Argentina is following the evolution of cereals and meat markets (see left) and has arrived at the conclusion that China is hoarding food as never seen before. China buys up 70% of the corn and half of the wheat available. Apparently, China is expecting a scarcity and higher prices, or a war. In other words, China's agriculture continues to fail and still cannot feed the population. It would be interesting to know how Japan and South Korea are standing in this area.
Sunday, March 23, 2025
China Hoarding Food
Success in the Bubbles Project
In the beginning it seemed a lost cause. The WWTP of the Industrial Park of Ariel is out of service, and no new industry is allowed to connect to the wastewater system. The main challenge was to deal with a crushing permitting regime that slows or outright bans industrial initiatives. Daniel is a friend, and I took it upon myself to get the permit for the new factory (pic). Today, Sivan told me that the license was issued. Good!
Friday, March 21, 2025
Ettinger's Second Thought
Ambassador (ret.) Yoram Ettinger, “Second Thought: a US-Israel Initiative” March 6, 2025
In 2024, the number of Israel’s Jewish births was 138,698 – 73%
higher than 1995 (80,400), compared to 42,911 Arab births – 18% higher
than 1995 (36,500).
2024 Jewish births were 76% of total births, compared to 69% in 1995. The surge of Jewish births has taken place due to the unprecedented rise of births (since 1995) in the secular sector, notwithstanding a rising level of education, income, wedding age, and expanded urbanization. Since 1995, Israel’s ultra-orthodox sector has experienced a mild decrease in fertility, while the modern orthodox rate of fertility has been stable.
The Muslim fertility rate has been Westernized: Jordan has 2.87 births per woman, Iran has 1.91, Saudi Arabia has 1.87, Morocco has 2.25, Iraq has 3.1, Egypt has 2.65, Yemen has 2.82, and the United Arab Emirates has 1.61.
Wednesday, March 19, 2025
Building Crimes
To receive a building permit in Israel is an extremely complex bureaucratic ordeal requiring hundreds of signatures from various authorities. During my time serving on vaadot (councils) that deliberated and approved projects, I often struggled to fully understand what was being discussed.
Recently, the Land Authority concluded an extensive investigation into several buildings and is now prosecuting fifteen former members of the Bnei Brak city councils, two former City Engineers, and multiple architects and directors from the Register Department. They stand accused of a serious crime: issuing permits for illegal construction projects, including two high-rise apartment buildings erected on public land. This is being handled as a criminal prosecution, with the physical existence of these buildings serving as tangible evidence of the wrongdoing. Money changing hands has not been mentioned.
I never imagined that participating in those soporific proceedings could land someone in jail.
Imprisoning both current and former City Engineers, alongside numerous past members of the vaadot, will certainly send a powerful message. The inevitable consequence will be municipal bureaucrats becoming even more reluctant to sign documents. This heightened caution will create additional obstacles to obtaining permits, making it substantially more difficult to advance not only my construction projects but everyone else's as well.
Monday, March 17, 2025
The Tel Aviv Central Project
Yesterday I took the 567 bus to Tel Aviv to see the next project. Basically, it is a fuel ("soler") station and a garage for buses within a closed environment. I had to walk the labyrinthine corridors and driveways to find the place. Already it is the next day and I am still feeling the effort. But I am not yet dead, so I have to concentrate and work! I'll have more than enough time to rest in the grave. Pic: Prague.
Friday, March 14, 2025
Quam-Core processor
Thursday, March 13, 2025
Germany's Mirror
Spiegel's editor writes an opinion piece:
There is no reason why 500 million Europeans shouldn’t be able to defend themselves against Russia on their own.
But that changes nothing about the fundamental shift that has taken place: Trump and his cronies have shattered the world order that has guaranteed security and prosperity in Europe and the United States since 1945. It was a unique system built on the foundation of an economic and military alliance within which the U.S. held the leadership role, but which depended on close cooperation.
The new U.S. president only sees the burdens this alliance placed on America’s shoulders; he is blind to its benefits. He sees the world through the eyes of a 19th-century imperialist: In his view, the world’s great powers should divide the world among themselves and demand complete subservience from their vassals. But Europe cannot succumb to this worldview. It must now rediscover its economic and military strength to survive in this new world – one defined by the naked pursuit of power.
Germany is very important. Spiegel is well-informed (it was the first to accuse China of the COVID epidemic). Not long ago its industry outcompeted all. Is Germany homecoming to its historical obsession, the "pursuit of power"?