Thursday, 18 March 2021

Real Land Lords

    I am still trying to avoid other tasks, so I will post another one about land ownership,  having just published one about Bill Gates now being the top private farm landowner in the United States. You should not be left with the impression that he owns a lot of land, compared to some others who own a lot more. The Queen, for example, or the Pope who has "nearly two hundred millions acres of land." Ted Turner used to be at the very top of the list of the top landowners, which irritated me because he also had Jane Fonda. He has been supplanted by John Malone who owns over 2 million acres of land as well as the Atlanta Braves about which I am less irritated.  Here are the top twenty-five:

You will notice at #6 our very own Irving family, but the figure provided there just indicates recent purchases. They own over 1 million acres of land (if such a large figure bothers you, it is less in hectares.) 

   You should also notice #5 on the list, the charming Mr. Stan Kroenke, who bought 200,000 hectares in British Columbia - the former Douglas Lake Cattle Company or Douglas Lake Ranch. The Nicola Valley Fish and Game Club members and many others in British Columbia used to fish in the remote lakes on the property, but Mr. Kronke locked the gates. He did the same thing when he purchased the half million acre Waggoner Ranch in North Texas. The courts up here recently decided that Mr. Kroenke had the right to deny access and it was determined that the Nicola Valley Fish and Game Club, who fought Kroenke in court, would have to pay his legal fees. 

Sources:
"Court Rules 2 B.C. Lakes Cannot Be Publicly Accessed, Siding With Canada's Largest Cattle Ranch," CBC News, Mar. 5, 2021.
"Billionaire Wins Legal Battle to Deny Public Access to B.C. Lakes," Cheryl Santa Maria, The Weather Channel, March 10, 2021.
"U.S. Billionaire Wins Battle to Keep Anglers Off His Giant B.C. Ranch, Vancouver Sun, Mar. 7, 2021.
"Annals of Geography," "Promised Land," David Owen, The New Yorker, Feb. 8, 2021 (for the statistic about the land ownership of the Catholic Church.)

The Bonus:
The table above came from The Land Report: The Magazine of the American Landowner. You will find it fascinating. It contains ads such as the one by Boone Pickens a couple of year ago when he put up for sale his Mesa Vista Ranch - 65,000 acres for $220,000,000. It is an oasis with the "World's Best Quail Hunting." 

In Scotland, one can roam freely anywhere and in some Scandinavian countries, the notion of 'trespassing' is a rather alien one. For more on that subject see the Chapter, "Going Nowhere and Everywhere' in Simon Winchester's Land: How the Hunger For Ownership Shaped the Modern World.

Bill Gates: The Farmer

   I have not posted anything in about fifteen days and no one has noticed or complained. I am back at work, however, because doing this beats doing some of the other things I should be doing. It is also the case, I am sure, that hundreds have been waiting at the door of my blog for something new, if only to avoid having to read anything more about the Royal Couple.

   You probably noticed that Mr. Gates has published another book: How To Avoid A Climate Disaster: The Solutions We Have and the Breakthroughs We Need.  It is a good thing that a person of his wealth and prominence has called attention to the fact that we may have a problem. We should have listened to him back in 2015 when he made this statement: "If anything kills over 10 million people over the next few decades, it is likely to be a highly infectious virus rather than war." 

Land Nerd

   You probably did not notice what I am about to present; that is why this blog is so valuable to you. When Bill Gates wasn't writing he was out shopping: 

"Bill Gates, the fourth richest person in the world and a self-described nerd who is known for his early programming skills rather than his love of the outdoors, has been quietly snatching up 242,000 acres of farmland across the U.S. — enough to make him the top private farmland owner in America....

While it may be surprising that a tech billionaire would also be the biggest farmland owner in the country, this is not Gates’ only foray into agriculture. In 2008, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation announced $306 million in grants to promote high-yield, sustainable agriculture among smallholder farmers in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. The foundation has further invested in the development and proliferation of “super crops” resistant to climate change and higher-yield dairy cows. Last year, the organization announced Gates Ag One, a nonprofit to advance those efforts."

   That seems like a rather generous gesture and in his new book he points out that the world's poorest people are likely to be harmed most by the changing climate. Once again, you may not know that some people think that Bill Gates is more evil than George Soros. They argue that he is really trying to kill-off the African people and "One outlandish belief is that he is using the pandemic to push a vaccine with a microchip that would control people's minds or track their location." Given my general glibness you may assume that I am joking and making this up.  I am not. Nor do I think that Gates and Soros are evil. 

Sources:
 The quotation about the property purchases is from; "America's Biggest Owner of Farmland is Now Bill Gates," Ariel Shapiro, Forbes, Jan. 14, 2021.
About the conspiracy theories involving Gates, there is plenty: 
"Bill Gates' Daughter Jennifer Jokes About Conspiracy Theory After Getting COVID-19 Vaccine," Eric Levenson, CNN, Feb. 15, 2021. (the source for the "outlandish belief.")
"How Bill Gates Became the Voodoo Doll of Covid Conspiracies," Jane Wakefield, BBC, June 6, 2020. 
Bill also has a blog and you can learn more about the book there. 

The Bonus:
Given that small bits of land and, little dilapidated houses around here are going for very big bucks, it is amazing that anyone has wealth enough to make such big, bulk purchases of property. Many can't afford to even rent a place.
"According to a report by the National Low Income Housing Coalition, there isn't a single American state in which a person working full time for minimum wage can afford a one-bedroom apartment at the fair market rent." From: "Trailer-Park Trades," by Sheelah Kolhatkar, The New Yorker, March 15, 2021. 

Thursday, 4 March 2021

Periodical Ramblings (10)

 The Steven Lamazow Collection of American Periodicals




















   Dr. Steven Lomazow is a neurologist in New Jersey. He has been collecting magazines for almost fifty years and has over 80,000 of them, many of which are very rare. One can only imagine what his waiting room is like. 
   It is fitting that the tenth post in the series, "Periodical Ramblings" is turned over to someone who is really interested in magazines. Many of those he has collected are now being exhibited in The Grolier Club in New York city. You can visit virtually here: Magazines and The American Experience: Highlights From the Collection of Steven Lomazow, M.D. You can spend the rest of the day rambling among periodicals that range in subject from the avant garde and archery, to wars and wrestling. 




    If you want to spend more time browsing, then visit his major website: The Great American Magazine: The Periodical Collection of Steven Lamazow, M.D. There you can search thousands of periodicals and view images, and find links to other periodical-related resources. It is also worth looking at his older blog site: Magazine History: A Collector's Blog Documenting and Illustrating the History, Importance and the Joy of Collecting Magazines, 2008-2013. 


The Bonus:
   If you are interested in books and libraries, you should visit The Grolier Club and do some browsing. There are many interesting books and resources to be found and among the other exhibitions, there is this one about medical history books related to plastic surgery: The History of Plastic Surgery: "Much More Than Skin Deep" from the Collection of Douglas M. Monasebian, M.D.
   Speaking of medical history, Dr. Lomazov has yet another blog relating to the health of FDR: see FDR's Deadly Secret. 


Sources:
"How Magazines Helped Shape American History: Explore 300 Years of the Periodicals in an Encyclopedic Exhibition Opening at the Grolier Club in New York City,” Nora McGreevy, Smithsonian Magazine, Feb. 23, 2021.
"For national audiences, Lomazow and librarian Julie Carlsen have curated an extensive online exhibition, chronicling the magazine experience against the backdrop of American history on subjects ranging from the birth of democracy, to emancipation and the Civil War, the mid-century information age and the battle for civil rights, as well as a host of niche publications on celebrity, humor, art and baseball."

"What Are Magazines Good For," Nathan Heller, New Yorker, Feb. 16, 2021.
"The Grolier is a club for bibliophiles, but magazine nuts are admitted if their obsession reaches sufficiently crazed levels. (The home Lomazow shares with his wife and collaborator in collection, Suze Bienaimee, teems intimidatingly, some might say alarmingly, with bound volumes.) Lomazow strode over to one of eleven glass cases displaying his magazines, moving like a man whose number has been called at a busy deli counter. In winnowing down his collection to about two hundred issues for display—the show, in the exhibition gallery of the Grolier’s clubhouse, is open to the public by appointment—he focussed on those of acute historical importance."

The Series:

Here are the ones that have been posted so far in "Periodical Ramblings."
Periodical Ramblings (1) (The Sewanee Review)
Periodical Ramblings (3) (The Village Voice)
Periodical Ramblings (4) (The Wilson Quarterly)
Periodical Ramblings (5) ( The Prairie Schooner)
Periodical Ramblings (8) (Journals Devoted to a Single Author)
Periodical Ramblings (9) ( Arizona Highways)