Now this is GOING TOO FAR:
joint ventures between Israel and Cuba are partially funded with US tax subsidies to Israel.I wonder what the people working together on the ventures have to say to each other each year when Israel votes to support the U.S. embargo!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Just found the agricultural method in google:
Organics in Castro's Cuban Agriculture: Kicking the Face in of the International Pesticide Cartel
Organic farming -- often considered an insignificant part of the food supply -- can feed an entire country concludes a report by the Oakland, CA-based Institute for Food and Development Policy, or more widely known as Food First, a member-supported, nonprofit education-for-action center advocating sustainable farming.
In Cuba, many of the foods people eat every day are grown without synthetic fertilizers and toxic pesticides, the report, Cultivating Havana: Urban Agriculture and Food Security in the Years of Crisis, found.
Cuba's organic food movement developed in response to a crisis. Before the revolution that threw out dictator Fulgencio Batista in 1959, and to some extent during the years of Soviet support for Cuba, the island followed a typical pattern of colonial food production: It produced luxury export crops while importing food for its own people. In 1990 over 50% of Cuba's food came from imports. "In the Caribbean, food insecurity is a direct result of centuries of colonialism that prioritized the production of sugar and other cash crops for export, neglecting food crops for domestic consumption," the report says. In spite of efforts by the revolutionary government to correct this situation, Cuba continued in this mold until the breakup of the Soviet Union in 1989.
The withdrawal of Soviet aid meant that 1,300,000 tons of chemical fertilizers, 17,000 tons of herbicides, and 10,000 tons of pesticides, could no longer be imported, according to the report.
One of Cuba's responses to the shock was to develop "urban agriculture," intensifying the previously established National Food Program, which aimed at taking thousands of poorly utilized areas, mainly around Havana, and turning them into intensive vegetable gardens. Planting in the city instead of only in the countryside reduced the need for transportation, refrigeration, and other scarce resources. (snip/...)
http://www.theexperiment.org/articles.php?news_id=1186I've seen reports from American University groups going to Cuba to study this method they've mastered. Guess THAT won't be going on much longer as Bush gives our tiny door to Cuba the ultimate hinge-ripper to please Miami.