired (awaiting dismantlement), stored, and deployed weapons.

• The Soviet Union first developed nuclear capabilities in 1949. Russia’s modern-day arsenal includes an estimated 7,000 warheads.

The following countries also possess nuclear weapons:
France (~300 warheads), China (~260), the United Kingdom (~215), Pakistan (~130), and India (~120) also have nuclear weapons. Israel has not officially acknowledged its nuclear capabilities. Estimates of its arsenal have typically been around 80 warheads, although some estimates are significantly larger.

North Korea’s capabilities are largely unknown. It’s suspected it may have a limited arsenal of 5-10 weapons, but may have material to build twice that many.
                                                                       (Source: Union of Concerned Scientists July, 2018)




Jeff Key's work (Vessel #40—Fusion) can be seen at:
GearBox Gallery, 770 W Grand Ave., Suite B, Oakland, CA 94612

"Art + Movement" opens August 15, 2019  
(with a reception August 17—2-4 pm.)
•The exhibition closes on Sept. 7