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news you can lose…

2 March 2006 by Nathalie Abejero 1 Comment

Coming up for air….

US Won’t Get Into Civil War, But Will Sort of Hang Out in the General Vicinity

White House Issues New Port Security Guidelines
“Every friendship requires vulnerability,” Mr. McClellan said. “We demonstrate our love for our friends in the United Arab Emirates by trusting them, without regard to previous wrongs.”

…and Jon Stewart on Larry King Live–cuz he’s da bomb

Jon joined Larry King last night and talked about the administration and Democrats in depth. Larry asks him if he’d like things to be bad, kinda like O’Reilly saying that left wing websites want the US to fail because Bush is in charge.
Video-WMP low res Video-QT
(transcript)

KING: You don’t want Medicare to fail?

STEWART: Are you insane?

KING: No.

STEWART: You’re literally asking me if I would prefer — yes, Larry, what I’m saying to you as a comedian I want old people to suffer, old and poor people to suffer. That is — that is — what we want is — what seems absurd to me is the length that Washington just seems out of touch with the desires of Americans to be spoken to as though they are adults.

I mean when you listen to Bush’s speeches, and I’m leaving the Democrats out because I honestly don’t feel that they make an impact. They have 49 percent of the vote and three percent of the power. At a certain point you go “Guys, pick up your game.”

But Bush, you know the other day when he had the speech about us being addicted to oil, he says those things as though, you know, he just thought of it and we’re disagreeing with him, like everybody’s been saying that. Jimmy Carter said it I think in 1978.

And he comes out, “What people don’t realize is we’re addicted to foreign oil” and he’s saying it like you’re going “Get out of here.” We’re addicted. You don’t get it people. You know he was the guy on the stump a few years ago making fun of hybrid cars because it wasn’t manly. And — and his vice president did shoot a 78-year-old man in the face. Aaron Burr was the last vice president to shoot a guy in the face, Alexander Hamilton.

KING: And that was a duel.

STEWART: That was a duel based on personal integrity. This vice president thought a 78-year-old man was a bird. It happens. What are you going to do?

KING: We’ve declined as a society right?

STEWART: I cannot tell you how many times I’ll turn around and go, “Grandpa,” oh no it’s a pigeon.

Filed Under: Interests, Life Tagged With: jon stewart, larry king, news

Past Plagues Are Prologue

5 October 2005 by Nathalie Abejero Leave a Comment

Disease is a fascinating study, a microbiological commentary and defensive mechanism to the stresses placed on our socio-economic environment.

Given the Avian Flu situation here in SE Asia, I thought I’d dig up an article by Andrew Nikiforuk. It’s a well-written piece geared at the Toronto policymakers in response to the SARS scare several years ago. But in light of recent announcements by WHO on the possible pandemic Avian Flu presents, the editorial still bears relevance.

Past Plagues are Prologue by Andrew Nikiforuk

edited 10 Feb 2010: since the above link no longer works, here it is re-posted:

Epidemics always teach us something, says author ANDREW NIKIFORUK. One SARS lesson is that we’re too dependent on hospitals – which can be scary places
By ANDREW NIKIFORUK

Toronto Globe and Mail Saturday, Apr. 26, 2003

When you learn that epidemic disease exists in a country, do not go there; but if it breaks out in the country where you are, do not leave. –Mohammed

Epidemics, one of the real constants of human history, are pretty rude teachers. SARS, a small virus with a big stick, is a task master complete with quarantines, travel advisories and foreign devils. But it also comes with some surprising messages — and they are not the ones you are hearing from the itinerant professional vandals at the World Health Organization or the TV news.

The first lesson might bruise Ontario egos. Plague historians generally agree that spectacular die-offs are rare events. The biggest global killer this century was the influenza epidemic of 1918. It probably buried anywhere between 40 million and 100 million people. It flooded their lungs with water and poured on pneumonia. It quieted entire aboriginal villages and terrified prairie folk into bundling the sick onto trains, a kind of moving quarantine.

The ill generally got off dead. In the end more than 50,000 Canadians died of influenza in a single year. Now, that was an epidemic.

In contrast, SARS is a modest grave-digger, in the last two months burying 18 Canadians and more than 200 Asians. Hundreds more have been sick and thousands have been quarantined. Now, having a new cold virus running amuck that can superinfect people with an untreatable pneumonia is definitely bad news. So this virus is definitely worth containing.

But SARS is not the plague of Athens (“No one expected to live to be brought to trial for his offenses,” wrote Thucydides). It is not the Black Death (which dispatched nearly a quarter of Europe and Arabia). Nor does it behave anything like smallpox. That mass murderer burnt away the faces, eyes and internal organs of nearly 100-million aboriginals in one century.

But as epidemics have repeatedly illustrated, a microbe doesn’t have to be big to be bad. Polio never killed a lot of children but its paralyzing abilities made it legendary. It also targeted the squeaky-clean classes. So we all remember polio.

But Ontario needs to take its pulse again. SARS is a nasty molecule, not an insurmountable mountain. Thanks to global trade, global health organizations and the global media, the death of 16 people in one month can take on the weight of one thousand in one week. (If a virus with 10 genes can unsettle Canada’s industrial heartland, just imagine what a bioterror attack might do!)

Epidemics are always about trade, politics and fear. In 1881, Egypt clamped a tight quarantine on British ships coming from cholera-infected Bombay, and for good reason. But the move infuriated free-traders in England. So the Empire shelled Alexandria and occupied Egypt. In our own century, China didn’t want to say
much about SARS because it feared an imperial-like cannonade on its trade and tourism. But it got one anyway — and so did Toronto by the virtue of international travel. Globalization works that way:
indiscriminately.

Whether ugly or just plain inconvenient, epidemics always tell us something about the way we live. The Black Death, for example, was an unabashed commentary on overpopulation, undernutrition and peasant architecture (rat-friendly thatched roofs). Tuberculosis is always a signal of much homelessness. Cholera wags a finger at water quality. AIDS reminded us that sex is never safe and that promiscuity has biological consequences. (Syphilis gave us the same message, but as we developed treatments, we forgot it.)

The 19th-century bacteria watcher Rudolf Virchow correctly called disease “life under altered conditions.” He noted that epidemics acted like grand warnings that told statesmen that a “disturbance has taken place in the development of his people.”

So what social disturbance is SARS illuminating? I’m no expert, but I’d wager something is seriously out of sync in Guangdong province, a place trying to move from the 18th century to the 21st in a hurry. Its waters are putrid and its air is as smokey as 19th-century London. The capital, Guangzhou, is home to millions of migrant workers who sleep on the streets like homeless Cree in Winnipeg. Tellingly, the 1968 Hong Kong flu pandemic started in Guangdong. Microbes recognize an opportunity when they see one.

But SARS is also highlighting another disturbance: the shoddy state of infection control in our hospitals. For starters, the virus has been a lazy opportunist that has largely dined on sick hospital patients. As a
result, about 30 per cent of the infected are hospital workers. In fact most of Ontario’s cases can all be traced back to one hospital. Here in Canada, SARS is a hospital-acquired infection.

This is not an accident. Many ancient and recent epidemics, including Ebola, have marked hospitals as formidable disease spreaders.

Why? Hospitals, like nursing homes, are microbial feedlots.

Thanks to medical cost-cutters and promiscuous antibiotic use, hospital infection control isn’t what it used to be. As such, Canadians generally now have a one-in-10 chance (according to Health Canada) of acquiring an unwanted infection whenever they visit an acute-care hospital. The rate at which patients pick up woeful infections has increased by 36 per cent in the last two decades.

Hospital-acquired infections now kill hundreds of Canadians and more than 100,000 Americans every year — and with barely a headline. With the exception of animal feedlots and daycare centres, no institution has done a better job of spreading antibiotic-resistant bacteria to the greater community than hospitals.

Unsanitary facilities, unwashed hands and unsanitary instruments account for most of these preventable deaths. SARS is a another reminder that if you are not deathly sick, a hospital visit just might change your prognosis.

Epidemics always do a good job of exposing these and other vulnerabilities. SARS, for example, has underscored the sorry state of Toronto’s political leadership as well as the short-sightedness of emergency response plans that assume health-care systems won’t get overloaded during an epidemic. It also illuminates the hopelessly complicated nature of a just-in-time-economy that makes no allowance for hazard. Nature doesn’t make that kind of mistake.

SARS does not spell the end of Toronto or world trade. But it is an economic upside-down mess for the golden horseshoe. China has a true epidemic to worry about. A blazing economy there has altered the conditions of life so rapidly that SARS won’t be China’s only biological export.

But, like all epidemics, SARS will soon pass on. It could get uglier, but I suspect it will just take up residence as a another chronic nuisance.

In a strange way, the message of every epidemic is proverbial: Wash your hands and love your children. Life is a gift and a gamble.

Andrew Nikiforuk is the Calgary-based author of The Fourth Horseman: A Short History of Plagues, Scourges and Emerging Viruses.

Filed Under: Interests, Life, Work Tagged With: Andrew Nikiforuk, Avian Flu, disease, Southeast Asia

Just another long weekend

4 October 2005 by Nathalie Abejero Leave a Comment

Yet another speedy exodus of the expats from the country for the long holiday weekend of Pchum Ben, a Bhuddist event honoring spirits of ancestors by bringing offerings of food to the temples. I spent some time catching up on news from the US, more especially the debates–er, confusion–surrounding the Harriet Miers nomination. “Trust me,” George W. says, in all seriousness.

Blunt object please…

Filed Under: Interests, Life Tagged With: bush, Pchum Ben

Gross National Happiness of Bhutan

3 October 2005 by Nathalie Abejero Leave a Comment

So the beautiful Kingdom of Bhutan, where I believe there is a daily quota cutoff and charge for touring their country (someone care to correct if I’m wrong?), has an alternative to the GDP for measuring well-being and progress. Since so many people are unhappy in the higher-GDP countries, perhaps they might be on to something…?

A Measure of Well-Being from a Happy Little Kingdom


courtesy NYTimes

Filed Under: Interests, Life Tagged With: Bhutan, GDP, GNH

Shakespeare

27 September 2005 by Nathalie Abejero Leave a Comment

Beware the leader who bangs the drums of war in order to whip the citizenry into a patriotic fervor, for patriotism is indeed a double-edged sword. It both emboldens the blood, just as it narrows the mind . . .

And when the drums of war have reached a fever pitch and the blood boils with hate and the mind has closed, the leader will have no need in seizing the rights of the citizenry.

Rather, the citizenry, infused with fear and blinded with patriotism, will offer up all of their rights unto the leader, and gladly so.

How do I know? For this is what I have done. And I am Caesar.

— William Shakespeare

Filed Under: Interests, Life Tagged With: hurricane, katrina, levy, louisiana, new orleans

Dire Straits… please wake up

9 September 2005 by Nathalie Abejero Leave a Comment

The Katrina disaster presages dire times. The status quo will drastically alter life in the coming decades. It needs the attention of an astute citizenry and a responsive, able leadership.

Consider our suicide economics. As if five years of steadily growing cutbacks to programs in environment, poverty reduction, welfare, and healthcare were not enough, the 2006 budget deliberated prior to Katrina contained $35 billion in further reductions. Billions in tax cuts for the wealthiest build brass at corporate offices instead of supporting much needed public investments ie. levee systems and emergency response networks. For the poor, that paltry check from Uncle Sam in effect adds up to significant cuts in health coverage and social security. Those lacking flexibility and capital are the most affected, as we’ve seen in the appalling news feeds from New Orleans. This drains the federal budget, compromising response to more urgent security matters. How dry can we squeeze an already record deficit?

The petroleum predicament. The period since the end of WWII saw the creation of a mammoth infrastructure that is extremely dependent on petroleum. Vast investments in this sector make it politically challenging to develop a clear energy policy exploring alternate power sources. But soaring global demand are straining low inventory levels. The bulk of our petroleum comes from repressive regimes in the Middle East, a region becoming increasingly unstable. The supply of natural gas that heats half the homes in the US also faces a bleak future. With depleted land-based wells, we now depend on the tenuous supply from the Gulf of Mexico.

If you follow the stock market you’ll have noticed the steady impact of the energy crisis, prior to Katrina. This has bearing on our monetary landscape, where dramatic shifts in processing and pricing such as we’ve seen in the past two weeks traditionally portend inflation. Thankfully the federal reserve on diligent watch have kept it at bay. But energy supply shocks affect more than just the Dow Jones and mortgages.

It ripples to other sectors, ie trade. Higher transportation and logistical costs attributable to the energy shortage from Katrina alone is wreaking havoc on crucial trade talks. The World Trade Organization (WTO) has been pressuring the US to lift agricultural subsidies to level the playing field for other countries that want access to US markets. But disaster relief programs in Katrina’s wake will depress commodity prices, leading to billions in government payments to farmers. This in turn compromises the administration’s effort to win new export markets for American production, where almost 30 percent of American farm receipts come from.

Globalization. Life has sped up, for everyone. A virus here in SE Asia can land on your doorstep in a mere seventeen hours. And medical technology have never kept pace with pathogenic ambitions, despite what the pharmaceutical sector might want to believe. We did not conquer SARS, Avian Influenza, or Japanese Encephalitis. These microbes lie waiting. The US Centers for Disease Control is part of homeland security. Are our assets ready?

The Iraq War. The Middle East’s autocrats and theocrats are stronger than ever. This was a war designed to prevent further terror; to create a compliant, free-market, pro-American client state; and to restrain Iran. Instead we accomplished the complete opposite by destabilizing the region, strengthening and fueling religious fanaticism and terrorist cells, and replacing Saddam Hussein with a worse alternative: a pro-Iranian regime. Iraq is now on the brink of a revolving civil war between the Kurds, Shiites, and Sunnis (read: millions dead in ethnic cleansing such as in Afghanistan 1979-92), if not a regional bloodbath sucking in Iran, Syria, and the rest of the Gulf States. This chaos will trigger a devastating disruption to our oil supply.

And through an intricate, inter-connected fiscal scheme, this foreign policy quagmire can catastrophically affect the dollar. A collapse in the dollar will bring down the world economy. We were forewarned against faulty and misleading information by a litany of esteemed Middle East scholars around the world before we attacked Iraq, yet we did not see past the mainstream media hype about “weapons of mass destruction”. Speaking of which, do we realize there is a monopoly on our media outlets by the same corporate interests (read: non-objective, interests-based soundbytes)?

The world order. By contravening the UN’s operational mandate in invading and destroying a sovereign state, we essentially revert to a pre-UN world order of alliances and unavoidable wars, with resumption of the arms race. Radical unilateralism and Pax Americana aspirations such as we’ve been pursuing cannot continue without incurring severe casualties on an already overextended military covering two fronts and the homeland.

The point. Our ambitions exceed capacity. US security is based on the strength of our socio-economic arrangements. We prioritized tax cuts and military offensives, and in a world of finite resources that decision has consequences. Katrina accomplished what a host of evidence-based rhetoric and literature could not: she exposed festering ills that threaten our national security and prosperity.

Our nation is barreling towards a calamitous disaster– and not necessarily by one spectacular act of terrorism. Decisions made in the US have global ramifications, and it rightly boomerangs back in a domino effect. We see that the structural integrity of our nation has been compromised by our leaders’ negligence. And it is buoyed by our apathy. We have to think beyond party lines, past faith-based divisions, and outside our small bubbles of existence. Are we confident in the direction our leadership is taking us? Because the security of our children’s America depends on it.

Filed Under: Interests, Life Tagged With: hurricane, katrina, levy, louisiana, new orleans

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