Amazing fertilizer facts

April 30th, 2008

Via the Foreign Policy Blog:

  • It takes five years to get a phosphate (fertilizer) plant up and running
  • Ammonia costs have tripled over the past decade
  • Sulphur costs have gone from $55 to $450 in the past year
  • Ocean shipping costs have gone from $35 to $100
  • Morocco, “the Saudi Arabia of phosphate,” has raised phosphate prices from $55 to $250 a ton. They’re headed for $400 a ton
  • China has imposed a 135 percent export tax on fertilizer
  • The Indian government will dole out more on fertilizer subsidies in 2008 than it spends on its military

It could have been worse…

April 30th, 2008

I knew there was a reason why I subscribe to the British Psychological Society research digest blog:

New research suggests that comparing a current situation with an even worse atrocity comes with a price - it desensitises our judgment of future moral violations.

That’s the conclusion of a study that examined the cost of thinking “it would have been even worse under Saddam”.

Setting the record straight

April 30th, 2008

Gershom Gorenberg gets better and better:

Just in case I’m ever struck by the mad thought of running for political office in Israel, I’d like to set the record straight: I don’t agree with the prophet Isaiah’s political views. He doesn’t speak for me. No way.

It’s true that I’ve enjoyed some of his sermons, and I took some comfort from the spiritual stuff, like that vision of heaven, with the six-winged creatures praising God. But I attended to Isaiah strictly for the religion, not for the politics. I mean, I’m a patriotic Israeli (even if my lapel pin got lost in the wash, honestly).

I’m pretty sure I wasn’t even there the day he said,

Ah, sinful nation!
People laden with iniquity!
Brood of evildoers!
Depraved children!
They have forsaken the Lord,
spurned the Holy One of Israel,
Turned their backs on Him!

but if I was there, I slept through the sermon. Otherwise, I would have told him that I might just run for office, and therefore I cannot tolerate him cursing my country.

Fieldwork advice

April 30th, 2008

Lovely, terse advice aimed at cultural anthropologists, but certainly of use to everyone who wants to be an informed observer of the world:

Note the titles for sale in the business section of the airport bookstore.