Saturday Morning Reads: The Dakini Office Pool
Posted: December 31, 2011 Filed under: morning reads | Tags: 2012 predictions 13 CommentsIt’s that time of year again! It’s time for my annual salute to the late William Safire’s annual “Office Pool”. I’ve been doing it since December 2008 which is basically about 6 months after I started this blog. Safire’s last column of the year in the NYT always had a list of predictions that challenged you to beat the pundit. Some of my favorite questions have to do with the results of elections as well as topical things like the number of troops left in places like Afghanistan.
Let’s make our predictions!
1. The winner of the Republican nod for Presidential candidate in 2012 will go to _______________ and the next president will be_______________.
2. The state with the most surprising election outcome will be ___________ where ___________________.
3. The next dictator to go–one way or another–will be:
4. The biggest court case this year will be about:
5. The winner of this year’s super bowl will be:
6. The next big Congressional stand off will be about ______________ and ___________ will be the one to cave to the opposition’s demands.
7. The big political surprise of the year will be:
8. The largest movement of US troops will be to:
9. Joe Biden’s first gaffe of the campaign will be:
10. The next major ecological/natural disaster will concern:
Okay, sharpen your pencils and let’s get started!
Here’s some other predictions to give you some inspiration! Of course the biggest 2012 predictions have to do with the end of the Mayan Calendar. Here’s some thing on that.
There are many theories floating around the Internet about how the world will end next year. The most popular being the Mayan prediction from 1,300 years ago. According to the Mayan Long Count Calendar, December 21, 2012 will mark the end of a b’ak’tun, a 144,000-day cycle. The b’ak’tun that will end on December 21 is the 13th cycle, a number that started all the apocalypse predictions. The truth is that the Mayan never predicted any cataclysms. The end of the Long Count calendar was just a measure of time for the ancient Mayan. It was Franciscan missionaries who actually attached the end of the world myth to the end of the 13th b’ak’tun.
There’s also some predictions out there for a Super Vocano eruption.
Another doomsday scenario for 2012 is that a supervolcano will erupt to kill off all life on the planet. Supervolcanoes are capable of spewing out thousands of times more magma and ash than regular volcanoes. A supervolcano eruption could wipe out millions of people and blot out the sun with ash. The largest supervolcano explosion happened 74,000 years ago in Sumatra. The explosion of Mount Toba released 700 cubic miles of magma and a thick layer of ash that covered all of South Asia. There are a dozen supervolcanoes today, most of them lying at the bottom of the sea but researchers agree that chances of a super-eruption happening next year are miniscule. Geologists think there is a super-eruption every 700,000 years or so and there is no sign that a super-eruption is going to happen anytime soon.
2012 is likely to feature a slow-growth world that includes a recession in Europe. The United States faces headwinds, but manages to achieve growth of between 2% and 2.5%. China and India slow somewhat, but, along with the United States, make up two-thirds of global GDP growth. The big risk remains that of a financial breakdown in Europe, which would tip the developed world, if not the emerging world, into recession. Inflation should also continue to move lower. Should the muddle-through environment come to pass, we believe earnings and some improvement in confidence would allow equity markets to move higher, with US stocks leading the way.
The Daily Beast has some political pundits with their predictions. Here’s John Avlon’s best guesses.
Anyone who tells you they know who’s going to win the presidential race isn’t telling the truth. This is going to be close—especially if Mitt Romney is the nominee and scores someone like Marco Rubio or Chris Christie as his VP. President Obama’s basic job approval and economic numbers make him a historically vulnerable incumbent, with his primary asset being his personal likability. Likable people get fired if they can’t do their job. The one thing I’ll say for certain is that if President Obama is reelected, it will be by a much smaller electoral margin than in 2008—and possibly razor-thin.
So, what do you think 2012 will bring?
Will Fidel Castro die? Will Israel bomb Iran? Will Hillary Clinton announce her retirement from the State Department? C’mon! Dust off those crystal balls and share!!!
Friday Reads
Posted: December 30, 2011 Filed under: morning reads | Tags: Dennis Kucinich, Marcy Kaptur, Racism, Ron Paul, Stormfront, TCE, Toxic Bronx school 14 CommentsSo, we’re getting close to yet another election year. Our challenges are fairly clear but our choices are limited. I only wish the opposite were true.
This Bronx factory turned school has evidently been in the news for a few months. It’s just one horrifying story after another. What would possess a school district to use a factory to house kids without testing it for toxic chemicals? A teacher is now suing the district after she had to terminate a pregnancy due to a horrible brain defect.
A TEACHER WHO worked at a toxic Bronx school lost her baby to birth defects linked to the contamination, she charged Wednesday in legal papers.
In October, five months into her pregnancy, Nancy Tomassi, a fifthgrade teacher at the shuttered Public School 51, learned her baby had a malformed brain, a condition called anencephaly, and would not survive.
The tests done in January showed that the sick school was laden with the carcinogen trichloroethylene, a toxin linked to defects, but failed to warn students or teachers until July.
“The whole tragic nature of the situation was made worse by the fact it could have been avoided if the Department of Education had acted properly,” said Tomassi’s lawyer Jeff Schietzelt, with the firm Silverson, Pareres & Lombardi. He notified the city of her intent to sue on Wednesday.
“How could they have known since January and not have told us?” said Mike Tomassi, Nancy’s husband. “You’re heartbroken and at some point you’re angry.”
For Tomassi, the diagnosis meant she had to end the pregnancy.
When researching possible causes, she found information to suggest the toxic chemical found at the sick school was responsible for her tragedy.
“If wed known about this, things could have been different,” said Tomassi, who worked at the school for five years.
A diligent nurse has evidently been documenting and reporting student illnesses since 2005. She even took the steps to write a superior about possible immune deficiencies in students which she thought might be due to a faulty heating/ac system. The reports of sick children number in the hundreds.
Students at a Bronx elementary school that relocated in September due to toxic contamination had for years complained of headaches, dizziness and other illnesses.
Records obtained by the Daily News under the Freedom of Information Law show that since 2005 nurses at the Bronx New School logged cases of kids suffering headaches, vomiting, abnormal gaits or even seizures nearly every month.
In May 2007, 16 students vomited at the Jerome Ave. school, records show. During one spell in November 2010, nurses listed five cases of students with heart “palpitations.” And in the late 1990s, one student suddenly died of kidney failure.
Toxic levels of TCE–in industrial degreaser–were found in the building. The school was closed in the fall but the report came in around January. This is just one of those stories you think would’ve gone away after all of the work done in the 1970s to make buildings and the environment safer. What do you want to bet that the PLUBS are more upset about the abortion of a nonviable fetus than the rest of the living sick children?
I’ve been calling Ron Paul a neoconfederate for years now. It looks like White supremicist group Stormfront–with whom Paul has taken pictures with the leaders–thought he was one of them too. Paul’s been distancing himself from the newsletters since he developed presidential aspirations.
Ron Paul was a hot topic this week on the talk radio show hosted by prominent white supremacist Don Black and his son Derek. Mr. Black said he received Mr. Paul’s controversial newsletters when they were first published about two decades ago and described how the publications were perceived by members of the white supremacist movement. Former KKK Grand Wizard and Louisiana Congressman David Duke also phoned in to explain why he’s voting for Mr. Paul.
“Everybody, all of us back in the 80′s and 90′s, felt Ron Paul was, you know, unusual in that he had actually been a Congressman, that he was one of us and now, of course, that he has this broad demographic–broad base of support,” Mr. Black said on his broadcast yesterday.
Mr. Black is a former Klansman and member of the American Nazi Party who founded the “white nationalist” website Stormfront in 1995. He donated to Mr. Paul in 2007 and has been photographed with the candidate. Mr. Paul has vocal supporters in Stormfront’s online forum. Mr. Black has repeatedly said he doesn’t currently think Mr. Paul is a “white nationalist.”
Mr. Paul’s newsletters contained threats of a “coming race war,” worries about America’s “disappearing white majority and warning against “the federal-homosexual cover-up on AIDS.” He has since denied writing the newsletters, which appeared under his own name.
“I didn’t write them, I disavow them, that’s it,” Mr. Paul said in a tense CNN interview.
On Monday, Mr. Black said he originally believed the newsletters were written by Mr. Paul.
“They went out under his name in the first person and most people receiving these newsletters, including me, thought he really did write them,” Mr. Black said.
Ron Paul on Thursday downplayed the fringe aspects of his old newsletters, saying on an Iowa radio program that the most offensive passages were probably only a small portion of the overall content.
“There were many times I did not edit the entire letter and other things were put in,” he told a caller on the Jan Mickelson radio show. “I was not aware of the details until many years later. These were sentences that were put in, eight or 10 sentences. It wasn’t a reflection of my views at all. It got in the letter and I thought it was terrible.”
He added that the newsletter content in question was “probably ten sentences out of 10,000 pages,” and that he only focused on producing the “economics” part of the publication.
But the promotional materials advertising the newsletter from the time indicate that the most out-there racist and homophobic lines were far from a rare sideshow.
One 1993 direct mail piece aimed at attracting potential subscribers name-checked “the coming race war,” “the federal-homosexual cover up on AIDS,” “the Israeli lobby that plays Congress like a cheap harmonica,” and described an elaborate conspiracy theory in which US officials would use newly introduced currency to impose martial law. All in just eight pages specifically devoted to summarizing the newsletter’s broader themes for new readers. That’s a pretty high density of fringe.
Jamie Kirchick, who compiled the newsletters four years ago, told TPM that the most incendiary parts were hardly stray cases.
“Ron Paul’s characterization of the newsletters as only containing ‘eight to ten sentences’ that can be characterized as ‘offending’ is preposterous,” he said in an e-mail. “As anyone can see from the scans of the newsletters available on the TNR website or posted elsewhere, the documents contain pages upon pages of bigoted statements and outright paranoia.”
Maybe we should send him some white sheets and see if he wants to make a fashion statement out of them.
U.S. Representatives Dennis Kucinich and Marcy Kaptur, both Democrats, will run against each other for their party’s nomination next year to represent a reconfigured Ohio congressional district.
Kaptur’s current district includes Toledo and extends east toward Cleveland. Kucinich represents parts of Cleveland and its suburbs. Both filed papers today with the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections in Cleveland to run in the March 6 primary to be the Democratic nominee in the redrawn district, the election board said.
Ohio’s number of House seats was reduced to 16 from 18 following the 2010 U.S. Census.
Kucinich, 65, said he would try to avoid attacks on his fellow Democrat.
Economist Jared Bernstein has a great set of wonky graphs up that he’s called “Guideposts on the Road back to Factville”. He has a large number of them that demonstrate that the US is a low
tax country, has extremely high income inequality, and that Dubya’s policies caused the huge federal deficit. Included is this advice as well as some interesting links. My favorite one is this one that shows how good the one percent have it here compared to the other developed nations. Too bad our middle and working class Americans don’t have similar blessings.
Arm yourselves with the knowledge herein, and you’ll be immune to the fact-free hand-waving that too often passes for debate these daze. Think of them not as wonky graphs, but as guideposts on the road back to the land where facts matter.
So, that’s my contributions this morning to get the conversations started off right. What’s on your reading and blogging list today?
Tuesday Reads: Dark Ages America
Posted: December 27, 2011 Filed under: morning reads, Reproductive Rights, Republican presidential politics, Surreality, U.S. Politics, Women's Rights | Tags: Agenda 21, Alex Jones, dis-empowering women, Georgia Guidestones, global climate change, Joshua Holland, Michele Bachmann, population control, Ron Paul, United Nations 31 CommentsGood Morning! Yesterday I read a (for me) mind-blowing article by Joshua Holland at Alternet about how right wing conspiracy theories are endangering the future of humanity. The main focus of the article is on Tea Party members and other right wing extremists who are obsessed with “Agenda 21,” a United Nations initiative begun at a conference on environmental sustainability in Rio de Janeiro in 1992 and signed by hundreds of world leaders, including President George W. Bush. This was all completely new to me, so I looked around to see what I could find out about it. Here is the gist:
Agenda 21, the international plan of action to sustainable development, outlines key policies for achieving sustainable development that meets the needs of the poor and recognizes the limits of development to meet global needs. Agenda 21 has become the blueprint for sustainability and forms the basis for sustainable development strategies. It attempts to define a balance between production, consumption, population, development, and the Earth’s life-supporting capacity. It addresses poverty, excessive consumption, health and education, cities and agriculture; food and natural resource management and several more subjects.
Its 40 chapters are broken up into four sections:
1. Social and economic dimensions: developing countries; poverty; consumption patterns; population; health; human settlements; integrating environment and development.
2. Conservation and management of resources: atmosphere; land; forests; deserts; mountains; agriculture; biodiversity; biotechnology; oceans; fresh water; toxic chemicals; hazardous, radioactive and solid waste and sewage.
3. Strengthening the role of major groups: women; children and youth; indigenous peoples; non-governmental organizations; local authorities; workers; business and industry; farmers; scientists and technologists.
4. Means of implementation: finance; technology transfer; science; education; capacity-building; international institutions; legal measures; information.
The full report (300+ pages) is here (PDF).
Apparently, fears about U.N. Agenda 21 are the basis for Michele Bachmann’s campaign against energy efficient light bulbs and for Bachmann’s and other right wingers’ drive to eliminate the Environmental Protection Agency. Here’s Bachmann, quoted in an article by Tim Murphy in Mother Jones:
“This is their agenda—I know it’s hard to believe, it’s hard to fathom, but this is ‘Mission Accomplished’ for them,” she said of congressional Democrats. “They want Americans to take transit and move to the inner cities. They want Americans to move to the urban core, live in tenements, [and] take light rail to their government jobs. That’s their vision for America.”
And here is Murphy’s explanation for the light bulb obsession:
Although she didn’t say it right then, Bachmann likely had something specific in mind: Agenda 21, a two-decade-old United Nations agreement that has taken on a life of its own on the far-right. The agreement, forged in 1992, nominally committed signatories to a set of shared values designed to mitigate the environmental impact of human development. Member countries agreed to a range of sustainability goals, from preserving the ozone layer to ensuring that forests are managed so they’ll be around for future generations. (The United States is a signatory, but the treaty has not been ratified by the Senate.)
But to some conservatives, Agenda 21 became something far more nefarious—a gateway to a global government built on a radical doctrine of secular environmentalism.
As these conservatives saw it, the agreement paved the way for the entire planet to be controlled by a central bureaucracy: Humans would be cleared out of vast swaths of settled areas—like the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, for example—and instructed to live in “hobbit homes” in designated “human habitation zones” (two terms embraced by tea party activists). Public transportation would be the only kind of transportation, and governments would force contraception on their citizens to control the population level. A human life would be considered no more significant than, say, that of a manatee. “Sustainability,” the idea at the heart of the agreement, became a gateway to dystopia.
Can you believe it? If you google “Agenda 21,” you’ll find scads of crazy stuff about it all over the internet. Bachmann recently answered questions about Agenda 21 in New Hampshire. She explained that Al Gore, who is apparently the Antichrist to the Agenda 21 freaks, was {gasp!} at the conference in Rio back in 1992.
Al Gore was there at the Rio Conference and the whole goal is really about global control.
It’s essentially a one world government view where there’s political body and the United States would have to subsume our sovereignty into a global body, but more than that, we would also have to give away our wealth.So the wealth of the United States would be redistributed to other countries.
As a matter of a fact, that’s what the Durban Conference was about in South Africa this weekend, also about redistribution of American money.
These people truly live in a different reality than you and I. Unfortunately, they want to make their reality our reality too.
Ron Paul is also a hero to the Agenda 21 freaks. Here’s an announcement at the Connecticut Ron Paul for President website.
Agenda 21 is Coming to your Neighborhood!
SOUNDS LIKE SCIENCE FICTION…OR SOME CONSPIRACY THEORY…BUT IT ISN’T.
By now, most Americans have heard the terms “sustainable development” and “smart growth” but are largely unaware of UN Agenda 21. While many people support the United Nations for its peacemaking efforts, Agenda 21 is a whole life plan that involves the educational system, the energy market, the transportation system, the governmental system, the health care system, food production, and more. The plan is to restrict your choices, limit your funds, narrow your freedoms, and take away your voice.
FREE ADMISSION
Sponsored by Campaign for Sound Money and The John Birch Society
Getting back to the article in Alternet that I began with, Joshua Holland writes:
The important thing to understand about Agenda 21 is that there is absolutely nothing binding or compelling member countries to implement any part of it. It’s not a treaty — it is entirely voluntary and certainly doesn’t have any connection to local governments. Yet for the right, with its long John Birch Society undercurrent of paranoia about international institutions, Agenda 21 represents some kind of dark UN conspiracy to impose socialism on the “free world.” ….
Last year, during the Denver mayoral race, Tea Party candidate Dan Maes argued that a local bike-sharing program, a popular initiative among city residents, was a “very well-disguised” part of a plan by then-Denver mayor (and now Colorado governor) John Hickenlooper for “converting Denver into a United Nations community.” Alex Jones constantly hawks the conspiracy [Here’s one example from Jones’ website Infowars]. Glenn Beck warned it would lead to “centralized control over all of human life on planet Earth.” And in September, Newt Gingrich, hoping to burnish his wingnutty creds, told a group of Orlando Tea Partiers that, if elected, his first order of business would be “to cease all federal funding of any kind of activity that relates to United Nations Agenda 21.” (Currently, no federal funding of any kind is used for implementing Agenda 21.)
But Holland argues that, although conspiracy theories like this may seem weird and silly to us, the people pushing them are succeeding in harassing and intimidating politicians and public officials; and thus these conspiratorial beliefs may make it impossible for us as a society to deal with environmental issues like global climate change.
Holland links to a June 2011 article in the Washington Post by Darryl Fears, a science correspondent, about efforts to deal with rising sea levels which uniquely threaten the Virginia Beach area. Then on December 17, Fears reported that local residents are fighting these efforts to deal with future flooding of the area.
The sea level is rising in Virginia Beach and the entire area known as Hampton Roads because of the warming climate, and the area also happens to be sinking for other geological reasons.
Within 50 years, a big part of Virginia Beach’s identity — its beach — could be lost if nothing is done, said [Clay] Bernick, the city’s environment and sustainability administrator. Large pieces of land could also be lost to the ocean in Norfolk within a few generations.
In fact, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration warns that, outside of greater New Orleans, Hampton Roads is at the greatest risk from sea-level rise for any area its size.
“It’s a significant threat,” Bernick said. “At this point, I wouldn’t put it in the category of fear, because it’s a long way off.” But he added: “You’ve got multiple factors with flashing lights saying, ‘Okay, guys, what are you going to do?’ ”
The residents’ opposition has focused on a central point: They don’t think climate change is accelerated by human activity, as most climate scientists conclude. When planners proposed to rezone land for use as a dike against rising water, these residents, or “new activists,” as [public planner Lewis L.] Lawrence calls them, saw a trick to take their property.
Here’s what some of the “activists” had to say:
“Environmentalists have always had an agenda to put nature above man,” said Donna Holt, leader of the Virginia Campaign for Liberty, a tea party affiliate with 7,000 members. “If they can find an end to their means, they don’t care how it happens. If they can do it under the guise of global warming and climate change, they will do it.” ….
When planners redesignated property as a future flood zone, activists said officials were acting on a hoax. They argued in meetings and on Web sites that local planners are unwitting agents of Agenda 21, a United Nations environmental action plan adopted in 1992 that the activists see as a shadowy global conspiracy to grab land and redistribute wealth in the United States.
“My professional credentials have been challenged,” said Lawrence, who holds degrees in municipal planning and provides professional and technical planning advice to municipalities throughout the peninsula. He said he has heard whispers behind his back after meetings: “I’ve been brainwashed. I’ve been called a dupe for the U.N.”
These kinds of irrational public protests are happening in other places too. Here’s an article posted at Alex Jones website Prison Planet.
MISSOULA, MT – In a move that would have made Joseph Stalin jealous, the City Council of Missoula, Montana on Monday approved the use of local tax dollars to an organization out of state known as ICLEI (International Council on Local Environmental Initiatives).
The ICLEI board can be found directly under the treasonous United Nations Agenda 21. The council room was almost in uproar as over 50 voices that opposed the funding of dues to the UnConstitutional initiative fell on deaf progressive “public servants’” ears.
“I am concerned that (the) Missoula City Council may be moving in a direction that could ultimately affect my property rights, which are guaranteed to me by both the Montana Constitution and the Constitution of the United States,” Trish Auras said during the council’s Monday night meeting. “Before you agree to paying dues to ICLEI, I would like somebody on the council to assure me that my property rights will not be affected in any way. Can you do that? Anybody?”
Read it and weep. Our future is being determined by ignorant people who take the bible literally and disdain science. They are leading us back into a new dark age. All you have to do is listen to the Republican presidential candidates to realize this is no exaggeration.
There’s another aspect to this conspiracy theory that Joshua Holland doesn’t mention. If you’ve read much of Alex Jones’ propaganda or listened to Glenn Beck, you know that another right win obsession is population control. Jones claims that once the “New World Order,” or global government is established, the elites will kill off 90% of the world population in order to make the planet sustainable for the rich and powerful who will remain. This also ties in with the mysterious Georgia Guidestones, pictured at the beginning of this post. Here’s an excerpt from an article (also linked above) from Jones’ website Infowars: “Al Gore, Agenda 21 And Population Control.”
When you start doing deep research into Agenda 21, you will find that describing it as a “comprehensive plan” is an understatement. Virtually all forms of human activity impact the environment. The rabid “environmentalists” behind the green agenda intend to take all human activity and put it into a box called “sustainable development”.
One of the key elements of “sustainable development” is population control. The United Nations (along with radical “environmental” leaders such as Al Gore) actually believes that there are far too many people on earth….Al Gore made the following statement regarding population control….
“One of the things we could do about it is to change the technologies, to put out less of this pollution, to stabilize the population, and one of the principle ways of doing that is to empower and educate girls and women. You have to have ubiquitous availability of fertility management so women can choose how many children have, the spacing of the children.
You have to lift child survival rates so that parents feel comfortable having small families and most important — you have to educate girls and empower women. And that’s the most powerful leveraging factor, and when that happens, then the population begins to stabilize and societies begin to make better choices and more balanced choices.”
Do you notice how whenever global leaders talk about “empowering” women these days it always ends up with them having less children?
The article concludes with a reference to the Georgia Guidestones, pictured at the top of this post, and at left.
Most Americans don’t grasp it yet, but the truth is that the global elite are absolutely obsessed with population control. In fact, there is a growing consensus among the global elite that they need to get rid of 80 to 90 percent of us.
The number one commandment of the infamous Georgia Guidestones is this: “Maintain humanity under 500,000,000 in perpetual balance with nature.”
One of the biggest issues for the right is the dis-empowerment of women. They want to make sure that women cannot choose whether or not to have a child or how many children to have. They’d probably like to force women out of the workplace and back into the home. That also ties in with the obsession with fighting population control. Why is it that this anti-woman agenda is so often ignored by the media–even by alternative media writers like Joshua Holland?
This post is getting way too long, and it probably makes no sense. But that’s my offering for today–a sample of what right wing conspiratorial madness and fear of science is doing to us. Holland is right. It has the potential to wreck wreck what’s left of our country.
Monday Reads
Posted: December 26, 2011 Filed under: morning reads 34 Comments
Good Morning!
That’s Jujabee over there on the left. He’s my daughter’s Mississippi Truck stop rescue kitty all decked out because even college girlz still can’t resist the temptation to dress up their kitties. Don’t worry! He’s safe in my care at the moment since she took off for Nebraska and a boyfriend this year! He’s snuggled up with Miles Davis Jazzcat and Karma the Bywater bad dog. It’s a long story, but my bestie Michelle’s dog died last night. Samara and Sasha and Honey and Karma were the Bywater Bad Dogs when I first bought my house and my friend Michelle and her daughter came to live with me because they needed a home. Karma is the only one left now. RIP Samara! I remember when Michie put the lot of them up for sale on Ebay as the Bywater Bad Dogs after a particular messy dog situation. That’s when Ebay decided that selling live things was unkewl, but it was certainly a funny joke and I wish I had the screen shot now. Sheesh, where do the years go? Yup. She put all four of them up for sale as the Bywater Bad Dogs. We actually had two friends bid for them but Ebay didn’t get the twisted humor so off the site they went.
So, I can’t resist the temptation to start out with an economics post. Also, one that talks about how crass consumerism is going to do in humanity on the day when every one rids themselves of unwanted gifts. It’s from Truth Dig and it’s called ” Goodbye “Shop Til You Drop” Mentality: Renegade Band of Economists Call for “Degrowth” Economy”. All I want for the New Year is a garden full of food and a solar- powered house!
But what if all roads to prosperity don’t lead to the shopping mall, as most economists would have us believe? What if, in fact, all that shopping — and the imperative to grow corporate profits quarter after quarter and continuously expand the economy — was actually the root of many of the problems we face today?
That’s the view of a renegade but increasingly influential band of economists, who say the myth of perpetual economic growth and “the iron cage of consumerism” are the chief causes of world economic dysfunction and environmental crisis — and the biggest obstacle to our very happiness.
“Overwhelmingly, growth is seen as the solution to all problems, but growth is failing,” says Herman Daly, a former World Bank economist who is also known as the father of “ecological economics,” an offshoot of the same field that spawned Adam Smith three centuries ago but challenges many of the assumptions that classical economists hold dear.
While the term may seem like an oxymoron to some, ecological economics places the economy inside the larger “ecosphere” that supports all life on Earth, rather than seeing the economy and job creation in direct opposition to environmental protection. That’s an idea that has gained ground in recent years as businesses have become increasingly compromised by water and raw material scarcity, extreme weather, crop failures and other problems linked to global warming and environmental degradation.
The problem, says Daly, is that the economy, once an inconsequentially small part of the natural world, has become so supersized that — sort of like an ingrown toenail or an evasive Japanese knotweed bush — it’s now growing into the remaining ecosphere and jeopardizing our ecological life supports: things like drinkable water, fresh air and a stable climate.
Those ideas can be found influencing, among other things, the slow money movement, D.I.Y. culture, modern barter systems, car sharing, and corporate sustainability rhetoric. They are also reflected in the views of ecologists such as Lester Brown and Jeremy Rifkin, the author, pundit and adviser to the European Union, as well as entrepreneurs such as Yvon Chouinard, founder of Patagonia, which ran an advertisement this holiday season urging consumers not to buy the pictured jacket and to think twice about making any purchases they don’t really need.
My lifestyle mantra is simplify and downsize! I have a house that’s been recycled many times having been built just after the civil war. It’s very small and full of stuff from both of my grandparents’ house. I also wear a lot of hand me overs sent to me by my sister. Stuff is not the meaning of life. I have to explain that I learned that lesson after I had nothing when I left New Orleans because of Katrina but my car, my computer, my pets and an overnight bag. I was grateful for contributions of clothes and warm things when I hit my friend’s house in Omaha. Turning my back on everything I have and heading for the people I love for refuge taught me a life time of lessons.
So, you know how wonky I am about graphs, models, and data. This is a completely wonderful post about physics and the existence of Santa Claus by The Atlantic. Yes, Einstein, Santa COULD exist. So, in Buddhist lore there is a Happy Monk (Hotei) with a wish fulfilling bag. He’s the fat dude that frequently gets mistaken by westerners for Buddha. So, he doesn’t need elves because his bag will produce whatever is needed. For those of you with the Nordic version that needs elves and reindeer, here’s a physicist’s estimate on Santa Clause and his trek around the world. Here’s the proof!
It is stipulated that Santa Claus exists.
Further, that he spends the night of December 24th circling the globe in a sleigh pulled by flying reindeer. That he gains access to the homes of children that celebrate Christmas children, and that he gives them presents. And that he does this in the dark, unseen.
Granted, it seems… impractical. Over the course of one night, St. Nick has to stop by the home of every Christian child in the world. Of which there are a lot – an indeterminately large number of kids waiting for their gifts.
I decided to figure out how many, how big a task Mr. Claus faces as he races west across the face of the globe, staying ahead of the sun. And I did. Or, anyway, I came up with a pretty solid estimate.
The Methodology
What I wanted to figure out is this: how many Christian children live in each general area of the world. The region is important: where the kids live impacts the feasibility of the
thing. If kids are distributed evenly, Santa has all night to reach everyone; if they live in the same place, he has about half as long.
It’s impossible to find this information without considering countries; no one tracks demographics based on longitude. So, for every country in the world – of which there are a lot – I really needed to figure out the population broken down by age, religion and time zone.
Well, the assumption is that he only delivers to “christian” children. I stipulate that Hotei takes care of every one else! So there! I always get a good laugh when people mistake the far eastern Santa Claus for the historical Buddha. I suppose it’s a typical mistake for people that don’t study comparative religions.
So, if you’re a wonky statistics nut like me you’ll just love the “9 numbers Obama will watch in 2012” from Politico. The obvious number is the unemployment rate. But, what are the others?
Italian bond yields. The European debt crisis, a slow-motion catastrophe with no predictable or palatable outcome, has the potential to sideswipe the U.S. economy in 2012, hijack the anemic recovery and sink Obama’s reelection chances.
Obama clearly recognizes this, and privately concedes the Eurozone is the biggest wildcard for him in 2012, even if he can’t do much about it. It must be an agonizing realization: After three years of fighting waves of recession — and the GOP — the administration must now cope with events they can’t really master and players they can’t control in Greece, Spain, France, Germany and Italy — the teetering economy with the biggest “boom” potential.
I’m always interested in housing starts and sales, but the article points to some interesting political numbers like Time Kaine’s polling numbers in Virginia, the number of $1 million plus donors to superpacs, and the trends in hispanic voters in Colorado.
Latino voters still make up a relatively small slice of the electorate, but they play an outsized role, thanks to their numbers in a handful of key Western states — Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado.
Most Democrats think Arizona will stay red next year, while New Mexico and Nevada lean blue. But Colorado, which Obama won by a narrow margin in 2008 is a real toss-up — with Obama leading Romney by a statistically insignificant two points in the most recent survey by Democratic pollster PPP. That means the state’s Hispanic vote, 13 percent of all ballots cast in 2008, could be the difference between victory and defeat.
So, ¡Feliz Año Nuevo! It seems we have an interesting 2012 ahead of us! I’ll be posting my annual poll of projections, forecasts, and ruminations this week so stay tuned! What’s on your reading and blogging list as we count down to 2012?
Saturday: All I want for X-mas is a baby owl…
Posted: December 24, 2011 Filed under: Hillary Clinton, morning reads, Women's Rights 43 CommentsMorning, news junkies!
Anyone who really knows me off the blogs knows I am obsessed with owls. I sported an owl beanie + handmade rhinestone owl t-shirt for Halloween this year. I own multiple pieces of owl jewelry. I have owl-themed kitchenware (including a crockpot), and lately I have taken to sending snail mail on owl stationary plastered with owl stickers all over them. Owls are the Hillary of the animal world for me.
I am even considering an owl tattoo, and my very Desi parents would probably have simultaneous heart attacks if they found out. In common Hinglish parlance, I have gone pagal.
My family and I also lost our sweet little pomeranian of almost 13 years this past March. This is my first Christmas in forever without her physical presence, but I still feel her with me…if nowhere else but in my heart.
I am not quite ready for another pet, though I do visit the adoptable kittehs at the Petco right next to my house whenever I have a chance and have grown rather fond of a certain French mastiff puppy in the family. And, just this week I held an adorable fluffy white lapdog (also in the family) in my arms for the first time since I became dog-less. I cried my eyes out the next morning watching home videos of my angel-goddess.
That being said, if it were possible to keep a baby owl that was suitable for domestication in the United States, I would be seriously tempted to own such a beautiful creature. As I understand it, though, owls would not make the best of pets and their dietary habits are not exactly something I’m so sure I could easily adjust to (I’m mostly a pescetarian, occasionally a flexitarian). However, I have been looking into this and found out that my sister and I may be able to adopt an owl from the Houston Audubon Society. This might be the ideal solution for awhile until/if we are ready to have pets again. I am thinking of surprising her either tomorrow or on New Year’s.
Alright, now that I’ve bored you to pieces with my owl monologues (like you give a hoot…I know, I know, bad pun, sorry!)
Anyhow, onto some Saturday reads…
I’ve still got some holiday odds and ends to attend to, so I’m just going to do a straightforward link-dump, with teasers and snippets for your convenience:
- Two links to cheer about, both from Jezebel:
–Welcome home, Wati: Girl Missing Since 2004 Tsunami Turns Up Alive In Indonesia
—The Best Holiday/Military Photo You Will See Today (or this year, imho!); per NPR…For First Time, Women Share ‘First Kiss’ At A Navy Homecoming
- Even more to cheer about…
—Governor ‘All asshat, no cattle’ Perry knocked off Virginia ballot [Wapo]
—Voters leaving Oligarchy flavors, D and R, in droves [USA Today]
- Via Yahoo’s Destination 2012/The Ticket:
—Stephen Colbert offered $400k for South Carolina GOP primary naming rights (and almost succeeded!)
- Hillary headlines:
–Star-Ledger Editorial Board: Hillary Clinton’s forceful remarks on Cairo women inspire pride…
Do women in power make a difference? After the awful situation in Egypt, and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton’s swift denunciation, the answer is a resounding yes. […] Would a male secretary of state—say, a James Baker or Colin Powell—been as forceful or quick? Hard to say. But there’s no denying that coming from Clinton, the words pack an extra wallop.
–Columbia Daily Spectator: Clinton inspires Barnard students at State Department…
At the inaugural colloquium hosted this Thursday, hosted in the State Department building, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and a dozen other women leaders spoke to students from Barnard, Bryn Mawr, Mount Holyoke, Smith, and Wellesley Colleges.
Former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and Barnard President Debora Spar sat across the aisle from one another.
Farah Pandith, special Representative to Muslim Communities for the State Department, attributed this goal to the “Hillary effect,” a phrase that has come to describe Clinton’s contagious enthusiasm. Pandith applauded Clinton for her 2008 presidential campaign, citing “15 million cracks in the glass ceiling.”
In keeping this reputation, Clinton spoke fervently about the multifaceted initiative. She deplored the United States’ reluctance to support female politicians, while applauding India’s quota of female lawmakers. Clinton’s opening remarks referenced her own experiences, too. “It was 18 million cracks,” she declared.
–humanrightsfirst.org: U.S. National Action Plan Puts Women at Forefront of Foreign Policy (the article pats President Obama on the back for his “own commitment to women’s leadership,” but come on… we all know this is Hillary’s signature issue and without her influence and clout as a crusader for women and girls, this “action” plan would not be happening.)
–via the Canadian Maclean’s: On the job with ‘Hillary’s angels’ (neat photos at the link)…
No U.S. Secretary of state has travelled like Hillary Clinton does. As Barack Obama’s top diplomat, she clocked more than 354,000 km in 2010—enough to circle the globe nearly nine times. And as the woman who famously said she made “18 million cracks” in the “glass ceiling” during her 2008 bid for the Democratic presidential nomination, Clinton also travels with a highly trained security contingent that includes more than a dozen women.
They were chosen from thousands of applicants to personally guard the secretary as she trots the globe touting American interests. Writing in Elle magazine, Laura Blumenfeld dubbed them “Hillary’s Angels.” Given that they’re trained to fire guns upside down, run for miles on end and take people down in hand-to-hand combat, the handle seems entirely appropriate.
—Great blog post from USA Today’s Christie Garton on Hillary’s Women in Public Service initiative; includes an interview with Kim Bottomly, president of Hillary’s alma mater, which is one of seven sister schools participating in the project.
—Elizabeth Warren And Hillary Clinton Trade Lessons (excerpt from an interview with Elizabeth Warren in The Progressive, highlighted via “Steve’s Politics blog”):
Q: You have an amazing anecdote in The Two-Income Trap about Hillary Clinton and the bankruptcy bill, which she called “that awful bill” and opposed when her husband was President but voted for in 2001, though it didn’t pass then.
Warren: I give Hillary Clinton a lot of credit. When she was First Lady, I sat down with her in a hotel in Boston. I had all these graphs and charts, and she was crunching through a hamburger, listening, and asking a lot of questions, and she really got it. At first, she was resistant. After all, the White House was quietly supporting the banks’ bankruptcy bill. But boy, by about the third or fourth slide she was starting to say, “Oh,” and she could jump ahead. She got it.
Someone later told me there were skid marks on the floor in the White House from people reversing position on that bankruptcy bill when Hillary Clinton got back from Boston.
Steve poses a good question for Elizabeth Warren to answer at the end:
The lesson Elizabeth Warren gave to Hillary Clinton was the explanation of how bad the bankruptcy bill was.
The lesson Hillary Clinton gave to Elizabeth Warren is that even if you understand the horrors of the bill and you convinced President Clinton to veto it, you may still eventually give in to the lobbying pressures once you become a Senator.
I would love to hear Elizabeth Warren’s plan to resist this pressure when she becomes the Senator from Massachusetts. Unfortunately President George H. W. Bush made the “Read my lips” assurance null and void. I have no idea what plan Elizabeth Warren could have to make sure she does not succumb.
–via Politico…Hillaryland: Draft movement a GOP plot?
Hillary Clinton’s people — current and former — are mystified, suspicious and bit peeved with the recent raft of mysterious “Draft Hillary” robocalls and emails and a mangy http://www.runhillary2012.net web site – which looks like it was produced in the Hindu Kush.
The current theory, according to posts on a listserv frequented by former Clinton 2008 staffers and senate staff forwarded to POLITICO, is that it’s a GOP plot.
- Sisterland Must-reads!
–Nancy Folbre: Feminism’s Uneasy Success (via Economix; complete with nifty graph)… as Folbre concludes:
The gender revolution didn’t cause this problem, but it is surely being hindered by it.
–David Rosen: Sexual Violence in America (via Counterpunch)
Sexual violence is the shame of the nation.
–Minjon Tholen: Women’s Sexual and Reproductive Health Should Be Prominent on the Progressive Agenda (via New Deal 2.0)… Tholen’s closing argument:
So rather than imposing abstinence-only education and preventing Plan B from being sold over the counter, let’s follow the Ad Council’s lead in acknowledging reality, trusting people to make responsible decisions, providing comprehensive information and resources, and recognizing the social and economic benefits of respecting women’s sexual and reproductive rights. The progressive movement needs to once and for all understand and embrace how these issues are intertwined with all of our other causes and put these rights at the core of its agenda.
–Bryce Covert: The Paternalism of the Holiday Car Ad (via New Deal 2.0)… from Covert’s piece:
As Annie Lowrey tweets in parody of these ads, “Husband buys wife a car! Wife expresses horror that he made a major financial decision unilaterally, on impulse!”
- Meant to post this last weekend… calling all fellow Jane Austen fangirls:
—Happy Birthday Jane Austen and the 7 Hottest Austen Men (via Houston Press’ Art Attack).
–Amanda Vickery: 200 years on, why Jane Austen’s lovers find new reasons for their passion (via the Guardian/Observer):
Many different Jane Austens have been celebrated since 1811 – sweet Aunt Jane in her rose-wreathed cottage, sardonic critic, master stylist, mother of the novel, feminist rebel and queen of romantic comedy. I think the key to her adaptability is her restraint. Austen leaves room for the reader’s intelligence and fantasies, which has the uncanny effect of allowing each new generation to see themselves reflected back from her pages. And in another 200 years, I am sure readers still will.
- Today (December 24th) in Women’s History:
–Via lizlibrary:
Event: 12-24-1948, first solar heated house occupied. The experiments were sponsored by Amelia Peabody, house designed by Eleanor Raymond, It was cheap and effective and promptly ignored by industry.
–For more info, see Fast Company’s March 2009 report “Some of the Greatest Inventors Are Women“… here is the blurb specifically about Dr. Telkes:
Maria Telkes invented the first solar home heating system:Maria Telkes was fascinated with the sun. She went to high school in Budapest, Hungary, and gained a PhD in physical chemistry from the University of Budapest. She traveled to the United States in 1925 and eventually joined the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Solar Energy Research Project.
While she was there, a Boston sculptor, Amelia Peabody, approached Maria and offered to pay for construction of a solar heated house on land she owned in Dover, Massachusetts. The house was to be designed by architect Eleanor Raymond. Maria was to design the solar-heating system.
That was in 1948. “I envisage the day when solar heat collecting shelters, like power stations, will be built apart from the house,” she told W. Clifford Harvey of The Christian Science Monitor. “One such solar-heating building could develop enough heat from the sun for pumping into an entire community of homes.”
Just think of all the carbon footprints Dr. Telkes could have shrunken by now if the world were ready to lift up its female talent instead of ignoring it. Especially during the holiday season!
Speaking of which, I stumbled upon this Blake & Sons Heating and Air blog post that I thought I’d close with…
A Holiday Debate: Clean Air vs. Full Wallets
It’s hard to spoil the Christmas or Hanukkah spirit at the popular holiday bazaars that sprout every year in places like Union Square or the Columbus Circle corner of Central Park, selling all manner of tchotchkes, knick-knacks and bric-a-brac for impulsive gift hunters.
But Jeffrey H. Brodsky, a graduate student in history at Columbia University, points out that all those stalls, lights and heaters are powered by diesel-fuel generators, which environmental groups say emit fumes that can aggravate lung and heart ailments and cause problems in children’s developing bodies.
“I’m not saying they should be closed down, but it’s almost Third World to put up with them,” said Mr. Brodsky, who lives three blocks from Columbus Circle. “We’re in the middle of New York City and we should be able to use electricity. We have ample power. It’s surprising that the city administration allows something so antithetical to public health.”
The markets have contracts with the city’s Department of Parks and Recreation, whose officials have pointed out in the past that they produce sizable revenue for a city in need just now, and that they are temporary; they last a month or so.
People vs. profit…the age-old political dilemma continues. I don’t think the original DFH (Dirty Frick-on-a-stick Hippie) Jesus would be very pleased with the priorities that rule our country today.
I’d love to see Amy Poehler on Parks and Recreations tackle this one.
Well, I think that about covers it for me. I hope you have a lovely Saturday & Sunday, however you spend it. Once again, I am very privileged to be co-blogging the morning reads on X-mas weekend alongside the magnificent Minkoff Minx…I can’t wait to see the linky goodness she serves up at the buffet table tomorrow morning! On behalf of the Sky Dancing frontpage team, here’s wishing you and yours ‘a merry & a happy’ as we look back at 2011 and look forward to 2012. I know it’s a busy time for a lot of us (and for the rest of us, it’s a time to sleep in and ignore the season of excess!), but if you can drop in and let us know what you are up to for the holidays and what’s on your reading list this weekend, we are always happy to hear from you! And, with that, I’m turning the discussion over to you in the comments, Sky Dancers.











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