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Astraea News and Views - December 2005
PerspectiveLies, lies and more lies - we're just so good at it! (See Holonics for more of the science.) A World Economic Forum/Globescan survey indicates that trust is declining globally, despite immense wealth and a reasonably fruitful year in most economies. Trust in Governments, Corporations and Global Institutions Continues to Decline. Of all the institutions examined, national governments have lost the most ground over the past two years. In twelve of the sixteen countries for which tracking data is available, public trust in the national government has declined by statistically significant margins, leaving only six of the tracking countries today with more citizens trusting their national government than distrusting them. Trust in government has fallen the most in Brazil, South Korea, Mexico, Canada and Spain, followed closely by Argentina and the United States. The case of Nigeria is also noteworthy, where trust in the national government fell by thirteen points while trust in all other institutions rose. Even in countries such as Great Britain and India, where trust remains positive, it has suffered its biggest fall since tracking began in 2001. The institutional dishonesty that we are oblivious to was thrown in our faces in December by our global superpower on several fronts. We learned that US security institutions export prisoners to foreign locations where many believe torturing to have taken place, and we learned that probably illegal and certainly immoral surveillance is being ordered on US citizens by the President. But the most shocking fact was the admission by President Bush that he lied, in particular about weapons of mass destruction, Al Quaeda and Iraq. It seems that everyone thinks its OK for the President to lie, because if his name was Richard Nixon he wouldn't be in office today. It is unlikely that we will see a confession from Bush like that of eight-term Republican congressman Randy Cunningham charged with accepting $ 2.4 million in bribes and evading over $ 1 million in taxes: " I broke the law, concealed my conduct and disgraced my high office". Instead we heard W tell us all that he lied, but its OK because he's in charge. He again used the excuse that he would do what he thinks necessary irrespective of the law or ethics. The founding fathers must be turning in their graves. For me however, it is not OK just to do the right thing, it must be done in the right way. ( I have been at the sharp end of bullying, as both child and adult, too often to think otherwise.) Too often privilege has been used to execute decisions, good and bad, but that is not equity or justice. The US appeared to be a strong meritocracy "anyone can make it" - and that has been attractive. But that has been lost in recent years at the highest political office. When the President stands up and says "I lied and cheated, but I did the right thing so its OK" as he did in mid-December, democracy is not in effect at all. Neither institutions, media nor people have challenged teh US's evangelical leader about this failure of ethics. I believe that responsibility is the price of power - and if ethics are absent the power is ill-deserved. (A company, like Enron, can not say we lied and cheated but we enriched our shareholders so its OK.) The US behaves as a monarchy or dictatorship, even if benevolent. One estimate is that over 25,000 civilians have been killed in Iraq in the last couple of years - even by world trade centre standards that is huge. It is be difficult for us all to balance the tension of being a loving and caring person and also loyal, yet circulating in a world where peers and friends make daily decisions that are inequitable and polluting the planet. The New York Times reported on their survey conducted with TIAA-CREF and Harris Interactive entitled Mutual Funds Investors Rate Public Figures. The numbers are worrying - perception is often a reflection of reality and people are obviously aware of dishonesty in the corridors of power but are also seemingly unable to do much about it. You can read more analysis by Claudia Deutsch in The New York Times: "New Surveys Show That Big Business Has a P.R. Problem," "Who Do You Think Is Very Trustworthy?"
"Who Do You Think Has Too Much Power in Washington?"
Coincidentally newly minted Nobel Laureate Harold Pinter's Nobel Lecture delivered in early December reflects on the same subject: Art, Truth & Politics. You can read the speech here, though its title reveals the gist: most communication, including art, is not true - it is instead a reflection of reality. And the important difference is whether or not it is honest. (We have all been in professional situations where we have told the truth but created an illusion to entice others into action, usually to buy something.)
From the other side of the world, China News Weekly shared a wish list for 2006. The article in English is here. For those of us who feel fear or that they are not getting their fair share in life, it makes interesting reading. This is how it begins:
Our wish is that we all have the strength to do the right thing, the right way. GeopoliticsThe rise of geopolitical dishonesty was reiterated by Transparency International in their most recent study. Corruption is on the increase in a majority of countries around the world. People in 48 of the 69 countries covered in its annual Global Corruption Barometer survey said corruption had risen over the past three years. The survey showed that taking bribes was particularly prevalent in Africa, Eastern Europe and Latin America. Political parties were the most corrupt bodies for the second year in a row. They were followed by parliaments, police and judicial systems. In central and eastern Europe, customs officials were seen as the most corrupt. TI said corruption also extended to the education system of many countries, and that this could have a detrimental effect on their future development - few are immune from this as fake degrees are widely available and screening is often modest. Its chairwoman Huguette Labelle said corruption was "a major problem of our times ... its most deadly impact is on the poor. ...The results of this survey are a call for alarm for people." The Bush administration based a crucial prewar assertion about ties between Iraq and Al Qaeda on detailed statements made by a prisoner while in Egyptian custody who later said he had fabricated them to escape harsh treatment, according to current and former government officials. The officials said the captive, Ibn al-Shaykh al-Libi, provided his most specific and elaborate accounts about ties between Iraq and Al Qaeda only after he was secretly handed over to Egypt by the United States in January 2002, in a process known as rendition. The new disclosure provides the first public evidence that bad intelligence on Iraq may have resulted partly from the administration's heavy reliance on third countries to carry out interrogations of Qaeda members and others detained as part of American counter terrorism efforts. The Bush administration used Libi's accounts as the basis for its prewar claims, now discredited, that ties between Iraq and Al Qaeda included training in explosives and chemical weapons. The New York Times said Mr Bush signed a secret presidential order for personal surveillance following the attacks on 11 September 2001. They allowing the National Security Agency, to track the international telephone calls and e-mails of hundreds of people without referral to the courts. Previously, surveillance on American soil was generally limited to foreign embassies. Critics have questioned whether wider surveillance in the US crosses constitutional limits on legal searches. American law usually requires a secret court, known as a Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, to give permission before intelligence officers can conduct surveillance on US soil."This is Big Brother run amok," was the reaction of Democratic Senator Edward Kennedy, while his colleague Russell Feingold called it a "shocking revelation" that "ought to send a chill down the spine of every senator and every American". There is intense concern about infringements of civil liberties in the name of security, but the power of the Bush gang seems unassailable. Even Republicans are not convinced that the things it does in the name of the war on terrorism are always justified. Initially it appeared that some balance was returning to policy when the Republican-controlled Senate blocked the renewal of the Patriot Act, the law introduced after September 11 that gives the FBI wide-ranging powers to investigate US citizens. However, a short term extension has been agreed and it will be another six months before another chance to step back from a police state occurs. In Bolivia, the national election was won by an indigenous candidate - the first to achieve such an office. This exercise of democracy occurred because of widening inequality. David Brooks of the New York Times highlighted the illustration given by the election: "That election illustrated many of the combustible phenomena we'll be dealing with for the rest of our lives. It demonstrated that economic modernization can inflame ethnic animosity, that democracy can be the enemy of capitalism and that globalization, far from bringing groups closer together, can send them off in wild and hostile directions." Some of the unrest born of inequality of opportunity that we saw in France in November was reflected in Australia in December. Thousands of young, white men attacked people of Arabic and Mediterranean background in Sydney's Cronulla, Maroubra and Bondi beaches. The large-scale violence in Sydney started when white men attacked people of Arabic and Mediterranean background on Cronulla Beach - apparently in revenge for a recent attack on two lifeguards. Many of the rioters had been alerted to congregate in the area by receiving text messages. Apparently in retaliation for the violence, groups described by police as having "Middle Eastern or Mediterranean" appearance were involved in two nights of violence and vandalism. New laws to prevent civil unrest were passed in the Australian state of New South Wales - authorities can enforce strict curfews, confiscate cars and ban alcohol sales. The outspoken economic adviser Andrei Illarionov aide to Russian President Vladimir Putin resigned in protest against what he called the end of political freedom. He said Russia was no longer politically free but run by state corporations acting in their own interests. He added that Russia's economic policy and the economic model of the state had changed. "I did not sign a contract with such a state," Mr Illarionov told reporters. "Until not long ago no-one put any limits on me expressing my point of view. Now the situation has changed." He had been one of the most vocal critic in Russia for some time. In Hong Kong on 4 December over 250,000 people marched peacefully for democracy ... again. Unlike previous marches, no one could say people came out because they were unhappy about the economy, suffered negative equity or didn't like former chief executive CH Tung. They clearly flooded out because they wanted to tell the authorities here and in Beijing they wanted universal suffrage soon. Thai politics became even more interesting in December. While the unrest in the south has not improved as expected under the new National Reconciliation Council and economic performance has been modest, early in the month the Prime Minister suffered a rebuke from King Bhumipol which he felt compelled to acknowledge by withdrawing lawsuits against people who had criticised him. It would be nice for Thailand if this spirit of openness could return. While it is not likely that Thaksin's modesty will be long lived - he is not Prime Minister and the richest person in Thailand for nothing - it is possible and his rural initiatives and continuing experience may signal new enlightened policies. He will make statements in early 2006 which may reveal his hand, so let us see what transpires. There were important events related to trade (ponderous WTO round) and health (GMO liberalisation) which effect geopolitics. There is more on these in the sections on Trade and Holonics. Risk and TerrorFear is weighing too heavily on economic decisions as well as political ones. Our fundamentalist reaction to terrorism has been impractical censorship at home (eg patriot act and shooting the insane) and the fear of the unknown prevents us from liberalising economic policy at home (eg the stagnation of trade liberalisation despite its proven benefits). It is ironic that we fear job insecurity, among the best educated populations in the world, and food scarcity, in countries with a recognised obesity problem. As more people become aware, through education and experience, the higher intelligences that emerge are emotionally, as well as cognitively, able to manage fear, live more fully and benefit in an enlightened socio-economic dynamic. The rise in fear and anger will hopefully result in a rebound to sensibility. But the pace of change required to avoid a painful correction is much faster than ever before. As Paul Volker said of financial markets: "I don't know whether change will come with a bang or a whimper , whether sooner or later. But as things stand now, it is more likely than not that it will be a financial crisis rather than a policy foresight that will force change." This foresight is increasingly relevant for all spheres of life. The US is particularly prone to dishonesty at the moment because nationwide dynamics, such as the Patriot Act and Presidential speeches harping on about terrorism, have exacerbated the feelings of fear. Hollywood cop movie displays are emerging ... Federal air marshals shot and killed a passenger, Rigoberto Alpizar, at Miami International Airport after the man claimed he had a bomb in his backpack and ran from an aircraft. But the man, an American citizen from Maitland, Florida, had no bomb and was mentally ill and merely off his medication. Mr. Alpizar's wife had tried to follow her husband as he ran off the plane, saying he was mentally ill and had not taken his medication. And then there was a coverup as law enforcement officials refused to answer questions about Mr. Alpizar's mental state or his wife. Under the circumstances we can understand why this happened and feel for the officials who murdered this person. But it would not have happened if fear did not rule America today. An example of the other end of the spectrum is the Dalai Lama, spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhism. In December a man burned himself to death in protest at Chinese repression in Tibet, yet the Dalai Lama advocated a non-violent approach to him on his death bed. How can one respect the feelings of anger and hatred when inequity strikes from your home to your heart? Is the Dalai Lama right to advocate total peace in seeking liberation, even at the bedside of a self-immolated man who was desperate in the face of Chinese repression of Tibet? This is certainly the policy that enlightened people should be adopting - and most certainly one that Christians, even in America, should hold dear. While it is difficult and possibly impractical in certain situations - it is the only honest way for the rich and powerful to engender change. After months of resistance by Mr Bush and Vice-President Dick Cheney, the White House was forced to retreat after proposals to ban torture were overwhelmingly backed by the Senate and House of Representatives. The ban was proposed by the Republican senator John McCain, a former Navy pilot who was held and tortured for five years during the Vietnam War. He introduced legislation that would prohibit "cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment" of any prisoner in US custody, regardless of where in the world they are held. Last month, the Senate backed Mr McCain's amendment by ninety votes to nine, one of the sharpest legislative rebukes to the White House since Mr Bush took office. The House overwhelmingly endorsed Mr McCain's position by 308 to 122. Although the House vote was non-binding and did not turn Mr McCain's amendment into law, it specifically instructed House negotiators to include the McCain language, word for word, in next year's $453bn (€378bn) Pentagon budget Bill. I was sent the following view on the developments in Iraq which gives positive news (verifiable on Department of Defense web sites). The news is worthy, especially because many people must be feeling bad, even guilty, about the continuing unexpected course of events in Iraq out of their control. Good people deserve to hear good news. And the Iraqi election happening now may hopefully provide some more of that. (But please remember these numbers are delivered out of context and are not balanced by the continuing tapestry of lies and death surrounding Iraq and America.) Did you know that 47 countries have reestablished
their embassies in Iraq? But please remember the body count. Iraqbodycount.net estimates between 27,736 and 31,263 civilians have been killed because of the war. (View Database ... Get the dossier). EnergyThe year ended with the oil price still hovering around $ 60. There is no reason to expect it to decline, particularly as winter continues in north America and Europe. The risk remains on the upside. The fire at a UK oil depot was newsworthy, not because of the importance of that depot and the large amount of fuel lost, but because of the evacuation of 2,000 people and the visible pollution - a cloud of toxic smoke that stretched for several kilometers and is visible from space - see here. Jerry Taylor and Peter Van Doren, senior fellows at the Cato Institute a highly regarded think-tank, have proposed eliminating the US oil reserve.The rise in fuel prices that followed Hurricanes Katrina and Rita has prompted many members of Congress to call for new and expanded federal reserves of crude oil, diesel fuel, home heating oil, jet fuel and propane. Proponents of stockpiling claim that if the government were to hoard those commodities when prices were low, it could unleash them on the market when supplies are tight, thus dampening price increases and stabilizing the market. But the US experience with the strategic petroleum reserve strongly suggests that such government-managed stockpiles are a waste of taxpayers' money. Rather than increasing the stockpile, the reserve should be emptied and closed. Public stockpiles are far more expensive to maintain than many analysts realize. For example, after adjusting for inflation, the petroleum reserve has cost federal taxpayers as much as $51 billion since it was created in 1975. If you divide that sum by the amount of oil in the reserve, that's $80 per barrel by the end of 2003. In its 30-year history, the 700-million-barrel reserve, which was recently authorized by Congress to expand to 1 billion barrels, has been tapped only three major times: 21 million barrels were released at the onset of the Persian Gulf war in the early 1990's, 30 million barrels in September 2000 and 24 million barrels last year after Hurricane Katrina struck. Those releases were so small considering the size of the reserve that one wonders why politicians are so keen on having a billion barrels. Climate Change and EnvironmentA deal to tackle global warming was secured after marathon international talks in Canada. However, the US will not sign the treaty because President Bush says it will hamper its economy. The US which had earlier walked out of the summit, has agreed to take part in non-binding talks on long-term measures to tackle global warming. Countries which have signed up to the Kyoto Protocol on greenhouse gas emissions have agreed to set new targets when the treaty expires in 2012. Delegates at the UN climate change conference in Montreal also agreed to adopt a draft rule book detailing the operation of the Kyoto Protocol, making it operational after years of negotiation. And they have agreed to get the compliance mechanism for the treaty up and running. The deal came on the final day of the two-week summit. The Kyoto Protocol is an international agreement setting targets for industrialised countries to cut their greenhouse gas emissions. Signatories of the Kyoto Protocol have agreed to cut their combined emissions to 5 per cent below 1990 levels by 2012. The US appears to have been stung by negative coverage in the US media after it walked out in protest at Canadian attempts to get it to accept mandatory targets, as well as by Bill Clinton's strong comments at the event: "There is no longer any serious doubt that climate change is real, accelerating and caused by human activities."Jennifer Morgan, climate-change expert for environmental group WWF, said US negotiator Harlan Watson's decision to leave the talks overnight showed "just how willing the US administration is to walk away from a healthy planet and its responsibilities". But let's hear from US media. The NYTimes editorial reads: At least the Americans' shameful foot-dragging did not bring the entire process to a complete halt, and for this the other industrialized countries, chiefly Britain and Canada, deserve considerable praise. It cannot be easy for America's competitors to move forward with costly steps to reduce greenhouse gas emissions while the United States refuses to carry its share of the load. Nevertheless, the Europeans and other signatories to the 1997 treaty limiting greenhouse gas emissions - a treaty the Bush administration has rejected - promised to work toward new and more ambitious targets and timetables when the agreement lapses in 2012. For its part, the Bush administration deserves only censure. No one expected a miraculous conversion. But given the steadily mounting evidence of the present and potential consequences of climate change - disappearing glaciers, melting Arctic ice caps, dying coral reefs, threatened coastlines, increasingly violent hurricanes - one would surely have expected America's negotiators to arrive in Montreal willing to discuss alternatives. They did not. Instead, the principal negotiators, Paula Dobriansky and Harlan Watson, continued to tout the benefits of an approach that combines voluntary reductions by individual companies with further research into "breakthrough" technologies. That will not work. While a few companies may decide to proceed on their own, the private sector as a whole will neither create new technologies nor broadly deploy them unless all countries are required to do their share under a regime that combines agreed-upon targets with strong financial incentives for reaching them. To believe that companies will spend heavily to reduce emissions while their competitors are not doing the same is to believe in the tooth fairy.
The fiduciaries who control the world’s financial assets – on our behalf – have long argued that their sole concern is to maximise financial returns. Michael Northrop, of Rockefeller Brothers Fund in New York, and David Sassoon, founder of Science First Communications, New York say it is also their duty to act to minimise climate change. The world has suffered more than $ 200 billion in economic
losses as a result of weather-related natural disasters
over the past year, making 2005 the costliest year on record, according
to preliminary estimates released by the Munich Re Foundation at the international
climate conference in Montreal. A special investigation by the New York Times reveals the extent of criminal activity by Freeport in Indonesia. Freeport has sent almost one billion tons of mine waste down the river from their copper and gold mine. The investigation revealed a level of contacts and financial support to the military not fully disclosed by Freeport, despite years of requests by shareholders concerned about potential violations of American laws and the company's relations with a military whose human rights record is so blighted that the United States severed ties for a dozen years until November. Company records show that from 1998 through 2004, Freeport gave military and police generals, colonels, majors and captains, and military units, nearly $20 million. Individual commanders received tens of thousands of dollars, in one case up to $150,000. Letters and other documents showed that the Environment Ministry repeatedly warned the company since 1997 that Freeport was breaching environmental laws. They also reveal the ministry's deep frustration. At one point last year, a ministry scientist wrote that the mine's production was so huge, and regulatory tools so weak, that it was like "painting on clouds" to persuade Freeport to comply with the ministry's requests to reduce environmental damage. That frustration stems from an operation that, by Freeport's own estimates, will generate an estimated six billion tons of waste before it is through - more than twice as much earth as was excavated for the Panama Canal. Much of that waste has already been dumped in the mountains surrounding the mine or down a system of rivers that descends steeply onto the island's low-lying wetlands, close to Lorentz National Park, a pristine rain forest that has been granted special status by the United Nations. A multimillion-dollar 2002 study by an American consulting company, Parametrix, paid for by Freeport and its joint venture partner, Rio Tinto, and not previously made public, noted that the rivers upstream and the wetlands inundated with waste were now "unsuitable for aquatic life." ITSeveral reports from North America and Europe show that internet commerce took a huge leap of around 30% in the holiday spending season. While bricks and mortar store sales did not achieve expectations, online shopping took up more of the slack than expected. It also seems that the standard shopping process includes both the hard and soft retail experience - consumers like to know there's a shop in the high street and will go there occasionally, but will tend to make the purchase online where they can do it at a time convenient to them and often compare prices with other shops at the same time. A few shops have been successful without the solid store front, like Amazon, but they have built loyalty through advertising, performance and the passage of time. Sony BMG is rethinking its anti-piracy policy following weeks of criticism over the copy protection used on CDs. The head of Sony BMG's global digital business, Thomas Hesse, told the BBC that the company was "re-evaluating" its current methods. It follows widespread condemnation of the way anti-piracy software on some Sony CDs installs itself on computers. The admission came as Sony faced more censure over the security failings of one of its copy protection programs. The row began in November when software developer Mark Russinovich discovered that Sony BMG's XCP anti-piracy programs used virus-like techniques to hide itself on a PC. The row ended with Sony recalling all the CDs that use XCP and offering to swap customers' existing discs for ones that do not use the much-criticised software. Mozilla, the home of the fastest growing browser Firefox has launched a sister site, Mozilla.com. It offers simplified navigation focusing on Firefox the #1 rated browser, and Thunderbird, the "best thing to happen to e-mail in a long time". Both are free. Microsoft has advised Mac users of Internet Explorer to switch to rival browsers such as Apple's Safari. The advice came as the software giant formally announced the end of IE for Apple Macs. Microsoft initially said it had stopped work on the browser in June. No more security updates will be provided as from the New Year. The browser itself will be removed from Microsoft's Mactopia site and no longer be available for download. The merger of Adobe and Macromedia is interesting in that it may lead to the next generation of web software with the merger of pdf and flash. The internet is providing more insight to communications and marketing. According to a recent report from Pew Internet and American Life: Men are from Google, women are from Yahoo. "On the Internet, as in life, men and women have different motivations for doing what they do. Women view the Internet as a place to extend, support, and nurture relationships and communities. Men tend to see it as an office, a library, or a playground--screw the community, this is about function not family." Here are some stats for the number crunchers: • 67% of the adult American population goes online, including 68% of men and 66% of women • 86% of women ages 18-29 are online, compared with 80% of men that age. • 34% of men 65 and older use the Internet, compared with 21% of women that age. • 62% of unmarried men compared with 56% of unmarried women go online • 75% of married women and 72% of married men go online • 61% of childless men compared with 57% of childless women go online • 81% of men with children and 80% of women with children go online. • 52% of men and 48% of women have high-speed connections at home • 94% of online women and 88% of online men use email And a great example of how the internet can reduce transaction costs and improve decisions is the owner listings real estate site FsboMadison.com (pronounced FIZZ-boh) which holds a nearly 20 percent share of the Dane County market for residential real estate listings. The site, which charges just $ 150 to list a home and throws in a teal blue yard sign, draws more Internet traffic than the traditional multiple listing service controlled by real estate agents across the country, the National Association of Realtors and the 6 percent commission that most of its members charge to sell a house are under assault by government officials, consumer advocates, lawyers and ambitious entrepreneurs. But the most effective challenge so far emanates from a spare bedroom in the modest home of Christie, a former social worker who favors fuzzy slippers, and her cousin, Mary Clare Murphy, 51. They operate what real estate professionals believe to be the largest for-sale-by-owner Web site in the country. The price competition is startling. FsboMadison listed about 2,000 homes in 2005 and said that about 72 percent of its listings sell. If those 1,440 houses averaged $200,000 per sale, the real estate commissions under the 6 percent system would have been about $17.3 million. Ms. Miller and Ms. Murphy collected about $300,000. The ICANN debate continues. Who should have control of the internet, or is control even desirable or possible? Is it to be viewed as a human construct, owned by its many creators, or is it more like a global public utility, or a natural resource? You can see here a transcript of a debate by Michael Barone of US News & World Report, Perry De Havilland of Samzdata, Franklin Cudjoe of Imani Ghana and Peng Hwa Ang of the UN’s Working Group on Internet Governance. They debate the question of whether or not the internet should or can be controlled, and if so, who should do the controlling. Holonics and LOHASHolonics * Health * Environment * Education * Living HolonicsAnother indication that Germany is an enlightenment pioneer: German rail commuters are being taught yoga and relaxation techniques on their journeys to and from work in a campaign to reduce stress. Teams of yoga instructors and physiotherapists have been placed on so-called "wellness" trains in southern Germany. They are laying their hands on workers with cricked necks and backaches, giving hand and shoulder massages and teaching relaxation methods that can be used at home or work. Deutsche Bahn - Germany's state-owned railway - decided to offer the relaxation techniques as part of a widespread drive to calm an anxious workforce and get commuters off the roads. HealthBird flu may be spread by using chicken dung as feed in fish farms, a practice now routine in Asia, according to BirdLife International, the world's leading bird conservation organisation. Fertilising fish ponds with poultry faeces, which can dramatically improve fish growth, may in fact set up major new reservoirs of avian influenza infection if the chickens are infected themselves. The suggestion puts a serious question mark over a technique firmly backed by the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation as a primary means of providing protein for mushrooming populations in the developing countries. Known as integrated livestock-fish farming, the technique involves transferring the wastes from raising pigs, ducks or chickens directly to fish farms, with chicken or duck sheds sometimes sited directly over the fish ponds themselves. BirdLife International is now calling for an investigation into the possibility that these thousands of manure-fed ponds across Asia may be the means by which the new, potentially deadly strain H5N1, is being spread. BirdLife points out that outbreaks of H5N1 have occurred this year at locations in China, Romania and Croatia where there are fish farms. This supports our contention that avian flu is emerging because of unsanitary production rather than simply "a new disease". (The Ecologist covers this in depth in their December issue.) Also in December, an AC Nielsen study on consumer habits in the UK suggest that people say that they eat healthier than they really do. This is reflective of people wanting to be seen to be educated and sensible responsible consumers but having difficulty breaking old habits of sugar, fat and packaging. However, the report also reveals the intelligence of the consumer who is showing strong resistance to fortified breads and milk - we prefer natural ingredients in food rather than chemical additives to create "nutraceuticals".The new study was designed to discover which foods that actively promote a health benefit were popular with consumers and why. Of the main categories listed in the survey whole grain products were regularly bought by most consumers (48%), cholesterol reducing products by 28%, fortified fruit juices by 16%, and probiotic yoghurts by 18%. When ACNielsen compared this latest online consumer survey with data from its Homescan project - which records actual purchases - it found significant differences. For example, whilst 65% of people in the online survey said they 'regularly or sometimes' bought cholesterol-reducing products, the Homescan data reveals that less than 20% of households purchased these products last year. Commenting on this phenomenon, Jonathan Bank, business insight director at ACNielsen said: "There is a lot of pressure to eat well and so consumers may be deluding themselves into believing they have a better diet than they have." Banks also said that sceptical British consumers were not always taken in by the health claims made for particular foods and that they were suspicious in particular about fortified foods which they did not regard as 'natural'. The Natural and Organic trade show scheduled for April in London already has the highest interest since it was launched. This certainly underpins the rapidly expanding demand for good food, against the institutional backdrop of GM contamination. EnvironmentThe European Commission has authorised genetic contamination in organic agriculture, clearly putting the biotech industry before organic farmers and consumers, as well as nature. In a draft Regulation on Organic Production, adopted by the Commission on 21 December products containing up to 0.9% GMOs can be labeled as organic. This is a step backwards compared to existing EU legislation. Independent legal advice obtained by Friends of the Earth and other NGOs concludes that the Organic Regulation currently in force does not allow an organic product to contain GMOs or GM derivatives in any quantity. The organic sector in the EU must be given the means to develop and ensure its economic growth without any risk of genetic contamination. The European Commission continues to refuse to consider strict EU-wide legislation on the coexistence of genetically modified crops with conventional and organic farming. The Commission is also refusing to take environmental and health issues into account when considering coexistence, insisting that it is a purely economic concern. Independent legal advice has found that the Commission's Recommendations on coexistence are "fundamentally flawed" and that Member States must have regard to the aims of protection of human health and the environment. Helen Holder, GMO campaign coordinator at Friends of the Earth Europe, said: "Genetic contamination of organic food is completely unacceptable to consumers throughout the EU. The European Commission should be protecting organic farmers and consumers with laws that prevent organic farming from being contaminated by GM. If the biotech industry can't prevent contamination, then GM crops should not be grown in the EU." Deep sea fish species in the northern Atlantic are on the brink of extinction, according to Canadian scientists writing in the journal Nature. They studied five deep water species including hake and eel and say that some populations have plummeted by 98% in a generation, meeting the definition of 'critically endangered'. Populations of roundnose grenadier, onion-eye grenadier, blue hake, spiny eel and spinytail skate all declined spectacularly over the period. Populations fell by between 87% and 98%; projections show that some would be completely eliminated within three generations. These statistics would place the five fish within the category of "critically endangered", as defined by IUCN, the World Conservation Union, which publishes the Red List of threatened species. "Conservation measures are necessary and lack of knowledge must not delay appropriate initiatives, including the establishment of deep sea protected areas," the researchers conclude. Scientists and conservation bodies are pressing for a global moratorium on deep-sea fishing which they regard as particularly destructive. EducationI find this particularly revealing because it lends credence to the idea that people behave like sheep, following the few leaders in our midst. It also supports the behaviour of markets, in which consumers tend to buy/do what others are buying/doing. We have not been adept at questioning our immediate environment and more often than not just want a solution irrespective of other considerations. Examples range from the mundane: buying fashion brand because we can't choose for ourselves, to the complex: we don't care how the computer software works, even if it is overpriced and buggy, so long as everyone else is using it. Although pragmatism demands that we recognise this dynamic, it is also clear that greater education and complexity are encouraging more people to move beyond programmed "knee-jerk" behaviour to critical thinking and enlightened behaviour. As a committed proponent of "walking the talk" we were attracted to The Economist's article the importance of actions not words which reports on "mirror neurons". This reflects the research of Derek Lyons monkey study related above providing the rationale for humans' tendency to imitate, at least until their mental sophistication allows them to engage in critical thinking. New experiments show that when we see someone carry out certain actions, the same parts of our brain are activated “as if” we were doing it ourselves. In essence: we don’t need to think and analyse, we know immediately what other people mean and feel by replicating what they do within the same areas of our own brains. As leading researcher Rizzolatti puts it, “the fundamental mechanism that allows us a direct grasp of the mind of others is not conceptual reasoning but direct simulation of the observed events through the mirror mechanism.” In the unusual properties of mirror neurons scientists may have stumbled upon the brain mechanisms that give us the power to feel what others feel, to read others’ intentions as though they were our own, and even to get deeply involved in the activity of others during a game of football or a dance performance. Yet more surprising, the properties of these mirror neurons suggest that human language began in gesture and mime, not in speech. Also new research links defects in these nerve cells to autism and suggests novel methods for treatment. The number of scientific papers mentioning mirror neurons has risen 800% in the past two years. Psychologists, linguists, biologists, robot builders (who think mirror-neuron-like properties might help their robots be a bit more human) and philosophers are all taking on board the new view that “cognition is embodied in action” or the old aphorism "learning by doing". But the insights go further and reveal more about our absurd propensity to lie and accept others lying. That “direct grasp of the mind of others” is an ability that sets humans apart from almost all other animals, except the monkeys and apes, which have only the first rudiments of this skill. Understanding what others intend makes possible those unique human skills of deliberate lying, cheating and manipulating, as well as imitation of others. Imitation is another skill that is almost uniquely human and permits learning to be passed on and culture to develop. It is time for humanity to recognise this characteristic and move on to a more sophisticated use of our mental capacities. Thankfully US District Judge John Jones, a federal judge in Philadelphia, banned the teaching of intelligent design as an alternative to evolution, by Pennsylvania's Dover Area School District, saying the practice violated the constitutional ban on teaching religion in public schools. In a fierce attack on the Dover school board, all but one of whom have now been ousted by the area's voters - the judge condemned the "breathtaking inanity" of its policy." Jones defended the students and teachers of Dover High School whom he said "deserved better than to be dragged into this legal maelstrom with its resulting utter waste of monetary and personal resources." The ruling for the Pennsylvania's Dover Area School District dealt a blow to US Christian conservatives who have been pressing for the teaching of creationism in schools and who played a significant role in the re-election of President Bust. "Our conclusion today is that it is unconstitutional to teach intelligent design as an alternative to evolution in a public school classroom," Jones wrote in a 139-page opinion. The school district was sued by a group of 11 parents who claimed teaching intelligent design was unconstitutional and unscientific and had no place whatsoever in high-school biology classrooms. LivingSome of America's most prominent megachurches decided not to hold worship services on the Sunday that coincides with Christmas Day, a move that generated controversy among evangelical Christians at a time when many conservative groups are battling to "put the Christ back in Christmas." Megachurch leaders said that the decision is in keeping with their innovative and "family friendly" approach and that they are compensating in other ways. Willow Creek Community Church in South Barrington, Illinois, always a pacesetter among megachurches, is handing out a DVD it produced for the occasion that features a heartwarming contemporary Christmas tale. "What we're encouraging people to do is take that DVD and in the comfort of their living room, with friends and family, pop it into the player and hopefully hear a different and more personal and maybe more intimate Christmas message, that God is with us wherever we are," said Cally Parkinson, communications director at Willow Creek, which draws 20,000 people on a typical Sunday. Megachurches have long been criticized for offering "theology lite," but some critics say that this time the churches have gone too far in the quest to make Christianity accessible to spiritual seekers. Although an atheist, I have to agree with Ben Witherington III, professor of New Testament interpretation at Asbury Theological Seminary in Wilmore, Kentucky: "I see this in many ways as a capitulation to narcissism, the self-centered, me-first, I'm going to put me and my immediate family first agenda of the larger culture." It certainly neglects the traditional role of the church to provide a community especially for the people in society without strong family connections like the elderly, single people a long distance from family, or people who are simply lonely and for whom church and prayers would be a significant part of their day. Like the religious rationale for the war in Iraq this policy seems more hedonistic than honest. I'd like to mention John Lennon tributes that occurred in December because he was ahead of his time and lived for enlightenment of humanity - just listen to Imagine. His former wife Yoko Ono and the musician's many fans have mingled in Strawberry Fields, New York, to mark the 25th anniversary of his death. In his home city of Liverpool devotees released hundreds of white balloons bearing messages into the sky. The former Beatle was shot in Manhattan on 8 December 1980 by Mark Chapman, who is now in a New York prison. Activities, Books and GatheringsI had a new experience in December - single parenthood! Well, not really new but being the single parent of four children for nearly three weeks was a great experience. Because I decided (based on past experience) that when they are about (eg not at school or asleep) I must focus on them, it allowed me to develop a better feel for what they are up to and what is going on in their minds. It was a very positive therapy for all of us and I recommend fathers make an opportunity to do the same - make sure you're actually involved rather than treating it as a holiday. I would do it again and would have continued if they were not so fond of their mother. Work on a couple of exciting transactions proved interesting and we hope to help develop a couple of new businesses in 2006. My brother's training business You Turn ("you turn your life around") is poised for an exciting year as blue chip clients sign up for programmes. Based in London, UK they offer one hour courses in basic skills such as plumbing and electrical ("Home Turn"), car use ("Car Turn") and living ("Health Turn") and are popular with companies as perks and with individuals starting out on the home ownership ladder. We wish him all the best with this great initiative. Garden chores were somewhat neglected because of the additional load indicated above, but winter is a quiet time and catch up will be feasible. Activity in the garden is already picking up as buds are spinging in to action and early sowings will take place soon. If you are interested in our garden/yoga news please let me know or sign-up for Ballin Temple's short newsletter here (please scroll down to select newsletter signup). Another couple of Pratchett's were devoured. Interesting Times has always been a favorite of mine because it takes place in an "oriental" setting so resonates with the decade I spent in Asia. It is also a story of repression and rebellion so much of the philosophy and commentary is relevant today. Such as: "Most people develop their social conscience when young, during that brief period between leaving school and deciding that injustice isn't necessarily all bad, and it was something of a shock to suddenly find one at the age of sixty." Masquerade is built on the Phantom of the Opera and is a fun "who done it?" It also has its share of philosophy relevant to local and global troubles of today: "The dwarfs think a rat is a good meal which only goes to show it would be a strange world if we were all alike!" or "The trouble is, you see, that if you do know Right from Wrong, you can't choose Wrong. You just can't do it and live." I'd like to recommend the Ecologist magazine again. December's edition researched a couple of interesting stories - the contention that bird flu is emerging because of poor living conditions, and Irina Ermakova's GM experiment that suggest significant liklihood that consumption of GM product can have disastrous effects on their progeny! Its a great read with interesting features, like its analysis of avian flu, and provocative regulars, like Behind the Label its review of commonly used household products. It also offers an ethical living guide packed with exciting tips. The only gatherings we attended in December were of the party variety. It was a wonderful time of joining up with family and friends and only wish we could spend more time with more of you. We will be running a two workshops in 2006 - one focused on holonics and integral systems suited to executives and another more broadly based experiential retreat. For more information please contact me by email or + 353 59 9155037.
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know thyself - Socrates |