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Investing in an Empire of Illusion, by Chris Nelder

20 December 2009 by Nathalie Abejero 7 Comments

Here is a good piece in its entirety below, via @pdenlinger and written by @nelderini, critiquing “an America in thrall to its illusions, unable to respond meaningfully to the challenges of peak oil, climate change, and population.” Agree or not on any of the points, if you invest or follow climate, oil and energy policy developments, it is a thinking piece on the status quo.

——————————–

As my regular readers know, I’ve spent much of this year contemplating big themes, like the long-term picture for energy, energy and monetary policy, black swans and the human penchant for valuing the present more than the future, the problems of complex systems like the energy-food-water nexus, sustainability, and the relationship between climate change and peak oil.

As this year draws to a close and I review my work, the biggest question that emerges is about why it is so incredibly difficult to reach people on these subjects.

It’s more than the usual culprits. Yes, the corporate media and the ad-supported business model are problems — like when I was called a “peak freak” on television and given no opportunity to respond to my opponent’s disinformation.

Yes, the overweening influence of corporate lobbyists has effectively neutralized policy and confused the public debate on our most serious problems. Yes, the capitalistic system favors short-term concentrated profits over long-term public good. And yes, the simple human preference for happy talk over sad stories plays a role in our denial.

The real problem is much more pervasive. Those actors cannot explain more fundamental questions:

Why has our economic theory failed us?
Why is the reality of climate change so hard to accept?
Why does climate change dominate public dialogue while the more proximate threat of peak oil remains far off the radar?
Why do we have such resistance to change?
Why would anyone ever think Dubai World was a good idea?
Why is talking about population control — arguably the only real way out of our predicament — taboo?

For over 40 years, our public dialogue has gotten progressively dumber and more polarized. The one “town hall meeting” I attended on health care was a horrifying display of tribal theater, with both sides screaming at the other and drowning out the elected official. It did not even remotely resemble intelligent discussion of issues.

Our news media have substituted entertainment for information and sponsor-endorsed opinion for neutral reportage, while the literacy of the public and the capacity for critical thought have progressively declined. Orwell, Huxley, Bradbury, Vonnegut, Chomsky, and a long line of others have decried it all along.

Yet it persists, and grows. Why? [Read more…] about Investing in an Empire of Illusion, by Chris Nelder

Filed Under: Interests, Life Tagged With: climate, energy, investing, oil, population

A pharma christmas carol

20 December 2009 by Nathalie Abejero 1 Comment

from Pharma Gossip, a little carol (to the tune of “God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen”..)

Origami Ornaments on the Christmas Tree at the American Museum o

Got rest us, pharma CEOs, let nothing we concern
Ineptitude will not reduce the millions that we earn
Our management is failing yet we think we need not learn

No tidings of comfort or joy
Comfort or joy
For the scientists we used to employ

God bless ye, Jeffrey Kindler, Pfizer’s dubious accolade
A corporate malfeasance fine, the largest ever paid
Regarded as a simple cost of business, I’m afraid

Sad tidings of marketing fraud
Marketing fraud
Sad tidings of marketing fraud

Financial joy for Fred Hassan, now Schering Plough’s been sold
His second mega-golden parachute can now unfold
And twenty thousand Pharma hands once more are on the dole

Schering Plough’s gone the same as Pharmacia
Pharmacia
Cut and run marks out good ol’ Fred’s career

God help thee AstraZeneca, pharma’s Titanic liner
It’s shutting down it’s First World sites and shipping them to China
For short term savings now – what motivation could be finer?

Sad tidings of jobs gone abroad
Jobs gone abroad
For the benefit of members of the Board

God rest our Pharma industry, it hasn’t got a prayer
Now run by greedy plutocrats who simply do not care
About the science or the ethics of human healthcare

Downsizings for comfort and wealth
Personal wealth
Downsizings for personal wealth

So spare a thought this Xmas for all those made unemployed
To boost the wealth of plutocrats whose greed is unalloyed
Because of them the Western pharma trade will be destroyed

Mad tidings of Money For The Boys
Cash For The Boys
Slash and burn is making Money For the Boys…

Filed Under: Interests, Life Tagged With: carol, christmas, pharma

My consumption impact

3 December 2009 by Nathalie Abejero Leave a Comment

pic
From American Public Media:

The Earth coudn’t support its 6.6 billion residents if everyone lived like a typical American. Consumer consequences will tell you how many planets it would take to support your lifestyle on a planetary scale and share some ideas for making your “footprint” a little smaller.

This formula has been making the rounds of the blogosphere, news and ads. The game walks you through some lifestyle questions such as the energy usage, transportation, food and shopping, and results show how many “Earths” worth of natural resources it would take to sustain all 6.6 billion humans if we all lived just like you. In my case, we’d need 3.5 planet Earths :-(

Filed Under: Interests, Life Tagged With: consumption, earth, ecological footprinting, environment, lifestyle

it makes your head hurt

26 November 2009 by Nathalie Abejero 4 Comments

A LOL great find from Flowing Data for those of you who love data graphics.

 

Filed Under: Interests, Life Tagged With: data visualisation

a magazine “for people who give a damn”

25 November 2009 by Nathalie Abejero 2 Comments

Above is a great series of videos from the YouTube GOOD channel. This one was taped last year, and is quite timely for starting this year’s holiday season.

I love data visualisation blogs. There are so many infographics published every day, and these data scientists critique the transparency and fairness of the data, as well as the presentation of the message. One of the blogs I came across is GOOD, which is a quarterly US general-interest magazine founded in 2006 with a focus on social issues, politics, and sustainable living. Check out their website. It’s chock full of questions and features to stimulate dialogue and collaboration for solving some of the world’s biggest problems.

Billed in its first release as a “free press for the critical idealist”, it was launched in 2006 by Ben Goldhirsh, son of the creator of Inc. Magazine. Departing from the normative industry strategy, Good’s subscription fees go entirely to charity, and their marketing budget go to throwing block parties in large cities rather than to direct mail. While critics charge that this model is not viable– it has yet to break even after two years– the magazine has attracted a lot of attention and press, particularly from NPR, Foreign Policy, Washington Post and NYTimes. It’s also been nominated for several national magazine awards.

I’ll be giving a subscription to some friends this Christmas, before I leave again for Cambodia.

Filed Under: Interests, Life Tagged With: GOOD, magazine, social causes, US

the Khmer side of SE Asia’s politics..

20 November 2009 by Nathalie Abejero Leave a Comment

Young journalists and bloggers are not plenty in the Kingdom, but they are gaining in numbers and spine. From just a few bloggers you can count on one hand in the early 2000’s to, literally, hundreds today, these guys are now lending a decidedly Khmer voice to the contentious politics of Cambodia, the ongoing belligerence with Thailand and shrewd maneuverings with Vietnam.

Events have traditionally come from a skewed Western or Thai perspective. So I’m glad to see the increasing articulation of the Khmer point of view.

Here are two new bloggers I just found. Worth a watch? We’ll wait and see.

  • Son of the Empire (politics)
  • Tumnei, a Photo Diary (culture)

Filed Under: Interests, Life Tagged With: blog, bloggers, Cambodia, journalism, politics

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Those little feet pitter-pattering about rule our lives lately. But on the occasional free moment I get to tap out scatterbrained bursts of consciousness about raising toddlers in Cambodia, traveling with them and working abroad. These posts are my personal updates to friends and family. But since you’re here, have a look around. Thanks for stopping by…

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