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August 2007
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Perspective
Living
in a fantasy world ...
You may have heard of the downturn in financial markets recently.
Its quite serious in fact. Though at the moment what's happened
is only heightened volatility coupled with a modest correction in asset
prices which has merely eliminated the optimism of the past few months.
Unfortunately it will continue because the fantasy of creating something
from nothing must be unwound. The irresponsible expansion of credit
fuelled consumption has exceeded our ability to pay our debts. As
you can read in the section on Investment, it has been too easy for us
all to buy "stuff" with money we don't have. Our propensity for
greed fuelled by envy has become immoral. And this does not account
for the wasted investment in war (which has simply been a money pit),
corruption and, unfortunately, below standard infrastructure. This
is OK because it can all be blamed on human nature. But that means
us. And unless we bring back morality into our personal lives the
pain of correction will be exacerbated. Unwittingly our values reflect
the fantasy of Hollywood more than the reality of nature.
The mechanism that underlies the sub-prime crisis is a good illustration
of the fantasy that we have created. Fiduciaries (people that are
supposed to be responsible for other people's money) grouped together
many loans then repackaged them into another group of loans based on the
original group. The second group of derived loans were then sold
on and by collusion and misinformation the sum of the second group became
more valuable than the first group even after the costs of doing the work.
Its like dividing a cake and then putting the pieces back together and
having a bigger cake than that you started with, even though crumbs (sometimes
big crumbs) have been eaten in the process! This is the fantasy.
And we've created other fantasies, like children without parents or self
control in an unattended sweet shop. It is fantasy to advocate free trade
while you subsidise your producers. It is fantasy to expect full
employment while encouraging automation without education and training
to ensure that people can move up the skills ladder. It is fantasy
to believe that you can take more out of the earth than is put in.
This financial discomfort is only going to be short term. But it
is another severe warning which will touch more lives than a tsunami,
hurricane, flood or heat wave. We're living a bigger fantasy that
needs to be unwound before the quake occurs. That is the fantasy that
this biosphere can support 6 billion people (and more). Malthus
was right, but he did not count on fossil fuels, especially oil.
Petrol has fuelled an exponential growth in consumption during the past
century. A hundred years ago human consumption was more closely
equal to the energy input of the sun to our biosphere. In the past
100 years we've sucked energy, stored over millennia, out of the ground
and burned it to create cars, TVs, cities and ... people. We believe
it's all normal and OK. But it's not. And we've begun to feel
the tremors of a planet self-destructing. While the biosphere is
likely to survive, there is no way it will continue to tolerate the footprint
of humanity. And while we feel the pain of repossessions, reduced
consumption and uncertainty with a brief financial tremor, the lifestyle
change that is inevitable in our lifetimes is inconceivable.
Some enlightened intentional
communities have started to initiate transition to infrastructure
and dynamic which explore enlightened technology like alternative energy,
open systems and organic food. These are communities of leading
thinkers who have gathered together to experiment with redesigning society
in a world without oil. These initiatives are not insignificant
and are the laboratories of future living. They do not advocate
regression to the stone age. But they are innovating choices about
how to continue the rich, varied and stimulating lifestyle that we now
enjoy, without sucking the planet dry. We have built up a massive
ecological credit in the past century and the biosphere's banker has decided
that our credit rating needs to be reconsidered.
The impending restructuring of global economics is an opportunity to
embark upon system change. And that starts with us as individuals.
We are irresponsible if we look to leaders to show us the way. That
is an abdication of responsibility. We must each take a step in
the right direction. We must face the fear of change and realise
that we all know how to do the right thing the right way. We can
apply the standards that we have for our children and leaders to ourselves.
We are not powerless. We must face the fact that being unable to
do everything does not mean that we should do nothing. Once we take
a step in the right direction we soon realise that the reality of nature
is as wonderful as the fantasies created by financial credit and feudal
power structures.
Top
Geopolitics
The tremors of financial markets around the world in August raised the
real spectre of there being no world leader. The US, as part
of a natural cycle of ebb and flow, is stepping back from its role of
the past century. And no nation is stepping forward. While
we know that China will soon dominate the world it is not in their culture
nor interest to play the role of world leader. It is as if a natural
dynamic is forcing nations to work together. Perhaps this is the
first step in the natural demise of the nation state and the rise of local
community politics and global politics.
A model of society underpinned by the work of Hayek and Freidman blossomed
in the second half of last century which allowed a democratisation of
economic power and a maturing of capitalism. Motivated by self interest
businesses innovated and prospered. This social dynamic, which is
where we are today has had its place and role in humanity's emergent intelligence.
It was a necessary reaction to growing attitude of righteousness embedded
in socialist movements of 1950s and 1960s. It took economic
meltdowns of 1970s to get leaders like Thatcher and Reagan and their policies
to the top of the list of priorities. But that model must now be
subsumed within the next level
of organisational sophistication - a more consensual model of external
cohesion. And hopefully then emerge an integral dynamic to human
organisation within a short time.
Maybe these videos explain why there is such a credibility gap
between what the American administration would have us believe and what
we accept. Forget North Korea, watch our (global) dear leader - the real
power behind the throne of America: Cheney
'94: Invading Baghdad Would Create Quagmire in which he concludes
"How many dead Americans would it be worth?" I think this would even surprise
the die-hard pro-war readers. And then there is Powell/Rice
2001: "Saddam has no WMDs" and A
Symphony of Lies. While it may difficult for those of us in
America to sift between truth and lies in the slick professional propaganda
and media, it is easier for those of us outside with the ability to compare
the tone and culture of news and media with more critical and sophisticated
perspectives.
And back in America broad new surveillance powers approved by Congress
in August could allow the Bush administration to conduct spy operations
that go well beyond wire-tapping to include, without court approval, certain
types of physical searches on American soil and the collection of Americans’
business records. The measure, which President Bush signed into law on
August 5, was written and pushed through both the House and Senate so
quickly that few
in Congress had time to absorb its full impact. These are exactly
the kind of executive powers that the founding fathers were trying to
escape when the formed the nation two and a half centuries ago.
The US Census Bureau's latest report on income, poverty and health insurance
in the United States, was released at the end of August. It offers
some insights in to the evolving character of the waning global superpower.
It suggests a deterioration in healthcare. This comes ironically
on the heels of the release of Sicko, a colourful case study of the inefficiencies
of US healthcare. For a review of the report by The Economist go
here.
And here
for the Census
Bureau’s report. Also, Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation, a
think-tank, has written a paper
examining poverty in America. See also the State
Children’s Health Insurance Programme. 
The problems in the US are not making people happy as life-long Republicans
change their stripes simply in protest at the way their savings are disintegrating
and the national morality is compromised by an administration that has
diverted resources from the needy to the rich (helping fund managers and
banks, not subprime borrowers), from health care to war and from administration
to cronyism (attorney general Gonzales being the soap opera in August).
There seems to be a general deterioration in US infrastructure
- transportation, housing, health and education - likely caused by a consumption-driven
and debt-driven culture at risk of spending itself into illiteracy and
impotence in the global sphere. Let's talk about what we've
been spending our money on - burgers, coke and guns instead of roads and
health.
More positively, the US Senate gave final approval to a far-reaching
package of new ethics and lobbying rules, with an overwhelming
majority of Republicans and Democrats agreeing to improve policing of
the relationship between lawmakers and lobbyists. If President Bush signs
the bill into law, members of Congress would face a battery of new restrictions.
The legislation, approved by the Senate on a vote of 83 to 14, calls for
bans on gifts, meals and travel paid for by lobbyists and makes it more
difficult for lawmakers to capitalize quickly on their connections when
joining the private sector. The measure also abolishes the practice of
discounted rides on private planes, requiring senators as well as candidates
for the Senate or the White House to pay full charter rates for trips.
House members would be barred from accepting free trips on private planes.
Also tucked into the 107-page measure are several Senate procedural changes
intended to curb a practice that has become more common in recent years:
adding surprise, last-minute provisions to bills. Until now, lawmakers
could only challenge what they call “dead-of-night” provisions by objecting
to the entire bill, an uphill battle because most members of Congress
are reluctant to block major legislation on the verge of enactment over
a single element. Under the bill, senators will be able to try to kill
select provisions without endangering the entire bill. All of these
measures are excellent improvements and we hope they become law and enforced
soon.
Last month China said it would reject any international effort
to limit its greenhouse gas emissions. The announcement came on
the heels of a report that China has become the world’s emissions leader,
overtaking America. This is entirely to be expected for two reasons:
firstly China is an emerging nation whose priority must be to feed, house,
educate and employ its population until they are on a par with richer
countries. Secondly, the example set by the US is that pollution
control is a secondary concern and not worth multilateral action.
While the US is seen as the worst offender in terms of climate change,
trade and even economic equity, it is true that all nations are motivated
by self-interest and the US is no different. Except perhaps that
the US and other rich countries should be able to extrapolate the consequences
of setting a bad example. In terms of the Kyoto treaty, the US would
have had to bear up to two-third of the costs simply because they have
such a high energy consumption per person, even 2x that of Europe. According
to current projections, the biggest losers from a warmer planet, in terms
of economics and health, will be Europe and developing nations; hence
the stronger stands in those parts of the world.
Also as a matter of corrective justice, perhaps the US has a special
obligation to reduce the problem of climate change as it has already been
the disproportionate contributor of greenhouse gas emissions in the atmosphere,
having produced about 30% of the existing stock (compared with 8% for
both Russia and China).
Pakistan was high in the geopolitical media in August, partly
because of the 60th anniversary of its creation and partly because of
the ongoing political volatility in this country bordering Iran
and Afghanistan. What is apparent is that the country has been hindered
by a culture of violence and confrontation since its birth. This
extract
by Mohsin Hamid, author of the novel “The Reluctant Fundamentalist”,
gives a flavour for the problem and the opportunity for Pakistan to emerge
more stable and prosperous in the coming years.
For me personally, the 60th anniversary of independence, while worthy
of note, is not of the utmost importance. My hopes are already dashing
ahead and attaching themselves to the elections that are scheduled for
later this year.
On one side are the forces of exclusion, who wish Pakistan to stand
only for their kind of Pakistani. These include the political descendants
of the man who stabbed my great-grandfather, the people who seek to oppress
those who are clean shaven or those who toil for meager wages or those
who are from provinces other than their own. But arrayed against them
is something wholly new.
Pakistan now has private television stations that refuse to let the
government set the news agenda. It has a Supreme Court that has asserted
its independence for the first time, restoring a chief justice suspended
by the president. And it has an army under physical attack from within
and in desperate need of compromise with civil society.
A 60th birthday brings with it the obligation to shed some illusions.
Pakistanis must realize that we have been our own worst enemies. My wish
for our national anniversary is this: that we finally take the knife we
have turned too often upon ourselves and place it firmly in its sheath.
A by-election in Lebanon showed that there remains a strong democratic
spirit in that country ripped apart last year. The election was
one of two being contested to find replacements for two murdered anti-Syrian
MPs. Christian cabinet minister Pierre Gemayel was shot dead in November,
and Sunni Muslim lawmaker Walid Eido was killed in a Beirut car bomb in
June. The vote to replace Eido in mainly Sunni West Beirut was won easily
by pro-government candidate Mohammad Amin Itani, as expected. But
opposition leader Michel Aoun acclaimed victory for his candidate who
defeated a government-backed, former president Amin Gemayel in a tense
by-election near Lebanon's capital Beirut. The election was not
happy with supporters of the two sides were separated by tanks and hundreds
of troops. This result in the deeply-divided country trapped between
the pro-Syrian, Hezbollah-led opposition and the western-backed, anti-Syrian
government, illustrates the level of resentment against foreign involvement
in the region: Gemayel’s doom seems to have been sealed by his support
from the Bush administration and the implied agendas behind its backing.
The paradox of American policy in the Middle East, promoting democracy
on the assumption it will bring countries closer to the West, is that
almost everywhere there are free elections, the American-backed side tends
to lose. Lebanon’s voters in the Metn district, in other words, appeared
to have joined the Palestinians, who voted for Hamas; the Iraqis, who
voted for a government sympathetic to Iran; and the Egyptians, who have
voted in growing numbers in recent elections for the Islamist Muslim Brotherhood.
Regional
analysts say candidates are tainted by the baggage of American foreign
policy, from its backing of Israel to the violence in Iraq, and, importantly,
American support is often applied to one faction instead of to institutions,
causing further division rather than bringing stability.
While a new constitution was approved in Thailand, it seems to
have been done with the hope that elections would not be delayed.
Meanwhile the governing junta continues to try to ring fence Thaksin and
the supreme court approved a prosecution request to issue arrest warrants
for the Manchester City owner and his wife on corruption charges. (The
former Thai prime minister, who has been living in self-imposed exile
in England, took over City in the summer.) The Thai attorney general
issued the warrant for Thaksin and his wife Pojamarn, in connection with
corruption charges over a controversial land purchase deal in Bangkok.
Despite these moves the popular support for Thaksin remains strong and
while his party may have been outlawed, it appears that it will be replaced
by a new political party, largely the same except in name. Thailand's
prospects remain positive, except for the political uncertainty, which
we hope will subside in the new year.
An on-line tool that reveals the identity of organisations that
edit Wikipedia pages has produced some interesting, though unsurprising
information. The CIA was involved in editing various entries, including
pages on Iran's president. On the profile of Iranian President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, the tool indicates that a worker on the CIA network reportedly
added the exclamation "Wahhhhhh!" before a section on the leader's plans
for his presidency. The Vatican has edited entries about Sinn Fein
leader Gerry Adams. The edit removed links to newspaper stories written
in 2006 that alleged that Mr Adams' fingerprints and handprints were found
on a car used during a double murder in 1971. Wikipedia Scanner also points
the finger at commercial organisations that have modified entries about
the pages. One in particular is Diebold, a company which supplies electronic
voting machines in the US. In October 2005, a person using a Diebold
computer removed paragraphs about Walden O'Dell, chief executive of the
company, which revealed that he had been "a top fund-raiser" for George
Bush. A month later, other paragraphs and links to stories about the alleged
rigging of the 2000 election were also removed. The paragraphs and
links have since been reinstated.
Related to this virtual politics, was news of a "cyberprotest"
in which hackers attacked the United Nations official website, forcing
some sections to be taken off-line. Slogans accusing the US and
Israel of killing children appeared on the pages reserved for statements
from UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon. Other pages on the site were also
breached by the group.
Top
Risk and Terror
Every now and then it is worth repeating these words from Martin
Luther King in the early 1960's:
"Through our scientific genius, we made of the world a neighborhood,
and now through our moral and ethical commitment, we must make of it a
brotherhood. We must all learn to live together as brothers or we will
all perish together as fools. This is what we must learn. It simply means
that every nation must be concerned about every other nation; every individual
must be concerned about every other individual."
George Friedman, international political science expert and founder of
Strategic Foresight offers a valuable synthesis of The
Major Diplomatic and Strategic Evolution in Iraq. A mutual
need to resolve the strife in Iraq is emerging between America, Iraq and
Iran, which led to high level meetings of U.S. Ambassador to Iraq Ryan
Crocker, Iranian Ambassador to Iraq Hassan Kazemi Qomi and Iraqi National
Security Adviser Muwaffaq al-Rubaie, and separately, a committee of Iranian,
Iraqi and U.S. officials held its first meeting on Iraqi security. As
Friedman notes:
"No one is in control of the situation. No one is likely to
get control of the situation in any long-term serious way. It is in the
interests of the United States, Iran and Saudi Arabia that the Iraq situation
stabilize, simply because they cannot predict the outcome -- and the worst-case
scenario for each is too frightening to contemplate.
None of the three powers can bring the situation under control. Even
by working together, the three will be unable to completely stabilize
Iraq and end the violence. But by working together they can increase security
to the point that none of their nightmare scenarios comes true. In return,
the United States will have to do without a pro-American government in
Baghdad and the Iranians will have to forgo having an Iraqi satellite.
But if the United States and Iran, plus Saudi Arabia, work together
-- with no one providing cover for or supplies to targeted groups -- the
situation can be brought under what passes for reasonable control in Iraq.
More important for the three powers, the United States could draw down
its troops to minimal levels much more quickly than is currently being
discussed, the Iranians would have a neutral, nonaggressive Iraq on their
western border and the Saudis would have a buffer zone from the Iranians."
If this approach continues there is hope for stabilisation, because as
has been pointed out previously, resolution in Iraq, as in Palestine/Israel
and other hot-spots, requires local multilateral cooperation.
The likelihood of a US retreat from Iraq is growing, despite the "surge"
and rhetoric to the contrary.
A senior Republican senator, John Warner, urged President Bush to begin
bringing troops back from Iraq by Christmas, as US intelligence agencies
published a bleak assessment of the chances of progress in the country
in the next 12 months. Warner, who recently returned from Iraq and is
widely respected by his Republican colleagues, went much further than
in June when he first broke ranks with Mr Bush over the war. After a meeting
with White House aides, he told reporters: "We simply cannot, as a nation,
stand and continue to put our troops at continuous risk of loss of life
and limb without beginning to take some decisive action." But he did not
go as far as saying that he would support Democratic members of Congress
who are likely to renew their attempts to pass legislation to set a timetable
for withdrawal. So far only a handful of Republicans have joined them.
He spoke only hours after the national intelligence estimate, the consensus
view of the CIA and 15 other American intelligence agencies, published
their latest assessment of Iraq. They predicted that the prospects
for the Iraqi government are "precarious", and expressed fears
of a surprise attack in that country in the next few weeks comparable
to the 1968 Tet offensive that threatened to overwhelm American forces
in Vietnam.
It is not just politicians that are losing faith. Disillusionment with
Iraq's elected leaders has forced President Bush's senior advisers to
contemplate a future without democracy - a goal that was at the
heart of the rationale for the US-led invasion. Frontline generals in
Iraq spoke openly of the need to have a government that could function
and guarantee security above all else, including democratic legitimacy.
Brigadier General John Bednarek, who commands forces in Diyala province,
told CNN that "democratic institutions are not necessarily the way ahead
in the long-term future".
Meanwhile new UK prime minister Gordon Brown dismissed pressure
to quit Iraq. The UK approach of a kind of policing is likely
to remain in place until Iraq has its own resources and more stability.
However, in a shift in policy, the UK asked the US to release five detainees
at Guantanamo Bay, who have resided in Britain but are not citizens.
The Bush administration has said it has been looking for ways to reduce
the Guantanamo population.
The EU stopped paying for fuel supplies to the only power plant
in Gaza, leaving thousands of Palestinians without electricity.
The European Commission said it had withheld funding because of concerns
over plans by Hamas, which controls Gaza, to tax electricity bills. The
fuel aid programme will resume once Hamas agrees not to introduce the
tax. Hamas denied it plans to impose any such tax. The EU's decision
forced the Gaza Generating Company, which provides power for at least
25% of the coastal strip's 1.5 million population, to shut down operations
at the Nusseirat power plant.
Bruce Lee said the greatest art is fighting without fighting. This
article describes in real terms why fighting less, leads to winning
more in the counterinsurgency world of Afghanistan and Iraq.
The lesson may be applied to other areas, like Israel, and also to most
spheres of human life including government, crime, education and work.
And to build on that, Chas Freeman intelligently outlines how Americans
and Arabs are so much alike here
in U.S.
Foreign Policy and the Arab World.
Maybe the cost of the Iraq war would be slightly lower if someone
was reading the cheques being issued to suppliers. You will appreciate
this extraordinary story of two sisters, Charlene and Darlene, owners
of C&D Distributors, who defrauded the pentagon of millions of dollars
by invoicing hundreds of thousands of dollars for shipping small parts
to Iraq. For example, they billed $ 455,009 for shipping three machine
screws worth $ 1.31 each. In total they swindled over $20 million
over the past 9 years. You've got to laugh, unless you're the taxpayer
...
Top
Energy
The US House of Representatives passed a radical new energy
bill, which aims to expand the use of renewable fuels and cut tax
breaks to oil firms. The draft law details support for "clean" energy
sources like biofuels, wind, solar and geothermal resources and would
withdraw some $16 billion in annual subsidies from the oil industry.
This is a welcome, long over due initiative (though the subsidy cutbacks
are modest in the context of the total subsidies received). Unfortunately,
the bill is opposed by President Bush, and still has to be reconciled
with a Senate version, which passed last June but is more restrained and
emphasizes slightly different priorities. If it passes in its current
form, the bill will require all American utility companies to generate
15% of their energy from renewable sources by the year 2020, compared
to just 6.1% currently. It also calls for more stringent efficiency standards
for lighting and electrical appliances. It would cancel tax concessions
long enjoyed by the major oil companies such as Exxon-Mobil, Conoco and
Chevron. The Senate energy efficiency package, which includes
new car fuel efficiency standards, is projected to reduce US demand for
oil by 5.3 million barrels a day in 2030 -- 32% of oil and other liquid
fuel imports projected for that year.
Here's
a cool technology. A team of researchers say that flexible paper
batteries could meet the energy demands of the next generation of
gadgets. They have produced a sample slightly larger than a postage
stamp that can store enough energy to illuminate a small light bulb. The
ambition is to produce reams of paper that could one day power a car.
Professor Robert Linhardt, of the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, said
the paper battery was a glimpse into the future of power storage.
The team behind the versatile paper, which stores energy like a conventional
battery, says it can also double as a capacitor capable of releasing sudden
energy bursts for high-power applications. While a conventional battery
contains a number of separate components, the paper battery integrates
all of the battery components in a single structure, making it more energy
efficient. The research appears in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences. The battery contains carbon nanotubes, each
about one millionth of a centimetre thick, which act as an electrode.
The nanotubes are embedded in a sheet of paper soaked in ionic liquid
electrolytes, which conduct the electricity. The flexible battery can
function even if it is rolled up, folded or cut. Although the power output
is currently modest, Professor Linhardt said that increasing the output
should be easy. "If we stack 500 sheets together in a ream, that's 500
times the voltage. If we rip the paper in half we cut power by 50%. So
we can control the power and voltage issue." Because the battery consists
mainly of paper and carbon, it could be used to power pacemakers within
the body where conventional batteries pose a toxic threat. "I wouldn't
want the ionic liquid electrolytes in my body, but it works without them,"
said Professor Linhardt. "You can implant a piece of paper in the body
and blood would serve as an electrolyte." However, carbon nanotubes
are very expensive, and batteries large enough to power a car are unlikely
to be cost effective for a few years.
Sony has developed a bio-battery that uses glucose to generate
enough electricity to power a Walkman. The technology breaks down sugar
in the carbohydrates using enzymes as the catalyst. The bio-battery reached
a 50 milliwatt power output, the world's highest for passive-type bio-batteries.
In passive-type batteries, reactive substances, such as glucose and oxygen,
are absorbed into electrodes through natural diffusion rather than by
force. A flow of electrons through the cathode and anode produces the
power. Sony said it created a new cathode structure which manages to efficiently
supply oxygen to the electrode while ensuring that enough water content
is maintained. The high power output levels were reached because Sony
was able to optimize the electrolyte for these two technologies.
The technology holds great promise as a clean energy source because sugar
is produced naturally by plants through photosynthesis. Sony said
it will continue developing immobilization systems, electrode composition
and other technologies to boost power output and durability. The company
one day hope to drive the technology toward future practical applications.
Sony's research was accepted as an academic paper at the 234th American
Chemical Society National Meeting and Exposition.
A recent article in GLOBE outlines the trends in greening of auto
tech. It
is reproduced here. I found a couple of points regarding electric
vehicle to be pertinent because electric vehicles are currently available,
especially the two wheeled variety. Electric motors are beneficial
because they can dramatically improve upon the energy efficiency of internal
combustion engines. Interestingly, electric vehicles were more popular
than gasoline vehicles during the early days of the automobile, but were
phased out in favour of cheap, high-performance internal combustion engines.
According to studies, electric cars substantially reduce emissions of
air pollutants and greenhouse gas emissions even when drawing electricity
from a grid supplied mainly by coal power. Battery technologies have improved
dramatically since electric cars were last market-tested in the 1990s,
and small, lightweight lithium-ion cells, of which the Tesla roadster
uses more than 6,800, could be leading a revolution. However, challenges
still exist in improving battery efficiency and longevity, and research
and development is ongoing. A widespread global introduction of “gridable”
vehicles would also have complex ramifications for electric power systems.
The world's largest carmakers have either signalled a wholesale move to
hybrid gas-electric vehicles or more broad efforts toward the full electrification
of the automobile.
With some tantalizing cars on the way, it appears the world will once
again see electric vehicles in widespread use. Fully electric vehicles
are on the way, with a host of companies planning cars powered only by
advanced battery systems and electric motors. Tesla Motors' roadster can
accelerate from zero to 60 mph in 4 seconds and provide more than 300
km of driving range; Miles Automotive's Javlon will go nearly as far without
a charge and will hit a top speed of 128 km/hour. Venture Vehicles Inc.,
a Los Angeles-based maker of "green-friendly" automobiles is developing:"A
revolutionary, two-passenger, three-wheeled, tilting (articulating) vehicle,
powered by a highly fuel efficient hybrid propulsion system that will
deliver over 100 mpg, at over 100 mph, and blistering 0 to 60 acceleration."
BusinessWeek published a special
report on high-tech cars which focusses on lowering fossil fuel consumption
and pollution. It offers some food for thought in the emerging battleground
for the the auto industry.
In the UK, the third political party, the Liberal Democrats, have made
radical proposals to be approved at the upcoming party members' conference.They
have dared to talk about making it compulsory for cars to be free of carbon
emissions by 2040, establishing personal carbon allowances not just in
Britain but across the world, and capping airport capacity at today's
levels! They propose that we move towards a so-called "pay as you burn"
world. Every service or product we purchase - be it a mini-break,
a television, or bottle of wine - would have its full carbon cost "internalised".
If you have a taste for a carbon-rich lifestyle, you would be highly taxed
accordingly. Their policy document is about as bold as a mainstream
party is likely to go in today's political scene. But the political climate
is changing almost as quickly as the planet's. It is highly likely that,
even if voters reject this vision in the short term, it will drag the
other parties' policies in the same direction. No one is likely to run
on a ticket of "Let's burn lots more of the black stuff" ever again.
In a similar vein check out ZeroCarbonBritain.
And this short video by GreenPeace discussing alternative
power and the inconvenient solution - Nuclear.
Top
Climate Change and Environment
According to a UN
climate change report, investment of more than $ 200 billion will
be needed by 2030 just to keep greenhouse gas emissions at today's levels.
(By the way that is only the same order of magnitude as what has been
tied up in the US subprime crisis and less than the injections of liquidity
by central banks in the past few weeks.) "Global additional
investment and financial flows of 200-210 billion dollars (146.3-153.7
billion euros) will be necessary in 2030 to return global greenhouse gas
emission to current levels," according to the report by the United
Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. Presenting the report,
UNFCCC Executive Secretary Yvo de Boer told reporters that finding "an
economic answer" was key to dealing with the peril of climate change.
The report estimates that between 0.3 and 0.5% of global GDP and between
1.1 and 1.7% of global investment will have to be spent on addressing
climate change. It seems that that would be a better use of resources
than war and the report seems to agree by suggesting that although additional
funding is necessary, "a substantial part of the additional investment
and financial flows needed could be covered by the currently available
sources" ... the aim will be to "direct the financial and investment flows
into new facilities that are more climate-friendly and resilient". This
will include investing in technology research, renewable energy and energy
efficiency for transport, industry and construction, as well as supporting
agroforestry and implementing sustainable forest management.
Scientists
say they have developed a model to predict how ocean currents, as
well as human activities, will affect temperatures over the next decade.
By including short-term natural events, such as El Nino, a UK team says
it is able to offer 10-year projections. Models have previously
focused on how the globe will warm over a century. Writing in Science,
Met Office researchers project that at least half of the years between
2009 and 2014 are likely to exceed existing records. However, the
Hadley Centre
researchers said that the influence of natural climatic variations
were likely to dampen the effects of emissions from human activities between
now and 2009. The conclusions drawn by the team seem to support
the sense that our expectations of the speed of climate change should
be measured in years not decades, as many of projections have done to
date.
The RSPB
says that climate change is to blame for a drop in the number of
some birds that visit Britain each winter. The charity said
many wildfowl no longer needed to migrate as far as the UK from places
like Greenland and Siberia because of warmer winters. It warned that the
numbers of seven regular visitors, including the shelduck, mallard and
turnstone, are declining, though the overall number of waterbirds wintering
in the UK has doubled since the late 1970s. The State
of the UK's Birds 2006 report, says in particular the number of wading
birds including the black-tailed godwit and the avocet, had increased
markedly, mainly due to action by conservationists.
A team of scientists have said that the EU target of ensuring 10% of
petrol and diesel comes from renewable sources by 2020 is not an
effective way to curb carbon emissions in Carbon
Mitigation by Biofuels or by Saving and Restoring Forests? They
suggest that reforestation and habitat protection is a better option
as forests could absorb up to nine times more CO2 than the production
of biofuels could achieve on the same area of land. Also, the growth
of biofuels was also leading to more deforestation rather than replacing
other uses, as should be the case. Dr Righelato, one of the team
and chairman of the World Land Trust, noted that the policy could actually
lead to more deforestation as nations turned to countries outside of the
EU to meet the growing demand for biofuels. However, he said that
so-called second generation biofuels, which used feedstocks such as straw,
grasses and wood (lignocellulosic material) rather than grains or palm
oil, offered a much better opportunity. The adoption of second generation
biofuels would be welcomed by environmental groups and food agencies,
who view first generation fuels as unsustainable.
Also experts at the World Water Week conference in Stockholm voiced concern
that growing food crops to be used to make biofuels could jeopardise water
supplies.
Top
ICT
Lenovo, one of the world's biggest PC manufacturers, is to start selling
laptops to business and consumers with Linux pre-installed on the
machines. Linux the free, open source operating system is a highly
competitive alternative to Windows, especially if security and stability
are important.Novell will provide the Linux software on the laptops, which
are due to go on sale at the end of the year. Shuttle, a German
PC maker, is offering nice looking, good value PC's
preloaded with Novell's Linux offering too. Shuttle PCs are fully
configurable. (We have used SuSE Linux for three years now with
good results - full integration with legacy systems (eg Windows) and no
viruses!). Earlier this year PC maker Dell also announced it would start
shipping PCs with the Linux installed - in this case the distribution
is Ubuntu. Dell introduced Linux-powered PCs after chief executive Michael
Dell asked customers for suggestions for new products on the company's
website: Linux PCs were the most-requested item.
In a decision that may finally settle one of the most bitter legal battles
surrounding software widely used in corporate data centres, a federal
district court judge in Utah ruled Friday afternoon that Novell, not the
SCO Group, is the rightful owner of the copyrights covering the Unix
operating system. In the 102-page ruling, the judge, Dale A.
Kimball, also said Novell could force SCO to abandon its claims against
IBM, which SCO had sued. Judge Kimball’s decision in favour of Novell
could almost entirely undermine SCO’s 2003 lawsuit against IBM. The ruling
could remove the cloud over open-source software like Linux, an operating
system loosely modelled on the proprietary Unix. The unresolved ownership
has been seen as a limiting factor in the willingness of computing managers
for businesses large and small to adopt open-source software, which can
be adapted freely by software developers and can be legally shared or
modified by end users. “It was argued that this was supposed to suggest
riskiness in open source, but it turns out that the open-source world
was rock solid from the beginning,” said Eben Moglen, a professor of law
at Columbia University and the founding director of the Software Freedom
Law Center, which advocates open-source software.
PowerTOP, a cool, new, free utility from Intel, gives companies a snapshot
of which applications use the most power, and can help reduce the total
power load at data centres around the world. PowerTOP works
on Intel-based Linux systems to monitor how much power all running applications
are using. The program's developer, Intel's Arjan van de Ven, said that
the trick to PowerTOP is that it runs on a "tickless" idling feature,
which keeps the system's processor idle for longer stretches, rather than
waking up every millisecond. "The primary objective is getting
Linux to use less power, to have Linux make maximum use of the power-saving
features within your computer," van de Ven told
Linux.com. "Intel can't do this alone; we want and need to cooperate
with the wider Linux community.... With PowerTOP, we provide a tool that
enables developers to quickly see issues on their own setups and to fix
them." According to Intel's PowerTOP
website, one user said he was able to increase the battery life on
his laptop from four to seven hours, and another said that using PowerTOP
lets his laptop idle using 13 watts of energy instead of the 25 to 30
it took before installing the utility. PowerTOP is not designed
for novice users, but IT pros who want to explore the cutting edge of
power savings can download PowerTOP from http://www.linuxpowertop.org/download.php.
It seems that video
conferencing is establishing itself. Telepresencing,
as it is called, is now used by larger firms to save time and money from
travelling by bringing disparate people from offices together in the same
room as in the picture. It is not yet ready for the home PC because
it uses massive ICT power, for example HP charges $ 350,000 per room it
installs and $ 18,000 per month for service. But for big and international
businesses, it is very cost effective in comparison to the time and energy
used in travelling and the cost of flights and hotels. It also reduces
decision making time. And in case you care, it greatly reduces pollution
- a round trip flight from NY to London emits over 1.3 tonnes of CO2.
The explosion in popularity of on-line video could lead to increases
in the cost of broadband for UK consumers. Internet services
providers, such as Tiscali, say that the raft of recently launched on-demand
services will "undoubtedly" congest the network. Upgrades to the net could
be needed to ensure services such as the BBC iPlayer continue to work
properly, with costs passed on to the consumer. Alternatively, the ISPs
say they would have to limit access to services. One option that
would allow them to do this would be to use so-called traffic shaping.
This involves delaying packets of information sent across the network
until congestion has eased. Tiscali already targets some of its
customer's traffic using the technology. On a personal note, in
August I unwittingly put our ISP to the test by downloading many big files,
including 2 Linux distributions each over 3 GB. All was fine until
I got a call at the end of the month from my friendly ISP who pointed
out that I had exceeded my allowed download quota of 15 GB by over 2x
and asked if there is a virus on my computer! There isn't.
He suggested I upgrade my service or keep tabs on download volume.
A report by Interactive Media in Retail Group claimed that wet
weather in July drove on-line shopping to record levels in the
UK as consumers surfed the net rather than sloshing down the High Street.
Internet sales nearly doubled to £4.2 billion in July, up from £2.34 billion
in the same month a year ago. Sales are also picking up as retailers improve
websites, and as consumers get faster internet connections.
Nokia has also joined the music download party and launched a
music and games download service, challenging both rival handset makers
and mobile phone network providers. The Nokia Music Store should
make it easier for customers to use Nokia handsets as music players, making
them stronger rivals to Apple's iPhone. It will also make Nokia a rival
to the sellers of its phones, the network providers, which also offer
downloads. Nokia has also unveiled handsets better suited as multimedia
players. Nokia predicts that the market for such phones, which can
be used to surf the web, play music and games, and even make calls, is
set to grow by 50% to 120 million units this year.
Vivendi's Universal Music will also test the digital sale of songs from
artists without the customary copy-protection technology. It will
allow the sale of thousands of albums and tracks available in MP3-form
without the protection, known as digital rights management. Most major
recording studios insist music sellers use DRM technology to curb on-line
piracy. Universal artists include 50 Cent, the Black Eyed Peas, and Amy
Winehouse. Universal said: "The experiment will run from August
to January and analyse such factors as consumer demand, price sensitivity
and piracy in regards to the availability of open MP3s." Retailers including
Google, Wal-Mart, and Amazon.com, will participate in the DRM-free trial.
Participants do not include Apple iTunes on-line music store, the third
largest music retailer in the US - although iTunes already offers a selection
of music from EMI free of copy protection, albeit for a higher price.
Google ("do no evil", mmmm...) is shutting down its premium video service,
leaving users who have bought or rented content unable to view their videos
in the future. In an e-mail to users they said that money spent
on videos would not be refunded. Customers are being offered fixed
credit on the firm's on-line payment system, Google Checkout, instead.
The move comes nine months after Google paid $1.65 billion for on-line
site You Tube, which also sells some video. Google started selling
video content on its video site in January last year, offering programs
such as Survivor, CSI and Star Trek for about $1.99. Google co-founder
Larry Page launched the service at the Consumer Electronics Show, in Las
Vegas, but the success of YouTube has made Google Video increasingly irrelevant.
Punishing corrupt officials has been a big theme this year for
the Chinese Communist Party after a succession of scandals. But no-one
expected computer game addicts would be allowed to join in and
vent their frustration with such enthusiasm that they would crash the
website that allowed them to do so. Incorruptible Warriors is the new
big hit of the on-line gaming world in China, where, like its Asian neighbours,
tens of millions of young men and women are in thrall to sites like World
of Warcraft and the Romance of the Three Kingdoms. The player's task is
to find, and kill, not just corrupt officials but their sons, daughters,
and even mistresses. In the first week after its launch as part of an
education campaign by local government, it was been downloaded so many
times the website was closed "for its hardware to be upgraded". The game
has clearly hit a nerve at a time when the louche behaviour of party cadres,
many of whom have been accused of taking bribes and spending them on high
living, lovers and prostitutes, is being widely publicised.
China has seen a sharp increase in requests for patents,
according to the UN's intellectual property agency. The number of
requests for patents in China grew by 33% in 2005 compared with the previous
year. That gives it the world's third highest number behind Japan
and the United States.
A 17-year-old hacker hacked the lock that ties Apple's iPhone
to AT&T's wireless network, freeing the most hyped cell phone ever
for use on the networks of other carriers, including those outside the
US. George Hotz of Glen Rock, New Jersey, confirmed that he had unlocked
an iPhone and was using it on T-Mobile's network, the only major US carrier
apart from AT&T that is compatible with the iPhone's cellular technology.
In a video posted to his blog, he holds an iPhone that displays "T-Mobile"
as the carrier. He put the unlocked 4GB iPhone up for sale on eBay,
where the high bid was above $2,000 (4x retail price) within one day!
Also, a UK firm's plan to sell software that could open the iPhone to
non-US networks was stalled following legal threats. Belfast-based
UniquePhones joined several others in claiming it had cracked the code
which locked iPhone into AT&T's network. But a middle-of-the-night
phone call from AT&T's lawyers has forced the firm to rethink its
plans and is now taking legal advice to assess the ramifications.
According to UniquePhones, it received a 3am call from a lawyer claiming
to represent AT&T and warning it that selling unlocking software could
constitute copyright infringement and illegal software dissemination.
A website called iPhonesSimFree also claimed to have cracked the code
with a software solution that it would begin selling imminently. Analysts
believe Apple may still have time to modify the iPhone to tighten its
locks before the phone is launched in Europe.
Top
Holonics and LOHAS
Holonics * Health * Environment * Education * Living
Holonics
Experiments reported in August show that out-of-body experiences
can be created. Both Henrik Ehrsson in Stockholm and Olaf Blanke
in Geneva, independently have been able to simulate an out of body experience.
While their work is focussed on developing treatments for unusual conditions,
this kind of experience gives meaning to the idea that our physical existence
is not the dominant dimension of ourselves. A sense of self is what
makes us distinct from our environment and from other people, and now
this sense of self can be shown to de dissociated from our physical bodies.
(There is a summary
of the research experiments here.)
Now even the venerable Harvard Business Review has now embraced the
benefit of stories in learning. In late August a fictitious
story by Joseph Finder was published as a case study. In fact, Finder's
books fictional stories set in the world of business have a growing following
among chef executives, including the likes of Jeff Imelt. His stories
have the benefit of being able to draw on confidential reality to describe
events or environments which otherwise could not be disclosed. Artistic
licence may also improve the readability of stories. The review
of the "chief
fiction officer" by the Economist describes how valuable stories can
be.
The hype around sustainability in the corporate sector has been a daily
media staple since high level reports like the Stern Report and IPCC reports
were circulated last autumn. But there are two cautions. As
noted in the section on Responsible Investing, many of the initiatives
are more talk than walk and do not attempt real system change. There
are announcements of corporate commitment to reducing energy or emissions,
reducing packaging, or introducing some innovative product or service
with a lower environmental impact, but not as much action. And,
as Kevin
Fletcher pointed out in Small
Business, Big Results, the predominant business constituency is hardly
mentioned at all: SMEs. And this is of great concern because
underlying the system change required is a move to a more holonic system
- one in which many small players act interdependently, as opposed to
a hierarchical one with large feudal corporates dominating the thoughts
and actions of consumers. Smaller companies, those with 500 or fewer
employees, represent over 95% of all companies, lack the time, money,
and other resources to commit to environmental practices, despite the
fact that they stand to gain much. The challenge is how to encourage
change. Command-and-control regulation doesn’t even work for bigger
firms. Incentive help, to a point, but don’t necessarily provide harried
small business owners more time and personnel needed to do the job.
An underutilized resource is business-to-business mentoring, programs
in which small companies share ideas and knowledge, or in which big companies
tutor their smaller brethren, but with a dearth of understanding of big
picture dynamics there are few role models in established sectors. (A
handbook on business-to-business mentoring is downloadable
here.) Our recommendation is simply to open up in the
style of Semco - have a look at Ricardo Semler's Maverick.
Open management methods are as effective in improving business performance
and open technology is at improving IT performance.
Here's a little diversion ... a US law firm, Nixon Peabody, now has its
own inspirational song "Everyone's
A Winner". Its a bit tongue in cheek, but has a message.
Its an unusual style for the stereotypical lawfirm - it talks about win-win.
Health
There was a raft of reports in August about the dangers of overeating,
not just the benefits of longevity from a calorie restricted diet.
Get a bag of chips before you read the next few paragraphs ...
I really took the following warning to heart: Scientists warned
that even a small pot belly can increase the risk of heart disease.
So I've even attempted to do a few sit-ups daily (ugh!). Research
from the University
of Texas, reported in the Journal
of the American College of Cardiology, found large waist measurements,
relative to hip size, were linked to early signs of heart disease. This
confirms other research that waist size, rather than overall body weight,
is a key indicator of heart disease. The study of 2,744 people suggests
that a waist size of 32ins (81cm) for a woman and 37ins (94cm) for a man
represents a "significant" raised risk. They found adding a few
inches to the waist increased the risk of damage in the arteries, even
if body weight remained within the normal range. People with the largest
waist-to-hip ratios (WHRs) were almost twice as likely to have calcium
deposits, which indicate the onset of atherosclerosis, in the arteries
of their hearts, as those with the smallest WHRs. And even when
other risk factors such as blood pressure, diabetes and age were taken
into account, the link remained strong. Professor James de Lemos, who
led the research, said: "Fat that accumulates around your waist seems
to be more biologically active as it secretes inflammatory proteins that
contribute to atherosclerotic plaque build-up, whereas fat around your
hips doesn't appear to increase risk for cardiovascular disease at all."
And waist-to-hip ratio was more closely linked to these early signs of
heart disease than either body mass index (BMI) or waist circumference
alone. BMI is widely used to assess relative body weight, and is calculated
as weight in kilograms divided by the square of the height in meters.
In the UK food products promoted by popular cartoons and film
characters are undermining parents' efforts to make their children
eat healthily, according to a survey published by Which? It warns
that biscuits and other snacks are being advertised as ideal for school
lunchboxes when in fact they are high in fat and sugar. The unhealthiest
foods include many popular cereals as well as biscuits. Products on the
blacklist, many with over 30% sugar, all attract red "traffic light" labels
under the new system introduced by the government's Food Standards Agency.
The series and characters identified by Which? for its Cartoon Heroes
and Villains report include The Simpsons, Bratz, Shrek and Spider-Man,
as well as new characters created by food companies themselves. Three-quarters
of parents interviewed by Which? said they thought it was irresponsible
for companies to feature cartoon characters on unhealthy foods and wanted
the practice to be stopped. They also objected to marketing practices
linking purchases to competitions and promotions on websites. I
think much of the problem lies with parents who are careless about what
their children eat and just give them fat and sugar to keep them quiet
... until the next hour when they must be fed with more of the addictive
stuff. I regularly see children eating chocolate bars and potato
crisps for lunch, and even in the morning on the way to school!
In America more evidence of the problem of advertising to children was
released. A new study in the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent
Medicine indicates that the annual $10 billion the food and beverage industry
is spending on advertising foods to kids is working alarmingly well. The
study found that 4 out of 5 kids preferred the flavour of foods served
in McDonalds packaging as compared to the exact same foods served in packaging
without the McDonalds brand. By the time they are two years old, children
may already have beliefs about certain brands, and by the age of six they
can recognize brands and specific brand products. Not surprisingly, the
study found that children with more televisions in the home had stronger
preferences for brands. Wow! The authors suggested this study strengthened
the justification for tighter regulation or banning of advertising and
marketing of high calorie, low nutrient food and drink, and perhaps a
ban on all marketing that is aimed at young children.
And the problem starts before the children are born. Pregnant
women who overindulge in junk food risk giving their child an addiction
for a fatty, sugary and salty diet, according to researchers who studied
the phenomenon in rats. Neil Stickland at the UK's Royal Veterinary College
and his team fed pregnant and breast-feeding rats on either a balanced
diet or processed food such as doughnuts, muffins, biscuits, crisps and
sweets. They then gave the offspring a choice of diets. The mothers who
ate the high fat, sugar and salt diet gave birth to young with a greater
preference for junk food. They also had a propensity to overeat and to
put on more weight. The research did not address how the changes in offspring
occur. However, Stickland speculated that a mother's junk food diet might
affect the development of reward centres in the brain involved in the
feeling of satiety and response to drugs. "The foetus is getting used
to the high fat, sugary and high salt diet and seems to prime the reward
centres in the brain so it needs more when it is born," he said, "It's
an addiction if you like." The study counters the convenient
myth adopted by some that mothers-to-be can safely overindulge because
they are "eating for two". Although the effect on rats may not necessarily
be exactly comparable in people, the research does back up a US study
of 190,000 families published in 2005. It found that women who gained
more weight during pregnancy than the US Institute of Medicine's recommended
amount - 11.5 to 16 kg - were more likely to have obese two to four-year-olds.
A new study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association,
shows that many children and adolescents have high blood pressure
that is going undetected. Dr Matthew Hansen of Case Western Reserve
University in Cleveland and his colleagues attempted to discover how much
undiagnosed high blood pressure there was by looking at the health records
of more than 14,000 children, aged between three and 18, living in Ohio.
The results show that of 507 children who had high blood pressure, only
136, just over a quarter, had such a diagnosis noted on their record.
The team concluded that even where blood pressure is measured, doctors
are not drawing the appropriate conclusions. The study estimates
that as many as one-in-20 American teenagers may suffer from high blood
pressure. The long-term effects can include heart attack, heart failure,
stroke and kidney disease. Researchers described an epidemic of high blood
pressure, going hand in hand with the obesity epidemic and blamed poor
diets, salty foods, and lack of exercise. Professor Bryan Williams of
the University of Leicester, a past president of the British Hypertension
Society, said: "We have probably seen a doubling of high blood pressure
in the young over the past 20 years." He said lifestyle changes were building
up serious health problems that could undermine recent advances in the
control of disease.
Data from Cancer Research UK show that too much food, alcohol and sun
has fuelled a massive rise in some forms of cancer. Cases
of melanoma, the most dangerous form of skin cancer, have risen by 40%
in the past decade, and mouth cancer, which is associated with smoking
and drinking, has risen by almost 25%. Research suggested that around
half of all cancers could be prevented by changes to lifestyle.
Rates of kidney cancer and womb cancer - both linked to obesity - have
also shown rapid increases over the past 10 years. Overweight and obese
women are twice as likely to develop womb cancer as women of a healthy
weight due to higher than normal exposure to the hormone oestrogen.
The charity is particularly concerned about rates of malignant melanoma
which have doubled in women and tripled in men since the mid-80s.
A recent study by Val Smith, of which a paper was published in the Journal
of Integrative and Comparative Biology shows that diet may be important
in disease control, not just because a healthy diet supports a healthy
body that is more resistant to disease, but because restricting access
to certain nutrients can help winnow a disease which needs those certain
nutrients. In particular control
of the intake of iron, which the host seems to be able to obtain more
easily than pathogens. In general terms however, it also adds some
weight to the notion that a calorie restricted diet increases longevity.
"Is ignorance bliss when eating out?" is the question posed by the Food
Commission in a special report in August's Food Magazine. While
food labelling has become more rigorous, especially when it comes to chemical
ingredients on one side or organic food on the other, caterers are
exempt from food labelling requirements. Of course regulating
restaurants in this area would be complex. It's not just that menus are
often large and variable, it's also the fact that we expect good chefs
to adjust seasoning and, yes, add, or take away, a bit of oil or cream
here and there. But as the report points out there is little indication
as to what is in preparations and no incentive for restaurants to open
up. The report asks "why should restaurants be free to add as much
salt, sugar or saturated fat as they like to foods without mentioning
it to anyone?", but in fact the issue is more stark than that. Most
of the time you would not want to know what goes in to your meal, even
at good restaurants. There is a strong incentive for restaurants
to cut corners, include cheap ingredients, even frozen meals, whenever
they can; and often its the fancier looking ones that do it because their
overhead is so high. I operated an organic restaurant in London
a few years ago and while we strove to use fresh and wholesome ingredients,
the competing restaurants around us were using bulk, processed "food"
which cost half as much; we found that most people are don't care about
quality and we survived simply because no one around us was doing anything
similar. Some kind of disclosure of processed and chemical ingredients
would be helpful to consumers, but that's unlikely to happen. There
is a stronger case for introducing some controls on the big restaurant
chains and fast food outlets, where the menus are limited and fixed and
it ought to be fairly straightforward for the big companies to provide
clear, accessible nutritional information to customers, as in fact they
now have to do in parts of America. The best advice is simply to
assume that there is a relation between price and quality, smell your
food, remember how you felt after eating it, ask if the restaurant uses
any kind of MSG (also called modified starch etc) and so on. Or
just don't worry!
Could eating off-season tomatoes contribute to heart attacks? Dr
Joon Yun thinks it’s possible that "stressed
food", like off-season tomatoes, contributes to heart attacks.
Yun, based at Stanford’s Department of Radiology, is a partner at Palo
Alto Investors focusing on health care startups, a founder of the think
tank The
Palo Alto Institute and, most recently, the author of Low-Stress
Food. Yun theorised that stress is accumulated up the food chain.
“Fish don’t die of heart disease,” he says. Instead, they die, of course,
primarily in the mouths of predators. And the stress that that any individual
fish feels (from living in constant fear of being eaten, from harsh living
conditions, etc.) is transferred to its predator…up the line until you
reach the final stop, humans. As such, a more highly stressed fish confers
greater stress to the predator than a happy fish. How do you know a happy
fish when it’s sitting on your plate covered in breadcrumbs? A bit of
science can help. “If you look at wild salmon versus farmed salmon, the
former is high in Omega 3’s and low in Omega 6’s, and the latter is high
in Omega 6’s and low in Omega 3’s,” Yun says, referring to the ratio
between the two types of essential fatty acids. A diet high in Omega
6 fatty acids is thought to increase the likelihood of all sorts of diseases
and afflictions, including heart attacks and certain types of cancer.
Yun concludes that the chemical makeup of each type of fish is merely
a manifestation of its happiness. In other words, the farmed fish (living
its life in crowded pens) is more stressed than the wild fish (swimming
freely in rivers and oceans). “Eating a farmed salmon increases the risk
of heart disease,” he says, noting that the same benefits derived from
eating wild salmon can be found in, say, grass-fed beef and eggs laid
by cage-free chickens. And it’s not just protein. You know that saying,
one rotten apple spoils the whole bunch? Well, Yun says it’s also rooted
in science. As soon as a fruit is picked, it stresses about its loss of
nutrients. The further from maturity that it’s picked, the greater its
stress. As such, it begins emitting ethylene,
which he calls “the stress hormone of fruit,” (a corollary to cortisol,
the human stress hormone). The ethylene is detected by surrounding fruit,
which causes secondary stress, causing what amounts to a panic attack,
a chain-reaction of ethylene production. Before long, they’re all rotten.
Conversely, a fruit that is picked when fully ripe, or close to it, is
essentially satiated. It has reached maturity and so is less stressed,
tastes better, and is healthier for its consumer. So, the more natural
the growing and distribution process , the happier the fruit, the better
the taste, and, ultimately, the healthier the consumer. Our conclusion:
aim for an organic, local, vegetarian diet, especially if you've a stressful
lifestyle.
The synthetic hormone recombinant (genetically engineered) Bovine
Growth Hormone is banned in most of the world, due to its links to
prostate and breast cancer, although it is still being injected into thousands
of dairy herds in the US. Grassroots pressure from health-minded
consumers and public interest groups, however, have caused Starbucks,
Chipotle, and many supermarket chains to put pressure on their dairy suppliers
to stop using the drug. And here aresome recent marketplace developments:
California Dairies, which produces 8% of the milk supply in the US, has
banned the use of rBGH; food retail giant Kroger recently announced they
will be banning rBGH in all of their stores by February 2008; all milk
produced in Oregon is now rBST-free.
Meanwhile initiatives to raise the ethical standards of the USDA,
which we reported is dumbing down organic standards, have reached mainstream.
In August the New York Times exposed the USDA for short-changing organic
programs. It pointed out that the National Organic Program, which
regulates the entire organic industry, has just nine staff members and
a puny annual budget of $1.5 million; in contrast, the chemical-agribusinesses
have individually received more than that in subsidies, including $1.7
million in subsidies given to a single mega-farm in Florida. They point
out that the USDA (whose annual budget is $100 billion) spent $28 million
on organic agriculture programs last year, while in comparison the agency
spent $37 million subsidizing farmers who grew dry peas last year - consumers
spend only $83 million a year on dry peas, but spent almost $17 billion
last year on organic food. NYT noted, "It's not entirely surprising that
organics are such a low priority at the department and in Congress. Both
the agency and farm-state members of Congress are reliable cheerleaders
for industrialized agriculture, and Big Ag has often viewed organics with
suspicion, if not outright disdain." And of course regulators receive
cash and benefits from industrial-agriculture lobbies.
Research by a team from Ohio State University which was presented at
a meeting of the American Chemical Society suggests that the compounds
which give certain fruit and vegetables their dark colour may contain
powerful cancer fighting properties. Studies on rats and
human cells found anthocyanins, which colour red, purple and blue fruits,
notably slowed the growth of colon cancer cells. The more exotic the plant
the better: purple corn and bilberry were found to be much more potent
than the radish. In some experiments cancer growth not just slowed, but
as many as 20% of the cells killed. For instance, anthocyanin pigments
obtained from black carrots and radishes slowed the growth of cancer cells
by between 50 to 80%. But compounds from chokeberries for instance killed
up to 20% of existing cells, without impacting healthy ones. This
is made more interesting by the finding, reported in Living below, that
females can navigate to stationary food sources (ie plants) more accurately
than males, particularly if the food is reddish in hue.
Meanwhile, India is to pour £20 million (€ 30 million) into clinical
trials on traditional herbal medicines used to treat major health
conditions. The Indian Government, keen that its long and rich tradition
of herbal medicine should be brought into the mainstream, is recruiting
leading Indian pharmaceutical companies to help undertake the trials.
The initiative, called The Golden Triangle Partnership, will involve trials
on a wide range of traditional herbal remedies and will focus on the their
application in the treatment of more than 20 medical conditions, including
arthritis, diabetes, IBS, malaria and psoriasis. The Partnership will
seek to identify ‘actives’ present in traditional Ayuervedic, Siddha and
Unani remedies, and it will not be looking for new molecules to turn into
chemically pure drugs. Its purpose instead is to “make herbal medicine
more scientific in the 21st Century”.
According to the Soil Association, annual sales of organic food
and drink in the UK have hit £2 billion (€ 3 billion). However,
supply of home-grown organic food is not growing fast enough to meet demand.
Spending on organic products grew 22% between 2005 and 2006, making the
UK the third largest market in Europe behind Germany and Italy. UK supermarkets
saw their slice of organic retail sales rise by 21%. And people in London,
the south east, the south west and Wales were the biggest spenders on
organic products. This data and personal observation suggests that
people are buying what's conveniently available and want to avoid the
poisons sprayed on conventional crops, but are unwilling to make an effort
to buy local and fresh produce which is what is needed for system change.
An Indian Court has ruled against Swiss pharmaceutical company Novartis’
attempt to challenge an Indian law that allows the country to refuse
a patent for an existing medicine. Oxfam and the Interfaith Center
on Corporate Responsibility call it an important victory for global public
health. This ruling supports the right of developing countries to use
the World Trade Organization’s guidelines to balance public health and
protection of intellectual property. Novartis had received numerous petitions
to pull the case and had been questioned by many political groups from
India, Europe and the United States. Currently, more than two-thirds of
the generic drugs manufactured in India go to developing countries.
Environment
The
baiji (a species of dolphin) is the
first mammal to become extinct in more than 50 years. (The ironic
coincidence is that in the Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, dolphins,
more intelligent than humans, leave the planet a week before planet earth
is blown up to make way for an inter-galactic transport corridor ...!)
Biologists, writing in Biology Letters journal,
have concluded that China's rapid industrialisation (not their fault -
we've all done it) has made extinct a species of fresh water dolphin that
had been on Earth for over 20 million years. Scientists from China,
Japan, Britain and the United States failed to find the white dolphin,
known as the baiji and a cousin of the bottlenose dolphin, during a six-week
search of its natural habitat in the Yangtze river last year and further
searches this year . "This result means the baiji is likely
extinct," Wang Ding, who led the survey and is one of the world's leading
experts on the species. The dolphin was a victim of devastating
pollution, illegal fishing and heavy cargo traffic on the Yangtze.
The World Conservation Union's Red List of Threaten Species
currently classifies the creature as "critically endangered".
Other rare species that live in the Yangtze, such as the Chinese sturgeon
and the finless porpoise, are also in danger of extinction. Read
The Ecologist's Dead
as a dolphin here.
One of the main causes
of global warming is agro-industrial farming and the global food
system associated with it. Although it is scarcely ever mentioned, farming
is responsible for 14% of greenhouse gas emissions. Within farming, the
largest single cause is the use of chemical fertilisers, which introduce
a huge amount of nitrogen into the soil, and nitrous oxide into the air.
Changing land use (mainly deforestation and thus linked to the expansion
of crop monoculture) is responsible for another 18%. And a large part
of global transport, which is responsible for a further 14% of emissions,
stems from the way in which the agro-industrial complex moves large quantities
of food from one continent to anther. It is abundantly clear that
we can only halt climate change by challenging the absurdity and the waste
of the globalised food system as organised by the transnational corporations.
Of contentious concern is the way on which biofuels may be generated and
there is concern that industrial production of biofuel will do to the
environment what agro-industrial farming has done - destroy it.
We believe that a fair trade-off would be industrial meat production for
biofuel, but either way we can't have it all. See
here for further reading on agrifuels from Grain. And background
on biofuels here. And the report above in Climate Change and
Environment on the trade-off between primary and secondary biofuels and
deforestation.
Continuing the theme of industrialised agriculture, have a look at The
Arbiters of Risk - How ‘Regulatory Science’ Is Leading to a Biotech
Nightmare an interview with Denise Caruso. Caruso's new
book, Intervention, exposes the dysfunctional regulation of US biotechnology
as business interests and their hired scientists on one side, suspicious
citizens and a few independent scientists on the other, argue the merits
with “our appointed arbiters of risk, the government regulators" in the
middle. The story she tells is about risk, and the disasters that
can flow from mistaken or cynical notions of risk. This quote from
the interview gets to the nub of the problem: "One of the things that
I have found to be disingenuous about the risk rhetoric around transgenic
crops is the idea that this is just a continuation of what humans have
done since the beginning of time, since we domesticated plants. It’s actually
not true. There is no way to create transgenic plants except forcefully
and invasively. There’s no natural way to do that."
A
quick update on summer's volatile weather reported last month ...
Here's a cool picture of the US
heatwave continuing in August here. Also on that page is a handy
explanation of how weather patterns are changing.
In the UK, this summer appears to have been the wettest since rainfall
records began in 1914, according to provisional data from the Met
Office. Britain had 358.5mm of rain, just beating the 1956 record
of 358.4mm. The main reason for the high rainfall has been the unusually
southerly position of the jet stream, a band of strong winds high in the
atmosphere. Following earlier floods in central and southern England,
five areas of the country are still on flood alert.
A clever initiative for warning rural residents of impending floods
is going live. When floods strike rural areas in emerging economies
it is difficult to warn residents because they are not connected to high
tech networks. Flood warnings in places like Bangladesh are for
naught if the people who may be affected by the floods cannot be warned
in time. Now, a forecasting system designed by scientists at the U.S.
National Center for Atmospheric Research and Georgia Tech will aim
to deliver one-to-ten-day flood forecasts directly to more than 100,000
people living in the floodplains of the Brahmaputra and Ganges rivers.The
program alerts the network of volunteers who then go directly to affected
residents, many of whom are in poor rural regions that lack radios or
even electricity. Residents have said that advance notice of floods could
help them quickly harvest near-ripe crops or move livestock, thus preserving
some of their livelihoods.
The US, Canada and Mexico are strengthening their efforts to ensure
the safe manufacture and use of industrial chemicals by developing
a regional partnership for assessing and managing potential risks. This
regional partnership was announced in Montebello, Quebec following discussions
between President Bush, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Mexican
President Felipe Calderon at the Security and Prosperity Partnership of
North America Leaders' Summit. A
Globe.net article outlining the agreement is reproduced here.
As part of the regional agreement, the three countries' top environmental
officials agreed that their agencies would coordinate efforts to assess
and take action on industrial chemicals. The United States, by 2012, will
complete risk characterizations and take action, as needed, on more than
9,000 chemicals produced above 25,000 pounds per year. It also provides
for the sharing of scientific information and technical understanding,
best practices and research on new approaches to chemical testing and
assessment. The agreement establishes goals to be met by 2020, which include
creating and updating chemical inventories in all three countries, as
well as coordinating the management of chemicals in North America as outlined
in other international agreements. It sounds like too little,
way too late.
Education
The results of studies
in brain development published in the Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences show that there are two neural networks involved in
memory and analysis whose relationship changes as we age. The two
networks, the “cingulo-opercular network” and the “frontoparietal network”
were bound into a single web in children; in adolescents, some of the
connections between networks had been undone; and in adult volunteers
the brain regions fired as two distinct networks. Moreover, the web of
activity inside the children's heads depicted the cingulo-opercular (sustaining)
network as being clamped inside the frontoparietal (rapidly adapting)
one. This understanding helps show why younger minds are eager to
have immediate rewards and are less able to wait and plan for bigger rewards
later (even a short time later). Another study has shown that the
both the whitening of grey matter in the brain and the increasing activity
of the prefrontal cortex as the brain gets older aid more detailed memory
recall. This understanding helps because it underpins an understanding
of how we might learn at different ages, which suggests adapting educational
methods to the stage development of youth. For example, training
in emotional intelligence and motor skills is appropriate at a younger
age, while problem solving and research becomes more relevant later.
It also gives some rationale for the idea that older people are better
able to synthesise disparate ideas, suggesting that older minds can continue
to develop aptitude and that the perspectives of older people can be more
valuable in understanding situations and projecting outcomes. By
the same token, younger minds are better suited to situations where quick
decisions might be useful, such as in dangerous sports.
In the UK, the Professional Association of Teachers says many who begin
formal schooling aged just four are not ready for an academic curriculum
and the age at which pupils start school should be raised to six or seven.
Deborah Lawson from PAT said it was vital that children should have more
freedom to play in nurseries without being told what to do by adults.
The government said primary schools followed an age-appropriate curriculum.
Speaking at the PAT annual conference Lawson said: "There is evidence
that by starting school earlier, our children are not better off than
those children who are starting later." Anecdotal evidence seems
to support this: the curriculum in Ireland is well behind that of the
UK at primary level, but seems to catch up in secondary. And the
area generally ignored but increasingly relevant is development of
emotional intelligence, which I believe relies on a nurturing environment
at a younger age. So keep your children close while you can
- and don't use work as an excuse, after all you're working for them.
Meanwhile, also in the UK, a survey suggested less than half of second
year pupils were reaching the expected reading and numeracy levels.
The Scottish Survey of Attainment looked at how children were performing
in primary school and their first two years of secondary school.
Maybe younger children should be having more fun and more practical activities.
We recommend that early education up to 6 - 8 years old focusses
on emotional intelligence to lay a sound foundation for academic
excellence and the realisation of academic intellect later in life.
This early training would focus on music, art, sport, games, building,
personal habits, team exercises and so on.
Furthermore, research suggests that a string of government policies
aimed at boosting pre-school children's educational achievement in England
has had no impact. Children's vocabulary, ability to count and name
shapes when they start school are no better than they were six years ago,
a study of 35,000 children claims. The Durham University research covered
such policies as the expansion of free part-time nursery places. Early
years education has been a government priority, with £ 21 billion invested
since 1997, and the research covered initiatives such as free nursery
places for three and four-year-olds and the roll-out of Sure Start children's
centres. It also covers the introduction of the Every Child Matters policy
which aims to provide more support for the welfare of children. Although
it may be too soon to assess the impact of some of the policies, perhaps
the focus should be more on nurturing emotional intelligence than achieving
academic hurdles. For example Sure Start Children's Centres were
underpinned by research which suggested high quality, inclusive early
education, leads to positive effects for children, families and communities,
particularly in areas of disadvantage.
However, lowering of standards in later years is not welcome.
The proportion of 14-year-olds in England reaching the required standard
in maths tests fell slightly this year. Some 76% reached Level 5
or above, against 77% in 2006 after a three-point rise over the previous
year. There was an increase of 1% in the proportions of pupils meeting
English and science standards, to 74% and 73%. But the government had
set a target of 85% reaching Level 5 in English and in mathematics by
this year. Within the English results, there was a 6% increase in
the share of boys meeting the required standards for reading but a drop
of 2% in writing. Some 65% of boys met the standards for reading
compared to 78% of girls, while 80% of girls met the standards for writing
compared with 67% of boys. In fact girls out-performed boys in each
of the core subjects. Girls are more likely to get the benchmark five
good GCSEs than boys and more girls do better at A-level. Yes,
girls are smarter! Boys' writing was highlighted as a particular
concern when the primary school results for 11-year-olds were published
last month.
Continuing the trend in to tertiary level a survey suggests that boys
are not as keen to go to university as girls. 76% of girls want
to go to university compared with 67% of boys, a poll of 2,400
11 to 16-year-olds suggested. The gap of 9% is double the one that
emerged in a survey of pupils in England and Wales in 2006. Educational
charity the Sutton Trust, which commissioned the poll, said ways of raising
male aspiration were needed and an aptitude test might be used.
Although publicising the data might do the trick given the male ego.
The survey of state school pupils also suggested girls were more certain
of their intentions than boys. Some 41% of girls said they were
very likely to go to university compared with 33% of boys. The same
poll also suggested boys were more cynical than girls about what factors
might help them get on in life. They were more likely to list "knowing
the right people" and "which secondary school you go to" than girls.
Female respondents, by contrast, listed "aiming to be the best you
can" and "being able to read and write well". I'm afraid the
boys might be right, but I don't like it and work to support the girls'
conjecture.
In the UK, worrying but not unexpected news that examiners have raised
concerns over the amount of "sickeningly violent" content in students'
creative coursework for their English GCSEs. An examiners report
from the Edexcel board said one of the most frequently used titles for
creative writing coursework was "The Assassin". It comes amid national
alarm over a spate of murders and attacks involving young people.
The report also questioned high marks given for poor quality work.
Examiners said some students were producing thinly plotted and extremely
violent content in their stories. It again raises the notion that
attention to emotional intelligence should be raised.
A related report on UK education says that business leaders feel educational
standards have not improved since 1997, despite official data showing
record exam and test results. More than half thought education and
skills in England had not improved, the Institute of Directors found in
a survey of 500 members. The IoD report also claimed record investment
had not led to exam results improving any faster than before, though the
government said record investment had improved standards in schools.
The report, which is the first in a series on the education system, aims
to provide some "necessary context" to the yearly debate on examination
results. It highlights the fact that at primary school, although results
are continuing to "creep up", the pace of change is slow. Four out of
10 still do not achieve the expected standard for their age in reading,
writing and mathematics. It also says although the percentage of pupils
achieving five or more GCSEs at grades A to C has increased, the proportion
of those getting the grades in subjects including mathematics, sciences,
English and a modern language has fallen. The fact that the A-level pass
rate rose for the 15th year in succession last year and the percentage
of those getting grades A to C has doubled since the early 1980s is also
highlighted. But by contrast, the report says, the proportion of those
passing the international Baccalaureate has remained stable. These included
the claims that grade standards have slipped and that changes in assessment,
such as more coursework, meant that it was now easier to achieve the same
level. It suggested that more pupils passed exams because of an
increased focus on preparation, but that this had not necessarily improved
learning overall. The report also suggested that because of the well-known
correlation between educational achievement and income, the fact that
more people were better off had also raised results.
The story of a critical phase in human evolution may have to be rewritten
after the discovery of two fossils in Kenya that have shed new light on
the origins and behaviour of two ancient relatives of Homo sapiens
(or Pan sapiens as we should perhaps be more correctly named). One of
the fossils found near Lake Turkana has shown that two early human species,
thought to have evolved one from the other, actually lived side by side
for almost half a million years, redrawing the most widely accepted version
of humanity's family tree. The discovery means that only one of the two
species, known as hominins, can be a direct ancestor of modern human beings,
and not both as was previously proposed. While scientists are still confident
that Homo erectus, the younger of the two, ultimately gave rise to Homo
sapiens, it is now suspected that the older, Homo habilis, was an evolutionary
dead end.
On a similar subject Nature journal reports that nine fossilised teeth
found in Ethiopia are from a previously unknown species of great ape.
The 10 million-year-old fossils belong to an animal that has been named
Chororapithecus abyssinicus by an Ethiopian-Japanese team. This new
species could be a direct ancestor of living African great apes. The
finds from the Afar rift, in eastern Ethiopia, raise questions on current
theories of human evolution. The researchers say the fossils from
Ethiopia probably belonged to an ape from the gorilla family. Based
on genetic evidence, gorillas and humans were thought to have split away
from a common ancestor about eight million years ago.The 10-million-year
age of the fossils led the research team to suggest that the split must
have happened earlier than 10.5 million years ago. If correct, molecular
and DNA studies will need to be revisited. Not everyone agrees with
the team's conclusions, however. Professor Peter Andrews, from London's
Natural History Museum, commented: "It is stretching the evidence to base
a time scale for the evolution of the great apes on this new fossil."
Professor Andrews believes the structures found on the teeth could be
related to the diet of the animal. He added: "These structures appear
on at least three independent lineages of apes, including gorillas, and
they could relate to a dietary shift rather than indicating a new genetic
trait."
Researchers from St Andrews University have shown that the animals
intentionally modify or repeat their signals to get their messages across,
in other words, orang-utan communication resembles a game of charades.
The scientists said they believed all great apes could have this capability,
suggesting that the skill may have evolved millions of years ago.
The study is published in the journal Current Biology.
Living
In a paper just published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology,
Geoffrey Miller, Vladas Griskevicius and colleagues look into two activities,
conspicuous consumption and altruism
towards strangers, to see if these support the “mating mind” hypothesis:
that the human brain is the anthropoid equivalent of the peacock's tail,
in other words, it is an organ designed to attract the opposite gender.
Their conclusion is that they do. Altruism, according to the text
books, has two forms. One is known technically as kin selection, and familiarly
as nepotism. This spreads an individual's genes collaterally, rather than
directly, but is otherwise similar to one helping one's own offspring.
The second form is reciprocal altruism, or “you scratch my back and I'll
scratch yours”. It relies on trust, and a good memory for favours given
and received, but is otherwise not much different from simultaneous collaboration
(such as a wolf pack hunting) in that the benefit exceeds the cost for
all parties involved. Humans, however, show a third sort of altruism,
one that has no obvious pay-off: this is altruism towards strangers, for
example, charity. That may enhance reputation. But how does an enhanced
reputation weigh in the Darwinian balance? Their studies found that
this display of blatant benevolence is more akin to conspicuous consumption
and is designed to attract mates. The profligate display of resources
is a costly signal to display power. It is therefore not as altruistic
as one might think. And so anonymous benevolence is much
closer to the ideal of charity than the conspicuous variety.
The two linked articles caricature the psychological profiles of people
showing that perspectives makes the difference between happiness and
stress, not wealth. On the one hand are millionaires
Who Don’t Feel Rich, a really sad story, but one which tells us a
lot about humanity - we choose to live in a fantasy world in which we
choose not to be happy. And in contrast this
story tells a much more enlightened tale of a millionaire who
knows he has enough: Despite a nest egg of roughly $1.5 million, small
in comparison to many of his engineering friends’, Wilson, 40, feels less
anxious about his wealth than many of his peers in Silicon Valley. Wilson,
an engineer with a master’s degree from Stanford University, rents rather
than owns. And in the land of BMWs and Lamborghinis, he drives a 2002
Nissan Sentra. He lives on a fixed budget rather than pursue a more expensive
lifestyle simply because he can afford it.
Research published in the journal Science explains how a Pac-Man-like
computer game that delivers electric shocks to gamers has been used to
show how the brain reacts to imminent danger. The research team
asked volunteers to play a computer game in which they had to move a blue
triangle through a 2D maze while avoiding a red dot "predator". If the
predator caught the triangle, the volunteer received an electric shock.
Scans showed the different regions of the brain used by volunteers as
the level of threat in the game increased. The scans showed that
activity switched from the front of the brain to the middle as anxiety
turned to panic. This is not surprising to students of emotional
intelligence and illustrates again why managing by fear reduces the
intellectual resource of humanity - it stops the thinking part of
the brain from functioning. The prefrontal cortex is much larger in modern
humans than it was in our ancestors, and so we may have evolved to be
more adept at avoiding threatening situations, even though we are quite
adept at creating fear in one another, whether it be fear of academic
failure, failure at work, or failure to look or sound "right". The
research further underpins the rationale for system change from feudal
thinking to holonic thinking.
Women might be pleased to know that a recent
study demonstrates that females are better at navigation, in
the specific task of locating food resources, than men. Related
studies also show that there is a preference for reddish colours (pink)
in the female brain. The colour preference is thought to be underpinned
by the fact that more nutritious foods are often colours other than green.
(By coincidence, in our gardening ventures we have also found that red
vegetables tend to be less attractive to pests, for example they will
prefer white potatoes but our purple ones are left alone.)
Using Nasa satellites, an international team have discovered that the
great medieval temple of Angkor Wat in Cambodia was once at the
centre of a sprawling urban settlement. They disclosed at least
74 new temples as well as more than 1,000 man-made ponds and a single
complex channel that extended 20 to 25km out from Angkor city supplying
the city's water, which were part of complex irrigation systems.
The discovery suggests that the medieval settlement surrounding Angkor,
the one-time capital of the Khmer empire which flourished between the
ninth and 14th centuries, was at least three times larger than previously
thought. The map, published in the journal PNAS, extends the known settlement
by 1,000 sq km, about the size of Los Angeles and the team believes it
could have covered 3,000 sq km, the largest pre-industrial complex
of its kind. Its nearest rival is Tikal, a Mayan city in Guatemala, which
covers between 100 and 150 sq km (40-60 sq miles). Analysis also lends
weight to the theory that Angkor's residents were architects of the city's
demise. "The large-scale city engineered its own downfall by
disrupting its local environment by expanding continuously into the
surrounding forests," said Damian Evans of the University of Sydney and
one of the authors of the paper and map. "We saw signs that embankments
had been breached and of ad hoc repairs to bridges and dams, suggesting
that the system became unmanageable over time."In addition, deforestation,
over population, topsoil erosion could have contributed to the population's
sudden disappearance. We should heed this lesson of history as our
modern urban populations now exceed rural populations and urban infrastructure
is pushed beyond their limits.
The stories of toy recalls by Mattel and other related quality issues
are disappointing. But they should be taken in the context of what
we buy and what we are prepared to pay for (see the comment on restaurant
food quality in Health above). It is not as if the issues of toxins
in consumer products have not been known by us, consumers. In fact
Bush himself was made aware of the issue five years ago when he was given
a summary of the toxic emissions from a Mattel doll by Michael Braungart.
(Braungart had been questioned by his daughter "Daddy, why does this doll
smell funny?" So he ran off gassing tests which showed high levels
of dangerous and banned toxic gases. The results were shared with
Bush.) The irony is of course that most plastic toys and many household
items seem to give off toxic fumes, but we've grown accustomed to them
and sometimes are even attracted to them!
South Korean Woo Suk Hwang became famous after claiming to have extracted
the world's first stem cells from a cloned embryo and then it emerged
that he had lied about his work, and the source of the cells. Ironically
however, analysis in the journal Cell Stem Cell reveals he may have produced
stem cells from human eggs alone, which is potentially even more useful.
Hwang said that he had created cloned human embryos by placing the nucleus
from the cell to be cloned into a "hollowed out" human egg, then managed
to extract stem cells from the resulting embryos. However, it later
became clear that he had used eggs from young female researchers at his
laboratory to create the embryos, itself a major ethical breach - and
that the resulting stem cells did not come from cloned embryos. The latest
twist came from the Harvard Stem Cell Institute in the US, who looked
closely at his data, and found the cells were actually from a different
type of embryo. Researchers said that the distinct "genetic fingerprint"
of the stem cells means they may be the first in the world to be extracted
from embryos produced by the so-called "virgin birth" method, or parthenogenesis.
This happens when eggs are stimulated into becoming embryos without ever
being fertilised by sperm, and has been achieved in animals. However,
before Hwang, no one had managed to produce a human embryo using parthenogenesis
which lived long enough to allow the extraction of viable stem cells.
Scientists are excited about the potential of stem cells because they
are the body's "master cells", with the potential to become any cell type
in the body, perhaps replacing those lost through ageing or disease.
Another milestone in our legacy of inhumanity occurred in August when
Johnny Ray Conner, 32, became Texas' 400th death penalty execution.
Texas is America's busiest death penalty state. Connor was convicted
for the 1998 fatal shooting of a grocery store clerk, Kathyanna Nguyen.
He had always maintained his innocence and asked for forgiveness and expressed
love to his family and Ms Nguyen's family. Conner was pronounced
dead eight minutes after a lethal mix of drugs was injected. The
EU took the opportunity to urge the governor of Texas to stop all executions
expressing "great regret" at the sentence saying the punishment is "cruel
and inhumane". The statement from the EU presidency said: "There is no
evidence to suggest that the use of the death penalty serves as a deterrent
against violent crime and the irreversibility of the punishment means
that miscarriages of justice, which are inevitable in all legal systems,
cannot be redressed." The EU is unreservedly opposed to the use of capital
punishment "under all circumstances" and has consistently called for the
universal abolition of the punishment. Texas's governor said it was a
"just and appropriate" punishment. According to the Washington-based Death
Penalty Information Center, 1,090 executions have taken place in the US
since the Supreme Court lifted a ban on capital punishment in 1976. Texas
has carried out more than a third of those.
Also in Japan, three prisoners on death row were hanged. The executions
bring to 10 the number of prisoners hanged since December 2006. Officials
did not reveal the identities of the executed prisoners, but a human rights
watchdog said that they were men in their 60s convicted of murder. Japan,
like the United States, is one of the world's few developed countries
to exercise capital punishment.
On the other hand, America took another positive step to an open equal
society when an Iowa county judge struck down a ban on same-gender
marriages as unconstitutional. Judge Robert Hanson ruled that a law
allowing marriage only between men and women violated the rights of due
process and equal protection. Only the state of Massachusetts allows gay
marriages. Nine others, including New Jersey, New Hampshire, Connecticut
and Vermont, offer civil unions which do not give gay couples the same
legal rights as heterosexual marriages.
Another piece of the universal
big picture is to be reported in the Astrophysical Journal: astronomers
found an enormous void in space that measures nearly a billion
light-years across. This is BIG: if you were to travel at the speed of
light, it would take you several years to get to the nearest stars in
our own Milky Way galaxy; but if you were to go to this hole and enter
one side, you'd have to travel for a billion years before you would get
to the other side! It is empty of both normal matter, such as galaxies
and stars, and the mysterious "dark matter" that cannot be seen directly
with telescopes. The "hole" is located in the direction of the Eridanus
constellation and has been identified in data from a survey of the sky
made at radio wavelengths. Previous sky surveys that have
traced the large-scale structure of the nearby universe have long shown
how the clustering of galaxies is strung into vast filaments and sheets
that are separated by great gaps, but the void discovered by a University
of Minnesota team is about 1,000 times the volume of what would be expected
in typical cosmic gaps. The void is roughly 6-10 billion light-years
away and takes a sizeable chunk out of the visible Universe in its direction.
Activities and Media
August provided a break in the normal routine for us. While our
children escaped to visit grandparents with Mum, Dad stayed home to feed
the chickens and relive a bachelor lifestyle. What a treat to be
woken by the sun instead of the sons! It allowed time to review
our web presence and IT, testing the new Fedora distribution (excellent)
and preparing the website for a blog. I also set up a bit-torrent
client which has been a boon for downloads. The weather was boring
with low temperatures and regular showers, but vegetables in the garden
continued growing - harvesting tomatoes and French beans started.
I love this season when much of our food is fresh from the garden and
it just tastes good. As the month drew to an end we had a couple
of birthday parties just before returning to the school routine.
Here are a couple of media links. Goodsearch
is a search engine which contributes a portion or revenue to a (US) charity
of your choice. Why not check it out? This book
review of A Billion Bootstraps: Microcredit, Barefoot Banking and
the Business Solution for Ending Poverty is a useful smmary in itself.
And if you are pursuing or considering micro-finance it might be worth
buying the book.
The 11th Hour was released.
It is a more visually striking story of our inconvenient truth. To
judge from all the gas-guzzlers still fouling the air and the plastic
bottles clogging the dumps, it appears that the news that we are killing
ourselves and the world with our greed and garbage hasn’t sunk in.
This movie is an unnerving, surprisingly affecting documentary about our
environmental calamity and is worth viewing. It may not change your life,
but it may inspire you to recycle that old slogan-button your folks pinned
on their jeans back in the day: If you’re not part of the solution,
you’re part of the problem.
We got to see Sicko - definitely Michael Moore-ish. Whether you
like him or not, its a stimulating story.
Oxford University philosopher Nick Bostrom and Trinity College bioethicist
James Hughes teamed in 2004 to found a forum for a diversity of "voices
arguing for a responsible, constructive approach to emerging human enhancement
technologies. We believe that technological progress can be a catalyst
for positive human development so long as we ensure that technologies
are safe and equitably distributed." The Institute
for Ethics and Emerging Technologies covers special research areas
like Securing the Future, Envisioning the Future, Rights of the Person,
and Longer, Better Lives. Essays, white papers, newsletters, discussion
forums, and links to projects and events explore a variety of future-oriented
issues where technology and society meet, such as the Singularity, human
longevity,climate change, and terrorism.
And a quick heads up (given the concern by many about what's happening
in teh world of finance) ... The World
Investment Prospects to 2011: Foreign Direct Investment and the Challenge
of Political Risk is to be released on September
5.
Please forward this publication to associates, family and friends,
print it, and share it.
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