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[ Arts and Poetry ]


Global Connection 500 Thai Kids Will Get low-cost laptop Computer By The Associated Press

Aug 16, 2006 (AP)— The ambitious project to provide low-cost laptop computers to poor children around the world is about to take a small step forward. More than 500 children in Thailand are expected to receive the machines in October and November for quality testing and debugging.

The One Laptop Per Child program, which began at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology''s Media Lab and now is a separate nonprofit organization, hopes to deploy 5 million to 7 million machines in Thailand, Nigeria, Brazil and Argentina in 2007.

Thailand''s government is expected to buy 1 million in the first year.

But Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra announced in a nationwide radio broadcast that "if this project is completed" it would reach all Thai elementary students. He said each student would get a free computer "instead of books, because books will be found and can be read on computers."

Posted by on Wednesday, August 16 @ 15:31:28 EDT (0 reads)
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World Bank: ''Follow Thailand'' on Aids
Global Connection Anonymous writes "World Bank: ''Follow Thailand'' on Aids

Thailand is offering life-saving HIV drugs to more than 90 per cent of those in need, bucking global trends and setting an example for other developing states, the World Bank said today.

Thai programs show that even countries with few resources may be able to hand out crucial antiretroviral therapy (ART) on a vast scale at low cost, a World Bank report released at the 16th International AIDS Conference said.

“Thailand''s ART program is a useful beacon for other developing countries which are looking at how to provide this treatment to people with advanced HIV,” said bank economist Ana Revenga.

Around 6.8 million of the estimated 38.6 million people living with HIV worldwide need ART, the World Health Organisation said today.

Only 1.66 million, or 24 per cent of those in need, are getting the treatment, the United Nations agency said.

But Thailand has bucked the trend. By May this year it was providing treatment for 78,000 AIDS patients, which is more than 90 per cent of those who need it, according to the report, co-authored with the Thai Ministry of Public Health.
"

Posted by 157 on Wednesday, August 16 @ 14:31:28 EDT (0 reads)
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Announcement
Global Connection

Welcome Back
Site is back up again but we are still working on it


Posted by love on Thursday, June 08 @ 14:31:28 EDT (2121 reads)
(Read More... | Score: 5)

Work Life: Workers Have Retirement 'Overconfidence'
Worklife, Job and Career Workers Have Retirement 'Overconfidence'
By EILEEN ALT POWELL, AP Business Writer
Tue Apr 4, 2:20 PM ET

NEW YORK - The majority of American workers think they'll be able to retire comfortably, but most aren't saving nearly enough to meet that goal, according to a new study.

The Employee Benefit Research Institute's annual retirement confidence survey, released Tuesday, found that about 68 percent of workers are confident about having adequate funds for a comfortable retirement, up slightly from 65 percent in 2005.

At the same time, more than half of all workers say they've saved less than $25,000 toward retirement, according to the Washington, D.C., based research group. Even among workers 55 and older, more than four in 10 have retirement savings under $25,000.



AP Photo: Graphic shows results of a survey about retirement savings. (AP Graphic) (Continue to Page 2)


Posted by Love on Wednesday, April 05 @ 15:25:00 EDT (2097 reads)
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Easter Island Casino Plan Raises Fear of Cultural Erosion
Earth & Environment Anonymous writes " Easter Island Casino Plan Raises Fear of Cultural Erosion
By LARRY ROHTER
Published: April 1, 2006

HANGA ROA, Easter Island — This is, as the saying here goes, "the most insular of islands," the place on earth farthest from any other place on earth. Most people here seem to like it that way, which is why a new plan to build a casino on this speck in the South Pacific has created an uproar among the island's 3,800 residents.

Skip to next paragraph
Enlarge This Image

Tomas Munita for The New York Times
Visitors to Easter Island view the island's famous stone statues, called moai, that were carved centuries ago and stand along the coast.
The furor may seem a small matter in a very small place. But to those who live here, the plan is the latest manifestation of a centuries-old onslaught of intrusions — from colonization and disease to intermarriage and the steady erosion of the local Polynesian culture and language — which threatens finally to undo one of the globe's singular outposts.

Tourism has grown rapidly here in recent years, as long-range flights have reduced Easter Island's remoteness. But visitors are hardly of the high-roller type, and come mainly to see the moai, the famous stone statues, carved centuries ago, that stand guard as mute sentinels along the coast of the island, which is three times the size of Manhattan. Slot machines and blackjack tables have been, until now, alien concepts.

Opponents here fear that if approved, the venture would bring a host of outside social ills, ranging from drugs and prostitution to money laundering and gambling fever among a population that until a generation ago lived in an economy based on barter. The project was proposed late last year, but could be decided upon as early as May.

"A casino would mean the instantaneous destruction of this island as we know it, in which our livelihood is based on a kind of cultural tourism found nowhere else in the world," said Mario Tuki, a fisherman and schoolteacher who is a member of a council of elders. "If people want to gamble, let them go somewhere else, like Las Vegas or Monaco."

Local people are irked all the more that the final decision will be taken in Santiago, Chile, nearly 2,500 miles away. Easter Island, known as Rapa Nui in the local Polynesian language of the same name, has been part of Chile since 1888, with Spanish as its language of government.

The author of the casino plan is Pedro Riraroko, a Rapa Nui businessman and landowner whose interests include a hotel and travel agency. He was on the Chilean mainland lobbying for the project, in which he has Chilean partners who already own a casino, and did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

But the mayor here, Pedro Edmunds, has endorsed the plan. He argues that the benefits of a casino would far outweigh its potential adverse effects. "I welcome any project that would develop Rapa Nui society, and this is one that would create 150 jobs that I don't have today," he said in an interview. "Plus, a chunk of the profits and sales would stay here on the island and give me more money to build roads and maybe afford to buy a dialysis unit for the hospital."

The casino project comes at a delicate moment in the island's complicated and turbulent history, with the Chilean Congress considering a "special statute" that would grant political autonomy to Easter Island. That legislation, which is expected to be approved this year, would give the island's government much greater control over land use and finances.

Easter Island acquired its name when a Dutch vessel landed on that Sunday in 1722. Scientists were curious about the mysterious moai from the beginning, but initially there was little interest otherwise because the island was so remote and had no natural resources to exploit. But in the 19th century, raids by slave ships from Peru carried off nearly 1,000 Rapa Nui, including the island's king, to work in guano mines there. An international campaign freed a handful of survivors, who returned here infected with diseases that reduced the population, more than 10,000 at its peak, to 111 people.

The survivors sought protection from Peru's rival, Chile, but for many years thereafter the island was little more than a sheep farm. Residents acquired Chilean citizenship only in 1966, after protests against their second-class status and what they saw as the arrogance of their Chilean Navy overseers. "This island was run like a ship," said Sergio Rapu, a Rapa Nui archaeologist who in the 1980's became the island's first civilian and native governor. "Everyone was in the navy, and if you were a Rapa Nui, then you were two steps down from a sailor."

"

Posted by Love on Tuesday, April 04 @ 16:53:33 EDT (2138 reads)
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Plains grow more lonesome
Economic News, Articles & Resources Anonymous writes "Article Launched: 03/16/2006 1:00 AM MST

denver & the west
Plains grow more lonesome
By Robert Sanchez,
Denver Post Staff Writer

Denis Weber strolls past a vacant house Wednesday in Sheridan Lake in Kiowa County - a town without a gas station, restaurant or grocery store. Kiowa and Cheyenne counties suffered double-digit percentage population declines in the past five years. There's fear in Sheridan Lake that the post office could close as well. "That would just kill us," Weber said. (Post / Karl Gehring)


Population on Colorado's long-suffering Eastern Plains slipped further over a five-year span beginning in 2000, even as new U.S. census estimates showed that the state overall enjoyed robust growth during the same period.

Hardest hit were Cheyenne and Kiowa counties on the Kansas border, which lost more than one-tenth of their populations and now are among the top 25 counties nationwide for population decline.

Other Colorado counties on the plains fared little better, with communities from the northeast and southeast losing anywhere between 0.5 percent to 9.9 percent of their population from 2000 to 2005, according to census data being released today.

The declines could get worse before they get better, demographic and agriculture experts said.

Eastern Plains communities could lose another third of their population before even the slightest rebound occurs, said Don Macke, co-director of the National Center for Rural Entrepreneurship.

"Eventually, things will begin to stabilize, but when that will happen is anyone's guess," he said. Still, even with the consistent decrease, the communities "won't decline to nothing."

The reason for the dramatic population decreases in Colorado's agriculture-based counties - some have dropped nearly 20 percent since 1990 - is a perfect storm of minimal economic development coupled with drought and stagnant crop prices.

Where farmers once were able to support families on 500 acres, it now takes 5,000 acres or more simply to break even.

"We have to have two other jobs just to make it work here," said Jan Hogan, a hair salon owner in Kit Carson.

Hogan's husband teaches high school science to support the family's cattle ranch in Cheyenne County. "We don't have young people staying here or coming into town because we don't have much to offer them," Hogan said.

Two of her children left Kit Carson and live in Denver and Pueblo. "They have opportunities there," she said.

Continue here.. "

Posted by Love on Tuesday, April 04 @ 16:53:00 EDT (2150 reads)
(Read More... | 6808 bytes more | Score: 0)

What do boomers want in 2006?
Global Connection Anonymous writes "What do boomers want in 2006?
By Joanna L. Krotz
In an historic turnabout, older folks are looking hot. Coast to coast, marketers, politicians and media are waking to the power and sheer numbers of consumers age 50 and older.


Fidelity Investments, for example, tapped Paul McCartney, the urBeatle, to pitch its financial services. The emblem of Gen X cool, The Gap, launched Forth & Towne shops for older women. And the Rolling Stones are still touring.

Fact is, a third of Americans are graying fast. These are the nearly 80 million so-called baby boomers born between 1946 and 1964. Every 7 seconds for the next 18 years, someone in the country will hit 60. More than a million Americans are expected to be 100 or older by 2050.

Even better, boomers are expected to exercise $3 trillion in spending muscle by 2007, as more of them enter prime-time earning years, 45 to 54.



Ready, set, grow! Get your business running in high gear
It's not enough to have a great product. You need to get out and sell it. See how technology can help your sales & marketing in our guide to Growing Your Business.
More



Best of all, this feisty, self-actualizing, sex-and-revolution bunch that leveraged "living" into a concept called "lifestyle" is hardly ready to turn "senior." "Every life stage offers new marketing opportunities, needs and motivations," says Carol Orsborn, partner at Imago Creative, a marketing agency that specializes in targeting boomer women.

How do you go with the flow of this lucrative age wave?

Here's a rundown on how to attract these older consumers as well as ideas about products and services that, in boomerspeak, will resonate with them.

Boomers come in different sizes and shapes
Clearly, millions of consumers born over an 18-year span are not homogenous. "While there are aspirational affinities, boomers are not a cultural or economic monolith," says Becky Chidester, CEO of RTCRM, a Washington, D.C., marketing agency.

Your first step is to pinpoint where your business best intersects it. Most market researchers divide the boomer group into three sub-segments:

1.
The leading edge, born 1946-1954

2.
The mid-range, born 1955-1959

3.
Trailing or tail end, born 1960-1964. This group often shares characteristics with Gen X, that is, the kids of leading-edge boomers.


Broadly, distinctions among the groups add up to time and money. The oldest segment, with kids out of the house and the mortgage handled, is ready for rock 'n' roll redux. The younger segments are probably still wrestling with family and financial commitments.

Keep those realities in mind as you package your pitch and plan marketing.

Top of page
Never assume boomers are too old to get the message
If you think of boomers as young at heart, flexible and educated, you'll be headed in the right directions. In contrast to previous aging generations, boomers are more likely to try unfamiliar brands than are consumers aged 16 to 34, according to "Business Week."

"You must continue to earn the loyalty of this customer at every single encounter," says Beth Zimmerman, owner of Cerebellas, a brand consultancy in Long Beach, N.Y. "Never assume they're too set in their ways or too ill-informed about other choices for where to take their business."

Once you've defined your overall message, these three marketing themes offer smart channels to develop for boomers.

• The special experience.

Life continues to be an exploration for boomers. That sets up a host of potential services to offer, including special-purpose travel, such as international treks or safaris, whitewater rafting, dude ranches or wilderness outings; cultural celebrations, such as arts forums or festivals; food or culinary adventures, such as back-to-the-old-country jaunts or cooking schools.

One-of-a-kind experiences can also be evoked by products, as in the feeling you get from owning a luxury or a rare treat. This might embrace upscale jewelry or watches, crafts or paintings, high-end machines, motorcycles or tools, handcrafted leather goods or furnishings and more. Just remember: Emphasize the feeling created by owning that fancy watch, not a device that tells time.

• Looking good, feeling good.

If you think there's been an upsurge in health clubs or diet fads lately, just wait. The real explosion is around the corner. Business researcher FIND/SVP forecasts that anti-aging products will turn into a $56 billion market by 2007, a staggering jump of 50% since 2002.

To move into this arena, consider day spa or convenient grooming and beauty services; exercise gear that tones and shapes (don't be too tough on aging bods); pharmaceuticals and nutraceuticals; health-conscious restaurants or low-fat, takeout foods; hair care and the like. Don't overlook professional and paraprofessional services, such as medical and plastic surgery, dental cosmetics, as well as vision and hearing boosters, physical therapy, massage or chiropractic services.

Also keep your antenna tuned for spiritual or yoga and meditation services. Such "higher purpose" experiences are also attracting boomers who want to feel and look their best.

• Financial fitness.

"I deal with clients in their mid-50s to early 80s all over the country," says Alan Haft, a financial Certified Senior Advisor based in Boca Raton, Fla. "There's a common denominator. The years of ac*****ulation are over." Everyone, says Haft, no matter the net worth, is concerned about outliving his or her money.

Financial services for boomers include insurance, such as supplemental health and long-term care policies, tax advice and accounting, financial and estate planning, legal services for wills, contracts and so on.

Besides word-of-mouth referrals, Haft finds seminars that offer real information to be his most effective marketing tactic. Typically, he'll mail about 10,000 invitations from purchased and in-house lists to get a 1% response, with 100 or so actually showing up. "About 30% will call for an appointment and half of those will be window-shopping," he says. In the end, one seminar might generate 10 good leads and five real deals. "But one deal over $100,000 pays for the seminar," says Haft.

Marketing via seminars works when your product has a high profit margin that can cover the hefty upfront costs. "Just don't forget the food," advises Haft. "Every boomer gets four or five seminar invitations a week. The better the food, the more likely you'll get a response." Haft holds seminars in hotels and at well-known restaurants.

Also look to technology and business-to-business services in this area. For instance, Impact Technologies, a Microsoft Certified Partner based in Charlotte, N.C., provides financial software and marketing tools for banks, brokerages and financial advisors. Impact's proprietary "Retirement Road Map" software, which quickly calculates how much money an individual will have to live on in later years, helps advisors develop relationships with potential clients, says J. Maxey Sanderson, Impact's vice president of product development. "Most people, regardless of economic means, want some basic awareness before they'll open up to talk about retirement or estate planning. The Retirement Road Map lets advisors give people fast definitive answers." That, points out Maxey, helps build business.


Top of page
Relationships and the new family
Affluent and educated, the boomer group is lavishing attention on their grandkids. So don't forget that the oldster marketing juggernaut includes consumer electronics, trendy toys and kid experiences. SVP estimates 69 million grandparents in the US, propelling a $30 billion market.

In addition, boomer women are defying the past "old lady" stereotypes and re-inventing themselves. Imago's Carol Orsborn, who, with Jimmy Laura Smull, recently released a University of California study of professional women in their late 40s and older called "The Wisdom Years: Women of the Baby Boomer Generation and Their Search for Meaning." They found that "Women are doing things together and looking for communal experiences with one another," says Orsborn. With kids grown and out of the house, women are increasingly leaving husbands at home and sharing experiences or taking trips with women friends or groups. That may be a trek up Machu Picchu or Thursday night chorus night.

Besides the other ideas for businesses and marketing plans for boomers, make sure to tip your hat to the older women market. It's growing more powerful by the month.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Joanna Krotz
Joanna L. Krotz writes about small-business marketing and management issues. She is the co-author of the "Microsoft Small Business Kit" and runs Muse2Muse Productions, a New York City-based custom publisher.

http://www.microsoft.com/smallbusiness/resources/marketing/market_research/what_do_boomers_want_in_2006.mspx#top"

Posted by Love on Sunday, March 26 @ 00:46:56 EST (2078 reads)
(Read More... | Score: 0)

James Lovelock About The Earth
Earth & Environment Anonymous writes "James Lovelock: The Earth is about to catch a morbid fever that may last as long as 100,000 years
Each nation must find the best use of its resources to sustain civilisation for as long as they can
Published: 16 January 2006
Imagine a young policewoman delighted in the fulfilment of her vocation; then imagine her having to tell a family whose child had strayed that he had been found dead, murdered in a nearby wood. Or think of a young physician newly appointed who has to tell you that the biopsy revealed invasion by an aggressive metastasising tumour. Doctors and the police know that many accept the simple awful truth with dignity but others try in vain to deny it.

Whatever the response, the bringers of such bad news rarely become hardened to their task and some dread it. We have relieved judges of the awesome responsibility of passing the death sentence, but at least they had some comfort from its frequent moral justification. Physicians and the police have no escape from their duty.

This article is the most difficult I have written and for the same reasons. My Gaia theory sees the Earth behaving as if it were alive, and clearly anything alive can enjoy good health, or suffer disease. Gaia has made me a planetary physician and I take my profession seriously, and now I, too, have to bring bad news.

The climate centres around the world, which are the equivalent of the pathology lab of a hospital, have reported the Earth's physical condition, and the climate specialists see it as seriously ill, and soon to pass into a morbid fever that may last as long as 100,000 years. I have to tell you, as members of the Earth's family and an intimate part of it, that you and especially civilisation are in grave danger.

Our planet has kept itself healthy and fit for life, just like an animal does, for most of the more than three billion years of its existence. It was ill luck that we started polluting at a time when the sun is too hot for comfort. We have given Gaia a fever and soon her condition will worsen to a state like a coma. She has been there before and recovered, but it took more than 100,000 years. We are responsible and will suffer the consequences: as the century progresses, the temperature will rise 8 degrees centigrade in temperate regions and 5 degrees in the tropics.

Much of the tropical land mass will become scrub and desert, and will no longer serve for regulation; this adds to the 40 per cent of the Earth's surface we have depleted to feed ourselves.

Curiously, aerosol pollution of the northern hemisphere reduces global warming by reflecting sunlight back to space. This "global dimming" is transient and could disappear in a few days like the smoke that it is, leaving us fully exposed to the heat of the global greenhouse. We are in a fool's climate, accidentally kept cool by smoke, and before this century is over billions of us will die and the few breeding pairs of people that survive will be in the Arctic where the climate remains tolerable.

By failing to see that the Earth regulates its climate and composition, we have blundered into trying to do it ourselves, acting as if we were in charge. By doing this, we condemn ourselves to the worst form of slavery. If we chose to be the stewards of the Earth, then we are responsible for keeping the atmosphere, the ocean and the land surface right for life. A task we would soon find impossible - and something before we treated Gaia so badly, she had freely done for us.

To understand how impossible it is, think about how you would regulate your own temperature or the composition of your blood. Those with failing kidneys know the never-ending daily difficulty of adjusting water, salt and protein intake. The technological fix of dialysis helps, but is no replacement for living healthy kidneys.

My new book The Revenge of Gaia expands these thoughts, but you still may ask why science took so long to recognise the true nature of the Earth. I think it is because Darwin's vision was so good and clear that it has taken until now to digest it. In his time, little was known about the chemistry of the atmosphere and oceans, and there would have been little reason for him to wonder if organisms changed their environment as well as adapting to it.

Had it been known then that life and the environment are closely coupled, Darwin would have seen that evolution involved not just the organisms, but the whole planetary surface. We might then have looked upon the Earth as if it were alive, and known that we cannot pollute the air or use the Earth's skin - its forest and ocean ecosystems - as a mere source of products to feed ourselves and furnish our homes. We would have felt instinctively that those ecosystems must be left untouched because they were part of the living Earth.

So what should we do? First, we have to keep in mind the awesome pace of change and realise how little time is left to act; and then each community and nation must find the best use of the resources they have to sustain civilisation for as long as they can. Civilisation is energy-intensive and we cannot turn it off without crashing, so we need the security of a powered descent. On these British Isles, we are used to thinking of all humanity and not just ourselves; environmental change is global, but we have to deal with the consequences here in the UK.

Unfortunately our nation is now so urbanised as to be like a large city and we have only a small acreage of agriculture and forestry. We are dependent on the trading world for sustenance; climate change will deny us regular supplies of food and fuel from overseas.

We could grow enough to feed ourselves on the diet of the Second World War, but the notion that there is land to spare to grow biofuels, or be the site of wind farms, is ludicrous. We will do our best to survive, but sadly I cannot see the United States or the emerging economies of China and India cutting back in time, and they are the main source of emissions. The worst will happen and survivors will have to adapt to a hell of a climate.

Perhaps the saddest thing is that Gaia will lose as much or more than we do. Not only will wildlife and whole ecosystems go extinct, but in human civilisation the planet has a precious resource. We are not merely a disease; we are, through our intelligence and communication, the nervous system of the planet. Through us, Gaia has seen herself from space, and begins to know her place in the universe.

We should be the heart and mind of the Earth, not its malady. So let us be brave and cease thinking of human needs and rights alone, and see that we have harmed the living Earth and need to make our peace with Gaia. We must do it while we are still strong enough to negotiate, and not a broken rabble led by brutal war lords. Most of all, we should remember that we are a part of it, and it is indeed our home.

The writer is an independent environmental scientist and Fellow of the Royal Society. 'The Revenge of Gaia' is published by Penguin on 2 February

Imagine a young policewoman delighted in the fulfilment of her vocation; then imagine her having to tell a family whose child had strayed that he had been found dead, murdered in a nearby wood. Or think of a young physician newly appointed who has to tell you that the biopsy revealed invasion by an aggressive metastasising tumour. Doctors and the police know that many accept the simple awful truth with dignity but others try in vain to deny it.

Whatever the response, the bringers of such bad news rarely become hardened to their task and some dread it. We have relieved judges of the awesome responsibility of passing the death sentence, but at least they had some comfort from its frequent moral justification. Physicians and the police have no escape from their duty.

This article is the most difficult I have written and for the same reasons. My Gaia theory sees the Earth behaving as if it were alive, and clearly anything alive can enjoy good health, or suffer disease. Gaia has made me a planetary physician and I take my profession seriously, and now I, too, have to bring bad news.

The climate centres around the world, which are the equivalent of the pathology lab of a hospital, have reported the Earth's physical condition, and the climate specialists see it as seriously ill, and soon to pass into a morbid fever that may last as long as 100,000 years. I have to tell you, as members of the Earth's family and an intimate part of it, that you and especially civilisation are in grave danger.

Our planet has kept itself healthy and fit for life, just like an animal does, for most of the more than three billion years of its existence. It was ill luck that we started polluting at a time when the sun is too hot for comfort. We have given Gaia a fever and soon her condition will worsen to a state like a coma. She has been there before and recovered, but it took more than 100,000 years. We are responsible and will suffer the consequences: as the century progresses, the temperature will rise 8 degrees centigrade in temperate regions and 5 degrees in the tropics.

Much of the tropical land mass will become scrub and desert, and will no longer serve for regulation; this adds to the 40 per cent of the Earth's surface we have depleted to feed ourselves.

Curiously, aerosol pollution of the northern hemisphere reduces global warming by reflecting sunlight back to space. This "global dimming" is transient and could disappear in a few days like the smoke that it is, leaving us fully exposed to the heat of the global greenhouse. We are in a fool's climate, accidentally kept cool by smoke, and before this century is over billions of us will die and the few breeding pairs of people that survive will be in the Arctic where the climate remains tolerable.

By failing to see that the Earth regulates its climate and composition, we have blundered into trying to do it ourselves, acting as if we were in charge. By doing this, we condemn ourselves to the worst form of slavery. If we chose to be the stewards of the Earth, then we are responsible for keeping the atmosphere, the ocean and the land surface right for life. A task we would soon find impossible - and something before we treated Gaia so badly, she had freely done for us.

To understand how impossible it is, think about how you would regulate your own temperature or the composition of your blood. Those with failing kidneys know the never-ending daily difficulty of adjusting water, salt and protein intake. The technological fix of dialysis helps, but is no replacement for living healthy kidneys.
My new book The Revenge of Gaia expands these thoughts, but you still may ask why science took so long to recognise the true nature of the Earth. I think it is because Darwin's vision was so good and clear that it has taken until now to digest it. In his time, little was known about the chemistry of the atmosphere and oceans, and there would have been little reason for him to wonder if organisms changed their environment as well as adapting to it.

Had it been known then that life and the environment are closely coupled, Darwin would have seen that evolution involved not just the organisms, but the whole planetary surface. We might then have looked upon the Earth as if it were alive, and known that we cannot pollute the air or use the Earth's skin - its forest and ocean ecosystems - as a mere source of products to feed ourselves and furnish our homes. We would have felt instinctively that those ecosystems must be left untouched because they were part of the living Earth.

So what should we do? First, we have to keep in mind the awesome pace of change and realise how little time is left to act; and then each community and nation must find the best use of the resources they have to sustain civilisation for as long as they can. Civilisation is energy-intensive and we cannot turn it off without crashing, so we need the security of a powered descent. On these British Isles, we are used to thinking of all humanity and not just ourselves; environmental change is global, but we have to deal with the consequences here in the UK.

Unfortunately our nation is now so urbanised as to be like a large city and we have only a small acreage of agriculture and forestry. We are dependent on the trading world for sustenance; climate change will deny us regular supplies of food and fuel from overseas.

We could grow enough to feed ourselves on the diet of the Second World War, but the notion that there is land to spare to grow biofuels, or be the site of wind farms, is ludicrous. We will do our best to survive, but sadly I cannot see the United States or the emerging economies of China and India cutting back in time, and they are the main source of emissions. The worst will happen and survivors will have to adapt to a hell of a climate.

Perhaps the saddest thing is that Gaia will lose as much or more than we do. Not only will wildlife and whole ecosystems go extinct, but in human civilisation the planet has a precious resource. We are not merely a disease; we are, through our intelligence and communication, the nervous system of the planet. Through us, Gaia has seen herself from space, and begins to know her place in the universe.

We should be the heart and mind of the Earth, not its malady. So let us be brave and cease thinking of human needs and rights alone, and see that we have harmed the living Earth and need to make our peace with Gaia. We must do it while we are still strong enough to negotiate, and not a broken rabble led by brutal war lords. Most of all, we should remember that we are a part of it, and it is indeed our home.

The writer is an independent environmental scientist and Fellow of the Royal Society. 'The Revenge of Gaia' is published by Penguin on 2 February


http://comment.independent.co.uk/commentators/article338830.ece

http://www.ecolo.org/lovelock/

http://www.planetecologie.org/ENCYCLOPEDIE/Pionniers/lovelock.htm
"

Posted by Love on Wednesday, March 15 @ 16:22:24 EST (2231 reads)
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Psychiatrist calls for end to 30-year taboo over use of LSD as a medical treatme
Global Connection


Psychiatrist calls for end to 30-year taboo over use of LSD as a medical treatment

· Drug inventor celebrates 100th birthday today

· Battle ahead for approval and funding of UK studies

Sarah Boseley, health editor
Wednesday January 11, 2006
The Guardian

British psychiatrists are beginning to debate the highly sensitive issue of using LSD for therapeutic purposes to unlock secrets buried in the unconscious which may underlie the anxious or obsessional behaviour of some of their patients. The UK pioneered this use of LSD in the 1950s. But psychiatrists found their research proposals rejected and their work dismissed once "acid" hit the streets in the mid-60s and uncontrolled use of the hallucinogenic drug became a social phenomenon.

Today, on the 100th birthday of Albert Hofmann, the scientist who discovered the mind-expanding properties of lysergic acid diethylamide in Switzerland, one consultant psychiatrist is openly risking controversy to urge that the debate on the therapeutic potential of LSD be reopened. Ben Sessa has been invited to give a presentation on psychedelic drugs to the Royal College of Psychiatrists in March - the first time the subject will have been discussed by the institution in 30 years.

"I really want to present a dispassionate medical, scientific evidence-based argument," says Dr Sessa. "I do not condone recreational drug use. None of this is tinged by any personal experience.

"Scientists, psychiatrists and psychologists were forced to give up their studies for socio-political reasons. That's what really drives me."

LSD was brought to the UK in 1952 by psychiatrist Ronnie Sandison who had visited the labs of the drug company Sandoz, where Dr Hofmann worked. He came home with 100 ampoules in his bag and began to use them at Powick hospital, near Malvern in Worcestershire, on selected patients with conditions such as obsessional hand-washing or anxiety who did not respond to psychoanalysis.

Dr Sessa has looked back on the papers published by Dr Sandison and others from the heyday of psychedelic psychiatry, and thinks they may have modern relevance. They claim positive results in patients who were given LSD in psychotherapy to get to the deep-seated roots of anxiety disorders and neuroses. It took them, as the title of Aldous Huxley's book has it, from the poem of William Blake, through "the doors of perception". Yet when he was a student, says 33-year-old Dr Sessa, all his textbooks stated categorically that LSD had no medical use.

"It is as if a whole generation of psychiatrists have had this systematically erased from their education," he says. "But for the generation who trained in the 50s and 60s, this really was going to be the next big thing. Thousands of books and papers were written, but then it all went silent. My generation has never heard of it. It's almost as if there has been an active demonisation."

He says he understands why. LSD became a huge social issue. But he argues that nobody would ask anaesthetists to forgo morphine use because heroin is a social evil, and cannabis is now being formulated as a therapeutic drug.

Since the 1960s, when research was stopped on LSD, "depression and anxiety disorders have risen to almost epidemic proportions and are now the greatest single burden on today's health services. Therefore, today's political climate may be just right for the medical profession to reconsider the use of psychedelic drugs", writes Dr Sessa in an as-yet unpublished paper with Amanda Feilding of the Beckley Foundation which promotes research into the nature of consciousness.

A major conference is being held in Basel, Switzerland, this weekend in honour of Dr Hofmann's birthday. Scientists in the burgeoning psychedelic psychiatry movement will be there, alongside artists, musicians and those who look to hallucinatory drugs for spiritual experience.

In the past five years, the international climate has been changing, albeit very slowly. In the US, Israel, Switzerland and Spain, a few research projects have been permitted into the effects of LSD, MDMA (ecstasy) and psilocybin - the active ingredient in magic mushrooms - on the brain. They look at the use of the drugs in conditions such as post-traumatic stress, obsessive compulsive disorder and the alleviation of distress in the dying.

But Dr Sessa knows it will be an uphill struggle to get research proposals approved and funded in the UK. He believes the drugs are safe in medical use - given in a pure form in tiny doses and in controlled and supervised surroundings. But LSD is associated with flashbacks, and brain scans of clubbers using ecstasy have shown damage. Some psychiatrists are likely to be appalled at the idea. Former patients of Dr Sandison claimed his use of LSD had caused them long-term problems and attempted to bring a court action for compensation.

Dr Sandison says his early experimentation with LSD in the 50s produced results in difficult cases. "I recall one young woman. She had a near-drowning experience. She developed a severe anxiety state. It coloured everything.

"We didn't get anywhere with ordinary psychotherapy, so we went on to LSD. She recalled an extraordinary memory of how, when she was eight, she had gone into a store with her mother and become separated from her. She went to a counter to ask an assistant and felt a man behind her trying to feel her up. She felt very confused by this and said she thought it was an odd way of stealing her purse." he said.

"It was pretty alarming. She had suppressed all this. We began to get somewhere and we discovered why she had sexual difficulties with her husband and felt angry towards men."

In 1954 he wrote his first paper, for the Journal of Mental Sciences, on LSD use in 36 patients. It concluded: "We consider that the drug will find a significant place in the treatment of the psychoneuroses and allied mental illnesses." But by the mid-60s, Dr Sandison had had enough. The drug had become a street problem. He gave evidence in a couple of Old Bailey cases where arson and a murder were committed under the influence of LSD.

"I don't see either ethically or professionally or technically why it shouldn't be used in the future," he says. "But anything done now has to be very different from what we did. All the expertise developed in those years by a large number of people has been lost so we have to start again."
http://www.guardian.co.uk/drugs/Story/0,2763,1683780,00.html

Posted by boomer on Friday, January 13 @ 03:11:05 EST (2236 reads)
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Why Business Smarts Are Investing Smarts
Economic News, Articles & Resources Why Business Smarts Are Investing Smarts

Why Business Smarts Are Investing Smarts

by Robert Kiyosaki

Tuesday, January 10, 2006

A great quote from Warren Buffett goes: "I'm a better investor because I'm a businessman, and I'm a better businessman because I'm a better investor." So let me tell you how to be a better investor by being better at business.

Business knowledge varies among these three kinds of people:

  1. Non-Investors: They expect that someone (such as their parents, their kids, a spouse, a company, or the government) will take care of them when their working days are over.
  2. Passive Investors: They turn their money over to someone or some organization, such as a mutual fund, to manage. It's the passive investor who tends to believe the financial planners' mantra of "work hard, save money, get out of debt, invest for the long term, and diversify."
  3. Active Investors: These people tend to manage their own portfolios and assets, as well as hand-picking their advisors, who are not brokers or sales people. To be a successful active investor requires a higher financial IQ, more real world entrepreneurial business experience, and a very smart advisory team.

For non-investors and passive investors, investing is risky. The main reason is because these two groups of people have no control over the investments they're involved in. While active investors know there's risk, they also realize that the greater the control they have, the less the risk.

Getting a Grip on Business

What do I mean by control? Let me illustrate using the example of driving a car. To be a safe driver, there are six basic controls we all must have:

  1. Steering wheel
  2. Gas pedal
  3. Brakes
  4. Gear shift
  5. Driver's education/license
  6. Insurance

You wouldn't drive a car if you didn't have any one of the above controls. Yet, when it comes to investing, this is what most people do -- they invest without having any influence over the six basic controls of investing or a business:

  1. Income
  2. Expenses
  3. Asset value
  4. Liabilities
  5. Financial education/management
  6. Insurance

The reason Warren Buffett says he's a better investor is because he's a businessman who has control of those six levers of a business. In other words, he can tell how good an investment is by how well management manipulates these basic controls. In most of his investments, Buffett doesn't just buy an equity position, he does his best to buy control of the business.

A good business person wants control over their business. For example, if sales are down and expenses are up, a good business person knows what to do to correct the situation. In my real estate investments, as soon as interest rates began to drop around 2000, our team immediately refinanced our debt (liabilities) on our properties, which reduced expenses, increased income, and boosted the intrinsic asset value of the property.

When I invest in real estate, I have lots of insurance. If a building burns or a tenant falls, I have insurance to cover those risks. A mutual fund has no insurance. That is why $7 trillion to $9 trillion were lost when the market crashed in 2000. Today, in spite of not having any insurance against losses, millions of employees happily deposit their money in their 401(k).

Know What You're Doing

The bad news for most non-investors and passive investors is they pick investments that don't welcome investor control. In fact, most non-investors and passive investors invest in the riskiest of all investments -- savings, stocks, bonds, and mutual funds -- all dangerous picks since investors lack control.

Ask yourself these questions:

  1. Do you have control over the dollar's fluctuation in value?
  2. Can you get Bill Gates to reduce Microsoft's expenses or replace its new marketing team?
  3. Do you have any control over interest rates?
  4. Do you know your mutual-fund manager personally?

While I do have some money in stocks, bonds, and mutual funds, most of my resources are in investments I control.

Even worse, most financial advisors -- be they stock brokers, financial planners, or corporate investment advisors -- don't have any control, either. In other words, asking most financial advisors for investment advice is like a asking a taxi driver who's driving a car without a steering wheel, gas pedal, brakes, or insurance to take you to the airport.

That's why investing is risky for most non-investors and passive investors. As Warren Buffett says, "Risk comes from not knowing what you're doing."

http://finance.yahoo.com/columnist/article/richricher/2188?p=1

Posted by boomer on Tuesday, January 10 @ 15:47:09 EST (2216 reads)
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