#California Farm Bureau
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Migrant Farm Workers Face Uncertainty Amid Immigration Concerns
As the U.S. prepares for changes in immigration policy under the incoming administration, the situation for migrant farm workers, particularly in agricultural hubs like California’s Central Valley, is becoming increasingly alarming. The California Farm Bureau has voiced concerns that a growing climate of fear regarding deportation is taking a toll on these essential laborers. Many migrant…
#agricultural sector#California Central Valley#California Farm Bureau#crop harvests#deportation fears#economic impact#emotional toll#farm productivity#immigrant labor#Immigration#labor supply#legal status#mass deportations#migrant farm workers#President Trump#worker rights
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Actually the English started doing it in the US have you ever taken a look at New Jersey and Pennsylvania? Actually Ohio too so many forests got turned into corn fields, and also the Western US is dependent on water that doesn't exist the Colorado River has nearly run dry a few years but we do still have some old big Growth forests left and a shitton of mature forest
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Actually your society is the freaks for shooting everything that moves and burning half your "nature reserves" every year so that upperclass dandies can eat leaded pheasant. North Americans are the well adjusted ones here, your country has become a desolate suburban lawn in island form
#colorado river#us agriculture#agriculture#US farming#america#california#pennsylvania#forestry#bureau of land management#department of reclamation#us politics#environmentalism
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Excerpt from this story from Truthout:
Rural La Paz County, Arizona, positioned on the Colorado River across from California, is at the center of a growing fight over water in the American Southwest. At the heart of the battle is a question: Should water be treated as a human right, to be allocated by governments with the priority of sustaining life? Or is it a commodity to be bought, sold and invested in for the greatest profits?
As the West suffers its worst megadrought in 1,200 years, investors have increasingly eyed water as a valuable asset and a resource to be exploited. For years, investment firms have bought up farmland throughout the Southwest, drilling to new depths for their water-hungry crops and causing nearby wells to run dry. Now, new players have entered the scene: “Water management companies” are purchasing up thousands of acres of farmland, with the intention of selling the water rights at a profit to cities and suburbs elsewhere in the state. Some argue that treating water as a commodity can efficiently get it where it is needed most. But others fear that water markets open the door to profiteering and hoarding, leaving poorer communities in the dust.
In 2013 and 2014, GSC Farm, a subsidiary of a water management company called Greenstone Resource Partners, which is backed by MassMutual, bought nearly 500 acres of farmland in Cibola, a tiny town in Arizona’s La Paz County, for just under $10 million. The farmland comes with the rights to more than 2,000 acre-feet of Colorado River water a year. (An acre-foot is the amount of water it takes to cover one acre with one foot of water.) Then in 2018, Greenstone sold the water rights, in perpetuity, to Queen Creek, a rapidly growing suburb of Phoenix nearly 200 miles away, for $24 million.
The transfer marked the first time a water management company sold Colorado River water rights. La Paz and two other counties sued to block the transfer, arguing that the Bureau of Reclamation, the federal agency that oversees water resource management, had conducted an insufficient environmental review before signing off. The counties’ request for a preliminary injunction was denied in April 2023 by a federal judge, and three months later the water began flowing down the Central Arizona Project, a 336-mile canal. Then, the judge seemingly backtracked in February 2024, ordering a more thorough environmental review.
“In the meantime, they’re still allowing for the water to flow, which we argued should have been stopped completely until the complete environmental studies have been done,” Holly Irwin, a La Paz County supervisor, told Truthout. “It’s really frustrating, not only for myself, but for the other leaders and elected officials in what we refer to as the river communities.”
The ultimate results of the lawsuit could affect how easily water management companies are able to transfer river water rights for profit in the future.
“I’ve had people already contacting me, asking, ‘Hey, look, I’m looking to buy this piece of property. It’s got water rights. Can it be transferred off the Colorado River?’” said Irwin. “Which is what we knew was going to happen. They just opened up Pandora’s box.”
Companies like Greenstone are betting that the price of water will increase. Western states generally allocate water through a “prior appropriation” policy of “first in time, first in right.” In times of shortage, those with the most senior water claims — often farmers and ranchers whose ancestors claimed Native land — are allotted their full share of water first. Now, companies like Greenstone are lining up to buy those increasingly valuable water rights.
The Colorado River provides drinking water to 40 million people across seven U.S. states, two Mexican states, and multiple tribal lands. Since 1922, its water has been allocated among the states through a framework created by the Colorado River Compact. But river volume has decreased 20 percent since the beginning of the century, leading to tense renegotiations, with the three “lower basin” states — California, Arizona and Nevada — agreeing to reduce their water shares.
Compared to Colorado River water, groundwater tends to be less regulated. Major investment banks have spent hundreds of millions buying up farms with claims to the groundwater beneath them — part of a larger movement by investors into physical assets like lumber, buildings and infrastructure.
Once pumped, groundwater aquifers in warm, dry places can take thousands of years to replenish. In an effort to conserve water basins, Arizona passed the 1980 Groundwater Management Act, heavily restricting groundwater pumping in several urban “active-management areas” (AMAs), including the Phoenix and Tucson areas. It also mandated that developers obtain a state Certificate of Assured Water Supply, demonstrating their new projects have enough water for 100 years. The law is credited as a success for protecting water levels in urban areas. But its lack of restrictions on groundwater removal from rural basins has become a concern as the state population swells and rural wells run dry.
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News from the U.S. Department of Labor, "Federal Stop-Order on Indio Farmer" (USDL-IX-59S56), San Francisco, August 3, 1959.
Record Group 174: General Records of the Department of LaborSeries: Records Relating to the Mexican Labor ("Bracero") ProgramFile Unit: Mexican Labor Program, General Correspondence
NEWS from the U. S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
James P. Mitchell, Secretary
CONTACT: Tor Torland, Info Officer
630 Sansome Street, San Francisco
YUkon 6-3111, Ext. 647
[handwritten] Mr Robertson
File
Mexican Program [/handwritten]
[stamp] RECEIVED
AUG 4 1959
REGIONAL ATTORNEY
SAN FRANCISCO [/stamp]
FEDERAL STOP-ORDER ON INDIO FARMER
SAN FRANCISCO, August 3: Joseph Munoz, a member of the Coachella Valley Farmers Association in Indio, has been refused further authorization to employ Mexican farm workers in a decision made public today by the U.S. Department of Labor.
Under the terms of public law 78 and the international agreement between the governments of the U.S. and Mexico, Mexican nationals may be imported to work on our farms only if it has been determined by authorities that there are not enough American workers in a specific area to fill farm-labor needs there.
Munoz was found to be using Mexican nationals to sort tomatoes in his packing shed despite repeated warnings by the U. S. Labor Department and the California Department of Employment that American workers were available for the jobs.
Glenn E. Brockway, regional director of the Labor Department's employment security bureau, issued his decision in a letter to the Coachella Valley Farmers Association. Brockway said, in part:
"All authorizations issued to the Coachella Valley Farmers Association to contract Mexican national workers are hereby revoked with respect to the employment of Mexican national workers by the said Joseph Munoz."
The federal stop-order also specified that because of Munoz's "repeated failure to give preference in employment of United States domestic workers", no authorizations would be granted him in future to use Mexican nationals.
The move came as part of the U.S. Labor Department's continuing policy of strictly policing the foreign-labor importation program so as to ensure first preference for farm jobs to American citizens.
#####
USDL-IX-59S56
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It sounds weird to say that carrots are having a moment, but social media has catapulted the humble root to a status resembling stardom. Anecdotal evidence suggests online carrot recipes trail in popularity only those for potatoes and brussels sprouts among vegetables, and Pinterest numbers support that: recipe searches for honey balsamic carrots on the platform are up 75% this year, while queries for roasted parmesan carrots skyrocketed 700%. Fresh carrots are an expanding $1.4 billion U.S. market, andAmericans are expected to consume 100 million pounds this Thanksgiving — roughly five ounces for every human being in the country.
At least 60% of those carrots are produced by just two companies, Bolthouse and Grimmway, both of which were acquired by buyout firms, in 2019 and 2020 respectively.
“There’s only two sources,” Adam Waglay, cofounder and co-CEO of Bolthouse owner Butterfly Equity, told Forbes. “We joke around — it’s kind of like the OPEC of carrots.”
Cartels are less funny for neighbors of the two producers in Southern California’s Cuyama Valley, who are calling for a boycott of Big Carrot over the amount of water their farms are sucking out of the ground. In 2022, Bolthouse and Grimmway together were responsible for 67%, or 9.6 billion gallons, of the area’s total water use. Local residents said they expect their wells to dry up if the carrot farms continue to use as much water as they do — Grimmway CEO Jeff Huckaby told Forbes his company has already reduced the amount of acreage it farms — and the two carrot producers have joined forces to defend their thirst in court. That worries local residents, who say they lack the deep pockets needed to wage a prolonged legal battle.
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Cattle rancher Jake Furstenfeld places a boycott sign in New Cuyama, California in September.Marcio Jose Sanchez/AP Photo
Water fights like this can take years to resolve, and often become a way to delay cutbacks, Karrigan Bork, a professor at the University of California, Davis School of Law, told Forbes. “You see these rights again and again get trimmed back by the state or by courts,” Bork said. “In some cases, your savvy water users recognize that, and for them, just delaying that trimming back is a success, and the longer they can do that, the happier they will be.”
Price Concerns
Waglay uses the word “duopoly” to describe the two companies. Such market consolidationoften leads to higher prices, and the government has for years used increased consumer prices as an indicator of possible unfair competition. The U.S. Department of Agriculture declined to comment on any antitrust issues.
Since 2019, carrot producer prices have increased more than 40%, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, outpacing the 22% inflation in the U.S. economy.
Carrot Top
Prices are near their highest since 2019, when Bolthouse was acquired by a private equity firm. Grimmway changed hands a year later.
Huckaby, the Grimmway CEO, told Forbes that the costs of a number of inputs have gone up, too. Packaging, fertilizer and fuel prices have all risen at a higher rate than inflation, he said, and California’s minimum wage has increased 27% since 2018. At $15 an hour, it’s the second-highest in the country.
Still, the carrot business has been a lucrative play. Total U.S. production value has increased 34% since 2019.
Duopoly Origins
Bolthouse, founded in 1915 in Grant, Michigan, started selling carrots packed in cellophane bags in 1959. In the 1970s and 1980s, production was centered around Bakersfield, California. After Bakersfield farmer Mike Yurosek invented “baby carrots” in 1986, consumption soared.
In the 1990s, Bolthouse ballooned into the largest carrot operator, reportedly shipping some 80% of California’s carrots. It amounted to half the U.S. carrot market in 1992, followed by Grimmway, founded by brothers Bob and Rod Grimm in 1969, and Yurosek’s family-owned outfit. Grimmway eventually bought out Mike Yurosek & Son. The carrot crop is now the tenth-biggest commodity in California, where one-third of America’s vegetables are grown.
Today, the industry’s growth could be limited by dwindling water supplies in the drought-prone Cuyama Valley, 150 miles northwest of Los Angeles and 90 miles west of Bakersfield. But the companies behind the duopoly aren’t giving up without a fight.
Both businesses, which own their own manufacturing, are hitting a similar point in their ownership lifecycles. Private equity-backed businesses typically change hands every three to five years. In 2019, Butterfly Equity acquired Bolthouse from publicly traded Campbell Soup for $510 million in cash. A year later, Grimmway was acquired by Teays River Investments, a Zionsville, Indiana-based investment firm, for an undisclosed amount. That means both businesses are in the sweet spot of what most investors consider the hot time to unload an investment or take it public.
Los Angeles, California-based Butterfly has sold only one of its investments, an organic protein company called Orgain, acquired by Nestle Health Science in February 2022 after two years of Butterfly ownership. Grimmway is Teays River’s only current investment after exiting two others in 2019 and 2013. Teays River held those investments for eight years and one year, respectively.
Grimmway’s owner, which according to Pitchbook has $1.38 billion in assets under management, is backed by pension funds including the public employees of the states of Maine and Oregon, Texas teachers, the New York state Teamsters union and the Producer-Writers Guild of America.
Butterfly Equity, by comparison, has $4 billion in assets under management and is backed byexecutives of private equity giant KKR, where Waglay worked for eight years. The firm has done eight deals in the eight years since it launched. Butterfly also owns America’s largest striped bass farm, the largest free-range egg company, an avocado oil maker that controls 60% of the market, and a large whey protein manufacturer.
Water Rights
Bolthouse and Grimmway started working with each other in a way that competitors rarely do. They filed a lawsuit together in 2021 in Kern County, California to ask a court to decide how to split up the water of New Cuyama, where they farm.
What’s happening in Cuyama Valley is an example of the kinds of water fights that are surfacing across California. Farmers of a variety of crops there have depended on irrigation for decades. Those years of pumping water and spraying it over crops through sprinklers or complex drip irrigation systems have had drastic implications, including threats of land sinking, a receding water table that makes it tougher to dig wells and the threat of some of them drying out.
That’s why water use around New Cuyama could get reduced by two-thirds over the next two decades. To bring the region back to a sustainable level by 2040, water cuts of 5% started this year and will continue each year going forward. The Cuyama basin currently has an annual water deficit of more than 8 billion gallons, and much of the area’s carrot farmland may have to be taken out of production. Some experts say Bolthouse and Grimmway would have to reduce their water consumption by about double what the city of Santa Barbara, California uses annually.
But water-efficient sprinklers can only save so much. The carrot companies’ lawsuit has forced area farmers, ranchers, residents and even the area’s public school to rack up legal bills. In response, a coalition of locals launched a boycott of carrots in July. The boycott’s goals: for the companies to drop the lawsuit, pay all legal fees and to reduce the amount of water they pump. One flyer the boycotters distributed suggests a Thanksgiving recipe for brussels sprouts instead.
Both Bolthouse and Grimmway lease farmland rather than own it. They recently withdrew from the lawsuit, though the companies that own the farmland are still in it, and what the judge decides will dictate how much the companies are able to farm there in the future.
Expanding Elsewhere
Huckaby said the carrot boycott has taken aim at Grimmway and Bolthouse because they’re easy targets. Only 3,700 of the 13,000 acres that Grimmway leases in the Cuyama Valley are being farmed, according to Huckaby. “We cut way back and we cut way back and we cut back and no one else did,” he said.
The companies may have to find new farmland to grow carrots. The average American now eats roughly seven pounds of the fresh vegetable every year, with consumption up 2% so far in 2023, according to NielsenIQ.
Grimmway has already expanded its farming operations outside of California with facilities in Florida, Washington and other states.
Butterfly’s Waglay doesn’t deny that water is one of the biggest barriers that his investment in Bolthouse faces. “Water challenges,” he said with a sigh. “This asset has great access to water, but it’s going to get worse and worse, and you need to be planning for that and trying to work on ways to minimize that. That’ll be a long-term challenge.”
California water fights often result in residents and smaller business owners getting “outgunned in the courts by large commercial actors,” Pomona College environmental analysis and politics professor Heather Williams, an expert on water issues, told Forbes. The lawsuit is among the first of many, she said.
“It’s put into motion a race to the basin — pumping as much as you can, and putting that into production,” Williams said. “Water is property in California. It’s what a rational actor acting on behalf of investors is going to do. If they’re playing this game, they’ve got to play hard.”
Grimmway and Bolthouse can move on, said Williams, unlike most of the residents in New Cuyama. “These are their homes, their small farms. If the well goes dry, it’s worth basically nothing,” she said. “They can’t pay lawyers for ten years of litigation.”
#article#forbes#private equity#boycott#farms#california#water rights#carrots#recall#grimmway farms#bolthouse farms
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Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday afternoon signed a bill that will prevent businesses from requiring employees to attend “captive audience” meetings, or mandatory workplace meetings with religious with political messaging — particularly, anti-union messaging.
State Sen. Aisha Wahab, D-Silicon Valley, introduced the bill in 2023, but requested it be held in the Assembly Committee on Appropriations “to ensure the final legislation was legally sound,” she said in a statement Friday. She reintroduced it in June, and it received broad support among her fellow Democrats. Republicans opposed the bill, along with business and industry groups such as the California Farm Bureau, Housing Contractors of California, United Contractors and the California Chamber of Commerce.
The bill “is about fairness and equity in the workplace,” Wahab said in the statement. “Captive audience meetings disrupt the balance of power by forcing workers to attend meetings unrelated to their jobs, often under threat of retaliation … This bill ensures employees can focus on their work without coercion, creating a fairer and more respectful environment.”
When Wahab’s bill goes into effect in January 2025, the California Labor Commissioner will have the authority to fine an employer $500 for “subjecting, or threatening to subject, an employee to discharge, discrimination, retaliation, or any other adverse action” if the employee does not attend a captive audience meeting.
Captive audience meetings often require employees to hear anti-union messages.
“For far too long, employers have used the power they have over workers to hold them hostage in meetings aimed at imposing political, religious, or even anti-union views that don’t align with workers’ beliefs,” said Tia Orr, executive director of SEIU California, in a written statement.
The bill “empowers workers to stand their ground with bosses and refuse to participate in these coercive meetings without fear of retaliation. SEIU members thank Governor Newsom for standing up against coercion in the workplace and Senator Wahab for championing this necessary worker protection.”
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President Donald Trump is directing the Army Corps of Engineers to increase water flow from reservoirs in California's Central Valley — and the results could be catastrophic for farmers, Politico reported.
Trump gave the order based on his disputed idea that catastrophic fires in Los Angeles earlier this month were a result of water mismanagement, where water was either being restricted or dumped into the Pacific Ocean. State officials in California have repeatedly debunked his claims. Instead, they said electricity and logistics issues, combined with extremely strong winds that blew ashes faster than firefighters could contain them, posed more problems than water availability.
But that didn't stop Trump from posting to Truth Social that his order has fixed California's problems.
. . .
In the area, local officials expressed alarm at Trump's directive and frantically urged the Army Corps of Engineers to prevent a catastrophic surge that could have flooded local communities and farmland."
Local officials had to talk the Army Corps of Engineers down after it abruptly alerted them Thursday afternoon it was about to increase flows from two reservoirs to maximum capacity," reported Camille von Kaenel and Annie Snider. These officials "scrambled to move equipment and warn farms about possible flooding, said Victor Hernandez, who oversees water management on one of the rivers, the Kaweah in Tulare County. He said the Corps gave him one hour notice on Thursday." He added, “I’ve been here 25 years, and I’ve never been given notice that quick. That was alarming and scary.”
One former senior Bureau of Reclamation official told Politico, “Something really bad could happen because of their nonsensical approach. Floods are real. This isn’t playing around with a software company.”
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Holidays 12.10
Holidays
Bob Dylan Day (Minnesota)
Chief Red Cloud Day
Dewey Decimal System Day
Flag Day (Guinea)
Flipadelphia (from “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia”)
Grub-Hoe Day (French Republic)
Human Rights Day (UN)
International Animal Rights Day
International Human Rights Day (Namibia)
Jane Addams Day
Mari Alphabet Day
Merlinpeen (Festival of Mouth Pleasure from Secret Santa; Verdkianism; on “30 Rock”)
Namibian Women’s Day (Namibia)
National Cancel Caillou Day
National Corey Day
National Day of the Clown
National Derek Day
Nobeldagen (a.k.a. Alfred Nobel Day; Sweden)
Nobel Prize Day
Sister-Friend Day
Victory Day (Iraq)
Whirling Dervishes Festival begins [thru 17th]
Women’s Day (Namibia)
Women’s Rights Day (Wyoming)
World Digital Detox Day
World Football Day
World Human Rights Day (UN)
World TRAP Awareness Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Do Something Wild and Crazy with Velveeta Day
International Tokaji Aszú Day
National Lager Day
National Pancetta Day
Suspended Coffee Day
Terra Madre Day (Slow Food)
Independence & Related Days
Constitution Day (Thailand)
Mississippi Statehood Day (#20; 1817)
Tortuga (Declared; 2021) [unrecognized]
2nd Tuesday in December
National Belgian Waffles Day (Belgium) [2nd Tuesday]
Table Tennis Tuesday [2nd Tuesday of Each Month]
Taco Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Target Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Tater Tot Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Tomato Tuesday [2nd Tuesday of Each Month]
Trivia Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Two For Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Weekly Holidays beginning December 10 (2nd Full Week of December)
Human Rights Week (thru 12.17)
National Groundwater Awareness Week (thru 12.12)
Festivals Beginning December 10, 2024
The Bracebridge Dinner (Yosemite National Park, California) [thru 12.23]
Great Lakes Fruit, Vegetable & Farm Market Expo (Grand Rapids, Michigan) [thru 12.12]
Michigan Greenhouse Growers Expo (Grand Rapids, Michigan) [thru 12.12]
Nebraska AG Expo (Lincoln, Nebraska) [thru 12.12]
Nobel Prize Award Ceremony (Stockholm, Sweden & Norway (the Nobel Peace Prize))
Stalker International Human Rights Film Festival (Moscow, Russia) [thru 12.15]
Western Alfalfa & Forage Symposium (Sparks, Nevada) [thru 12.12]
Feast Days
Adriaen van Ostade (Artology)
Behnam, Sarah, and the Forty Martyrs (Syriac Orthodox Church)
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Cornelia Funke (Writerism)
Emily Dickinson (Writerism)
Eulalia of Mérida (Christian; Saint)
Festival for the Souls of Dead Whales (Inuit)
Giovanni Gioseffo dal Sole (Artology)
Greta Kempton (Artology)
Hanukkah Day #3 (Judaism) [thru Dec. 15th]
International Human Rights Day (Pastafarian)
Karl Barth (Episcopal Church USA)
Llys Don (Celtic Book of Days)
Lux Mundi (Light of the World; Roman Goddess of Liberty)
Melchiades, Pope (Christian; Saint)
Miltiades (Christian; Saint)
Purification Rites begin (Ancient Inuit; Everyday Wicca)
Rumer Godden (Writerism)
Sedna’s Day (Pagan)
Thomas Merton (Episcopal Church USA)
Tidy Up Day (Starza Pagan Book of Days)
The Toves (Muppetism)
Translation of the Holy House of Loreto (Christian)
Vieta (Positivist; Saint)
Zinaida Serebriakova (Artology)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Fatal Day (Pagan) [24 of 24]
Tomobiki (友引 Japan) [Good luck all day, except at noon.]
Premieres
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain (Novel; 1884)
Bedazzled (Film; 1967)
Bedknob and Broomstick, by Mary Norton (Novel; 1943)
Being the Ricardos (Film; 2021)
Big Fish (Film; 2003)
The Billy Goat’s Whiskers, featuring Farmer Al Alfa (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1937)
Boris Bashes a Box or The Flat Chest (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S5, Ep. 237; 1963)
The Cider House Rules (Film; 1999)
Counterpart (TV Series; 2017)
A Day at the Races, by Queen (Album; 1976)
Dexter’s Laboratory: Ego Trip (Hanna-Barbera Animated TV Film; 1999)
Donald’s Ostrich (Disney Cartoon; 1937)
The Ethics of Ambiguity, by Simone de Beauvoir (Philosophy Book; 1947)
The Fellowship of the Ring (Film; 2001) [Lord of the Rings #1]
Fernando, by ABBA (Song; 1975)
The Fighter (Film; 2010)
48 Hrs. (Film; 1982)
Gandhi (Film; 1982)
The Glenn Miller Story (Film; 1953)
Gopher Spinach (Fleischer/Famous Popeye Cartoon; 1954)
The Green Mile (Film; 1999)
Guided Muscle (WB LT Cartoon; 1955)
Guys and Dolls, by Damon Runyon (Short Stories; 1932)
A Horse Tale (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Cartoon; 1928)
The Hour of the Star, by Clarice Lispector (Novel; 1977)
Islands in the Stream, by Ernest Hemingway (Novel; 1970)
The Last Detail (Film; 1973)
Lawrence of Arabia (Film; 1962)
The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (Film; 2004)
Mood Indigo, recorded by Duke Ellington and His Orchestra (Song; 1930)
A New Villain, Parts 1 & 2 (Underdog Cartoon, S3, Eps. 25 & 26; 1967)
Ocean’s Twelve (Film; 2004)
One, Two, Three, Gone! Or I’ve Got Plenty of Nothing (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S5, Ep. 238; 1963)
Santa’s Workshop (Silly Symphony Disney Cartoon; 1932)
Shoah (Documentary Film; 2010)
The Silver Sword, by Ian Serraillier (Novel; 1956)
Sleuth (Film; 1972)
Sophie’s Choice (Film; 1982)
Swiss Family Robinson (Film; 1960)
The Tempest (Film; 2010)
Tennis Chumps (Tom & Jerry Cartoon; 1949)
Three’s a Crowd (WB MM Cartoon; 1932)
The Tourist (Film; 2010)
Toyland Premiere (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Cartoon; 1934)
Wayne’s World 2 (Film; 1993)
West Side Story (Film; 2021)
Wings Over America (Live Album; 1976)
The Year Without a Santa Claus (Animated TV Special; 1974)
Today’s Name Days
Angelina, Bruno, Emma, Herbert (Austria)
Edmund, Gregor, Mauro (Croatia)
Julie (Czech Republic)
Judith (Denmark)
Juta, Juudit (Estonia)
Jutta (Finland)
Eulaire, Romaric (France)
Emma, Imma, Loretta (Germany)
Judit (Hungary)
Loreto (Italy)
Cera, Guna, Judīte, Sniedze (Latvia)
Eidimtas, Eularija, Ilma, Loreta (Lithuania)
Judit, Jytte (Norway)
Andrzej, Daniel, Judyta, Julia, Maria, Radzisława (Poland)
Ermoghen, Eugraf, Mina (Romania)
Radúz (Slovakia)
Eulalia, Loreto (Spain)
Malena, Malin (Sweden)
Angeline, Marian (Ukraine)
Emely, Emilee, Emilia, Emilie, Emily, Eula, Eulalia, Ula (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 345 of 2024; 21 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 2 of Week 50 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Ngetal (Reed) [Day 17 of 28]
Chinese: Month 11 (Bing-Zi), Day 10 (Wu-Shen)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 9 Kislev 5785
Islamic: 8 Jumada II 1446
J Cal: 15 Black; Oneday [15 of 30]
Julian: 27 November 2024
Moon: 72%: Waxing Gibbous
Positivist: 9 Bichat (13th Month) [Fermat / Wallis]
Runic Half Month: Jara (Year) [Day 4 of 15]
Season: Autumn or Fall (Day 79 of 90)
Week: 2nd Full Week of December
Zodiac: Sagittarius (Day 19 of 30)
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This day in history
On September 12 at 7pm, I'll be at Toronto's Another Story Bookshop with my new book The Internet Con: How to Seize the Means of Computation.
On September 14, I'm hosting the EFF Awards in San Francisco.
#15yrsago Canadian man changes name to beat no-fly list https://web.archive.org/web/20080917202919/https://www.cbc.ca/canada/montreal/story/2008/09/11/nofly-name.html
#15yrsago Michigan GOP attacks right-to-vote for the recently foreclosed https://web.archive.org/web/20080911193036/https://michiganmessenger.com/4076/lose-your-house-lose-your-vote
#15yrsago North Texas house burns because local authorities switched off hydrants “to fight terrorism” https://web.archive.org/web/20080913150058/https://www.wfaa.com/sharedcontent/dws/wfaa/latestnews/stories/wfaa080827_lj_hawes.1983f2d0.html
#15yrsago Terror cops hunt down ornamental castor bean plant https://web.archive.org/web/20080914224719/http://www.abc4.com/news/local/story.aspx?content_id=f2396fa3-c730-457d-825c-257c263a831c
#15yrsago Seaweed: Lush, hilarious oversized indie graphic novel https://memex.craphound.com/2008/09/11/seaweed-lush-hilarious-oversized-indie-graphic-novel/
#10yrsago NSA reveals that it illegally gathered thousands of phone records, to the appalled astonishment of FISA court judge https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/sep/10/nsa-violated-court-rules-data-documents
#10yrsago Revisiting Milgram’s obedience experiment: what did he actually prove? https://psmag.com/social-justice/electric-schlock-65377
#10yrsago This is the crypto standard that the NSA sabotaged https://archive.nytimes.com/bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/09/10/government-announces-steps-to-restore-confidence-on-encryption-standards/
#10yrsago How the feds asked Microsoft to backdoor BitLocker, their full-disk encryption tool https://mashable.com/archive/fbi-microsoft-bitlocker-backdoor
#5yrsago California Farm Bureau sells out farmers, hands John Deere a monopoly over tractor repair https://www.vice.com/en/article/kz5qgw/california-farm-bureau-john-deere-tractor-hacking-right-to-repair
#5yrsago 2018’s Blue Wave needs to take down Trump, and the right-wing establishment of the Democratic Party https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/sep/10/trump-neoliberal-democratic-party-america
#5yrsago History’s solutions to runaway inequality: warfare, revolution, state collapse and plague https://www.economist.com/open-future/2018/09/10/can-inequality-only-be-fixed-by-war-revolution-or-plague
#5yrsago The EU’s copyright plans will let anyone mass-censor the internet https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/09/how-eus-copyright-filters-will-make-it-trivial-anyone-censor-internet
#5yrsago Wanting It Badly Is Not Enough: Real Problems For Creators Deserve Real Solutions https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/09/wanting-it-badly-not-enough-real-problems-creators-deserve-real-solutions
#5yrsago Woman World: the hilarious man-free apocalypse we’ve all been waiting for https://memex.craphound.com/2018/09/11/woman-world-the-hilarious-man-free-apocalypse-weve-all-been-waiting-for/
#5yrsago What developers need to do to save the internet from the EU’s looming copyright disaster https://github.blog/2018-09-10-how-developers-can-defend-open-source-from-the-eu-copyright-proposal/
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Saturday, February 10, 2024 Canadian TV Listings (Times Eastern)
WHERE CAN I FIND THOSE PREMIERES?: DICKS: THE MUSICAL (Paramount+ Canada) LOVE & JANE (W Network) 8:00pm NINJA KAMUI (adult swim) 12:00am
WHAT IS NOT PREMIERING IN CANADA TONIGHT? THE SUPER BOWL SOULFUL CELEBRATION 25TH ANNIVERSARY (CBS Feed)
NEW TO AMAZON PRIME CANADA/CBC GEM/CRAVE TV/DISNEY + STAR/NETFLIX CANADA:
AMAZON PRIME CANADA THE LAST VOYAGE OF DECEMBER
NHL HOCKEY (SNOntario/SNEast/SNWest) 1:00pm: Flames vs. Islanders (SNPacific) 1:00pm: Canucks vs. Red Wings (TSN2) 1:00pm: Stars vs. Habs (SN/SN1) 3:30pm: Capitals vs. Bruins (SNWest/CityTV) 7:00pm: Penguins vs. Jets (CBC/SN) 7:00pm: Leafs vs. Sens (CBC/SN) 10:00pm: Oilers vs. Kings
NBA BASKETBALL (TSN4) 3:00pm: Thunder vs. Mavericks (TSN/TSN3/TSN4/TSN5) 7:30pm: Cavaliers vs. Raptors (SN Now) 7:30pm: Pacers vs. Knicks
TORONTO MARLIES HOCKEY (TSN2) 4:00pm: Laval vs. Toronto
W5 (CTV) 7:00pm: Customer (dis) Service: A look at businesses with poor response records to Better Business Bureau complaints.
MARRIED BY MISTAKE (CTV) 8:00pm: After losing her dream job, Riley gets drunk with Nate, and the next morning they find themselves married. With no job prospects on the horizon, Riley takes Nate up on his offer to move back to his hometown to help rescue his family's business.
SECRETS IN THE MARRIAGE (Lifetime Canada) 8:00pm: Framed for murder by her cheating husband, a newlywed must find a way to absolve herself of a crime she didn't commit while exposing her spouse before it's too late.
THE WEDDING IN THE HAMPTONS (Super Channel Heart & Home) 8:00pm: Jenna is a fashion designer who works for her friend's boutique, and their failing business was saved by an influencer. When Jenna comes to a Hamptons wedding, she is mistaken for that influencer, but she decides to go along to save the business.
761ST TANK BATTALION: THE ORIGINAL BLACK PANTHERS (History Canada) 9:00pm: The powerful story of the first all-Black tank unit to serve in combat in U.S. military history; under Gen. George Patten's command, the 761st battalion fought heroically throughout WWII.
LICORICE PIZZA (Crave) 9:00pm: Alana Kane and Gary Valentine grow up, run around and fall in love in California's San Fernando Valley in the 1970s.
THE LEGEND OF MOLLY JOHNSON (Super Channel Fuse) 9:00pm: On a remote homestead in the Snowy Mountains, a lonely bushwoman tries to run the family farm and raise her children while her husband is away.
A STAR IS BORN (2018) (CTV) 12:35am: Hard-drinking country music star Jackson Maine discovers -- and falls in love with -- a struggling but talented singer named Ally. As her career quickly takes off, Jackson starts to realize that his best days may be behind him.
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I will not give in to despair, and I won't let ya'll either. On top of the truly absurd degree of adoption of solar over the last few years thanks to a combination of natural scaling of production to meet demand, pressures from insurance industries that made new fossil fuel projects untenable, and herculean efforts by governments there's actually some more stuff coming down the line that's going to make decarbonizing even easier. First, renewable infrastructure like the SunZia Southwest Transmission Project is finally going forward. This project is the first large-scale efforts to build not only solar and wind farms, but to build the infrastructure to export their energy using High Voltage Direct Current (HVDC) transmission lines and a battery plant to store surplus power before transmission, in this case between New Mexico, Arizona, and California. This will mean that all that solar and wind energy can now work for baseload power needs, rather than only being useful during peak hours near the solar field/wind farm.
Next, Sold State Batteries are finally going to large scale production. Solid State batteries offer much higher energy density than your typical lithium batteries, while also being able to run 10 to 100x as many charge cycles before degrading. They're also potentially a lot cheaper because they can use a lot simpler materials in their construction. This is huge for renewable infrastructure, but for EVs it translates from a range of 200-320 miles on a single charge to 900-1000 miles on a single charge. They can also go from 0-80% in under 15 minutes. And now manufactures have finally got the production lines figured out. Large scale production is expected to be up and running in a couple years.
The last thing I'll mention is by far the most exciting: Deep Well Geothermal Energy. This technology has been in development hell forever, but its finally out of the lab and generating power in Utah, and the U.S. Department of Interior just gave the greenlight to expand the project. Deep Well Geothermal actually uses technology originally made for Fracking. No, not the part that causes earthquakes, but the GPS guided drill heads that dig deep and dig horizontally. This means they can get to the best source of geothermal heat basically anywhere, and drill a big heat sink under ground to get the most heat per project. A few more improvements and it will be possible to sink a geothermal well anywhere, and since geothermal is just another way to generate steam, you could hook the steam pipes that run under the earth to power plants that used to depend on steam pipes that ran to a coal or gas furnace. This is more exciting than nuclear fusion in terms of what it could mean for combating climate change.
We have already averted truly apocalyptic levels of global warming.
Yes, read that again. Let it sink in. This is what the science now says. We have already averted truly apocalyptic global warming.
To quote David Wallace-Wells, author of The Uninhabitable Earth, from his huge feature in the New York Times:
"Thanks to astonishing declines in the price of renewables, a truly global political mobilization, a clearer picture of the energy future and serious policy focus from world leaders, we have cut expected warming almost in half in just five years... The window of possible climate futures is narrowing, and as a result, we are getting a clearer sense of what’s to come: a new world, full of disruption but also billions of people, well past climate normal and yet mercifully short of true climate apocalypse." (New York Times, October 22, 2022. Unpaywalled here. Emphasis mine. And yes, this vision of the future is backed up by the current science on the issue, as he explains at length in the article.)
So we've already averted truly apocalyptic warming, and we've already cut expected warming IN HALF in just the past five years.
The pace of technology, of innovation, of prices, of feasibility, of discovery, of organizing, of grassroots movements, of movements in other countries around the world, have all picked up the pace so fast in the last five years.
Renewable technology and capacity are both increasing at an exponential rate. It's all S-curves, ones that look like this:
-via The Economist, June 20, 2024.
How much more will we manage in another five years? Another ten? Another twenty?
I know the US is about to fucking suck about the environment for the next four years. But the momentum of renewable energy is far too much to stop - both in the US (x) and around the world.
(Huge shoutouts to India, China, and Brazil for massive gains for the environment in renewables, and Brazil for massive progress against Amazon deforestation.)
We're going to get there.
Say it with me. We're going to get there.
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Excerpt from this LA Times story:
It was 111 degrees when Mark McBroom stepped from his air-conditioned pickup and onto a dry alfalfa field. Remnants of desiccated hay crunched underfoot, and the sun-baked soil was fragmented with deep cracks.
McBroom and other Imperial Valley farmers agreed to leave many hay fields unwatered for seven weeks this year in exchange for cash payments from a federally funded program designed to alleviate the water shortage on the Colorado River.
Many farmers decided that the payments — $300 per acre-foot of water conserved — would pencil out for them this year, in part because hay prices have recently fallen.
“Most of the farming community felt like our water is worth a lot more than that, but we wanted to help,” McBroom said. “We want to be good neighbors.”
But while the three-year deal is helping to save water in the river’s reservoirs, some people in the Imperial Valley say they’re concerned it’s also accelerating the decline of the Salton Sea and worsening environmental problems along its retreating shores.
With less water running off fields and into the sea, growing stretches of dry lakebed are being exposed to desert winds that kick up lung-damaging dust. At the same time, the lake is growing saltier as it shrinks, bringing changes to a habitat that is a vital stopover for migratory birds.
“This three-year deal is accelerating the receding of the sea,” said Eric Montoya Reyes, executive director of the nonprofit group Los Amigos de la Comunidad. “It’s going to impact our community.”
The voluntary water-saving program is an unusual effort by farmers who receive the single largest share of Colorado River water. While the growers adamantly oppose leaving farmland permanently dry, they decided that shutting off water temporarily to hay fields would help conserve supplies and minimize effects on crop production and the local economy.
Leaders of the Imperial Irrigation District say their agreement with the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation will save up to 700,000 acre-feet of water — enough to raise the level of Lake Mead, the country’s largest reservoir, more than 10 feet.
But environmental advocates have argued that the irrigation district’s deal with the federal government fails to adequately address the effects on the shrinking lake.
The Salton Sea has been drying up over the last two decades as a result of a deal in which the Imperial Irrigation District transferred a portion of the valley’s water to urban areas.
For years, local activists and residents in the Imperial and Coachella valleys have urged state officials to speed up long-delayed efforts to build wetlands along the retreating shores to create wildlife habitat and control dust that contributes to high asthma rates.
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California Farm Bureau stands with agricultural workers and farmers, calls for workforce stability amid reported concerns
The California Farm Bureau is weighing in on growing concerns about immigration that could have an impact on farmers across the state.
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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — California will provide 100% of the water requested by cities and farms for the first time in years thanks to winter storms that filled reservoirs and runoff from a record snowpack, regulators announced Thursday.
The State Water Project will provide full allocations to 29 water agencies supplying about 27 million customers and 750,000 acres of farmland, the Department of Water Resources said.
As late as March, the agency was only expecting to provide 75% of requested water supplies.
The last time the state agency fully met water requests was in 2006.
Meanwhile, the federal Bureau of Reclamation announced it was increasing water allocations for the Central Valley Project to 100% for the first time since 2017.
The move was cheered by contractors who supply the federal water to the state's agricultural heartland. It will provide much-needed water to communities, farms and families in the San Joaquin Valley, said a statement from Jose Gutierrez, interim general manager of Westlands Water District.
"Following two years of 0% allocations, this water supply will assist growers in Westlands with putting the land to work to grow the food that feeds the world,” he said.
Both the state and federal governments control networks of reservoirs and canals that supply water across California.
Three years of drought had pinched off supplies drastically in the nation’s most populous state. Late last year, nearly all of California was in drought, including at extreme and exceptional levels. Wells ran dry, farmers fallowed fields, and cities restricted watering grass.
The water picture changed dramatically starting in December, when the first of a dozen “ atmospheric rivers ” hit, causing widespread flooding and damaging homes and infrastructure, and dumping as many as 700 inches (17.8 meters) of snow in the Sierra Nevada mountains.
The statewide reservoir storage on Thursday was at 105% of the average for the date, the Department of Water Resources said.
The runoff from the melting snow will supply additional water that the state agency said it is working to capture.
As of this week, more than 65% of California no longer had drought conditions, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.
However, the Department of Water Resources urged people to continue using water cautiously. State officials have warned that in the era of climate change, one extremely wet year could be followed by several dry years, returning the state to drought.
The state water agency noted that some northern areas of the state still have water supply issues. In addition, some areas, including the agricultural Central Valley, are still recovering after years of pumping that has depleted underground water.
“Millions of Californians rely on groundwater supplies as a sole source of water," the agency warned.
“The Colorado River Basin, which is a critical water supply source for Southern California, is still in the midst of a 23-year drought,” the agency added. “Californians should continue to use water wisely to help the state adapt to a hotter, drier future.”
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Holidays 12.10
Holidays
Bob Dylan Day (Minnesota)
Chief Red Cloud Day
Dewey Decimal System Day
Flag Day (Guinea)
Flipadelphia (from “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia”)
Grub-Hoe Day (French Republic)
Human Rights Day (UN)
International Animal Rights Day
International Human Rights Day (Namibia)
Jane Addams Day
Mari Alphabet Day
Merlinpeen (Festival of Mouth Pleasure from Secret Santa; Verdkianism; on “30 Rock”)
Namibian Women’s Day (Namibia)
National Cancel Caillou Day
National Corey Day
National Day of the Clown
National Derek Day
Nobeldagen (a.k.a. Alfred Nobel Day; Sweden)
Nobel Prize Day
Sister-Friend Day
Victory Day (Iraq)
Whirling Dervishes Festival begins [thru 17th]
Women’s Day (Namibia)
Women’s Rights Day (Wyoming)
World Digital Detox Day
World Football Day
World Human Rights Day (UN)
World TRAP Awareness Day
Food & Drink Celebrations
Do Something Wild and Crazy with Velveeta Day
International Tokaji Aszú Day
National Lager Day
National Pancetta Day
Suspended Coffee Day
Terra Madre Day (Slow Food)
Independence & Related Days
Constitution Day (Thailand)
Mississippi Statehood Day (#20; 1817)
Tortuga (Declared; 2021) [unrecognized]
2nd Tuesday in December
National Belgian Waffles Day (Belgium) [2nd Tuesday]
Table Tennis Tuesday [2nd Tuesday of Each Month]
Taco Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Target Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Tater Tot Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Tomato Tuesday [2nd Tuesday of Each Month]
Trivia Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Two For Tuesday [Every Tuesday]
Weekly Holidays beginning December 10 (2nd Full Week of December)
Human Rights Week (thru 12.17)
National Groundwater Awareness Week (thru 12.12)
Festivals Beginning December 10, 2024
The Bracebridge Dinner (Yosemite National Park, California) [thru 12.23]
Great Lakes Fruit, Vegetable & Farm Market Expo (Grand Rapids, Michigan) [thru 12.12]
Michigan Greenhouse Growers Expo (Grand Rapids, Michigan) [thru 12.12]
Nebraska AG Expo (Lincoln, Nebraska) [thru 12.12]
Nobel Prize Award Ceremony (Stockholm, Sweden & Norway (the Nobel Peace Prize))
Stalker International Human Rights Film Festival (Moscow, Russia) [thru 12.15]
Western Alfalfa & Forage Symposium (Sparks, Nevada) [thru 12.12]
Feast Days
Adriaen van Ostade (Artology)
Behnam, Sarah, and the Forty Martyrs (Syriac Orthodox Church)
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Day (Church of the SubGenius; Saint)
Cornelia Funke (Writerism)
Emily Dickinson (Writerism)
Eulalia of Mérida (Christian; Saint)
Festival for the Souls of Dead Whales (Inuit)
Giovanni Gioseffo dal Sole (Artology)
Greta Kempton (Artology)
Hanukkah Day #3 (Judaism) [thru Dec. 15th]
International Human Rights Day (Pastafarian)
Karl Barth (Episcopal Church USA)
Llys Don (Celtic Book of Days)
Lux Mundi (Light of the World; Roman Goddess of Liberty)
Melchiades, Pope (Christian; Saint)
Miltiades (Christian; Saint)
Purification Rites begin (Ancient Inuit; Everyday Wicca)
Rumer Godden (Writerism)
Sedna’s Day (Pagan)
Thomas Merton (Episcopal Church USA)
Tidy Up Day (Starza Pagan Book of Days)
The Toves (Muppetism)
Translation of the Holy House of Loreto (Christian)
Vieta (Positivist; Saint)
Zinaida Serebriakova (Artology)
Lucky & Unlucky Days
Fatal Day (Pagan) [24 of 24]
Tomobiki (友引 Japan) [Good luck all day, except at noon.]
Premieres
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, by Mark Twain (Novel; 1884)
Bedazzled (Film; 1967)
Bedknob and Broomstick, by Mary Norton (Novel; 1943)
Being the Ricardos (Film; 2021)
Big Fish (Film; 2003)
The Billy Goat’s Whiskers, featuring Farmer Al Alfa (Terrytoons Cartoon; 1937)
Boris Bashes a Box or The Flat Chest (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S5, Ep. 237; 1963)
The Cider House Rules (Film; 1999)
Counterpart (TV Series; 2017)
A Day at the Races, by Queen (Album; 1976)
Dexter’s Laboratory: Ego Trip (Hanna-Barbera Animated TV Film; 1999)
Donald’s Ostrich (Disney Cartoon; 1937)
The Ethics of Ambiguity, by Simone de Beauvoir (Philosophy Book; 1947)
The Fellowship of the Ring (Film; 2001) [Lord of the Rings #1]
Fernando, by ABBA (Song; 1975)
The Fighter (Film; 2010)
48 Hrs. (Film; 1982)
Gandhi (Film; 1982)
The Glenn Miller Story (Film; 1953)
Gopher Spinach (Fleischer/Famous Popeye Cartoon; 1954)
The Green Mile (Film; 1999)
Guided Muscle (WB LT Cartoon; 1955)
Guys and Dolls, by Damon Runyon (Short Stories; 1932)
A Horse Tale (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Cartoon; 1928)
The Hour of the Star, by Clarice Lispector (Novel; 1977)
Islands in the Stream, by Ernest Hemingway (Novel; 1970)
The Last Detail (Film; 1973)
Lawrence of Arabia (Film; 1962)
The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (Film; 2004)
Mood Indigo, recorded by Duke Ellington and His Orchestra (Song; 1930)
A New Villain, Parts 1 & 2 (Underdog Cartoon, S3, Eps. 25 & 26; 1967)
Ocean’s Twelve (Film; 2004)
One, Two, Three, Gone! Or I’ve Got Plenty of Nothing (Rocky & Bullwinkle Cartoon, S5, Ep. 238; 1963)
Santa’s Workshop (Silly Symphony Disney Cartoon; 1932)
Shoah (Documentary Film; 2010)
The Silver Sword, by Ian Serraillier (Novel; 1956)
Sleuth (Film; 1972)
Sophie’s Choice (Film; 1982)
Swiss Family Robinson (Film; 1960)
The Tempest (Film; 2010)
Tennis Chumps (Tom & Jerry Cartoon; 1949)
Three’s a Crowd (WB MM Cartoon; 1932)
The Tourist (Film; 2010)
Toyland Premiere (Oswald the Lucky Rabbit Cartoon; 1934)
Wayne’s World 2 (Film; 1993)
West Side Story (Film; 2021)
Wings Over America (Live Album; 1976)
The Year Without a Santa Claus (Animated TV Special; 1974)
Today’s Name Days
Angelina, Bruno, Emma, Herbert (Austria)
Edmund, Gregor, Mauro (Croatia)
Julie (Czech Republic)
Judith (Denmark)
Juta, Juudit (Estonia)
Jutta (Finland)
Eulaire, Romaric (France)
Emma, Imma, Loretta (Germany)
Judit (Hungary)
Loreto (Italy)
Cera, Guna, Judīte, Sniedze (Latvia)
Eidimtas, Eularija, Ilma, Loreta (Lithuania)
Judit, Jytte (Norway)
Andrzej, Daniel, Judyta, Julia, Maria, Radzisława (Poland)
Ermoghen, Eugraf, Mina (Romania)
Radúz (Slovakia)
Eulalia, Loreto (Spain)
Malena, Malin (Sweden)
Angeline, Marian (Ukraine)
Emely, Emilee, Emilia, Emilie, Emily, Eula, Eulalia, Ula (USA)
Today is Also…
Day of Year: Day 345 of 2024; 21 days remaining in the year
ISO: Day 2 of Week 50 of 2024
Celtic Tree Calendar: Ngetal (Reed) [Day 17 of 28]
Chinese: Month 11 (Bing-Zi), Day 10 (Wu-Shen)
Chinese Year of the: Dragon 4722 (until January 29, 2025) [Wu-Chen]
Hebrew: 9 Kislev 5785
Islamic: 8 Jumada II 1446
J Cal: 15 Black; Oneday [15 of 30]
Julian: 27 November 2024
Moon: 72%: Waxing Gibbous
Positivist: 9 Bichat (13th Month) [Fermat / Wallis]
Runic Half Month: Jara (Year) [Day 4 of 15]
Season: Autumn or Fall (Day 79 of 90)
Week: 2nd Full Week of December
Zodiac: Sagittarius (Day 19 of 30)
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