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Astraea News and Views - May 2006
PerspectiveI was pulled between the extremes of optimism and futility in May, even wondering "have I been living under a stone?". The optimism was engendered by a host of businesses and projects which are initiating positive change and helping turn humanity from an exclusive beast to an inclusive part of nature. On the other hand there were personal and global warnings that we are accelerating down the wrong road. Could the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the west's growing confrontation with Iran, and efforts to divest North Korea of its nuclear weapons approach crucial turning points that might combine to create a perfect storm of simultaneous international crises? Could the economic rumblings, like the dollar decline, trade imbalances and inequities and various asset bubbles combine to destabilise our cosy lifestyles? On the positive side, BeTheChange in particular introduced some powerful businesses, like Eprida, and change agents, like Stan Thakera and Tim Flannery. These businesses and people will make it possible to recreate humanity such that we see the world though a filter that is more unified and wholesome than the current belligerence in politics and economics. But at the same time it is depressing to hear of ignorance and selfishness among privileged people who imagine that traditionally derived solutions, like Halliburton's Survivaball (see Climate Change section), might work, and, even worse, that we are manipulated by rich power brokers more than we imagine (see Geopolitics). On a personal note, my predilections to family business were greatly challenged. A number of people I respect denigrated the idea of pursuing family business, although I still maintain the view that family values are appropriate for long term stability of organisations. In one incident, I met a man with 6 siblings who chats with them all weekly, but never wanted to be involved in his father's business and does not want his children to take over his; this carries weight because he has built a billion dollar private business group in which the principals aim to share ownership with management up to 50% - he is extremely successful and fair. I reflected that Einstein, and other greats, never created family legacies. And two family enterprises with which I am in touch appear to be choosing dualistic strategies rather than unified ones. As Pratchett notes "gold and mud come out of the same hole" - that is to say there is no telling what creature your loins will create. The longevity of family businesses (they are the oldest in the world; we have a tenuous 15 generation record) suggests that families can create an environment that nurtures the right kind of guardian, but I've not seen any literature, even supported conjecture, that this might be the case. Perhaps the key is to nurture family values, but allow succeeding generations to adapt to the changing world that organisations inevitably face. GeopoliticsLast month we reported on the crisis of confidence at the IMF/World Bank. The UN also faces a crisis when its interim budget runs out at the end of next month. The US and the other large contributors are threatening to withhold new funds unless the G77 (developing) countries agree to essential reforms of the UN secretariat. Getting the latter to sign up will probably in turn depend on progress towards revamping the Security Council. UN reform is high on many people's agenda. There are many who would scrap it and start again. More pragmatic views favour reform. And this is likely to be the right solution, but it is not clear how and it is not clear what. The UN is seen as impotent, because the US is the global superpower not the UN, and incompetent, because of waste and corruption from within. At the top of the list of needs is who is to replace Annan. Most candidates are high-profile leaders from politics or business. But that is not the kind of leader that a multilateral organisation needs. In fact, lessons can be learnt from VISA the highly successful trillion dollar credit processing company: Who is VISA CEO? Don't know? That's because the organisation is designed to cooperate internally - it is a member owned organisation (designed by Dee Hock) and it works. Multilateral organisations need similar structures and anyone at the head needs the disciplines of big company CEOs, without the ego. Immigration was high on many agendas in May. The USA continued trying to bolster border control with Mexico. While the sentiment of wishing to preserve jobs and safety is understandable, the approach needs to be more thoughtful and less belligerent. The approach of doubling the resource allocation and applying a militant strategy is an inefficient use of resources which will not benefit America. Also Spain faced immigration issues as waves of north Africans attempt to land in the Canary Islands. Some 7,000 migrants, mostly from Africa, have reached the Canary Islands in the Atlantic Ocean this year; in May alone, about 2,000 would-be migrants reached the Canary Islands, mostly from Central and Sub-Saharan Africa, alone. Here in Ireland the state deported a few dozen Afghanistanis who have sought amnesty being afraid of torture and death on repatriation. A bigger issue in Ireland is the massive influx of people from eastern Europe which is now testing traditional Irish hospitality. While just 2.3pc of the Irish population were foreigners in 1990, the level rose to 7.1pc in 2003. This compared with just under 5% in the UK. Since then, the number of migrants has increased considerably, with more than 200,000 eastern Europeans registering for social welfare numbers since EU enlargement in 2004. We can guess that the proportion is now at least 10%. If this kind of influx occurred in the US one can imagine there might be rioting. While long term residents can be frustrated as parts of towns are taken over by immigrants and jobs are taken up, the immigrants have provided a strong foundation to the labour force and are greatly appreciated by employers. Last month we spoke about the need for more insightful measures of prosperity, such as Index of Sustainability and Economic Welfare, the Genuine Progress Index and the Calvert-Henderson's Quality of Life Indicators. Now the call has been taken up by David Cameron the new leader of UK conservatives, as he talked about the desirability of moving from GNP to Gross National Happiness or similar. It is heartening to hear the call, it will be better to see it implemented in the coming 5 years. Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra chaired his first cabinet meeting since stepping aside from front-line politics at the beginning of April. He had handed power to his deputy after the election, which was later annulled. The return to political life has concerned some opponents who accuse Thaksin of abusing power and weakening democratic institutions. In the meantime, the anti-Thaksin street protests have melted away and Thailand has been calm despite extraordinary levels of political confusion. It appears that Thaksin did not want a long political vacuum, though it will take some weeks to organise new elections. Guessing who might succeed Thaksin is difficult as there are no clear leaders ready to step into the breach. Our current best guess is Surakiart Sathirathai who has a good academic pedigree, international experience and appears to be acceptable to a wide range of interests. One of our readers in Thailand was kind enough to share with us a review from the Economist Intelligence Unit on the current political situation in Thailand. It offers a comprehensive summary by a long term resident and may be read here. Petropolitics is getting interesting. Soon after invading Iraq, the US determined that Iraqi oil can only be bought in US$, in effect prohibiting the use of Euros and other major currencies. Now Putin has raised the stakes in the oil game during his State of the Nation to parliament address on May 10 when he announced that Russia was planning to make the rouble “internationally convertible” so that it could be used in oil and natural gas transactions. “The rouble must become a more widespread means of international transactions,” Putin said. “To this end, we need to open a stock exchange in Russia to trade in oil, gas, and other goods to be paid for in roubles." Presently, oil is denominated exclusively in dollars and sold through the New York Mercantile Exchange or the London Petroleum Exchange, both owned by American investors. Currently, the central banks around the world carry large stockpiles of dollars to use in their purchases of oil. This gives the US a virtual monopoly on oil transactions. It also forces reluctant nations to continue using the dollar even though it is currently underwritten by $8.4 trillion national debt. If Russia proceeds with its plan, the rouble will become another alternative to the the dollar on the open market, particularly attractive to its neighbours, and may help deflate demand for the dollar putting raising the pressure for devaluation. Russia’s plan is similar to that of Iran,
which announced that it would open an oil-bourse (oil exchange) on Kish
Island in two months. The bourse would allow oil transactions to be made
in petro-euros, thus discarding the dollar. The Bush administration’s
belligerence has intensified considerably since Iran made its intentions
clear. Secretary of State Rice said that “security guarantees were not
on the table”; in other words, Washington will not provide Iran a “non-aggression
pact” whether it follows UN Security Council guidelines or not.
If Ithe course of events in Iraq had not been so disastrous this would
suggest that America is anticipating military action in Iran. In the US Attorney General Alberto Gonzales's threatened to prosecute media stalwart the NY Times for revealing President Bush's domestic spying program. Strangely he claimed that a century-old espionage law could be used to muzzle the press and asserted that the administration cares about enforcing laws the way Congress intended. Gonzales said that a careful reading of some statutes "would seem to indicate" that it was possible to prosecute journalists for publishing classified material. He called it "a policy judgment by Congress in passing that kind of legislation," which the executive is obliged to obey. Gonzales seemed to be talking about a law that dates to World War I and bans, in some circumstances, the unauthorized possession and publication of information related to national defense. It has long been understood that this overly broad and little used law applies to government officials who swear to protect such secrets, and not to journalists. But in any case, Gonzales and Bush have not shown the slightest interest in upholding constitutional principles or following legislative guidelines that they do not find ideologically or politically expedient. European residents may wish to vote for a unified seat of government. If you think the European government should be consolidated to one location (Brussels) by disbanding Strabourg and saving some € 200 million annully, please say so here: http://www.oneseat.eu/. Risk and TerrorRisk profiles are rising globally. While military and political risk has been in the danger zone for some time, we feel that economic risk is now moving from yellow/orange to red. That is not to say that financial systems are not robust and flexible, but the imbalances are massive and are now being recognised by a wider proportion of the public which may in itself undermine stability. In Iraq, neither militray nor political stability has improved. And the Haditha incident of last November is now at the forefront of minds in America's administration, population and around the world. The allegations in Newsweek magazine contribute to an ever more disturbing portrait of embattled marines under high stress, some on their third tour of duty after ferocious door-to-door fighting in the Sunni insurgent strongholds of Falluja and Haditha. The marine unit involved in the killing of Iraqi civilians in Haditha last November had suffered a "total breakdown" in discipline and had drug and alcohol problems, according to the wife of one of the battalion's staff sergeants. The wife of the unnamed staff sergeant claimed there had been a "total breakdown" in the unit's discipline after it was pulled out of Falluja in early 2005. "There were problems in Kilo company with drugs, alcohol, hazing [violent initiation games], you name it," she said. "I think it's more than possible that these guys were totally tweaked out on speed or something when they shot those civilians in Haditha." The troops in Iraq have been ordered to take refresher courses on battlefield ethics, but a growing body of evidence from Haditha suggests the strain of repeated deployments in Iraq is beginning to unravel the cohesion and discipline of the combat troops. "We are in trouble in Iraq," Barry McCaffrey, a retired army general who played a leading role in the Iraq war, told Time magazine. "Our forces can't sustain this pace, and I'm afraid the American people are walking away from this war." Blair has met with Bush to discuss the viability of Iraq's fragile new national unity government, as British aides admit there is no short-term prospect of stopping the sectarian murders plaguing the country. They also discussed a programme of troop withdrawals from Iraq that will be much faster and more ambitious than originally planned. The US ambassador to Baghdad added to the sense of foreboding by predicting that the next six months would be "critical" for Iraq. To achieve stability, the new government must "get the security ministries to transform in such a way that they will have the confidence of the Iraqi people". Unfortunately, Iraq's prime minister, Nuri al-Maliki, speaking as his cabinet met for the first time, took a basal militaristic approach, vowing to use "maximum force against terrorism". But his government was met with a fresh wave of bombings, killing at least 19 people in Baghdad alone. The new government, due to internal sectarian disputes, has been unable to fill the key interior and defence posts . Further calls to close Guantanamo Bay camp in Cuba and any secret "war on terror" detention facilities abroad came from a United Nations report following hearings in early May in to US conduct. The UN Committee against Torture said that detaining persons in such conditions was a violation of the UN Convention against Torture. It also urged the US to put in place "immediate measures" to eradicate torture of detainees by its troops. "The state party should cease to detain any person at Guantanamo Bay and close the detention facility," the 11-page report said. It also urged the US to "rescind any interrogation technique" that constituted torture, such as the use of dogs to scare detainees. The report was compiled by a panel of 10 experts who heard testimony in early May from a delegation of US officials into its "war on terror" conduct. In connection with this, we saw for the first time an interview with two detainees released after proof of innocence supplied by the UK government. The two UK citizens seemed to have become more resentful and religious since their detention and, while their testimony appears tainted by hype, aspects are crdible enough to further blemish the reputation of the global superpower. An audio recording supposedly of Osama Bin Laden denies Zacarias Moussaoui's involvement in the 9/11 attacks, for which he was convicted and jailed for life without parole. "I am the one in charge of the 19 brothers and I never assigned brother Zacarias to be with them in that mission," the voice said, in a reference to the 19 hijackers of 11 September 2001. "Since Zacarias Moussaoui was still learning how to fly, he wasn't No 20 in the group, as your government claimed," he said. Moussaoui confessed because of pressure caused by over four years in prison, he said. Whatever the aunthenticity of the tape and statement, it further detracts from the US administration's credibility. Indonesia suffered a massive 6.3 magnitude earthquake on Saturday. The area around Bantul, a district eight miles south of Yogyakarta, was devastated where most of the deaths occurred. Unfortunately the ancient site of Prambanan was rocked and suffered damage too. The scale of mortality is similar to that of the World Trade Centre, being over 3,000. However, there is no comparison to be made between this relatively modest earthquake and far more devastating quakes in Pakistan and Pakistani-administered Kashmir in October 2005, which killed 75,000, and in Iran in 2003, which killed 31,000, let alone the tsunami, which killed 181,000 people in Southeast Asia in 2004. Nurpashi Kulayev was convicted for crimes in connection with the Beslan massacre, in a trial that was emotionally charged and closely watched. He is a young Chechen carpenter, who was caught during a final battle at School No. 1 in Beslan, in North Ossetia, near the Chechnya border. Kulayev was charged with several crimes, including terrorism and murder. He was first shown on Russian national television two days after the battle, looking overwhelmed and afraid as masked law enforcement officers handled him. The judge, Tamurlan Aguzarov, largely sidestepped these issues in his verdict, incorporating the positions of both the prosecutor and the government into the sentence. He said Mr. Kulayev deserved to die, but "because the Russian government has introduced a moratorium on carrying out death sentences, I sentence him to life imprisonment". The history of Chechnya and that massacre suggest that he is more of a scape-goat than a criminal. The US is beginning to debate whether to set aside a longstanding policy taboo and open direct talks with Iran, to help avert a crisis over Tehran's suspected nuclear weapons program. European officials who have been in contact with the administration in recent weeks said the discussion was heating up, as Secretary of State Rice worked with European foreign ministers to persuade Iran to suspend its efforts to enrich uranium. European leaders make no secret of their desire for the United States to join in the talks with Iran, if only to show that the Americans have gone the extra mile to avoid a confrontation that could spiral into a fight over sanctions or even military action. But since the Iranian revolution of 1979 and the crisis over the seizure of American hostages in November that year, the US has avoided direct talks with Iran. There were sporadic contacts during the war in Afghanistan, in the early stages of the Iraq war and in the days after the earthquake in Bam, Iran, at the end of 2003. Incentives and possible sanctions against Iran are the focus of negotiations between the United States and the European nations. The United States is resisting the Europeans' desire to increase economic incentives for Iran, because that would involve a lifting of American sanctions on European businesses that helped Iran. At the same time, Russia and China are resisting the idea of seeking a new resolution at the United Nations Security Council that could be seen as clearing the way for sanctions or possible military action against Iran. We do not see the Iranian nuclear threat as imminent. Presenting a report entitled The Military Balance, Dr Chipman warned
of a rising Taliban insurgency in Afghanistan aimed at British and Nato
troops who are replacing some US forces. "This year will be crucial for
Afghanistan as well as for Nato as it expands its mission into the south,"
he said. "The Taliban are likely to increase their operational tempo -
not least because they know that casualties among European Nato states
may mobilise domestic opinion against the war." British-led efforts
to eradicate Afghanistan's heroin production also "carry high risks to
international forces as they will come into direct confrontation with
the local population and the Taliban". Our views of risks to global stability were coloured by an unusual stream of referneces to consipracy theories which sound all too plausible and were prompted by the release by the US government of the 9/11 Pentagon video (which appeared to have the wrong time-stamp: September 12, 2001 17:37:22!). The US justice department has released the first video of the plane crashing into the Pentagon on 11 September 2001. The release of the video, taken from a Pentagon security camera, comes after a Freedom of Information Act request by legal watchdog Judicial Watch. For a more entertaining "movie" of the lead-up to the destruction of the Pentagon see this video (3 MB). Coincident with receiving the two video links above in mid-May, a participant in a discussion on global finance raised the issue of dollar support by oil, miltary and drug interventions by the US government; supporting conjecture with various evidence but most interestingly recognition of the fact that the US government has plotted against its citizens before - as a matter of governemnt record: Operation Northwoods was signed off by all five Joint Chiefs of Staff under the Kennedy administration as a way to foment public support for a war against Cuba, who would be blamed for the terrorist acts.
Rejected sternly by President Kennedy, which may have contributed to reasons behind his assassination, this approach to political gain may have been the model for September 11, shifting the blame this time to the Taliban homeland. What would make a more irresistible excuse for war? And then, perhaps because of heightened scrutiny fuelled by the Pentagon video, the question over the source of the World Trade Center collapse was brought to our attention: Dr. Robert M. Bowman, the former head of the Star Wars missile defense program under Presidents Ford and Carter has gone public to say that the official version of 9/11 is a screen and his main suspect for the architect of the attack is Vice President Dick Cheney. There appears to be evidence that the buildings were professionally demolished using themolite. (See: 9/11 Conspiracy: Controlled Demolition Dropped WTC and Miracles of 9/11: 'Surely the Hand of Allah' ) Bowman outlined how the drills on the morning of 9/11 that simulated planes crashing into buildings on the east coast were used as a cover to dupe unwitting air defense personnel into not responding quickly enough to stop the attack. Bowman agreed that the US was in danger of slipping into a dictatorship and stated, "I think there's been nothing closer to fascism than what we've seen lately from this government." Over the past two years, scores of highly regarded individuals have gone public to express their serious doubts about 9/11. These include former presidential advisor and CIA analyst Ray McGovern, the father of Reaganomics and former Assistant Secretary of the US Treasury Paul Craig Roberts, BYU physics Professor Steven Jones, former German defense minister Andreas von Buelow, former MI5 officer David Shayler, former Blair cabinet member Michael Meacher, former Chief Economist for the Department of Labor during President George W. Bush's first term Morgan Reynolds and many more. It certainly strains the credibility of the stories told so far by the US administration. Other related developments include the increase by a factor of some 8x in heroin production in Afghanistan since the US military was mobilised there in 2002. And if you are looking for a connection to "loose-cannon" Cheney and gang, enjoy the chart of Halliburton's recent fortunes. Energy
In the meantime, Africa and the Middle East, including places like Libya, Nigeria and Saudi Arabia, supply 60% of global oil reserves and are increasingly seeing this as their bargaining chip at the table of global resource allocation and wealth. The US energy secretary announced that the US does not think countries
such as Venezuela and Iran
would cut off oil supplies, despite
fraying relations. Sam Bodman believed the nations were so dependent
on oil export revenues that the drastic action was unlikely. He
added that while high oil prices may damage the US's economic growth little
could be done to bring down costs and attempted to blame traders for the
price of oil rather than OPEC, which sounds more like propaganda to benefit
the US administration's friend Saudi Arabia. In the wake of ever-escalating gasoline prices, an ethanol craze has officially taken hold. US Congress has approved $ 5.7 billion in federal tax credits to support the ethanol market, in addition to the $10 billion U.S. corn farmers annually receive in subsidies. While the corn-industry-lobbying-machine has President Bush predicting ethanol will replace gasoline, the science behind corn-based ethanol seems to suggest this alternative fuel may be more about politics than an actual solution. According to the U.S. Department of Energy, it takes the equivalent of three barrels of oil to create four barrels of corn-based ethanol. Couple that with the fact that ethanol gets lower miles per gallon than gasoline, and the corn-based solution begins to show its true colours. But other nations are demonstrating that plant-based ethanol fuels can help meet our energy needs. Brazil makes ethanol from sugar-cane, which is almost 8x more energy efficient to produce than the US corn-based fuel. Crops with high cellulose or sugar content that can be easily grown in the U.S., such as sugar beets, hemp or switch grass, make much more efficient fuels. But, in the U.S., where special interests, not the public seem to govern federal policy, it appears the immediate future of U.S. automotive fuel is going to the highest bidder: genetically engineered corn - scary! BusinessWeek reported on developments in bio-energy. Exciting bio-mimicry technology is being developed which offer clean, localised energy. Simply put, bacteria digest organic matter and produce electricity which can be captured and transferred. To quote the article: "microbes in a septic tank could power a house"! Now that sounds like a solution. While the technology is some years from commercialisation, it has been proven to work and it is a good example of how the solutions to today's problems may well come from unexpected sources. Anyone got a good idea on how to jump start hydrogen energy? The H Prize (expected to be passed in to US law) will award alternating prizes of $ 1 million and $ 4 million for advances and a grand prize of $ 100 million for paradigm shifting technology. Climate Change and Environment"An Inconvenient Truth," Al Gore's film about the climate change, opened in New York and California. It promises to be provocative, as its website quotes: "It is difficult to get a man to understand something when his salary depends on not understanding it". Much of the advocacy agenda stemming from the movie and its companion Web site, climatecrisis.net, is aimed a modest provisions, such as forest conservation, adoption of energy-efficient appliances, expansion of the hybrid car market and purchases of "green power" from electric utilities. The US National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) made a recent unanimous decision to establish a task force on climate change. And one sceptic has been converted by the weight of science. NY Times journalist Easterbrook says: Has anything happened in recent years that should cause a reasonable person to switch sides in the global-warming debate? Yes: the science has changed from ambiguous to near-unanimous. As an environmental commentator, I have a long record of opposing alarmism. But based on the data I'm now switching sides regarding global warming, from skeptic to convert. More of this kind of media is needed because many seemingly well informed and powerful people remain oblivious to the problem let alone its massive scale. Unfortunately, Canada will to try to block efforts to set stricter emissions targets in the Kyoto Protocol's second phase starting in 2012 and wants the climate-change accord scrapped in favour of a separate, voluntary deal. Canada wishes to join the Asia-Pacific Partnership on climate change, a non-binding pact criticized by environmentalists and an alternative to the Kyoto Protocol. This is driven by the fact that Canada's emissions are now 35 percent above its 1990 base levels whereas its protocol target is six percent below 1990 levels by 2012. This is particularly a shame because Canada makes a weighty contribution to alternative fuels. In a new report, the World Bank noted that the global market for carbon dioxide emissions, an innovative offshoot of the Kyoto pact on global warming, has shown explosive growth, though recent events in the European Union's Emissions Trading System underscored how deeply volatile the market remains. The study said the worldwide market in CO2 trading was worth more than $ 10 billion in 2005, 10 times the value of 2004 and more than the entire $ 7 billion US wheat crop. "The data makes it clear that carbon is now a financial commodity. Carbon is now priced and business managers take the carbon price into consideration along with other factors in making business decisions," said Karan Capoor, senior financial specialist at the World Bank and the report's main author. The volatility in the ETS came about on the release of reports that six EU countries had emitted far less CO2 than anticipated. Carbon prices dropped by more than 50% upon reports that the Czech Republic, Estonia, France, the Netherlands and the Walloon region emitted far less CO2 last year than initially anticipated by the market. The news took the market by surprise because of the magnitude in the discrepancy between the caps placed on countries' emissions and the amount of CO2 actually emitted. The shortfall was as much as 25% in Estonia with other countries reporting between 8 and 15% fewer emissions than anticipated. In France, this amounted to 19 million tonnes surplus allocations. However, the reported CO2 emissions represent only about 15% of the total emitted in the EU with reports for the biggest emitters like Germany, Italy, Poland and the UK still pending. And the drop also has positive effects, sending electricity prices down as CO2 market valuation is integrated into power prices. Electricity prices already fell by 5 to 10 euros in Europe in general on hearing the news. It was hardly a "crash" anyway - "the market started at € 6 and nobody then thought it would go above €10", said EU environment spokesperson Barbara Helfferich. Attention now turns to the EU's next round of emission allocation plans due on 30 June. The Emissions Trading Scheme is the EU's flagship instrument to fight climate change and meet its Kyoto pledge to reduce emissions of global warming gases by 8% by 2012. Under the ETS, 11,500 firms that are big users of fossil fuels have to meet a target of CO2 emissions or else pay a penalty of € 40 a tonne for 2006 and 2007, a punishment that will rise from 2008 to € 100 a tonne. Energy-hungry industrial installations have been able, since 1 January 2005, to buy and sell permits to emit carbon dioxide, covering about 40% of the EU's total CO2 emissions. A CO2 cap is set for each plant covered by the scheme in order to create a shortage and keep prices high, thereby encouraging companies to emit less than what they have been allowed. Those that are below their quota can sell their surplus on the ETS to companies that are over, thus providing a financial carrot to everyone to clean up his act. Pollution credits can be exchanged on an EU-wide carbon market, favouring greener utilities that can make a profit from selling their excess credits. This was the first time that governments have reported their actual level of emissions. The quotas established for the firms taking part in the ETS were based on estimates. The Financial Times commented "there is a strong suspicion that EU governments, of which at least 15 are on track to exceed their eventual Kyoto targets, are being too generous in awarding permits to their industries rather than the latter being unexpectedly successful in cutting pollution." In a recent study, WWF estimated that German power utility Vattenfall Europe received 99 % of its certificates for free. It said other German utilities such as E.ON and RWE had to pay for presumably only 7 % of their emission certificates. WWF calculated that German utilities were set to make windfall profits of between to €31 and €64 billion until end 2012 due to the free carbon allocations. The Commission's reports showed a 2.5% surplus for 2005, with the 21 states granting 44.2 million metric tons more carbon dioxide permits than needed. Five companies in Britain produce more carbon dioxide pollution together than all the motorists on UK roads combined, according to new figures which reveal heavy industry's contribution to climate change. A league table compiled by the Guardian identifies EON UK, the electricity generator that owns Powergen, as Britain's biggest corporate emitter of greenhouse gases. It produced 26.4 million tonnes of carbon dioxide last year - slightly more than Croatia did. The figures, which have prompted new calls for tighter restrictions on corporate pollution, show that efforts by individuals and households to cut their carbon footprints will make little difference unless accompanied by greater action by industry. A 1% increase in the efficiency of the giant Drax power station in North Yorkshire - the largest in Europe and the single biggest polluting site in the UK - would save the typical carbon emissions of 21,000 households. Drax alone produced 20.8 million tonnes of carbon dioxide last year. The top five companies (EON UK, RWE Npower, Drax, Corus, and EDF) produced between them more than 100 million tonnes of carbon dioxide in 2005. On average, the country's 26 million private cars produce 91 million tonnes each year. Britain's participating companies, which had lobbied for laxer targets,
produced together more than 242 million tonnes of carbon dioxide - they
had permits to emit only 209 million. Germany negotiated to produce 495
million tonnes of carbon dioxide, but its companies emitted only 474 million.
France produced 131 million tonnes, but had permits for 151 million.
British sites operated by Tesco, Walkers, Ford, Unilever, Kellogg's, Allied
Bakeries, Nestle and Cadbury Trebor Bassett are among those that emitted
more than 100,000 tonnes of CO2 in 2004 - more than that of Vanuatu, the
Pacific state where 100 people became the first official climate refugees
when they were moved from their coastal village in December. Fortunately Halliburton has "solved global warming". Their new SurvivaBalls save managers from abrupt climate change. An advanced new technology will keep corporate managers safe even when climate change makes life as we know it impossible. At least Halliburton realises climate change is a problem, but their solution is medieval! See, and click, the picture at right. (This is a joke, though frighteningly real.) In mid-May Chinese news media reported that engineers were pouring the last of the concrete to finish the construction of the massive Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze River in central China. The dam spans the entire river, and a large reservoir had filled behind it, to the northwest. The new reservoir is more than 3 kilometers (more than 2 miles) across just upstream of the dam. The dam is intended to provide flood control and hydroelectric power. When all the generators are operational (projected for 2009), Three Gorges will become the largest hydroelectric project in the world. While hydro-electric power is relatively clean, the construction of this project has devastated human and natural habitats and will continue to do so as it fills. ITEBay and Yahoo announced that they have agreed to combine their efforts on a number of projects. By 2007, expect an increase in eBay search results on Yahoo!, an increase of contextual text and graphical ads on eBay, PayPal to power Yahoo! Wallet, a co-branded eBay Toolbar, and click-to-call advertising using Yahoo! Messenger with Voice and Skype. This could all be good news, especially if the projects treat user data more ethically than Google does. Dell, however, will place Google browser toolbars and other free Google software applications on freshly shipped Dell computers. Google will also be powering Dell's start page. Google will be paying an undisclosed amount for that right, though it's probably well worth it. This kind of deal is clearly an affront to Microsoft and its knack of packing as many proprietary applications as possible into their pre-installed operating systems. Wouldn't it be great if Dell shipped with Mozilla or Firefox and Thunderbird?! The shift away from advertising on TV is likely to accelerate in the coming year as data from Nielsen Media Research suggests that already 5% of viewers are recording top shows to watch later when they skip the ads. This number could rise to 20% by the end of 2007 given the growth in DVR sales. This is probably good news for everyone because TV ads are designed to appeal to basal needs and instincts and are funneled into passive minds, ie brainwashing effect. No doubt advertisers will devlop sophisticated solutions, perhaps using other media, but it is a sign that consumers are increasingly seeking information more intelligently. The trend of consumer enlightenment is reflected in web advertising where placed ads on internet searches are also far less likely (1/5th) to recieve a click than normal search results, thus depreciating the benefit of paying for this type of placement. Security software maker Symantec is taking legal action against Microsoft, accusing it of misusing its technology, alleging that Microsoft improperly used Symantec's data storage techniques in its own software. Symantec wants compensation, saying the alleged infringement amounts to misappropriation of its trade secrets. Microsoft describes the accusation as unfounded and says it has tried unsuccessfully to resolve the issue. The disagreement is based on Symantec's Volume Manager software, which allows operating systems to store and handle large amounts of data. Symantec believes Microsoft has "deliberately and surreptitiously misappropriated" the technology "and thereby convinced the US government to issue patents to Microsoft based on technologies invented by Symantec". Microsoft says it licensed the technology from Veritas Software, a company that Symantec acquired last year in a $ 13.5billion deal. Holonics and LOHASHolonics * Health * Environment * Education * Living Holonics
See the website for more examples such as the Groupmind Meditation, Sept 24 2000 or the Earthquake Pakistan 8 Oct 2005. Janine Benyus a leading proponent of natural design, has had interview videos added to the archives at Big Picture TV. Janine is co-founder of the Biomimicry Guild, where she works as a biologist helping designers and engineers learn from nature's design solutions. She is the author of several books, including "Biomimicry: Innovation Inspired by Nature." She is also a public speaker and has given lectures to a number of large organizations and corporations including Nike, Novell, Proctor & Gamble, Patagonia and Interface Carpets. Biomimicry Explained is the first of all of her mini-videos, which together are about half an hour, so provide quite a comprehensive presentation. HealthIn the UK working days lost through sickness absence are at their lowest level in 20 years, according to a CBI report. The business leaders' group said the figure fell last year by four million days to 164 million days. But the CBI says too much absenteeism remains in many workplaces and that 13% of sick days are not genuine (-we're surprised that number isn't much higher). The cost of lost days to the economy was £ 13 billion. Some areas obviously have problems in motivation or environmental health - the Yorkshire and Humber region had 8.9 days lost per worker in 2005. The study, carried out with the assistance of insurance firm Axa, also tellingly shows absentee levels a third higher in the public sector than in private business. Public sector staff took an average of 8.5 days a year off last year! If the public sector could reduce its absentee levels to that of the private sector then £ 1 billion of taxpayers' money would be saved. Following last month's report concerning the conflicts of interest involved in bird flu propaganda (and February's review of where the real problem lies), these statistics support the view that the public is being treated disingeniously regarding bird flu:
The US is following the UK in improving nutrition in schools. A long overdue reform has been initiated voluntarily by Coca Cola, PepsiCo and Cadbury Schweppes, who have said that they are to pull most fizzy drinks from US schools, selling only water, juice and low calorie drinks. The deal was brokered by former President Bill Clinton and the American Heart Association. It is a long overdue response to growing problems of childhood obesity and increasing criticism of the role of the food and drink companies. It will also improve general behaviour if the sugar soda is replaced with water, milk or natural juices. The change will influence around 35 million American school children, at least 15 percent of whom are considered to be overweight. In the face of the controversy, a number of district and state legislatures have been considering a total ban on vending machines in schools - the voluntary move by the companies is partly motivated by the desire to continue to maintain a presence in schools. Because school districts already have the power to add or remove vending machines from schools, the policy announcement from the soda industry amounts to nothing more than another deceptive, albeit clever PR campaign. A number of schools say they benefit from the income from such arrangements, but this is no reason to neglect the physical well being of their "customers". Unfortunately, a closer look at the actual statements of the soda giants reveals that no actual implementation of these policies is planned. In fact, according to the American Beverage Association, an industry trade group representing soda companies, the so-called new policy is completely voluntary, and first requires that individual school districts actually request to have soda machines removed. Ironically, the UK has gone a step beyond reason (in our view) - schools are to be banned from serving whole milk to children, as part of the offensive against obesity! From September, all state schools in England must offer only semi-skimmed or skimmed milk to pupils aged 3 to 18. The ruling will apply to milk served during school lunches and at break times, and to cartons sold in vending machines. The ban on whole milk, approved by the Food Standards Agency, was included in the nutritional standards for schools announced by Alan Johnson, the Education Secretary. The focus at the time was the ban on junk food in schools, but the ban is to extend to whole milk. The UK's Prince Charles used his speech in May to the World Health Organisation in Geneva to mount a strong defence of complimentary medicine. The speech came on the same day The Times published a letter from a group of prominent doctors calling for a self-serving cut in NHS funding of complementary therapies. The letter criticised Prince Charles for suggesting recently that making complementary therapies more widely available on the NHS could lead to widespread benefits - despite evidence that complementary therapies do in fact reduce costs and improve recovery, and the letter concluded “at a time when the NHS is under intense pressure, patients, the public and the NHS are best served by using available funds for treatments based on solid evidence” - despite evidence that standard medicine is a hit and miss affair as noted below!Dr Peter Fisher, clinical director of the Royal Homoeopathic Hospital, said its demands that NHS funding of CAM treatments should stop amounted to “medical apartheid”. Prince Charles, a long-standing advocate of integrated and holistic approaches to healthcare, correctly noted that “the proper mix of proven complementary, traditional and modern remedies, which emphasise the active participation of the patient, can help to create a powerful healing force". This approach is what makes the Chopra Cancer Center so successful. Dr Robert Verkerk of the Alliance for Natural Health challenged the doctor’s assertion that only ‘scientifically proven’ therapies should receive NHS funding. “Double-blind placebo controlled trials are not always applicable to CAM modalities. It is of paramount importance that the clinical evidence base, which is sometimes thousands of years old, is amply considered.” Sue Croft, director of Consumers for Health Choice, said "The group of doctors are entrenched in the old philosophy that curing disease with drugs is the way to good health. This one-size fits all approach is wrong and doesn't work. It completely disregards the fact that we are all individuals with different anatomy and physiology, as well as mental attitude and lifestyle. They talk about high costs to NHS, but the majority of people pay privately for their supplements, remedies and alternative treatments, actually saving the NHS money." BusinessWeek reported that the US high-tech healthcare system costing $ 2trillion annually is a hit-and-miss affair. "There is little or no evidence that many widely used treatments and procedures actually work better than various cheaper alternatives", the report says, estimating proven remedies to be 20 - 25% of treatments. The range of conditions that are affected is wide including heart surgery, prostate care, back pain, ear tubes, spinal surgery, breast cancer and more. It is healthy disclosure and while one must look to doctors for professional advice and care, it is increasingly apparent that they are fallible and they are motivated by things other than the well-being of others, such as money, power and reputation. Although the 'organic meat scam' stories in the UK provided some fodder for talk shows and radio hosts, they also served to highlight that organic is protected by national and European law and that fraudsters are now being targeted and fined. A strong and co-ordinated response to this issue from certifiers, producers and retailers is more likely to strengthen consumer confidence in organic. New research from Norway has shown that antioxidants in coffee could cut the risk of death from inflammatory disease in a dose dependent manner. A team from the University of Oslo led by Lene Frost Anderson recently reviewed a study of 27,321 postmenopausal American women who were tracked over a 15 year period. At the end of the study period 4,265 deaths had been recorded. When the results were adjusted for age, smoking and alcohol consumption, total death rates showed an inverse association with total coffee consumption. An inverse association was also seen between coffee consumption and death from inflammatory disease, though not cardiovascular disease. The Norwegian researchers reported that death from inflammatory diseases (including cancer) was 28% lower among coffee drinkers of 1-3 cups per day than in non-drinkers - increased consumption gave further small decreases. They concluded that drinking 1-3 cups of coffee per day reduced the risk of death, particularly from inflammatory diseases. Since coffee is the second most widely consumed drink in the world, and contributes a major proportion of dietary antioxidants, Anderson believes that his team’s findings are significant. While we like our coffee, there are better sources of anti-oxidants, ones which don't play with the nervous system in such a volatile way. New research by French scientists has revealed important links between the levels of three metals, magnesium, copper and zinc, in the body and the risk of developing cancer and heart disease. Research carried out by Dr Nathalie Leone of the Lille Pasteur Institute showed that high serum levels of magnesium were linked to a 40% lower risk of mortality (from all causes), and a similar reduction for cardiovascular deaths. By contrast, high serum levels of copper and zinc were associated with increased risk of death from all causes. The research has attracted the interest of nutritionists since recent dietary surveys have shown that large parts of the adult population are failing to achieve the RDA for magnesium.Dr Leone’s research was published recently in the journal of Epidemiology. In her paper she comments on the need to research further the apparent interactions between magnesium, copper and zinc. She writes: “Decreased zinc and either increased copper or decreased magnesium might synergistically enhance oxidative damage and inflammatory response.” These findings match the rationale for the development of the Metabolics range of supplements developed by Chris Astill-Smith which we reported on in May 2005. EnvironmentIn the US, in an unprecedented move, the EPA's own scientists are lashing out against the agency, saying the profits of the pesticide industry are taking priority over measures to protect public health. A union of over 9,000 EPA scientists has submitted a letter to the EPA's Administrator, Stephen Johnson, indicating that due to industry pressure, the "integrity of the science upon which agency decisions are based has been compromised." In particular, the scientists are concerned about a group of organophosphate pesticides they believe should no longer be allowed on the market due to their harmful effects on children, infants and foetuses. Specifically, the letter references 20 toxic pesticides that were developed from nerve gases after World War II, many of which are still available for purchase at most gardening centrers. The polar bear and hippopotamus have joined the ranks of animal and vegetal species threatened with extinction, according to the latest "red list" published by the World Conservation Union (IUCN). Since 1948, the IUCN has listed 16,119 species whose existence is being severely jeopardised as a result of human activities. The 2006 Red List adds 530 species to the 2004 record, illustrating what it describes as a clear trend: "biodiversity loss is increasing, not slowing down." IUCN assessments are widely recognised as the most authoritative source of the global status of plants and animals. The ranks of those facing extinction are joined by familiar species like the polar bear, hippopotamus and desert gazelles; together with ocean sharks, freshwater fish and Mediterranean flowers. Positive action has helped the white-tailed eagle and offers a glimmer of hope to Indian vultures. Another incident demonstrating the risk of GMO was reported in May. At least 1,800 sheep have reportedly died after grazing on post-harvest Bt cotton crops in the Warangal district of Andhra Pradesh, India. According to 42 shepherds interviewed by investigators from the Centre for Sustainable Agriculture and elsewhere, the sheep became "depressed" and died within days. The team strongly suspects a Bt toxin, but farmers in that area use many insecticides and pesticides on their crops. 122 countries taking part in the 2004 Stockholm Convention are meant to present plans to phase out, or prevent pollution by, the "dirty dozen" Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs) by the end of May. The 12 POPs, including the pesticide DDT and dioxins, are known as some of the most harmful, causing cancers and damaging immune and nervous systems, according to the UN Environment Programme. POPs also accumulate in the fatty tissue of living organisms and remain intact in the environment for long periods if they are allowed to get into the soil or water sources such as rivers, potentially spreading over wide areas. The nine pesticides, two industrial chemicals, and dioxins produced by incineration of some plastics, are already outlawed or severely restricted in industrialised nations. Experts warned the effectiveness of international restrictions would depend on financial and technical support for the developing countries involved. "There are substitutes for most POPs, but their use is hampered by the high cost, insufficient public awareness or a lack of the right infrastructure or technology," UNEP said. Fish stocks in international waters are being plundered to the point of extinction, the World Wildlife Fund has warned.Species including the tuna and the orange roughy are under threat by illegal fishing. The most imperilled species are within international waters, away from the protection of national governmental control. These waters account for more than half the world's surface, yet many governments are ignoring controls on them and allowing pirate fishing to go unchecked, said Simon Cripps of WWF's marine programme. Countries such as Australia, Britain and Canada should be taking more responsibility, setting examples and putting pressure on other states, he said. The WWF report, co-written with the wildlife trade monitoring network TRAFFIC, was released before governments met to review the UN fish stocks agreement, the legal framework for management of fish populations. The damage caused by a global fishing industry whose catch has risen from 18 to 95 million tonnes over the past half-century, has left 25% of commercial species over-exploited and depleted, compared with 10pc in the mid-1970s, according to the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation. Photos of agricultural patterns around the world make interesting viewing courtesy of NASA Earth Observatory here. EducationReflecting last month's Review which noted the decline in the quality of graduating engineers in the US, the first nationwide science test administered in five years shows that achievement among high school seniors has declined across the past decade, though scores in science rose among fourth graders and held steady among eighth graders, the federal Education Department reported. The science results came from the National Assessment of Educational Progress, a comprehensive examination administered in early 2005 by the Department of Education to more than 300,000 students in all 50 states, the District of Columbia and on military bases around the world. The falling average science test scores among high school students appeared certain to increase anxiety about America's academic competitiveness and to add new urgency to calls from President Bush, governors and philanthropists like Bill Gates for an overhaul of the nation's high schools. The drop in science proficiency appeared to reflect a broader trend in which some academic gains made in elementary grades and middle school have been seen to fade during the high school years. There are no doubt many reasons including the "no child left behind" policy, culture, teaching resources etc. Because the "no child left behind" policy takes away emphasis from science early on and replaces it with a need to teach reading and writing, it is more difficult to nurture interest later on. As noted above in Health, the US's top three soft-drink companies announced that they would start removing sweetened drinks like Coke, Pepsi and iced teas from school cafeterias and vending machines in response to the growing threat of lawsuits and state legislation. If they are replaced by more natural products, including water and milk, this will contribute to a better learning environment.Under an agreement between beverage makers and health advocates, students in elementary school would be served only bottled water, low-fat and nonfat milk, and 100 percent fruit juice in servings no bigger than eight ounces. Serving sizes would increase to 10 ounces in middle school. In high school, low-calorie juice drinks, sports drinks and diet sodas would be permitted; serving sizes would be limited to 12 ounces. The agreement, which includes parochial and private schools contracts, is voluntary, and the beverage industry said its school sales would not be affected because it expected to replace sugary drinks with other ones. Still, about 35 million public school children would be affected by the agreement, which would apply to extended school functions like band practice but would not apply to events likely to be attended by parents, like evening plays or interscholastic sports. An additional 15 million students attend schools that operate under stricter regulations, where the guidelines would not apply. Connecticut, for example, banned all sodas, including diet drinks and sports drinks like Gatorade, in its schools; New York City schools permit only low-fat milk, water and 100 percent fruit juice - which is sold under an exclusive contract with Snapple. The scientific evidence linking humans to the animal kingdom took another step forward in May as research into genetics by the Board Institute of Harvard and MIT revealed that humans and chimps interbred after the species first separated, before eventually evolving separately. In fact a viable hybrid species may have lasted 1.2 million years before dying out. This important science will work its way into education and common knowledge and help humans respect other life. Business for Social Responsibility, the leading U.S.-based global non-profit business organization focusing on corporate social responsibility, has agreed to jointly develop a new leadership training program with the Global Institute For Tomorrow, an Asian think-tank. LivingAnother reformation of the Catholic church may be underway. The Vatican confirmed in May it had excommunicated two bishops ordained by China's state-approved Catholic church without papal consent, and denounced what it said were grave violations of religious freedom. The Vatican called the ordinations an unacceptable act of coercion and said that under church law the two bishops and those who officiated at the past days' ceremonies were automatically excommunicated. The strongly-worded Vatican reaction shattered hopes for re-establishing relations that ended after communists took control of China in 1949. Beijing severed diplomatic ties with the Vatican in 1951. It is not a positive sign that this institution can not manage compromise and retains its exclusive policies. In the US, preliminary results of a McGraw-Hill Construction/National Association of Home Builders survey indicated that there was a 20% increase in 2005 among those in the home building community who are focusing their attention on green, environmentally- responsible building, which is expected to increase by another 30% this year. After several years of slow but steady growth across the country, the green home building movement, which applies innovative and environmentally sensitive construction techniques and products to reduce energy and water consumption and improve residential comfort and safety, is rapidly moving into the mainstream. By 2010, residential green building is expected to grow to $19 - $38 billion. Another positive sign in the US is that the last census showed multigenerational households, defined as those of three or more generations, growing faster than any other type of housing arrangement. The number of multigenerational households is still relatively small: 4.2 million, or 4 percent of all types. But they grew by 38 percent from 1990 to 2000, and professionals in real estate and the building industry say the trend has accelerated since then. Without the contribution of fresh fibre into the paper-making process, North American consumers would run out of paper in less than a year, according to the nonprofit Metafore. Its newly released research also finds that much more needs to be done to recover paper across North America. These key findings and more on the Paper Fiber Cycle, the way paper is produced, used, discarded and reutilised in the U.S. and Canada, can be found here. Metafore's research provides objective information to stimulate conversation with businesses and consumers along the paper supply chain and others about the opportunities that exist to more efficiently use recovered and fresh fibre across North America. Recovered fibre on average contributes to 30 percent of the total fibre in paper products used in Canada and the United States. However, recovered fibre breaks down with each use until it no longer has the properties needed to make various paper products. The most senior judge in the UK made wide criticisms of the criminal justice system and made sensible observations on the approach to rehabilitation. He warned that prison overcrowding is proving "absolutely fatal" for efforts to tackle the treatment of inmates. The remarks by Lord Phillips, lord chief justice of England and Wales, are likely to put further pressure on the Home Office, which is reeling from the release of foreign prisoners. The prison population is predicted to pass 80,000 by autumn. Lord Phillips warned that judges should not send people to prison unless they really have to and that the "sensible place for rehabilitation is in the community". He said one reason why prison numbers were rising was because drug users were deliberately committing offences to get on prison help programmes. "We need much better drug rehabilitation facilities in the community. It should not be necessary to commit an offence in order to get drug treatment. I am afraid the reality in many parts of the country is that it is." He also said:
Activities, Books and GatheringsWe enjoyed BeTheChange 2006. As before we went with open minds and were pleased to be reinvigorated and stimulated by new ideas, perspectives and thoughts. The speakers were excellent with a range of personal and professional presentations that inspire. It was great to be joined on several days by friends who took time to participate in various parts of the programme. Our editor's notes are online here and will be added to by a Director's review of the gathering to be uploaded in the coming month. To give a taste of the event here are some quotes and observations:
May was fun and productive. Meetings with new acquaintances and BTC were fun and, because wet weather was a good excuse not to be in the garden, the office was productive. The weather has been a bit late this year, which gave a bit of a breather and has meant that bluebells and rhododendrons are still blooming at the end of May. We are very lucky. Getting in to Maverick! by Ricardo Semler has been enjoyable. He offers smart, tested methods of applying open management. And his story, which is woven throughout and holds the reader's attention is an unusual and enjoyable tale. Definitely recommended for entrepreneurs, managers and owners. Dipping back into Emotional Intelligence by Daniel Goleman is always stimulating and edifying. It offers alot of detail about human thought processes and from a perspective traditionally neglected. It makes one realise that education needs a whole new dimension, that of emotional skills, to develop people. It would not require a huge investment but is evidently so important. We see examples everyday of people who should know better behaving at primitive levels. On a national scale it is the wealthiest nations adopting infantile belligerence to achieve selfish, and potential self-defeating, aims. Emotional Intelligence is recommended for all. Pratchett is a master. Visiting an old bookstore in London a specialist there said a reason Pratchett is different among writers is that he is always "straight", his characters are true to character. This resonates strongly with me and is a sound rationale for my love of his style. I think the reason some people can not get comfortable with him is because they see aspects of themselves in his fantastic tales - I know my weaknesses are highlighted by his characters. The Fifth Elephant is a tale of diplomacy and criminal investigation which also plays with the problem of prejudice. I like the quote "muck and gold come from the same hole" to describe how siblings can be quite different. I could not work out why it was called the Fifth Elephant, except to realise that it is a reference to the Fifth Element (movie with Bruce Willis), but then I read The Truth in which he provides the last piece of the puzzle: "The world is made up of four elements: Earth Air, Fire and Water. ... There's a fifth element, and generally it's called Surprise." You'll have to read the book to get the big picture though. The Truth is one of my favourites, as you might expect by its title, although it is certain that you can tell the truth without being honest. It lends pertinent insight to the dangers of privilege: defining a criminal "as anyone with less than a thousand dollars a year" or treating justice "like coal or potatoes. You ordered [it] when you needed it." And relevant to concerns expressed in Geopolitics and elsewhere in this month's newsletter, "A lie will go around the world before the truth has got its boots on." And if you enjoy stretching your philosophy: "Have you heard the theory that there is no such thing as the present? Because if it is divisible, then it cannot be the present, and if it is not divisible, then it cannot have a beginning which connects to the past and an end that connects to the future? The philosopher Heidehollen tells us that the universe is just a cold soup of time, all mixed up together, and what we call the passage of time is merely quantum fluctuations in the fabric of space-time." Pratchett probably had particular fun with The Truth because it is a story of journalism, which is a business he was once involved with. A friend of ours has recently published a book reviewing some of the key corporate failures in recent past. The conclusion that greed and arrogance at the top is the principal cause will not be news to SRI advocates. Greed and Corporate Failure: The Lessons from Recent Disasters offers chapter case studies on: Barings and Allied Irish Bank: Lessons Ignored And for an alternative view of news,
you might find a browse through CounterPunch
worthwhile.
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know thyself - Socrates |