The Antipodes of the Mind – Charting the Phenomenology of the Ayahuasca Experience

from Oxford University Press website:


by Benny Shanon

Professor, Department of
Psychology of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and holder of the Mandel
Chair in Cognition


Publisher: Oxford University
Press; ISBN: 0199252939; (December 2002)


488 pages, 7 tables and
4 halftones, 234mm x 156mm


order from Amazon.com

A pioneering study of the
phenomenology of the special state of mind induced by Ayahuasca, a plant-based
Amazonian psychotropic brew. The author’s research is based both on extensive
firsthand experiences with Ayahuasca, and on interviews conducted with
a large number of informants coming from different places and backgrounds.

Readership: Anthropologists,
psychologists, students of consciousness, neuropsychologists, psychiatrists
and other clinicians, philosophers and students of religion and of culture,
botanists and ethnobotanists, pharmacologists, physiologists, medical practitioners.

Contents/contributors

Prologue

Preliminaries:General background;
Theoretical foundations; Methodology and general structure


The Phenomenology of the
Ayahuasca Experience;Atmosphere and general effects; Open eye visualizations;
A structural typology of Ayahuasca visualizations; Interaction and narration;
The contents of visions; The themes of visions; Ideas, insights, and reflections;
Non-visual perceptions; Consciousness I; Transformations; Time; Meaning
and semantics; Consciousness II; Light


Theoretical issues:Stages
and order; Contextual considerations; Cognitive parameters; Dynamics; A
general theoretical perspective; Concluding philosophical reflections


Epilogue

Appendix (Quantitative Data)

Bibliography

“LA is a warmup for the apocalypse”

FROM http://www.seanbaby.com/e32001/index.htm:

Above: Beautiful Los Angeles. Inset: A closer look. Not pictured: Tina Turner

LA is a warmup for the apocalypse. There’s not enough water, it’s covered in a dome of toxic smoke, electricity doesn’t work, and a full tank of gas is worth enough to kill a man over.

Gas in LA costs about $98.45 a gallon. Their gas stations don’t even give receipts anymore. When you fill up, an electronic voice laughs at you and prints out a picture of a baby, indicating that you owe them one live human baby. This is different from the system in Brazil where you have to take home one of the attendants’ extra babies every time you fill your tank.

Slowly coming to a stop costs several thousand dollars in gas, so we had the idea to start jumping out of still-moving cabs. Erik broke his head, pelvis, and vagina, but we each saved enough money to get the new LA status symbol — a gas filled tooth.

The LA airport is where all the horrors of LA go after they’ve trained to be the best. But besides the general Mad Max dangers of it, they’ve started insulting people over the loudspeaker. Every four seconds a voice booms, “YOU ARE NOT REQUIRED TO GIVE MONEY TO SOLICITORS. THEIR ACTIONS ARE NOT SPONSORED BY THE AIRPORT.” Who is that announcement for? I know what a fucking solicitor is, airport. Your speaker might as well say, “SOLICITORS ARE NOT ICE CREAM. OR CHOO CHOO TRAINS.” And if somehow there really was someone that stupid in the airport, let the guy doing the announcement leave the microphone and drive behind them in a little cart so he can personally give them advice while they crawl around on their retarded mutant flippers. And while I’m on the subject of taking personal offense at public announcements, why do U2 songs keep telling me not to kill people because of their color? I don’t even do that, you stupid dicks. Sometimes when they come on I scream back at the radio, “Hey Bono, why don’t you stop lighting hitchhikers on fire?” and then change the station to someone who gives less insulting advice like, “You’ve got to Move it! Move it!”

The one thing that sets LA apart from other versions of the apocalypse is that none of their panhandlers
can form words.
Maybe I’m lucky to come from a city where government rats don’t eat the tongues out of sleeping hobos, but I couldn’t understand a thing those mole people were saying. One hari krishna came up to me and said word-for-word, “Smibble moofn moof.”

I pretended to look in a nonsense-to-English dictionary which was actually a novel based on the Super Mario Brothers, and then took a crap in his bucket, normally an eight dollar value. And if you’re reading this from LA, that means I “powdered my nose” in his bucket, pussy. I could tell from the mean look he gave his bucket that I’d broken some sort of airport taboo, or at least misunderstood what “Smibble moofn moof” meant. I’d still rather take shit on an angry hari krishna than in an evil robotic airport toilet, even if that hari krishna was a barrel of alligators….

SEEING EVIDENCE OF A MOTHER CULTURE…


News on Olmec comics from THE NEW YORK TIMES:

(Drawing by Ayax Moreno)
Researchers say symbols from an Olmec Indian site in Mexico, above, date back to 650 B. C., and are the Americas’ earliest forms of writing.

New Evidence of Early Form
of Writing in Mexico


By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD

Centuries before the famously literate Maya, even before the Zapotecs, the Olmecs of ancient Mexico were carving symbols on stone and ceramics 2,600 years ago in what a team of archaeologists thinks is the earliest form of writing ever found in the New World.

    In a report being published today, archaeologists led by Dr. Mary E. D. Pohl of Florida State University in Tallahassee say they discovered writing symbols, or glyphs, on a cylinder seal used to make imprints and on fragments of a greenstone plaque.

    The artifacts,
dated at about 650 B. C., were excavated near the prominent Olmec site
of La Venta, close to the Gulf of Mexico in Tabasco State, in southeastern
Mexico. The researchers said this was strong evidence that pre-Columbian
writing originated on the coastal plain there.


    Scholars
had previously traced the earliest American writing to about 300 B. C.
and to the Zapotec culture centered at Monte Albán, in Oaxaca State.
Mayan writing developed some 500 years later and farther south in Mexico
and Central America.


    The new
discovery has focused attention on the Olmec civilization, which flourished
from 1,300 to 300 B. C., as innovative and a wellspring of most subsequent
Mexican cultures. The Olmecs were best known until now only as the bold,
mysterious sculptors of colossal stone heads carved with huge lips.


    Writing
in the journal Science, Dr. Pohl’s group said the new artifacts “reveal
that the key aspects of the Mesoamerican scripts were present in Olmec
writing.” The Olmec writing has not been deciphered, but several glyphs,
the researchers said, shared several similarities with much later Mayan
words.

    The archaeologists
also said the excavations produced compelling evidence of a connection
between Olmec writing, the sacred 260-day calendar and kingship, all hallmarks
of later Mesoamerican cultures.


    “We’re seeing evidence of a mother culture,” Dr. Pohl said in a telephone interview.

    Such a role for the Olmecs made sense, she said, because they may have been the “first known peoples in Mesoamerica to have a state-level political structure, and writing is a way to communicate power and influence.”

    Other scholars reacted to the new findings with fascination and caution.

    As expected, several scholars raised questions about characterizing the glyphs as elements
of true writing ˜ whether they were simply pictures of objects or people,
or represented spoken language. A few said they suspected the dates for
the artifacts should be more recent.


    “It’s an interesting find, but we need to wait and see what it means,” said Dr.
Joyce Marcus, a University of Michigan archaeologist who is an authority
on the Zapotecs.

    Dr. Michael D. Coe of Yale, an authority on Mayan culture, said that until much more evidence of Olmec writing was uncovered, Dr. Pohl’s interpretation would remain speculative and the Olmec role in early writing would be an open question.

    “It’s controversial, but that’s all right,” Dr. Coe said of the report. “It’s worth publishing.”

    By a loose definition, Dr. Coe said, the glyphs on the artifacts are “certainly
writing.” In particular, he noted the drawing of a bird with symbols
coming out. “This bird is talking ˜ he’s saying something,” Dr. Coe explained.

“One of those symbols looks very much like one of the Maya calendar glyphs,
a day name.”


    Dr. Coe
was referring to a bird, perhaps representing a king dressed as a bird,
depicted on the excavated cylinder seal. Two glyphs emanate from the bird’s
beak, like words from modern-day cartoon figures. The image seems analogous
to speech scrolls that were common in later Mayan art.


    Dr. Pohl
interpreted the words as meaning “king” and “3 Ajaw.” The latter is the
name of a day in the sacred calendar that could have been used as a personal
name for a king.

    The cylinder,
the size of a human fist, was apparently used like a roller stamp. With
ink or paint applied, the roller was used to spread the imprint of a pictograph
or word symbol on cloth or over someone’s body.


    “Clothes
and jewelry were important items of display to show your rank and status,
so it would show you were part of the elite to be able to display your
connection to the ruler,” Dr. Pohl explained.


    In their
report, members of Dr. Pohl’s group said they identified other glyphs incised
on fragments of a greenstone plaque that was dug out of refuse deposits
at the site of San Andrés, three miles from La Venta.


    The evidence
for writing in a second medium, the archaeologists said, strengthened “the
argument that the writing system was indigenous” to that Olmec region.


    The authors
of the report, besides Dr. Pohl, were Dr. Kevin O. Pope of Geo Eco Arc
Research, a Maryland company that specializes in geological and archaeological
projects, and Dr. Christopher von Nagy of Tulane University, in New Orleans.


    “I know
this is very controversial,” Dr. Pohl said in the interview. “We feel we
have made a good case for writing in the Olmec culture, but we also recognize
that there’s more research to be done.”

REMEMBER THIS WHEN YOU SHOP FOR LOTHES.

December 1, 2002

From the LATimes Sunday Magazine:

The Cost of Apparel Has Declined for a Quarter Century, Helping Make Americans the Best-Clothed People in History. All Is Right in the World, Unless You Ask How It Happened.

By FRED DICKEY

Brenda Pope sits at the kitchen
table and stares sadly at her work-hardened hands. Inside one wrist is
the purple welt of a surgical scar that runs halfway to her elbow. Twenty
years at a sewing machine gave her the carpal tunnel injury. That scar
and $15,000 in severance is what she has to show for those years. Near
the edge of Blue Ridge, Ga., the Levi Strauss plant where she once worked
now sits empty, a glass-and-brick shell overlooking acres of empty parking
lot. Bored security guards stroll the grounds to protect what no one any
longer values. A factory dies an honorable death when it falls apart from
hard work and time. This one was cut down in full productivity.


    For a
half-century, this apparel sewing plant was a wellspring that pumped life
into the town. The workday was switched on by the gathering of 400 workers,
mainly women, chattering as they punched the clock. Hour after hour, they
created a cadence from clacking sewing machines, generating wealth for
their bosses and modest wages for themselves.


    The plant
was shut in June, one of six Levi plant closures that left the San Francisco
apparel giant with just a tiny U.S. manufacturing presence–a plant in
San Antonio, Texas, devoted to quick turn-around products that have deadlines
overseas plants can’t meet. At the end, the Blue Ridge workers stood in
small knots, tossed about by a maelstrom of emotions. Some were in shock.
Some muttered that they would never again wear Levi clothing. Most worried
about the future. Brenda Pope was one of those.

    Blue
Ridge is a town of nearly 2,000 in north Georgia, just south of the Tennessee
and North Carolina lines. Blue-green hills rise sharply a few miles south
of town and provide a gateway to the Appalachians, gaining loveliness as
they gain height. Residents are mostly Scots-Irish, descendants of the
hard-edged people who broke the Cherokees, and then broke the soil. Today,
many here, like Pope, are working poor.


    Measured
against what most of us feel we need, the 44-year-old single mother asked
little. She wanted to live among familiar pines and trustworthy people,
create value with her hands and raise her child in the old ways. She did
not think she needed a college degree to do these things. She was right,
until she made the mistake of pricing herself out of the labor market–a
feat accomplished by earning $14 per hour putting zippers in Levi’s famous
blue jeans.


    When
Levi moved Pope’s job out of the country, she became one of hundreds of
thousands of American workers who have lost jobs during the past six decades
as the garment industry seeks lower wages in underdeveloped countries.
In that context, the decision to close the Blue Ridge plant was hardly
unusual. Levi had clung to its last U.S. manufacturing plants long after
most of its competitors had fled.


    Yet when
a company like Levi, with a reputation for good management and strong relations
with employees, finally turns out the lights in the United States, it might
be an occasion to measure the human toll, here and abroad, of the flight
of garment industry jobs–and to remember that it’s happening so that American
consumers, who buy more clothing than any people in history, can get a
shirt for $20 instead of $25.

In 1950, 1.2 million Americans
were employed in apparel manufacturing. By 2001, that figure had fallen
to 566,000. In the same time span, the U.S. population almost doubled.
Jobs went out of the country, and finished products came in. In 1989, the
U.S. imported $24.5 billion in apparel; in 2001, $63.8 billion. In the
last quarter of 2001, 83% of all apparel sold in this country was imported.


    The migration
of these jobs is seen as the natural result of globalization, the economic
process that melds the technology and finance of the developed world with
the vast labor pool of the underdeveloped. This trend is especially attractive
to the apparel industry because, basically, all it needs are sewing machines
and low-paid workers.

    Globalization
has crept up so stealthily that it wasn’t generally recognized until full
grown. It accelerated around the end of World War II, when the industrialized
world was reshuffling, says Charles Derber of Boston College, author of
“Corporation Nation,” a book that views corporate power through a populist
filter. As American corporations witnessed the economic rise of Japan and
other foreign competition, they started looking for an edge, and they found
it in cheap labor abroad. “They realized that more money could be made
by using those billions of workers as producers as well as consumers,”
Derber says.


    Many
corporate executives view this sea of cheap labor as an attractive profit
center, or, if they find it predatory and distasteful, as a competitive
necessity. Economists say globalization will be the platform for Third
World countries to build their own free-market economies, and that low
wages are part of the growth process.


    Michael
M. Weinstein, a New York economist who has studied the job-flight phenomenon,
says of the plight of Pope and others like her: “Any policy you give me
for saving that person’s job is going to threaten somebody else’s. I don’t
mean to sound callous, but there are plenty of low-end jobs [in the U.S.]
that need filling. If we bar low-cost goods from abroad, it would be the
poorest among us who depend on these products who would be punished most
harshly.”


    In other
words, it is the poor who would suffer most if, say, clothing at Wal-Mart
suddenly cost more. Weinstein adds, “We don’t need garment jobs to have
full employment for Americans. It’s a good thing when these jobs go to
the worst-off people in the world. I regard it as unconscionable to clamp
down on sweatshops that are making these people’s lives better than they
would otherwise be.”


    The search
for the worst-off people in the world means the garment industry is looking
for a target that’s always moving. As soon as wages rise in one country,
work can be moved to another. Charles Kernaghan, director of the National
Labor Committee in New York City, calls this long-distance shuffle a “race
to the bottom” of the wage scale. The committee has a list of hourly apparel
wages in Third World countries, including: Guatemala, 37 cents; China,
28 cents; Nicaragua, 23 cents; Bangladesh, 13 to 20 cents.


    In
addition to low wages, manufacturers in many countries benefit from child
labor and long workdays as well as the absence of health plans, environmental
protections, workplace safety standards and efforts to organize workers.
In fairness, some U.S. apparel makers, Levi among them, have taken steps
to police conditions in plants overseas, and to pay fairly. But those efforts
are far from universal.

    “American
companies make showcase visits to these offshore plants, but they always
get the VIP tour and are maneuvered to talk only to employees who have
been coached for such occasions,” says Kernaghan, an old-style, angry labor
activist who knows his enemy, doesn’t     trust him
and never gets too close.


    Levi
Strauss & Co. has taken on the role of dressing people to look sexy
and cool, but the company began in 1853 as a wholesale dry goods business.
Its first garments were work pants made of canvas-type material to serve
workers in dust-clogged mines and on docks. As the years passed, Levi grew,
its sales reaching $4.3 billion by fiscal 2001, and the company expanded
its manufacturing to other parts of the country. Levi became a paragon
of corporate beneficence. It provided benefits, fair wages and even helped
employees earn diplomas. It donated ball fields to the small towns where
it operated. Even unions liked the company.


    Ann Woody
was a management employee at the Blue Ridge factory. She remembered when
Bob Haas, a descendant of the founders and Levi’s president and CEO, visited
the plant about a decade ago. Workers planted a tree in his behalf to show
their affection. It was a touching moment of mutual fidelity.


    Company
fortunes faltered in the mid-’90s in the face of competition from goods
made overseas. When the time came for Levi to close Blue Ridge, Haas had
become chairman of the board, replaced as president and CEO by Philip A.
Marineau, who was recruited from Pepsi-Cola to “turn this thing around.”


    To reduce
labor costs, Marineau had to break the paternal mold that the Haas family
had formed over many years. Journalist Karl Schoenberger wrote in his 2001
book, “Levi’s Children,” that “Levi Strauss is one of the very few major
companies in the apparel industry that has not been indelibly branded a
scoundrel by human rights critics. . . . It has the distinction of trying
harder and far longer than any other multinational corporation to do the
right thing.”

    The new
boss was tough enough to say to the workers: Sorry, but this is about money.

Marineau doesn’t do fireside
chats. He’s all business. Asked why the company closed Blue Ridge and turned
out faithful workers, he says: “To be competitive in the marketplace required
us to lower our cost of goods. It required us to go offshore. Apparel prices
have gone down for the last 25 years, and it continues unabated, driven
by an aging population that wants to spend less on clothing.”


    In announcing
the six plant closures, Levi said it was becoming a “marketing company,”
and that future production in almost all cases would be by contract manufacturers.
That would take place in 50 countries, including Mexico, Bangladesh and
China.


    To author
Derber, that explanation is code language that actually says: We’re going
for the cheap labor, and we don’t want the dirty hands of ownership that
go with sweatshops. The goal is to have “plausible deniability” about labor
conditions. He said that foreign plant owners are rarely steeped in touchy-feely
management techniques and operate with the backing of powerful politicians
who can impede whatever government oversight might technically be on the
books.


    Asked
why Levi contracts out its manufacturing, Marineau gives several competitive
business reasons, then he pauses and acknowledges, “The apparel industry
is chasing low-cost labor.”


    For Levi,
the advantages became obvious this year. In the third quarter, which ended
Aug. 25, Levi’s sales were up 3.5%, its first increase since 1996. Five
weeks ago came an agreement to sell a new line of lower-priced jeans through
the vast Wal-Mart Stores chain. Marineau predicted that the new Levi Strauss
Signature brand would generate hundreds of millions of dollars in sales
each year–all from garments made abroad.

    To its
credit, Levi has been a pioneer overseas, creating a corporate code of
standards for every manufacturer with which it contracts. Levi also pays
inspectors to enforce the standards. Writer Schoenberger acknowledges Levi’s
effort, but says, “How well they have managed to enforce that code is probably
very debatable,” given the serpentine twists in Third World countries.


    In fact,
enforcing the codes of various private groups and international organizations
is not achievable, Weinstein says. Groups such as the World Trade Organization,
NAFTA and the International Labor Organization have no real leverage to
control American multinationals because the United States has such vast
economic clout. “Say the Philippines has a beef against American trade
practices,” he says. “What are they going to do, refuse to do business
with the U.S.?”


    That
segues into a main Kernaghan point. The labor activist says that the most
effective step against globalization abuses would be to pass legislation
in the United States prohibiting the entry of goods from countries whose
products fall short of acceptable standards. In other words, the U.S. would
be saying to multinationals operating offshore: We can’t stop you from
making clothing in sweatshops, but you can’t sell it here.


    “We have
the power to determine what comes into our country,” says Jay Mazur, retired
president of Unite, the union that traditionally represented most American
apparel workers. “We say cocaine can’t come into our country; so we can
say that goods produced in sweatshops can’t either.”


    Kernaghan
and his allies (human rights advocates and some labor unions, but thus
far not many politicians) believe that such legislation would eliminate
the common explanation companies give for abusing humane standards–we
do it because our competitors do. Opponents argue that the law would send
clothing prices higher in the U.S.


    Karen
Collis was the president of the Unite local in Blue Ridge. When Levi announced
the closure, there was little the union could do except negotiate severances.
Collis, 31, is luckier than most. She’s bright, young and ambitious. She
has a supportive husband and plans to use her $11,000 severance to pursue
an accounting degree. She may be one of the few for whom being laid off
will be a blessing.

    Collis,
though, knows her former co-workers do not need severance packages. They
need employment. She is upset–at the union she believes gave up on the
Blue Ridge plant, at Levi for turning its back on loyal workers, and even
at Mexico, which is where she and other workers heard their jobs are going.


    So in
the race to the bottom, is Mexico the next stop?

In the sand-blown Mexican
border town of Piedras Negras, two hours southwest of San Antonio, a mother
of five prays that Collis’ prediction comes true. It won’t. The woman,
who did not want her name used for fear of reprisal at work, lives in a
two-bedroom crumbly stucco house so narrow it seems you can’t open the
back door without closing the front. The tiny front room is filled with
rows of family photos, religious symbols and a snowy old TV that is always
on and seemingly never watched. Even the furniture coverings are threadbare.
At the moment, the room is festive and crowded as several relatives have
gathered for the momentous occasion of this interview. Her children are
almost awkwardly polite and listen as attentively as if this were pay-per-view.


    She says
she earns about $55 a week sewing cloth bags at the local factory. Two
years ago, she earned twice that much working on Levi jeans at a large
factory, but it closed and the jobs moved to Central America and the Far
East. The closure left her and her husband, whose own job is spotty, with
far more bills than money.


    Today,
she worries that she will fall behind on her sewing quota. She is not as
nimble as she once was. She holds her bladder until lunch or quitting time
to avoid slowing down. She knows that 100 people would line up for her
job, and would gladly take the latest starting wage of about $35 per week.
There is no job security and no one to appeal to because the union in her
plant is as answerable to the company as she is.


    This
year’s economic downturn in the U.S. has hurt the Mexican apparel industry,
but most jobs were lost because companies moved to countries with lower
wages, says Julia Quinonez, head of CFO (Border Committee of Women Workers)
in Piedras Negras. She says that 4,500 apparel jobs have disappeared from
that small city in the past three years and that wages have gone from $4
per hour 10 years ago to an average of 80 cents today. Quinonez says the
jobs are going abroad, or farther south in Mexico, where wages are about
60% of those along the border and labor protections are rarely enforced.

    Martha
Tovar, president of Solunet-InfoMex, an economic research company in El
Paso, Texas, says that 68 textile plants closed in Mexico last year, depressing
conditions in the border area, including the poor woman’s family in Piedras
Negras. Prices are so high, they cross the border to buy beans and rice,
and occasionally–very occasionally–some chicken or cheap beef. When told
that some housekeepers in L.A. earn her weekly income by lunchtime, the
mother’s eyes widen and she says, “How can that be?”


    Her ambition
is to gather her family and slip across the border, where she wishes to
find out if such stories can be true for her. Asked how she would do that,
she shrugs. “I’ll just use a guest pass to cross over, then not return.”


    She has
little curiosity about the companies responsible for her wages. She would,
however, like to ask them–whoever they are–“Why is it that you can’t
pay me enough so I can live decently? So that I can feed my family chicken
even once in a while?”


    She is
not an economist and she has never heard of globalization, but her instincts
tell her that the job that allows her barely to survive is soon going the
way of thousands of other jobs in her town. In the race to the bottom,
it turns out, Mexico is in the rearview mirror.


    Lisa
Rahman would consider that Mexican family blessed with riches, because
$1 an hour far exceeds any amount the 19-year-old garment factory worker
would dare dream of when asleep in her family’s shack. Her closer-to-earth
ambition is to double her income to about 30 cents per hour. That would
mean chicken in her rice maybe once a week.


    Rahman
lives with and is the main support for her parents and two young relatives
in the vast slums of Dhaka, Bangladesh. All she can afford is one room,
and during the rainy season, the family collects the bedding and moves
to the one dry corner so that they don’t get soaked. She has never gone
to school, ridden a bicycle or seen a movie. Her wages allow the eating
of chicken maybe once every two months. She describes the neighborhood:
“Ninety to 100 people in my neighborhood all use one water pump, one outhouse
and one stove with four burners.”

    Rahman
has worked in garment factories since she was 10, the last three years
at the Shah Makhdum factory. She says she often works from 8 a.m. until
10 p.m. seven days a week, with a day off maybe once a month. Her take-home
pay is the equivalent of 14 cents per hour. The factory is hot, and the
drinking water is dirty. If she gets sick and can’t work, she doesn’t get
paid. If she gets sick very often, she’ll be unpaid permanently.


    Rahman
is waif-like–about 5 feet and 110 pounds–and has round eyes that float
in her still-young brown skin. Everything about her begs for a protective
arm around her, but that draws her no slack on the job: “If we fail to
meet [production quota], the supervisors yell and curse at us. They curse
our parents and call them filthy [names]. Sometimes they slap us.”


    One product
that Rahman worked on most recently was for the Walt Disney Co. of Burbank,
a contract purchaser from the factory. It’s a Winnie the Pooh shirt that
retails for $17.99. Asked to guess the shirt’s retail price in the U.S.,
Rahman says, “About 50 or 100 taka,” which is 86 cents to $1.72.


    Rahman
had never heard of Disney, Disneyland or Mickey Mouse until a labor dispute
broke at the plant recently over working conditions. The Disney licensee
promptly suspended its work there–forcing Rahman and others to reverse
field. They are now trying to have the manufacturing resume.


    Rahman
says she hopes to work at the plant until she is old.


    And what’s
old?

    “Thirty.”

    A spokesman
for the Disney company, Gary Foster, says of Rahman’s allegations about
the Shah Makhdum plant: “We have visited that plant 12 separate times,
and everything she says about it is untrue.” Asked if Disney garments are
still being produced there, he says, “As far as we know, there is no Disney
licensee making products in that plant.” Asked why he isn’t certain, he
says, “That is the licensee’s decision.”


    Bangladesh
is a desperately poor nation of 134 million that needs a lot of Lisa Rahmans
to staff its 3,300 sewing factories. The country provides garments for
most major American apparel manufacturers, including Levi. In 2000, Bangladesh
companies made 924 million garments for U.S. companies with a wholesale
customs value of $2.2 billion.


    Recently,
however, the Bangladesh minister of commerce complained that wages in other
countries, such as China, were undercutting laborers in his nation. That
is not surprising to labor activist Kernaghan. He says that fickle multinationals
have found new low-wage destinations, and China heads the list.


    Richard
H. Dekmejian, an international relations expert at USC, makes a judgment
on where globalization is leading us: “Third World countries have no
choice but to let these companies operate so their teeming populations
don’t die of hunger. People take what crumbs they’re able to catch. But
the overall impact of globalization is that the rich get richer and the
poor starve. That will eventually lead to an explosion. It’s inevitable.”


    Union
veteran Mazur is more sanguine. “The world sees us as the great economic
engine, and they just want it to work for them, too. By giving the world
fair wages for labor, we would create social stability, and make peace
more possible.”

    Sitting
at the table with Brenda Pope is her 11-year-old son, Brian. He’s a chubby,
pleasant boy, well-mannered in a “yes sir, no ma’am” way that sounds almost
quaint to a Southern California ear. Brian was found to have lupus a year
ago, and he has red splotches on his face and arms caused by the disease,
which can kill if it’s not carefully–and expensively–controlled. He can
do nothing about his face, but he reflexively tries to cover his sleeveless
arms. When I ask if he would mind playing outside for a while, he complies
without a murmur. When he’s gone, I ask his mother how he’s doing.


    “Lots
of kids give him a hard time. They call him pizza face and stuff like that.
It just breaks my heart. He once asked me, ‘Momma, are you ashamed of how
I look?’ When the doctor told him about the lupus, the only question he
had was, ‘Am I gonna die?’ “


    Pope
has been pushed around by life, but some of it was her own doing, and she
knows it; to wit: the two men she married, including Brian’s father, whom
she divorced 10 years ago. The look on her face as she discusses them tells
me I could write the familiar script. “I dropped out of school; figured
I could live on love. I was stupid, I reckon,” she says with a hollow laugh.


    When
Pope switches attention to her lost job, she says she anticipates drudging
trips to the welfare and unemployment offices, and endless job hunts that
promise little for her limited skills. She could flip burgers for about
$6 an hour–if they’d hire a middle-aged woman with a G.E.D. and an old-fashioned
work ethic–but that wouldn’t be enough to save her house and pay the costs
of treating her son’s sickness. “I’d dig ditches if the pay’s good,” she
says.


    Helen
M. Lewis, who also lives near Blue Ridge, is an author and authority on
the familiar Appalachian struggle to make a living. She doesn’t know Pope,
but she has known thousands in the same situation. “I’m sorry to say it,
but she’ll probably lose her house and move onto her parents’ property
with a trailer home. It’s an old pattern. There are millions of people
in this country like her who want to be productive workers and who are
content to live marginally middle-class lives; instead, they become dependent
on society because large corporations tromp on them chasing more profits
from sweatshop foreign workers.”


    No one
in Blue Ridge, currently, is looking for a woman who has sewn a couple
million zippers into pants. In fact, not many in Blue Ridge are looking
for anyone. The town is rapidly turning into a mountain resort of antique
shops, summer houses for rich Atlantans, and retirement and convalescent
homes. In job-availability shorthand, that comes down to bedsheets and
bedpans serving those low-paying industries.

    The state
of Georgia has set up a job agency for the former Levi workers. State employees
eagerly staff job banks, but for far too few positions. They encourage
people who can’t type to learn computer skills, and provide some funding
to go back to college or trade school. That’s of marginal value to middle-aged
people conditioned to manual work and who, in any event, can’t afford to
stop working while going to school.


    Brian
is invited back to the kitchen table. He listens to his mother vent at
her ex-employer. Levi was part of the Pope family. Her mother worked there
for 26 years before retiring, and three other members of her immediate
family were let go with Brenda. “Four of us are out of a job.” It’s as
though another husband took off.


    “They
said they was going to give us a commemorative denim bag.” She pauses for
the irony of that to settle. “Twenty years, and I get a denim bag made
out of the same damn scraps I threw in a basket?” She laughs. “I just can’t
wait to get that denim bag.” Brian chuckles, too, but isn’t sure why. Asked
about his mother’s situation, he responds with a child’s heart. He smiles
at her proudly and says he wants to give back his allowance to help out.
She hugs him tightly. As I walk down the driveway, I look back and see
Brenda and Brian Pope standing on the step holding hands.


    American
consumers are blessed in many ways. As the nation’s standard of living
has risen and the cost of clothing has dropped, homes have grown bigger,
as have closets. Shopping for clothes has become a pastime for millions
of people because they can afford to do it regularly. Thanks to this
Levi closure, we can buy, say, five shirts for $100 instead of four.


    The
cost of having that fifth shirt? Higher welfare, health-care and job retraining
costs for hard-working people like Brenda Pope, the shrinking lives of
people like Lisa Rahman and the family in Piedras Negras, and perhaps the
explosion forecast by Dekmejian.

It is part of the American
character to believe that things will always get better. However, many
poor countries are mired in the depression that says bad things never change.
Both are often right.


    On March
25, 1911, 275 young immigrant women who sewed garments for six bucks a
week were about to go home. It was quitting time in the cluttered Triangle
Shirtwaist Company factory in Manhattan. A fire broke out and spread quickly
through clutter on the floor. The rush to get out turned to panic as they
realized they were trapped on the upper floors, where the doors opened
inward. Many leapt onto pavement from eight stories up. At the end, 146
died. Photographs of their bodies laid in an orderly line on the sidewalk
shocked America. In response, laws were passed establishing workplace safety
standards. Wage laws eventually followed, decreeing that apparel workers
should not only not die, but their lives should be worth living.


    Ninety
years later, on Nov. 25, 2000, a fire broke out on the fourth floor at
the Chowdhury Knitwear factory in Narsingdi, Bangladesh. It darted across
the factory floor and enveloped tables piled with shirts. A can of solvent
exploded into a fireball. Someone grabbed an extinguisher. It was broken.
The 1,250 apparel workers panicked. Some dashed to the roof, where they
were cornered and jumped to their deaths. Some raced down the stairs to
the main exit, where they discovered the metal gate was locked. As their
pounding went unanswered, others piled up behind them. Fifty-two workers
died, mostly young women and children. The factory was soon back in production.
No new laws were passed and nothing much changed, except about 50 new faces
at the sewing machines.

AMERICANS DO THEIR DUTY.

ABOVE: Shoppers at a Bakersfield
Wal-Mart grab televisions after the store opened at 6 a.m

The Washington-based National
Retail Federation predicts total holiday retail sales, which exclude restaurant
and auto sales, will increase by 4 percent to roughly $209.25 billion.

from The New York Times
for April 24, 2001:

Labor Standards Clash With Global Reality

by LESLIE KAUFMAN and DAVID
GONZALEZ

SAN SALVADOR ˜ Six years ago, Abigail Martínez earned 55 cents an
hour sewing cotton tops
and khaki pants. Back then, she says, workers were made

to spend 18-hour days in
an unventilated factory with undrinkable water.


Employees who displeased
the bosses were denied bathroom breaks or occasionally made


to sweep outside all morning
in the broiling sun.


    Today,
she and other workers have coffee breaks and lunch on an outdoor

terrace cafeteria. Bathrooms
are unlocked, the factory is breezy and clean, and


employees can complain to
a board of independent monitors if they feel abused.


    The changes
are the result of efforts by Gap, the big clothing chain, to


improve working conditions
at this independent factory, one of many that supply


its clothes.

    Yet Ms. Martínez today earns 60 cents an hour, only 5 cents more an hour than six years ago. In some ways, the factory, called Charter, shows what Western companies can do to discourage abuse
by suppliers. But Gap’s experience also demonstrates
the limits to good intentions
when first-world appetites collide with third-world

realities.

    Ms. Martínez’s
hours are still long, production quotas are high, and her


earnings are still not enough
to live on. She shares a two- room concrete home with a


sister, two brothers, her
parents and a grandmother.

    Yet the
real alternative in this impoverished nation is no work. And


government officials won’t
raise the minimum wage or even enforce labor laws too rigorously


for fear that employers
would simply move many jobs to another poor country.


    The lesson
from Gap’s experience in El Salvador is that competing


interests among factory
owners, government officials, American managers and middle-class


consumers ˜ all with their
eyes on the lowest possible cost ˜ make it difficult to


achieve even basic standards,
and even harder to maintain them.


    “Some
have suggested that there are simple or magic solutions to ensure

that labor standards are
applied globally,” said Aron Cramer, director of human


rights at Business for Social
Responsibility, a nonprofit advocacy group that receives


support from business. “In
fact, it takes a great deal of work.”


    Fed up
with abusive conditions, Ms. Martínez and a small group of other


workers organized and began
to hold strikes at the factory, then called Mandarin


International, in 1995.
As tension rose, workers took over the factory and shut down


power to the plant. Security
guards forcibly ejected strikers; union members said the


guards dragged women out
by their hair and clubbed them with guns. The

factory’s owners fired hundreds,
including Ms. Martínez.


    It might
have ended that way, except that it occurred just as concern


about sweatshops was rising
in the United States. Groups like the National


Labor Committee, a union-backed,
workers advocacy group based in New York, had formed to


oppose sweatshops. Mandarin
offered a media- ready case of abuse, and the


revolt was widely publicized.

    Still,
two of the four retailers using Mandarin left after the protests

˜ J. C. Penney and Dayton
Hudson (now Target). Eddie Bauer, a unit of Spiegel Inc.,


suspended its contract.
Gap Inc., which is based in San Francisco, intended to quit,


too, but a group of Mandarin
workers pleaded with the company to save their jobs. Some


blamed union organizers
for the trouble. “Problems were made to look worse by the


union,” said one employee,
Lucía Alvarado, who has worked at the factory for eight years.


    Gap executives
chose to stay after deciding that all the groups involved


˜ workers, labor activists
and factory owners ˜ were willing to make changes. The


workers were expected to
stop disrupting the plant, and managers had to agree to more

humane practices and to
accept outside monitors.


    To make
sure the changes stuck and to arbitrate disputes, Gap decided to


try the then innovative
idea of hiring local union, religious and academic leaders as


independent monitors who
would meet regularly with workers to hear complaints,


investigate problems and
look over the books.


    “It’s
not a paradise,” said Carolina Quinteros, co-director of the


Independent Monitoring Group
of El Salvador, as the monitors call themselves. “But


at least it works better
than others down here. They don’t have labor or human rights

violations.”

    The push
for change ranges far beyond the Charter factory, or El


Salvador. Today, activists
on college campuses are calling for an end to sweatshops


everywhere. [As recently
as this past weekend in Quebec, world trade officials debated


how to clean up those operations,
and the United States has pushed developing countries


to raise pay and working
conditions in thousands of plants from Bangladesh to


Brazil.]

    Results,
however, have been negligible. The basic problem is that jobs

and capital can move fast
these days, as the president of El Salvador, Francisco Flores,


is keenly aware. “The difficulty
in this region is that there is labor that is


more competitively priced
than El Salvador,” he said.


    Here,
as in many other countries, labor advocates say the problem is


made worse by the government’s
cozy ties with factory owners. When a Labor Ministry


committee issued a report
critical of forced overtime, poor safety and threats


against labor organizers,
factory owners complained. The government swiftly withdrew


and disowned it.

    Salvadoran
officials and business leaders have also objected to monitors


Gap has hired to police
working conditions. They contend that the group is a tool of


unions that want to keep
jobs from leaving the United States ˜ or a leftist


anti-government front, a
suspicion left over from El Salvador’s long civil war, which ended in


1992.

    Then
there is practicality. Gap spends $10,000 a year for the


independent monitors at
Charter, which is owned by Taiwanese investors, and thousands more for


management time to arbitrate
disputes and for its own company monitors to recheck

the facts on the ground.
For the company to duplicate these intensive efforts at each


of the 4,000 independent
factories it contracts with would have taken about 4.5


percent of its annual profit
of $877 million last year.


    In a
world where costs are measured in pennies, that percentage would be


a significant burden. Wal-Mart
and Kmart are praised by investors for relentlessly


driving down costs, but
they have much less comprehensive monitoring programs.


    Gap says
that expense and staff time are not even its main concerns. The


experiment in El Salvador
has only reinforced the company’s conviction that

companies cannot substitute
for governments indifferent to enforcing laws. Also, it said,


retailers have limited power
over their independent contractors. Either they pull out,


which would punish innocent
workers, or they must accede to a slow process where


they must cajole and bully
for every bit of progress.


    “We are
not the all-powerful Oz that rules over what happens in every


factory,” said Elliot Schrage,
Gap’s senior vice president for global affairs. “Do we


have leverage? Yes. Is it
as great as our critics believe? Not by a long shot.”

Sitting Down: Monitoring
Effort Enlists Outsiders

Still, monitoring is the
sweatshop opponents’ great hope. Watchdog


groups say that only people
outside of the company can win the trust of workers and


evaluate complaints. “That
is where you get problems that won’t show up in paper


records and interviews with
management,” said Sam Brown, executive director of the


Fair Labor Association,
a labor advocacy group in Washington.


    At the
time, however, no one had ever done it, said Mr. Brown, who is a


former Ambassador to the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe


and past director of Action,
federal domestic volunteer agency.

    Gap’s
efforts are still in many ways a blueprint for the international


labor advocacy movement
˜ since 1995 other companies like Liz Claiborne and Reebok have


attempted to start similar
programs. But what has actually happened in


El Salvador is a process
that lasted longer, cost more and achieved less than what many


people had hoped for. “We
knew it would be hard,” Mr. Schrage said. “But it’s been


harder than we ever imagined.”

    The company
has found that no aspect of its efforts escapes local


politics. On the recommendation
of Charles Kernaghan, the director of the National Labor

Council, Gap turned to the
legal aid office of the Archdiocese of San Salvador and to


the Jesuit University here.
Earlier, both institutions had helped uncover abuses in


the plant, which to Gap
demonstrated their experience and independence from management.


But both also had a history
of sympathy for the Farabundo Martí National


Liberation Front, a coalition
of rebel groups and political parties during the civil war.


The coalition is known as
the F.M.L.N., its initials in Spanish.


    “When
companies see me, they see someone to the left of the F.M.L.N.,”

said Benjamín Cuéllar,
the director of the Institute for Human Rights at the


University of Central America
here who is also on the board of independent monitors. That view


manifests itself in mistrust
and resistance by managers, he said.


    Beyond
politics, Gap says it is not easy to impose its will on


contractors simply because
it is a major customer. Pedro Mancía, the factory’s manager,


indicated that he looks
on the monitors as an annoyance, not a threat. In his view, the


only meaningful role they
played was in easing tensions among the workers themselves

after the 1995 strike.

    That
event “was not between management and workers,” Mr. Mancía argued.


“We had two warring factions
of unions and they could not sit down together.”


    Factory
managers agreed to accept monitors mostly to avoid losing Gap


and going out of business.
Still, trust is tenuous and the managers have found ways ˜


subtle and not so subtle
˜ to resist, monitors say.


    It took
about a year to rehire all of the workers fired during the 1995

strike, for example. And
30 of those rehired in 1997 were fired again recently, not


because they were strikers
but because the company said they were not productive


enough. “They are playing
by the rules of the game,” said one member of the monitoring


group. “But I’m not much
in agreement with the rules of the game.”


    Gap says
that this project has taught it the limit of its own influence.


“We can’t be the whole solution,”
Mr. Schrage said. “The solution has to be labor laws


that are adequate, respected
and enforced. One of the problems in El Salvador is


that that was not happening
and is not happening.”

Moving On: Economic Obstacles
Impede Reforms


Before dawn each day, Flor
de María Hernández leaves her three children


in the tent where they have
lived since an earthquake leveled her home earlier this


year and begins her two-hour
commute to the Charter clothing factory.


    She and
the others, like Ms. Martínez, must be at work before 7 a.m.


Managers close the gate
precisely on the hour and dock the pay of anyone who is late.


    Inside,
rows of sewing machines face blackboards on which supervisors

have written the daily quotas
for shirts and trousers, roughly 2,000 a day for each


line of 36 machines. The
pace is relentless, but by local standards it is a


pleasant place to work.
There are lockers, tiled bathrooms, a medical clinic and an outdoor


cafeteria. Large fans and
high ceilings keep temperatures down.


    But Ms.
Martínez remembers just what it took to get this far. She was


among the workers who protested
the abusive conditions in 1995. “Workers would


bring in permission slips
from their doctors to go to the hospital,” she


recalled, “and supervisors
would rip it up in their faces.”

    Of the
70,000 garment workers in El Salvador, 80 percent are women. Few


earn enough to take care
of their families. Ms. Hernández, for example, earns


about $30 a week inspecting
clothes. It is not enough to feed her children; to make


ends meet, she relies on
help from her ex-husband.


    She keeps
her job because the most common alternative is to work as a


live-in maid or a street
vendor. Jobs cutting sugar cane in the searing sun, once


plentiful, are difficult
to find now, and wages have fallen in recent years along with commodity

prices.

    El Salvador,
never a wealthy country, is struggling every bit as hard as


its people. Roughly 75,000
people were killed and thousands wounded in the civil


war. The war also drove
away foreign investment, shuttered relatively high-paying


electronics factories and
left roads, power lines and other basic services in


tatters.

    Earlier
this year, two powerful earthquakes compounded the difficulties


by wrecking hundreds of
thousands of buildings. Economists estimate that 180,000

Salvadorans are jobless.
Almost half of the population lives in poverty.


    The government
has gone out of its way to attract investment and jobs.


Government leaders pin the
country’s future on the optimistic hope of doubling the


number of factories making
clothes for the United States, to more than 400, in


three years.

    “Maquilas
have been a source of significant economic growth in recent


years,” President Flores
said using the Spanish term for the plants that enjoy tax and


trade benefits. “They are
the most dynamic economic sector in the country.”

    That
growth, however, has not been matched by the budget of the Labor


Ministry, which is among
the worst-financed agencies. It employs only 37 labor


inspectors to enforce regulations
˜ 1 for every 10 factories, not including coffee


plantations, construction
sites or other places of business in this country, which


has 6.1 million people.

    The limits
of the government’s willingness to be an advocate for labor


was illustrated last summer
when it suppressed the report critical of factory working


conditions. The labor minister,
Jorge Nieto, said that the report was technically

flawed, and insists that
the government intends to modernize his agency and improve inspector


training. “We want investment,
but only with respect and fairness,” he said. “Only


when workers’ rights are
respected can we generate more contracts with American


companies.”

    But to
get those contracts, El Salvador must compete with neighbors like


Honduras and Nicaragua,
where wages are lower and the population even poorer and


more eager for work. Government
officials and factory managers concede that El


Salvador’s current minimum
wage is not enough to live on ˜ by some estimates it covers less

than half of the basic needs
of a family of four ˜ but they are wary of increasing it.


    “We cannot
be satisfied with the wage, but we have to acknowledge the


economic realities,” Mr.
Nieto said.


    Since
Gap pioneered the independent monitoring effort, few other


American companies have
followed. They cite costs, politics and questionable effectiveness.


Gap executives echo those
worries when they assess the experience at Charter.


    “We are
in a very competitive marketplace,” said Mr. Schrage of Gap.

“Consumers make decisions
on lots of factors, including price. There is no clear benefit


in having invested in independent
monitoring to a consumer and it is not clear if we were


to make it more broad policy
that consumers would get a benefit or care at all.”


    As she
shopped at the Gap flagship store at Herald Square in Manhattan,


Claire Cosslett fingered
an aqua cotton T-shirt made in El Salvador to check


for quality. Ms. Cosslett,
a legal recruiter, said she reads labels and sometimes worries


that her garments are “made
by some child chained to a sewing machine.”


    American
companies dread comments like that. Yet for all their fears,

they ultimately have to
balance their concern over image, and any feelings they have


about third-world workers,
with customers’ attitudes. Then there are the competitive


pressures to keep costs
low. Would the cost of raising working standards in El Salvador


raise the price of a
T-shirt enough to drive off customers?


    Among
several shoppers who were interviewed at the Manhattan store, Ms.


Cosslett was the only
one to say that reports of sweatshop conditions had stopped


her from buying a particular
brand. She said she would be willing to pay more for

a garment made under
better working conditions.


    But
then she paused and hedged. “It would depend how much,” she said.

Talk Talk’s Missing Pieces

Missing Pieces [IMPORT]

Talk Talk

(February 16, 2001)

Number of Discs: 1

Label: Blueprint

1. After the Flood (Outtake) [Alternate Take]
2. Myrrhman
3. New Grass [Edit]
4. Stump
 5. Ascension Day

6. 5:09
7. Piano – Mark Hollis

‘Missing Pieces’ picks up
where EMI’s ‘A’s & B Sides’ left off. After leaving EMI the band signed
to Polydor to produce their final album ‘Laughing Stock’. This CD is a
collection of the A and B-sides of the singles issued during the Polydor
era. Also includes the very rare piece called ‘Piano’, recorded in 1998.
1999 release. Standard jewel case.

HOW U.S. COFFEE CAPITALISTS (Nestle, Kraft, Procter & Gamble, and Sara Lee) ARE KILLING QUALITY COFFEE

http://www.fortune.com/indexw.jhtml?channel=artcol.jhtml&doc_id=210409

Crisis in a Coffee Cup

The price of beans has crashed.
Growers around the world are starving. And the quality of your morning
cup is getting worse. So why is everyone blaming Vietnam?

Fortune: Monday, December
9, 2002


By Nicholas Stein

Nestled among the rugged
hills of Vietnam’s Central Highlands, 200 miles north of Ho Chi Minh City,
Buon Ma Thuot is a remote and isolated village in a remote and isolated
land. The only road in and out of town is a narrow, winding, muddy track
interrupted by gaping potholes and meandering yaks. Until the mid-1990s
the region was notable only for a key battle in the final days of what
Vietnam calls its American war. A replica of the first North Vietnamese
tank to roll into Buon Ma Thuot sits in the center of town as a monument
to South Vietnam’s “liberation.” But in the past decade almost everything
else here has changed. The rain forest that once blanketed the region is
gone–pulled up and burned down to get at the fertile soil beneath. The
population has exploded. And the streets now reverberate with the buzz
of motorcycle traffic and the hum of commerce. The development is exemplified
by Phuc Ban Me, a gaudy resort complete with a hotel, a sprawling water
park, and a karaoke bar built in the shape of a cave.


    The catalyst
for Buon Ma Thuot’s growth was a plant associated more often with the lush
climes of Latin America than the jungles of Southeast Asia: coffee. Between
1990 and 2000, Vietnamese farmers planted more than a million acres of
the crop. Annual production swelled from 84,000 tons to 950,000, enabling
Vietnam to surpass Colombia as the world’s second-largest producer (Brazil
is the first). Vietnam may not have Juan Valdez, but its coffee is probably
in the can in your kitchen pantry.


    In 1997,
after a frost in Brazil sent the price of green (unroasted) coffee on New
York’s Commodities Exchange soaring above $3 a pound, Buon Ma Thuot’s coffee
sector suddenly had more money than it could spend. But the coffee renaissance
in Vietnam proved short-lived. In 1999 prices began to fall, sinking last
December to 42 cents a pound, their lowest level in a century. For three
consecutive years prices have not even covered the cost of production.
Many of the region’s farmers are heavily in debt. Some have replaced their
coffee plants with corn or pineapples. Others have simply abandoned their
farms. Phuc Ban Me gets few visitors these days, and its water park stands
vacant, a reminder of the excesses of the boom.

    Vietnam’s
coffee industry is not the only one suffering. The prolonged price slump
has ravaged many of the world’s 25 million coffee growers. In Central America,
where the costs of production are triple those of Vietnam, the repercussions
have been particularly severe. The U.S. Agency for International Development
estimates that at least 600,000 coffee workers have lost their jobs. Conditions
are equally dire in Africa, where impoverished nations such as Uganda,
Burundi, and Ethiopia rely on coffee for the majority of their export revenues.
Nestor Osorio, executive director of the International Coffee Organization,
calls this “the worst crisis ever” for coffee, the second-largest globally
traded commodity, after oil.


    Vietnam
is not just a victim of the crisis. For many, it is also the chief culprit,
responsible for flooding the market over the past five years with millions
of bags of unwanted coffee, upsetting the fine balance between global supply
and demand for its own short-term gain.


    But the
depressed prices plaguing coffee growers are not simply the result of a
cyclical glut. They are also caused by two systemic changes within the
global coffee world: the collapse of the cartel that kept prices at sustainable
levels for nearly three decades, and the development of new coffee-processing
technology, which prompted a shift away from high-quality arabica beans
to cheaper, lower-quality robusta.
The former was brought on by complex
geopolitical developments. The latter can be traced to the coffee divisions
of four multinational conglomerates–Nestle, Kraft, Procter & Gamble,
and Sara Lee–which buy nearly half of the world’s coffee and own some
of the best-known brands, including Nescafe, Maxwell House, Folgers, and
Chock Full o’ Nuts. In the past, these Big Four coffee roasters blended
small amounts of robusta with arabica to pare their purchasing costs. But
technological advances have allowed roasters to neutralize robusta’s harsh,
unpleasant taste. To reduce costs further, the Big Four have significantly
upped the percentage of robusta in their blends, substituting it for arabica
they once purchased from small farmers in Latin America and Africa.


    Most
of the robusta comes from Brazil and Vietnam, which together have seized
a greater share of global exports, up from 29% in 1997 to 41% last year.
“Brazil and Vietnam offer excellent coffee at very reasonable prices,”
says Frank Meysman, head of Sara Lee’s worldwide coffee business. “It will
be difficult for other countries, particularly in Central America, to compete.”


    The
switch to cheaper beans in the past five years has provided a windfall
for the Big Four. Though none of the companies releases financial results
for its coffee divisions, all acknowledge they have enjoyed record coffee
profits.

UK PIRATE RADIO UPDATE

25 NOVEMBER 2002: UK
PIRATE RADIO UPDATE

Hold tight the massive

Ever since Simon Dee’s first
broadcast from the MV Caroline in 1964, pirate radio has played a crucial
role in forming Britain’s musical taste. Now the phenomenon is bigger than
ever, the airwaves in the cities so crowded that the pirates are being
pushed into the suburbs and the countryside. Alexis Petridis picks up the
story in an Essex garage with a young man named Stealth . . .

Friday November 22, 2002

The
Guardian


 

It has been described as
a new studio, a nerve centre, and the headquarters of Essex’s top pirate
radio station, and admittance has been granted only after a rigorous vetting
procedure. I have been quizzed at length. ID has been demanded. The Guardian’s
photographer has been accused of spying for the government: “I’m sorry
about that, mate,” says our guide, a 19-year-old who bears the fitting
pseudonym of Stealth. “But he looks exactly like an inspector from the
DTI – he’s even driving a Ford Mondeo.” Finally, though, Stealth has agreed
to drive us to the secret location. On the way, the car stereo blares out
Soundz FM. It plays chirpy UK garage topped not with patois-heavy rhymes
about guns, “haters” and inner-city violence, but rap of a distinctly Essex
strain. “Big shaaht aaht to the XR3i crew,” says the MC. “Buzzing abaaht
in the rain on a Sunday afternoon.”


    The screening
procedures are so exacting, it’s difficult not to be slightly disappointed
when you arrive. You can call this place a studio until you are blue in
the face, but there is no getting around the fact that we are standing
in the middle of someone’s garage. The turntables nestle on a workbench
amid cans of de-icer and Hammerite. The DJs and their friends sit on piles
of stacked-up garden chairs, their baseball-capped heads nodding in time
to the beats.

    A DJ
called Mr Y2K is hunched over the turntables, while his fellow DJ Softmix
chatters into a microphone, taking requests and demands for “shout outs”,
and reading text messages. The mobile phone rings. He hands it to Mr Y2K,
and a brief, animated conversation takes place, just audible over the beats.
A listener is criticising Y2K’s choice of records. “Yeah, I know, mum,”
he mutters. “I didn’t really want to play it myself.” He pauses and looks
momentarily pained. “Will you stop interfering?” he asks, plaintively.
“Big up Mr Y2K’s mummy!” cries Softmix. Stealth rolls his eyes. “Sometimes
his nan rings up as well,” he says.


    Soundz
FM is far removed from the popular image of a pirate radio station. For
a start, we are not in a crumbling Hackney tower block, nor is the atmosphere
fugged with marijuana smoke. Judging by the litter on the floor, Soundz
runs on nothing stronger than junk food and cigarettes. The atmosphere
is cheery with the added frisson of illicit behaviour. It is somewhere
between a youth club and a house party being held while parents are away.
Everyone is friendly, if startled by the arrival of a national newspaper
in their midst. “Shout going out to the Guardian posse,” cries Softmix,
by way of introduction. “Checking out the studio, writing an article on
Soundz FM!” He then decides to conduct an interview of his own. “What do
you make of it?” he asks, thrusting the microphone into my hands. But I
have neither the voice nor the vocabulary for pirate radio. “So far it
seems very impressive,” I say, sounding like the winner of a competition
to find Britain’s most middle-class person. Aware that Soundz FM’s street
credibility is threatened, Softmix takes the microphone back. “Wicked,”
he says.


    From
Radio London in the 60s to So Solid Crew’s Battersea-based Delight FM,
pirate radio has traditionally been a London phenomenon. Two years old,
Soundz is one of a new breed of suburban pirates, uncomfortable with the
gangster posturing and occasional bursts of violence that have become associated
with illegal radio in the capital. Although Soundz reaches London, the
majority of its audience comes from the suburbs: Essex, Surrey, Kent and
Hertfordshire. The “staff” of Soundz FM are curiously prudish. Swearing
is banned on air. “Some stations use filthy language, you know,” bridles
one DJ indignantly. “They’re asking to be taken off the air, no question.”


    “In London
they want that rude boy attitude,” says Stealth. “In certain parts of north-west
London… well, there’s a pirate station there that’s actually based in
a crack den, so that gives you an idea of some of them. But we’re not all
like that. We’re referred to as polite people from Bexley. We’re a friendly,
community station. We’re from the suburbs, we don’t bother trying to get
non-suburb listeners.”


    There’s
a musical distinction as well, albeit one of those infinitesimal sub-generic
shifts that anyone not completely immersed in the dance music world has
no hope of understanding. DJ L-Dubs attempts to explain it to me. “Shady
garage”, he says, is to be avoided at all costs, whereas “happy garage”
attracts “uplifting people who want to be uplifted”. The latter, he informs
me, is what Soundz FM is all about. I nod knowledgeably, but have no idea
what he is talking about.


    Equally
bewildering is the station’s co-founder, Master Control. Portly and middle-aged,
he cuts an incongruous figure amid the sportswear-clad teens. He was a
teenager himself when he first got involved with pirate radio. Now it has
completely taken over his life. During the week he makes “rigs” – radio
transmitters – that he sells to other stations. At the weekends he careers
around the Essex countryside, checking Soundz’s aerial, ensuring that the
signal is not causing interference to television or the emergency services.
Ask him what the appeal of pirate radio is and he looks completely mystified.
“I don’t know. I find it… I don’t know. I can’t really do anything else.
It’s the only thing in my life that I can do. I make rigs that work, I
do it properly. You get a sense of achievement, I suppose.”

    He’s
not alone in his inability to explain the compulsion to break the law on
a weekly basis, endure the endless hassle and expense of having your transmitter
impounded by the Radiocommunications Agency (or stolen by a rival station)
and risk unlimited fines and two years in prison. There’s certainly no
financial reward – the DJs pay a £10 weekly subscription to play
on the station, which goes towards running costs – and little chance of
celebrity. While some of the Soundz staff clearly see the station as a
means of breaking through, circumventing the politburo of ageing celebrity
DJs who control the dance scene, it is statistically unlikely that they
will. For every So Solid Crew, who have converted their pirate notoriety
into a more tangible form of celebrity, there are scores of DJs beavering
away in semi-obscurity: Dom Da Bom, Miss Giggles, Lukozade, DJ Bangers,
the hopefully named Aylesbury Allstars.


    It’s
peculiar, but then pirate radio has always been a bit peculiar. By definition
it exists outside the mainstream, attracting strange characters who don’t
really fit in anywhere else. As befits a criminal enterprise, it regularly
changes its identity. It began in 1964, the brainchild of Irish businessman
Ronan O’Rahilly, who noted that, in the heyday of Beatlemania, the BBC
Light Programme was broadcasting only two hours of pop music a week. Rahilly’s
Radio Caroline and its competitor Radio London invented pop radio as we
know it today. By 1967, however, the Marine Broadcasting Offences Act had
made the seafaring stations illegal, and Radio 1 had swiped both the pirates’
all-pop     format and their biggest DJs: Tony Blackburn,
Dave Lee Travis, Kenny Everett and John Peel.


    Deprived
of both legality and raison d’etre, pirate radio went into decline. By
the 70s, it was the domain of crackpots: Radio Nordsee featured a DJ called
Spangles Muldoon and broadcast virulent Tory propaganda during the 1970
general election. Radio Enoch, meanwhile, offered military music and plummy
voices denouncing immigration.


    It took
the rise of dance music to revive the pirates’ fortunes. Britain’s underground
soul and reggae scenes grew throughout the 70s, but were largely ignored
by Radio 1 or the new commercial stations. Pirates stepped in to fill the
void. Invicta, Radio Free London, Solar, Horizon and LWR eschewed fishing
trawlers and set up in the centre of London, broadcasting urban music in
an urban setting. When acid house was effectively banned from Radio 1 after
1988’s tabloid drug exposés, a host of new pirates sprung up: Centreforce,
Sunrise and Fantasy among them. It set a pattern that has repeated ever
since, in which the pirate stations are the scourge of the authorities
and a vital source of new music for the record industry.


    When
a new dance genre emerges – hardcore, drum’n’bass, and most recently UK
garage – a new wave of pirates appear, devoted to the new sound. Virtually
every garage or drum’n’bass tune that makes the national chart will have
been played on a pirate station first. Occasionally, a pirate DJ finds
himself at the helm of a hit. Flex FM’s DJ Dee Kline went to number 11
in 2000 with I Don’t Smoke, a garage record that sampled Jim Davidson doing
his comedy West Indian voice.

    Radio
1 repeated the trick it pulled off in 1967, luring DJs Pete Tong and Tim
Westwood from LWR, Gilles Peterson from Horizon and the Dreem Teem from
Blackbeard Radio. But this time the pirates, attracted by the relatively
low cost of setting up a station (estimated by Stealth at around £2,500),
won’t die away. In 1991, the RA carried out 475 operations against pirate
stations. Last year, it carried out 1,438. London’s airwaves are currently
jammed with a startling array of illicit stations. At the weekend, you
can hear anything from the pre-pubescent children of So Solid’s Dan Da
Man spinning garage on Delight to Ghanian gospel music courtesy of WBLS’s
improbably named DJ Rabbi.


    Stations
rise and fall with dizzying frequency – the victims of internal feuding,
a lack of suitable studio locations and raids by the DTI’s Radiocommunications
Agency – but there is always someone to replace them. So far this year,
the RA has raided 179 pirate stations in London. Most went straight back
on the air. As the RA dolefully admits: “There’s no easy victory or cure
for pirate radio. You take them down, they put them up again. You can’t
be sure people won’t re-offend. You’re just dealing with a specific complaint
at a specific time.”


    According
to Stealth, central London’s airwaves are so overcrowded that the suburbs
are the best option for a new station. “We’re doing it as a hobby. There
are too many stations in London and they’re all doing it for money. When
it turns into a money market, you get people using dodgy rigs, employing
thick cement mixers to install the equipment.” Meanwhile, he says, pirate
stations are springing up in locations that make Bexley look like a teeming
metropolis: Weymouth, Newquay, Telford, Ludlow, Swindon.


    To prove
the point, Stealth suggests a visit to his friend’s station, Y2K Kent,
which broadcasts from Margate. The next weekend, we rendezvous in a lay-by
near the Blackwall Tunnel. Stealth arrives in a small hatchback, with a
large skull and crossbones flag sticking out of the sunroof.


    In Margate
I am introduced to Y2K’s founder, a stocky 20-year-old who works for a
drainage company by day and who calls himself Fraudster. Fraudster has
been involved in pirate radio since he was 13. He originally DJed around
London before realising the pirate scene was simply too crowded there.
“We realised we needed to go somewhere else,” he says, “so we packed everything
into the car and just started to drive out of London, through the Blackwall
tunnel. This was the first place we got to.”


    Fraudster
says that in its year of existence, Y2K Kent has been successful enough
to attract complaints from the local commercial radio station. “They said
we nicked 1,000 of their listeners, but they play music for over-30s, so
I don’t see how that works.” Nevertheless, it is a modest set-up, located
in the box room of a student house. The room is so tiny that three people
constitute a life-threatening crush. DJs and associates crowd outside,
peering in. It is extremely hot, and the unmistakable stench of bloke wafts
down the stairs. The windows must be kept shut, lest anyone notices the
noise and contacts the RA. “You have to be careful in Margate,” says Fraudster,
“because there’s no crime, the police have got nothing to do. The front
page of the local paper is ‘man steals pork pie from Tesco’s’.”

    On the
floor, an electric fan cools a tangle of wires and electronic boxes, apparently
assembled to plans by Heath Robinson. On our arrival, it breaks down. “Hold
tight the massive,” says the MC, “as we sort it out inside the place.”


    Stealth
immediately springs into action. “You need a graphic on the mixer,” he
suggests. “I need another studio,” groans Fraudster, looking harassed.
In fact, Fraudster spends most of my visit looking harassed. His mobile
phone rings constantly, not with shout outs or requests, but irate calls
from his girlfriend, for whom the novelty of pirate radio has clearly long
worn off. “I sometimes wonder why I do this,” Fraudster admits. “I spend
my whole week cleaning out shitty drains, then spend all weekend doing
this. I’m not in it to earn anything. I suppose it’s for the joy of the
music.”


    The RA’s
spokesman argues that “people suffer as a result of pirate radio. They
tune into a station they want to listen to, and find something else blocking
it. I take their calls, and they’re absolutely furious. If you live nearby
they create a noise nuisance. They’re anti-social.”


    You take
his point – you wouldn’t want to live next door to an illegal radio station,
pumping out UK garage or drum’n’bass from Friday evening to Monday morning.
However, it’s hard not to be impressed by the determined attitude of the
pirates. There is little fame and less cash in their world of box bedrooms
and converted garages.


    Yet still
they doggedly carry on, buying new rigs, finding new studios, skulking
about in search of suitable transmitter sites. Although most of them are
far too young to remember the Sex Pistols, there’s something resolutely
punk about theirattitude: confronted with a dance scene that has slid into
mundane irrelevance, they have decided to do something for themselves.
Their ambitions are not commercially driven, yet they extend far beyond
anti-authoritarian posturing. At Soundz, there’s a lot of talk about digital
radio. When legal stations switch to digital transmission, they live in
hope that the RA will leave the obsolete FM band to them. Soundz even has
aspirations beyond playing music. “We run a show between 8pm and 12am where
we do comedy,” says Stealth, proudly. “It’s absolute chaos. We had a bloke
out with a microphone doing wind ups on people in McDonald’s in Lakeside
shopping centre, and on drivers at the Dartford tunnel. You’d crease up
if you heard it.” A little corner of pirate radio, it seems, will be forever
DLT.


    A few
weeks after my visit, Stealth telephones. Both Soundz FM and Y2K Kent have
gone off the air. Soundz has collapsed due to internal disagreements: Stealth
and Master Control have fallen out over music policy. Y2K Kent, meanwhile,
was raided by the RA, who found not only their rig, but two station staff
standing next to it. For the first time, Stealth sounds bleak about the
future of pirate radio: “Fines are going up, more stations are getting
raided, things are getting tighter all the time. They’re really turning
up the heat.”

    But it’s
still not hot enough to discourage Stealth and Fraudster. Within weeks,
both are back in business with new stations, Fraudster with a station called
Essence 105.1 FM, Stealth with Impact 99.7 FM. He has moved out of the
garage and set up a studio in an industrial estate. And he has finally
nailed pirate radio’s unique appeal. “The buzz is when you’re driving down
your local high street and you hear it playing out of someone else’s radio,
or you hear people talking about it on the bus,” he says. “You realise
you’re having an effect. If it was going nowhere, you’d soon lose interest.”