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Ecology and Economics

Ecology and Economics

July 26, 2013 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

The Philippines negotiator at a 2012 climate change conference is clearly affected by the reality of the impact of climate change on his own country.

A Guardian article give some additional information and a transcript of his speech:

When a senior diplomat at global talks breaks down in public, it is a signal that other countries must pay attention. It happens rarely, but it can have a dramatic effect.
 
On Thursday, it happened in a full plenary session of the COP18 climate talks at Doha.
 
Naderev Saño, the lead negotiator of the Philippines delegation, got halfway through his prepared statement and then stopped (video).
 
He wanted to relate the tortured negotiations to the tragedy unfolding in his own country when typhoon Bopha slammed into the island of Mindanao, killing hundreds of people and making thousands homeless. It was, he said, like hurricane Sandy which hit New York, Haiti and Cuba last month, a clear sign of climate change. No typhoon had ever come so far south, it was more intense than ever and one had not hit this region in many decades. Saño told the plenary session:
 
“As we sit here in these negotiations, even as we vacillate and procrastinate here, the death toll is rising. There is massive and widespread devastation. Hundreds of thousands of people have been rendered without homes. And the ordeal is far from over, as typhoon Bopha has regained some strength as it approaches another populated area in the western part of the Philippines.
“Madam chair, we have never had a typhoon like Bopha, which has wreaked havoc in a part of the country that has never seen a storm like this in half a century. And heartbreaking tragedies like this are not unique to the Philippines, because the whole world, especially developing countries struggling to address poverty and achieve social and human development, confront these same realities.
 
“Madam chair, I speak on behalf of 100 million Filipinos, a quarter of a million of whom are eeking out a living working here in Qatar [as migrant labourers]. And I am making an urgent appeal, not as a negotiator, not as a leader of my delegation, but as a Filipino …”
At this point he broke down.
 
“I appeal to the whole world, I appeal to leaders from all over the world, to open our eyes to the stark reality that we face. I appeal to ministers. The outcome of our work is not about what our political masters want. It is about what is demanded of us by 7 billion people.
 
“I appeal to all, please, no more delays, no more excuses. Please, let Doha be remembered as the place where we found the political will to turn things around. Please, let 2012 be remembered as the year the world found the courage to find the will to take responsibility for the future we want. I ask of all of us here, if not us, then who? If not now, then when? If not here, then where?”
 
“Thank you madam chair.”
The hall rose and applauded.
 
Later I spoke to Saño, or “Yeb” as he is widely known. He said: “This was the 16th typhoon this year. It was particularly intense and uncharacteristic, struck the province of Davao Oriental. I know the area well. I have been there many times. Quite a few of our delegation have their families there.
 
“Each destructive typhoon season costs us 2% of our GDP, and the reconstruction costs a further 2%, which means we lose nearly 5% of our economy every year to storms. We have received no climate finance to adapt or to prepare ourselves for typhoons and other extreme weather we are now experiencing.

“We have not seen any money from the rich countries to help us to adapt. So more and more people die every year. I feel very frustrated. I was very emotional because it tears your heart out when you know your people are feeling the impact. We cannot go on like this. It cannot be a way of life that we end up running always from storms.
 
“You feel frustrated when the UN process does not work. We always go to the brink in the negotiations. That is a bad sign. Climate change negotiations cannot be based on the way we currently measure progress. It is a clear sign of planetary and economic and environmental dysfunction.”

Looking around for more info I found an interesting article, on a Philippines website, that notes:

The whole world also has to rethink the present system of production and distribution which is not only wrecking havoc on our environment and causing climate change but also continues an unacceptable system of inequality that favors a few wealthy over millions of impoverished people.
 
The ethic and system to produce profit for a few will have to urgently give way to a world where production is geared for people’s welfare and needs, for immediate use, for immediate response to people’s basic needs for food, clothing, and shelter.
 
The present profit-oriented system will have to change as well to protect and preserve nature and our earth. Why must a few be allowed to continue to create poverty among people and destruction of our earth?

I haven’t found a site explaining the link between tornadoes and climate change. I don’t know the science but is important/urgent for me is the link between ecology and economics drawn by the writer of the aticle quoted.

davidsuzuki

Breathariansim

Breathariansim

July 25, 2013 gavin.sealey Comments 2 comments

I don’t want to make any judgement about this right now but breatharianism is intriguing, not just because going without food is remarkable in itself but because of what it implies about the nature of reality.

I met someone who claims to be a breatharian about a year ago but she didn’t talk too much about it. She didn’t want to be defined by it, it was just part of her life.

I have blogged about bretharianism, also called ‘inedia’ before; what seems a bit different about this guy, Kirby De Lanerolle. He , is that he claims to be able to teach breatharianism and he is young, handsome and more accessible to western sensibilities than people like Prahlad Jani. Kirby gave an interesting TED talk:

TED is a pretty mainstream media vehicle but it does allow non-mainstream speakers with disclaimers:

Note from TED: We’ve flagged this talk, which was filmed at an independent TEDx event, because it falls outside TED’s curatorial guidelines, by virtue of its questionable health advice. For example, it implies humans can gain adequate energy from air and sunlight instead of food, a claim which is not scientifically credible. Indeed it could cause harm if taken seriously.

What Kirby claims is beyond remarkable. He is saying that we can solve the food crisis by learning to live on air and love. There is a sense in which this is obscene; if it is possible to live without food why are people in parts of Africa starving to death? Surely something in them would have been triggered by the crisis of starvation. Kirby is either a liar, or he is one of a group of physiologically different humans who can go without food for extended amounts of time or he is telling the truth and we all have this hidden capability.

Syria

Syria

July 25, 2013 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

This documentary gives good background info on the conflict. It looks like there has been a long history of repression and violence with roots in sectarianism and economic injustice. On the one hand the Assad regime has been brutal in its suppression of opposition and on the other it has provided a framework of stability for a culturally divided people. While Assad has been heavy handed and his violence has been counter productive the US/UK calls for regime changing intervention are also heavy handed and would be counter productive here as they have been in Iraq, Libya and Afghanistan. What the documentary fails to mention is that the majority of Syrians, not just Alawites, prefer Assad on at least a ‘devil you know’ basis.

This is a BBC documentary but nothing here justifies, on humanitarian grounds, the rabid insistence of Cameron, Hague, Obama, et al, that Assad must go. There is however an explanation in that Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Israel and the US/UK share economic interests and political ideologies that put them at odds with the more secular and socialist governments in Syria, Gaddhfi’s Libya and Lebanon and with whatever Iran is. These powers are prepared to work with the Muslim Brotherhood and Sunni extremists who have no love for them but hate what they see as the Sunni and Alawite ‘heretics’ with greater passion.

These days I’m finding that hour long documentaries test my attention span but we really should give time to understanding what motivates our government to violent interventions and the probable consequences of these interventions.

If a 12 Year Old Can Understand This …

If a 12 Year Old Can Understand This …

July 17, 2013 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

This is a very special 12 year old. His understanding of the political situation in Egypt and the Middle East puts most adults to share. I was amused when the interviewer suggests that she doesn’t even know what a ‘fascist theocracy’ and the kid gives a concise and accurate definition.

As I said this kid is special, conscious and articulate he is performing above the expectation for someone his age. But what he is saying is not ‘rocket science’, why don’t more people in the UK realise that their government’s support for the insurgents in Syria is cynical and immoral?

Perception

Perception

July 17, 2013 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

This video shows a great little experiment that would be a good discussion starter with a group looking at the issue of racism. Some people fool themselves or maybe try to fool themselves and others that racial prejudice does not exist or is not a big problem. But it is a problem. People, black and white, have a negative perception of black people, particularly young black men. This perception leads to black people being judged as less worthy than black people and being treated as morally, socially and intellectually inferior. This perception and treatment affect the self perception of black people and some can conform to the stereotype which reinforces it.

This week George Zimmerman was acquitted for the murder of Trayvon Martin. I wrote in a FB post that:

Maybe Zimmerman is not racist in the ‘classic sense’ but racism is inherent in America is a way that is more visceral and institutionalised that in the UK. See http://bit.ly/18kJoGB and http://bit.ly/13uWk7h. Zimmerman was advised to stop following Trayvon, he rejected that advice and there was a confrontation. True we don’t know the facts of that confrontation but it was Z’s responsibility to keep it from escalating and to keep himself and T safe, calling for backup if necessary. I would say that he was negligent/incompetent at best and the system that puts him out on the streets with a gun needs to be reviewed. This hasn’t come out. Also there is a need to look at the context in which this is happening, the context of inherent racism and that of a police state in the US as discussed here: http://youtu.be/01nSGb6waE8.

It was Zimmerman’s perception of Trayvon that led to the shooting. Trayvon Martin was effectively guilty of being black. The video of the ‘bike stealers’ shows how people reacted differently to the three actors. It is not a stretch to suggest that Zimmerman might have acted differently if a white boy were acting in exactly the same way as Trayvon. I think, too, that the jury that tried Zimmerman would have come back with a different verson if he had killed a white boy

Sura

Sura

July 17, 2013 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

My cat died a week ago. I wrote in Facebook:

My cat Sura died today. He didn’t come home last night and I found him unmoving in a neighbour’s back garden early this morning. The vet tried to stabilise his condition with oxygen and fluid but he died of internal failure. He would have been 16 years old in December. I’m glad I had some time to comfort him a bit and say goodbye.

Sometimes he was inconvenient and I didn’t pay enough attention to him; but he was part of my family and my life. It took me a while to feel a sense of loss but I do now. ‘Just a cat’ maybe but a definite personality and I had a spiritual connection with him. My neighbour, Jim, said that he was definitely the ‘top cat’ in the area; he ate out sometimes when my other neighbour Afshan fed him chicken scraps.

His body will be cremated and the ashes returned to me. I checked at the vet’s and was told that I would be notified within the next week.

Tai Chi Notes

Tai Chi Notes

July 7, 2013 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

The Mei Quan community site has some useful guidance on the 24 step short form:

step1

Step one is called Opening the Form. I find this easy to remember .. the rest not so much.

 

step2

Step 2 is called Part the Wild Horse’s Mane. It starts from left bow stance, moves to right bow stance and returns to left bow stance.

 

step3

Step 3, White Crane Spreads its wings involves much waving of hands and seems more complicated than it is. Most of this step in in left hanging stance.

 

step4

Step 4 is Brush Knee with Twist Step and I am finding this difficult.

 

step5

Step 5 is called Play the Guitar and is as far as I’ve gone with the form.

So far I’ve not really practiced much outside the class, which is why I feel I’ve retained so little.

Another possibly useful resource can be found at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P5hvODK2zW4 which seems to be the beginning of a video series on the short form. I haven’t look at it in all.

WordPress Theme Builders

WordPress Theme Builders

July 2, 2013 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

Thinking about WordPress theme design. Eventually I will have to learn CSS properly and maybe PHP if I want to be a web designer/developer but in the meantime I need design software.

I currently use Artisteer to design themes. This is adequate for simple sites but it has limited flexibility. I’m looking at Headway Themes and Elegant Themes as ‘theme builders’. Elegant Themes costs $89 while Headway costs $174. Other options are highlighted at the Vandelay Design site.

Ultimate Conspiracy

Ultimate Conspiracy

July 2, 2013 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

Despite its title, ‘The Gods of David Icke’, this video has nothing to do with David Icke. Rather it contends that what can broadly be described as the ‘New Age movement’ is part of an extensive ‘Luceferian’ conspiracy that links Aleister Crowley, HP Blavatsky, Teilhard de Chardin, Spiritualism, The Beatles, The Rolling Stones, Ecumenism, Darwinism, the United Nations, the New World Order, Nazism and much else. The premise is that dark spiritual forces have been enticing mankind to rebel against God since the original enticement in Eden.

The video does a nice job of connecting the dots to depict an ‘ultimate conspiracy’ that culminates with the extermination of billions of people and the coming of the ‘Antichrist’. While I do not endorse the underlying thesis I think that there are elements of truth here and the video was interesting enough to keep me watching for two and a half hours.

Netstorms Video

Netstorms Video

June 28, 2013 gavin.sealey Comments 0 Comment

I hate watching and hearing myself. Tammana made this for Netstorms and the quality is good but the content, especially my exposition, is not; it reflects my uncertainty. I will use it on the Netstorms site but hope to do better after the Summer School.

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