Country Kitchen Pantry - Herbs, Spices, Cooking, Recipes

I opened the journal I keep in my country kitchen's pantry, and this is what I wrote:


Sunday, October 4, 2009

Hippies, Prejudice, and Me

What do people have against hippies these days?? I am appalled at some of the derision I hear. For example, when I was working at a local restaurant last year a young woman was hired. You know how people chat while they work. One day she informed me “I hate hippies! I can’t stand them!”

She didn’t know I was one.

What venom! I guessed I didn’t look like much of a hippie that day. Mostly these days I just look like a little old lady with gray hair and too much baby fat (after five children some of us unfortunately get that way.) Well, I pretended not to be insulted and let it go, but purchased several tie dye shirts just to make it clear that I’m still quite the hippie even in my old age. I needed a little self-identification, apparently.

I guess the word “hippie” means different things to different people. To some it might refer to a dirt-bag unwashed, unkempt drug user - indulging in heavy drugs like heroin - perhaps. …Or just a stoner looking to take advantage of others. (Just a guess at what people might be thinking when they’re all negative about the hippie counter-culture movement.)

But hippies are more than that.

The most important aspect of being a hippie is the creativity: the desire for inventing new modes of art and the ability to be unique enough to put those arts into form. Hippiedom also is a form of spirituality for me. It is an acknowledgement that I’m able to develop my own spiritual connection with the divine apart from rituals and set forms devised by others for their organization into groups of spiritual worship realities. My spirituality is my own alone. It encompasses nearness to the divine source through creativity.

God is creative, and so am I, so when I’m involved in an act of creativity I’m closer to God than at any other time. Plus there’s the fact that love is an expression of god-self within. For me, loving everyone was the most important aspect of hippieness, plus these realizations of the reality of God through being in nature, through aligning oneself with nature and all that is natural. To me, those are the qualities of being a hippie, and drugs and free-love type sex have nothing to do with that which is natural and pure… other than use of herbs of course which sometimes includes something as amazing as marijuana which is a very cool herb helpful in many medical need situations.

Anyhow, I don’t see why people should speak badly about hippies and make people like me think we need to hide our hippieness. I’m not going to hide anymore. Too many years I’ve been diverted from what is really me. I’ve been a hippie since the sixties. Just because I’m almost sixty years old doesn’t mean I should change and be someone else’s idea of the perfect little old lady grandma … you know what I mean?

Well, this week I was reading two different books that mentioned hippies. One was Tribal Bigfoot. I was in the middle of an absolutely awesome story about a guy who had been in a forest in Del Norte County, California when he was surrounded by Sasquatches… and then the author told of his own walk into this area. He was approached on the trail by a man. He wrote: “I hadn’t seen anyone on the trail or in the parking lot for two hours. I held my ground and watched as a derelict looking hippie walked up to me and asked what I was doing there. I was a little miffed, but I couldn’t tell what kind of weapon he might have had under his tie-died sweater and coat. He wasn’t a large man, but he smelled and looked like he’d been in the woods too long…. It was a little nerve wracking having that encounter unarmed.” (Tribal Bigfoot, Paulides, Pg. 285)

Okay, now I’m a little miffed. Are hippies so bad you have to suspect them of being dangerous? The author of the book is a former law enforcement agent who I guess has decided that hippies are to be avoided unless you can arrest them.

This morning I was reading a book of Bigfoot fiction when I got to a page that said, “We needed more scientists with real clout in the community to come forward, look at the data and see that the hard evidence was already there…. Instead we get sociopaths and rednecks and hippie cultists.” (North American Primates, Durgee, Pg. 209)

Can you see why I feel hippies are under fire from the misperceptions of prejudice?

Now I know I’m not going to change the opinions of millions who have already made up their minds one way or another on whether or not hippies are good or bad. I happen to live in a community, however tiny, where there’s a lot of drug users. I see more than my share of them. MOST of them are not old enough to have been part of the hippie movement. My neighbors are huge users of drugs, ex methies, current full-time potheads [and I should add this is medical marijuana at this point, and quite legal]… they aren’t but in their forties and not wise enough to know what being a hippie really meant. They just want the drugs, not the spirituality and lifestyle of creativity that the early hippies brought into focus.

There are a few young people hereabouts that have the beauty and spirit of real hippies, but not many. Most are completely clueless… they just want drugs. Pathetic, in my humble opinion! And there are a few old hippie artists in the community who are carrying on the mysticism of true hippie life, with love.

Hippiedom is a liberation of the spirit, an expansion of consciousness, a flight of amazement on the journey to reach forth toward world consciousness and love. To denigrate it into a ‘hey we want drugs’ thing is to entirely miss the point of what the movement was actually about.


Filed under: Rants — Linda @ 12:21 am



Thursday, July 30, 2009

Cool Pantry Advice

I just found a couple of pages a friend of mine wrote about stocking and organizing a pantry… and of course I wanted to pass on the information to you since the intent of this blog so closely matches Dianne’s articles.

First I noticed her article on Gather.Com, one of my favorite article-writing sites. Her article, A Well-Stocked Pantry, caught my eye… because pantries are often on my mind… especially as my tomatoes are getting ripe and I’m wondering how I’m going to can and store them all!

In her article she linked to a related Squidoo page about kitchen pantries on which she shows examples of why having a well stocked kitchen pantry will be invaluable in a number of situations. I too look for the sales to buy supplies in quantity. She has a poll there, “Is your pantry organized and well-stocked?”… I had to admit, mine is well-stocked, but not organized. I love her organization suggestions!

Filed under: Kitchens — Linda @ 11:46 am



Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Codex Alimentarius Natural Health Freedoms Threat

Dr. Rima E. Laibow, MD is a a spokesperson for the protection of natural health freedom. She’s also a doctor who has practiced natural, drug-free medicine for more than 35 years.

Her website: Health Freedom USA

In these videos Dr. Laibow gives a speech explaining what Codex Alimentarius is and how it threatens our natural health freedom rights. This speech was given in 2005 at the annual conference of the National Association of Nutrition Professionals (NANP).

If you don’t have time or means to watch these videos, you can read my notes and supplementary research at the end of this blog posting.

Most of what follows are my notes taken directly from the videos above. I added a small bit of my own research with website links. In particular I wanted to know the current status of this issue. (It is ongoing at this time.) I also looked for Codex Alimentarius on Snopes.Com - it isn’t there, so I’m guessing this information hasn’t been deemed a hoax.

After WWII at the Neurenburg Tribunals twenty-four executives and board members of a large German company called IG Farbin were sentenced to prison. IG Farbin produced steel, munitions, poisonous gases, pharmaceuticals (including Bayer) and chemicals. The president of that company, Fritz derMeer, was convicted on July 29, 1948. When released he went to friends in the UN and suggested they take over food in order to have power over everyone.

In 1963 they created a trade commission called the Codex Alimentarius Commission. It isn’t a governmental organization; it is about turning a profit. Their goal is to have total global implementation of Codex Alimentarius by 12/31/09. Codex is a huge bureaucracy now and has created over 4000 guidelines, standards and regulations over every type of food imaginable. Pharmaceuticals are not included in these guidelines. Herbs, vitamins and minerals are.

Their standards have no legal weight, but here’s how they got into power anyhow.

First a bit of history: The Austro-Hungarian government decided they needed rules for courts to use in cases regarding food. Around 1893 they put these regulations in place and called them Codex Alimentarius. It lasted until the country ended at the end of WWI.

Fritz derMeer apparently liked the idea of rules so he started promoting his food rules using the same name. His rules were voluntary guidelines. The Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC) was formed in 1963 and is supervised and funded by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO), at the request of the United Nations.

The Guidelines for Vitamin and Mineral Food Supplements were presented to the Codex Alimentarius Commission for ratification on July 4, 2005. They were approved by consensus and are now mandatory over all countries that are members of the World Health Organization. They expect all members of the World Trade Organization to “harmonize” with Codex Alimentarius rules.

If two countries are involved in a dispute resolution process ruled over by the World Trade Organization, if one country is Codex compliant and the other isn’t, the Codex compliant country automatically wins no matter what the facts of the case are. Therefore every county in the world wants to “harmonize” with Codex Alimentarius rules.

Codex, however, doesn’t serve health. It serves pharmaceutical, chemical, biotechnical, agricultural, and medical industry interests.

Though Codex rules are said to be “voluntary” they are not actually… countries are coerced by the WTO dispute resolution process into following them. However after 12/31/09 they will be totally mandatory - at least that is the plan.

Here in the USA in 1994 the Dietary Suppliments Health and Education Act (DSHEA) classified nutrients and herbs as foods. By this act and common law, anything not forbidden is permitted, and we’re allowed to have as much of these things as we want. Codex, however, is not ruled by common law - it is ruled by Napoleonic Code law which states that anything not permitted is forbidden.

In 1994 Codex declared that nutrients are toxins.

Via toxicology risk assessment animals are given these ‘toxins’ until they die to figure out how much would be poisonous for human beings. It is expected that eighteen of these ‘nutrient toxins’ will be approved, one of them being fluoride (a real poison! Fluoride makes people complacent so it was first used in WWII concentration camps to control people there. Read more about fluoride here: Fluoride Poisoning.)

There have been multiple attempts to destroy the USA legislation, DSHEA. The Coalition to Preserve DSHEA website states “Congress may soon consider new legislation that would trump DSHEA and put consumer access to dietary supplements at risk.” This watch-dog organization is working to preserve our health freedoms.

Codex would make most of the food supplements we use illegal.

Codex would force every dairy cow on the planet to be treated with Monsanto’s recombinant bovine growth hormone.

Codex would force every food animal on the planet to be treated with sub-clinical antibiotics and growth hormones. (including fish and fowl)

Codex mandates that all food be irradiated unless eaten locally and raw, including organic food.

Codex organic standards allow farmers to use growth hormones and antibiotics on animals.

Codex sets amazingly high limits for dangerous industrial chemicals.

You can do a Google search for Codex Alimentarius and look through their pages to find information on toxic chemicals allowed in our foods including pesticides.

Codex has brought back seven toxic chemicals that over a hundred countries have banned. And any country that is Codex compliant will not be able to refuse imports of foods with these toxins.

According to Dr. Laibow, the World Health Organization’s own statistics project that if Codex’s vitamin/mineral standard becomes mandatory, over three billion people will die, one billion from simple starvation. These people are considered expendable because starving people can’t contribute much to the world economy. The other two billion will die from under-nutrition and health conditions that can’t be treated properly without the right foods and supplements. She says those who will live are the wealthy and powerful who can afford clean food sources. The rest of us are apparently to be intended victims of toxic foods. Even if we eat natural, homegrown foods at home, children in public schools are eating government-supplied foods for school lunches.

This doctor has been working with a team of lawyers to create a strategy to fight Codex in court.

She is asking us to sign her Natural Solutions Foundation Citizen’s Petition and to tell people about it.

Well, now I’ve told you about it. What can you do to spread this information to others?

Filed under: Herbs, Law, Videos — Linda @ 7:36 am





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Hi, my name is Linda. This is my personal home and hearth journal.

I am a self-trained herbalist. I became a vegetarian when I was a teenager in the 1960s. I was a San Francisco Bay Area hippie in the 60s and early 70s. Then I became a mom - the most important job I've ever had.

Now I live in a very small mountain community. The nearest fast food restaurant is more than forty miles during summer, and more than seventy miles in winter when the pass is snowed under. I've never owned a cell phone, but I talked on one once.





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