The Presidency and the Internet(s)

George W. Bush refers to “rumors heard on the Internets” and likely also refers to Microsoft’s famed operating system in the singular.  Now we’ve got John McCain, who has openly admitted that he doesn’t know how to use a computer, prompting folks to actually have debates about whether he even knows what the Internet is.  I’m just saying…

First Oil, Now Bananas

Anyone looking for some random knowledge should read this OpEd on bananas that I came across last week in the IHT.  Really fascinating stuff.  Who knew the business of the banana could be so interesting?  Here’s a little taste to wet your whistle:

That bananas have long been the cheapest fruit at the grocery store is astonishing. They’re grown thousands of miles away, they must be transported in cooled containers and even then they survive no more than two weeks after they’re cut off the tree. Apples, in contrast, are typically grown within a few hundred miles of the store and keep for months in a basket out in the garage. Yet apples traditionally have cost at least twice as much per pound as bananas.

Americans eat as many bananas as apples and oranges combined, which is especially amazing when you consider that not so long ago, bananas were virtually unknown here. They became a staple only after the men who in the late 19th century founded the United Fruit Company (today’s Chiquita) figured out how to get bananas to American tables quickly – by clearing rainforest in Latin America, building railroads and communication networks and inventing refrigeration techniques to control ripening. The banana barons also marketed their product in ways that had never occurred to farmers or grocers before, by offering discount coupons, writing jingles and placing bananas in schoolbooks and on picture postcards. They even hired doctors to convince mothers that bananas were good for children.

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