How The World s Energy Problem Has Been Hidden
We live in a world where words are very carefully chosen. Companies hire public relations firms to give just the right “spin to what they are saying. Politicians make statements which suggest that everything is going well. Newspapers would like their advertisers to be happy; they certainly won’t suggest that the automobile you purchase today may be of no use to you in five years.
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I believe that what has happened in recent years is that the “truth has become very dark. We live in a finite world; we are rapidly approaching limits of many kinds. For example, there is not enough fresh water for everyone, including agriculture and businesses. This inadequate water supply is now tipping over into inadequate food supply in quite a few places because irrigation requires fresh water. This problem is, in a sense, an energy problem, because add
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Oh, the long and winding road that is sometimes traveled where these columns are concerned.
Last week, Sweet Harold told me about a recipe shared on social media from The Farmer s Almanac. The recipe was for a Depression Era cake that had no eggs, butter or milk. I told Miz Betty, my mama, and she was intrigued as well.
We had a long chat about food that she had eaten while a young girl during the 1930s. Unsurprisingly, the foods she mentioned were foods we enjoyed during my childhood in the 1960s.
I asked my Facebook page followers what they considered Depression Era food. Again, the majority of answers were those same foods my family enjoyed.
Beasley Broadcast Group â parent of
Beasley Media Group â reveals a decline in net revenue of 17.8%, from $57.7 million in Q1 2020 to $48.2 million in Q1 2021. While station operating income was down, $5.2 million compared to $6.7 million in Q1 2020, Beasley greatly reduced its operating loss from $7.1 million in the first quarter of 2020 to $2.5 million in the first quarter of 2021. Beasley CEO
Caroline Beasley says, âBeasley reported 2021 first quarter financial results consistent with the expectations we outlined when we reported the 2020 fourth quarter, as our strong revenue growth in the first two months of the comparable 2020 period, prior to the onset of the pandemic, created a difficult year-over-year comparison. Though we continued to