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PUBLICATION ANNOUNCEMENT
A Vision for 2012: Planning
for Extraordinary Change by John L. Petersen
John
Petersen wrote his newest book “to provide a framework for the next
administration – or any organization, for that matter – for
thinking about how to deal with the great change that appears to be on the
horizon”. Priests, shamans, and holy men have been talking
about the coming decade for hundreds of years. Many scholars,
examining the recurring patterns of history, also foresee major upheaval on
the horizon. In the small, hard cover volume Petersen
surveys the big changes that he sees converging in the next few years and
presents alternative scenarios that may emerge from the
confluence. He highlights the unbelievable breakthroughs in
knowledge, mindsets, and scientific capabilities that demonstrate our
extraordinary capacity not just to preserve, but to evolve. Former Speaker of the House of Representatives, Newt Gingrich has said
that “A Vision for 2012 will stimulate you to think deeply about the
challenges we face, the solutions we need, and the changes that should
occur to prevent the bad changes that could occur”. Former senator
and presidential candidate Gary Hart added “Even for those of us who
have known John Petersen over the years, his insights into our
revolutionary age still are enlightening, and often astonishing. As the
Paul Revere of the early 21st century, his message is: The Future is
Here! He is a visionary with an ethical dimension and a too little
known national asset. This deceptively short essay is a primer for an
explosive future that is already upon us. It should be required reading for
the next President.”
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FUTURE FACTS - FROM THIS ISSUE
- For all who have wondered if they could enjoy the benefits of exercise
without the pain of exertion, the answer may one day be: YES.
- Bangladesh may not be as vulnerable to rising sea levels caused by
climate change as previously feared; satellite images show the country's
landmass is actually growing.
- The nation’s biggest store chains are coming to see their
immense, flat, sun-catching roofs as an untapped resource.
- An internal World Bank study has concluded that biofuels have forced
global food prices up by 75% - far more than previously estimated.
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INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE
• If You Have a Problem, Ask Everyone
• Human Remote Control May
Spell End for Teachers • GPS
Headsets Make Sure the Cows Come Home
If
You Have a Problem, Ask Everyone – (New York Times – July 21,
2008) InnoCentive is a company that links organizations
(seekers) with problems (challenges) to people all over the world (solvers)
who win cash prizes for resolving them. The company gets a posting fee and,
if the problem is solved, a “finders fee” equal to about 40
percent of the prize. The process, according to John Seely Brown, a
theorist of information technology and former director of the Xerox Palo
Alto Research Center, reflects “a huge shift in popular culture, from
consuming to participating” enabled by the interactivity so
characteristic of the Internet.
Human Remote Control May Spell End for Teachers – (CNN –
August 7, 2008) Teachers and textbooks beware - your
future could be under threat from a quickly developing and very smart
technology. At the center of this technology is a man who recently turned
his face into a remote control - Jacob Whitehill, of the University of
California's Machine Perception Lab (MPLAB). More than just a wacky stunt,
Whitehill's feat marked a major step forward in the way people could one
day learn by establishing facial expression recognition in robot teachers.
The teaching robots or Intelligent Tutoring Systems (ITS) are computer
systems that provide personalized instruction and feedback to students
without human intervention.
GPS Headsets Make Sure the Cows Come Home – (Crave – August
6, 2008) The U.S. Department of Agriculture and the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology are teaming up to remotely corral
cattle using a wireless device that sends sound straight into the bovines'
ears. The solar-powered "Ear-A-Round" is a naugahyde "helmet" held in place
by the cow's ears. Atop the holster sits an electronics device hooked to
sound-transmitting stereo earphones and containing a GPS unit that could
let farmers monitor the animals' whereabouts or direct them to move in a
certain direction from afar.
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NEW REALITIES
Practical Cloaking Devices
on the Horizon? – (Phys Org – August 10, 2008) Invisibility cloaks get a step closer to realization, with the
demonstration of a new material that can bend (visible) light the 'wrong'
way for the first time in three dimensions. Researchers report a
metamaterial that produces negative refraction of visible light, and show
that it can be can be easily probed from free space, paving the way for
practical optical device applications.
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DISCOVERIES ENABLED BY NEW
TECHNOLOGY
• Rock Reunites Antarctica and North
America • The Hottest Water on Earth
Rock Reunites Antarctica and North America – (Live Science –
July 28, 2008) For several decades, researchers have
theorized that part of the ancient supercontinent Rodinia broke away from
what is now the southwestern United States around 800 million to 600
million years ago, eventually drifting southward to become eastern
Antarctica and Australia. The idea is known as the southwestern United
States to East Antarctica (SWEAT) hypothesis. But there was little physical
evidence that could tie the southernmost continent to the long-disappeared
Rodinia. Until scientists stumbled upon this rock, that is.
The Hottest Water on Earth – (New Scientist – August 4,
2008) Deep down at the very bottom of the Atlantic Ocean,
geochemist Andrea Koschinsky has found something truly extraordinary: "It's
water," she says, "but not as we know it." At over 3 kilometers beneath the
surface, sitting atop what could be a huge bubble of magma, it's the
hottest water ever found on Earth. The fluid is in a "supercritical" state
that has never before been seen in nature. The fluid spews out of two black
smokers called Two Boats and Sisters Peak. Liquids boil and evaporate as
temperature and pressure rise. But push both factors beyond a critical
point and something odd happens: the gas and liquid phase merge into one
supercritical fluid. For water, this fluid is denser than vapor, but
lighter than liquid water.
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GENETICS/HEALTH TECHNOLOGY
• Aging May Be an Accident of Evolution
• Couch Mouse to Mr. Mighty by
Pills Alone • Futuristic
Fashions will Fight Our Health Scares •
New Chemicals Trick the Brain into Eating Less • Gene Tags Fuel Obesity
Epidemic
Aging May Be an Accident of Evolution – (Daily Galaxy – July
29, 2008) The prevailing theory of aging is being
challenged by Stanford University Medical School researchers. Their
discovery contradicts the generally held hyopothesis that aging is a
buildup of tissue damage similar to rust. The Stanford findings suggest
specific genetic instructions drive the process. If they are right, science
might one day find ways of switching the signals off and halting or even
reversing aging.
Couch Mouse to Mr. Mighty by Pills Alone – (New York Times –
August 1, 2008) For all who have wondered if they could
enjoy the benefits of exercise without the pain of exertion, the answer may
one day be yes — just take a pill that tricks the muscles into
thinking they have been working out furiously. Researchers at the Salk
Institute in San Diego reported that they had found two drugs that did
wonders for the athletic endurance of couch potato mice. One drug, known as
Aicar, increased the mice’s endurance on a treadmill by 44% after
just four weeks of treatment. A second drug, GW1516, supercharged the mice
to a 75% increase in endurance but had to be combined with exercise to have
any effect. “It’s a little bit like a free lunch without the
calories,” said Dr. Ronald M. Evans, leader of the Salk group.
Futuristic Fashions will Fight Our Health Scares – (CNN –
August 4, 2008) From sensors in workout gear that monitor
sweating while you run at the gym, to underwear that aims to detect cancer
cells, the contents of our wardrobes have been quietly undergoing a
revolution. Trials of smart clothes that can repel insects and mask nasty
odors such as cigarette smoke have proved successful and are already being
marketed. Last year, a design student at Cornell University designed a
garment that can prevent colds and flu and, crucially, never needs washing.
We can expect to see, in the not-too-distant future, fabrics that have
in-built cooling, deodorant, moisturizer and even vitamins, experts say.
New Chemicals Trick the Brain into Eating Less – (Scientific
American – August, 2008) What if a handful of tiny
compounds could fool our brains into eating differently? That is the idea
behind the new science of flavor modulation. Scientists who have unlocked
the long-standing mystery of taste biology are developing inexpensive yet
potent compounds that make foods taste sweeter, saltier and more savory
(heartier) than they really are. By adding tiny amounts of these modulators
to traditional foods, manufacturers could reduce the amount of sugar, salt
and monosodium glutamate (MSG) needed to satisfy, resulting in healthier
products.
Experts Find
'Scaredy-Cat' Gene – (BBC News – August 11, 2008) Variations in a gene may help explain why horror movies
shock some people and entertain others, say German scientists. People with
one version of the COMT gene startled more dramatically to unpleasant
images than others, the researchers found. The work in Behavioral
Neuroscience suggests inborn differences make some prone to extreme anxiety
and stress.
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ENVIRONMENTAL ISSUES
• A Dash of Lime - a New Twist that May
Cut CO2 Levels • Canadian
Arctic Sheds Ice Chunk •
Bangladesh Landmass is Growing • Melting Ice Threatens Arctic
Park • Nepal's
“Restaurant” for Vultures •
Is China's Pollution Poisoning Its
Children?
A Dash of Lime - a
New Twist that May Cut CO2 Levels – (Phys Org – July 21,
2008) Adding lime to seawater increases alkalinity,
boosting seawater's ability to absorb CO2 from air and reducing the
tendency to release it back again. The process of making lime generates
CO2, but adding the lime to seawater absorbs almost twice as much CO2. The
overall process is therefore 'carbon negative'. However, the idea, which
has been bandied about for years, was thought unworkable because of the
expense of obtaining lime from limestone and the amount of CO2 released in
the process. Shell is so impressed with a newly developed approach that it
is funding an investigation into its economic feasibility.
Canadian
Arctic Sheds Ice Chunk – (BBC News – July 30, 2008) Nearly 20 sq km (eight sq miles) of ice from the Ward Hunt
shelf has split away from Ellesmere Island, according to satellite
pictures. It is thought to be the biggest piece of ice shed in the region
since 60 sq km of the nearby Ayles Ice Shelf broke away in 2005. Scientists
say further splitting could occur during the Arctic summer melt. Scientists
visited the area recently and found major new fractures in the ice that
stretched for more than 16km (10 miles).
Bangladesh
Landmass is Growing – (BBC News – July 30, 2008) New research shows Bangladesh may not be as vulnerable to
rising sea levels caused by climate change as previously feared, scientists
in Dhaka say. They say satellite images show the country's landmass is
actually growing because of sediment dumped by rivers. A report by UN
scientists has projected that rising sea levels will inundate 17% of
Bangladesh by 2050, making about 30 million people homeless. One its
authors said he saw little in the new research to change his mind.
Melting Ice
Threatens Arctic Park – (BBC News – August 1, 2008) A national park in Canada's Arctic has been partly closed
after record high temperatures caused flash flooding. A combination of
melting permafrost and erosion means part of the park will remain shut
until geologists can examine the damage. The Auyuittuq - which means The
Land that Never Melts - covers an area of over 19,000sq km (7,340sq miles)
and is dominated by the huge Penny Ice Cap. The park consists mainly of
glaciers, rock and polar sea ice.
Nepal's
“Restaurant” for Vultures – (BBC News – July 31,
2008) Two of the seven vulture species in the Indian
subcontinent have declined catastrophically in number and are now
endangered. Scientists recently pinpointed the cause - the drug,
diclofenac. Farmers often give it to their cows as a painkiller. But if the
cows die soon afterwards, the drug is deadly for the vultures which feed on
their flesh. Nepal and India have now banned diclofenac because it was
harming the vultures. It has been replaced by a safe drug called meloxicam.
Under a unique initiative to conserve the scavenging birds, the "vulture
restaurant" buys old and sickly cattle, cares for them until they die
naturally and the feeds them to the vultures.
Is
China's Pollution Poisoning Its Children? – (Scientific American
– August, 2008) Researchers may have found the best
test case yet for environmental molecular epidemiology: a city in China
whose coal-fired power plant was shut down in 2004. Preliminary analysis
shows that children born in 2002, when the plant was still operating, have
smaller heads and lower scores on developmental tests than those born a
year after the plant closed. They also have correspondingly higher levels
of pollution-related genetic abnormalities.
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ENERGY DEVELOPMENTS
• First Solar: Quest for the $1 Watt
• Comfy New Commuter Bikes for
Getting around Town • Major
Discovery Primed to Unleash Solar Revolution •
EEStor: The Story So Far •
New Biomass Technology Dramatically Increases Ethanol
Yield • China's Rapid
Renewables Surge •
Intergalactic Hydrogen Expects to Win Auto X-Prize • Giant Retailers Look to
Sun for Energy Savings
First Solar: Quest
for the $1 Watt – (Phys Org – July 23, 2008) Photovoltaic cells, once so costly they could be used only
to power million-dollar satellites, are today turning up even on humble
parking meters. Now a company called First Solar plans to take the
technology to the next level by making it cost-effective enough to compete
with coal-fired generation. Their means to achieve that involves not the
photovoltaic cell itself but the way in which it is manufactured. Instead
of the familiar silicon, the design uses a compound of cadmium and
tellurium.
Comfy
New Commuter Bikes for Getting around Town – (US News & World
Report – June 20, 2008) Bike stores and
manufacturers across the nation are reporting a significant uptick lately
in sales. "They're selling out of all the commuting bikes—all bikes,
by the way—that they can get their hands on," says Bill Fields, a
consultant who has followed the bicycle industry for decades and
anticipates a 20% bump in the "comfort bike" category, which includes
commuting bikes, by year's end. Meantime, a bill that will allow employers
to offer financial incentives to bicycle commuters is winding its way
through the House and Senate. A bike-sharing program launching this month
in Washington, D.C., which allows members to use bikes from 10 rental
locations with the swipe of a card, has spurred interest in other
cities.
Major
Discovery Primed to Unleash Solar Revolution – (MIT News – July
31, 2008) Until now, solar power has been a daytime-only
energy source, because storing extra solar energy for later use is
prohibitively expensive and grossly inefficient. However, MIT researchers
have hit upon a simple, inexpensive, highly efficient process for storing
solar energy. The key component in the process is a new catalyst that
produces oxygen gas from water; another catalyst produces hydrogen gas. The
new catalyst consists of cobalt metal, phosphate and an electrode, placed
in water. When electricity - whether from a photovoltaic cell, a wind
turbine or any other source - runs through the electrode, the cobalt and
phosphate form a thin film on the electrode, and oxygen gas is produced.
EEStor:
The Story So Far – (Earth2Tech – July 30, 3008) Energy storage startup EEStor previously had its energy
storage unit labeled as a potentially “disruptive technology”
by The Economist. Potential markets for disruption include automotive
batteries, grid energy storage and even battlefield power supplies. The
company describes its device as follows: “Using revolutionary ultra
capacitor architecture and environmentally friendly materials the EESU will
have the capability to compete against all existing battery and capacitor
technologies.” The company says its technology can provide 10 times
the energy of lead-acid batteries at one tenth the weight and half the
price.
New Biomass
Technology Dramatically Increases Ethanol Yield – (Phys Org –
July 28, 2008) Producing ethanol from renewable biomass
sources such as grasses is desirable because they are potentially available
in large quantities. The new technology features a fast, mild, acid-free
pretreatment process that increases by at least 10 times the amount of
simple sugars released from inexpensive biomass for conversion to ethanol.
The technology effectively eliminates the use of expensive and
environmentally unsafe chemicals currently used to pretreat biomass.
China's
Rapid Renewables Surge – (BBC News – August 1, 2008) China's rapid investment in low carbon technologies has
catapulted the nation up the global renewable energy rankings. The Climate
Group study said China invested $12bn in renewables during 2007, second
only to Germany. However, it was expected to top the table by the end of
2009, it added.
Intergalactic
Hydrogen Expects to Win Auto X-Prize – (Pure Energy Systems
– August 9, 2008) Intergalactic Hydrogen (IH)
believes they can win the Automotive X-Prize championship with their
multi-fuel technology. The Auto X-Prize is searching for a vehicle that can
get 100 MPG-equivalent (MPGe), and would like to award the winner the
ability to produce 10,000 copies of their championship design.
Intergalactic Hydrogen multi-fuel vehicles have the ability to run on
hydrogen, methane, or ethanol while retaining the ability to use gasoline.
The same system can be used on a diesel engine as well.
Giant
Retailers Look to Sun for Energy Savings – (New York Times –
August 10, 2008) The nation’s biggest store chains
are coming to see their immense, flat roofs as an untapped resource. In
recent months, chains including Wal-Mart Stores, Kohl’s, Safeway and
Whole Foods Market have installed solar panels on roofs of their stores to
generate electricity on a large scale. So far, most chains have outfitted
fewer than 10% of their stores. Over the long run, assuming Congress renews
a favorable tax provision and more states offer incentives, the chains
promise a solar construction program that would ultimately put panels atop
almost every big store in the country.
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INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
• Electronics Giants to Create Wireless
HD Standard • Thailand Bans
Grand Theft Auto IV • Emotiv's
New Mind-Control Headset for PCs
Electronics
Giants to Create Wireless HD Standard – (Associated Press –
July 23, 2008) Sony, Samsung and other
consumer-electronics heavyweights are uniting to support a technology that
could send high-definition video signals wirelessly from a single set-top
box to screens around the home.The consortium is an important development
in the race to create a definitive way to replace tangles of video cables,
but doesn't end it — both Sony and Samsung also are supporting a
competing technology.
Thailand
Bans Grand Theft Auto IV – (BBC News – August 4, 2008) Copies of Grand Theft Auto IV have been pulled in Thailand
after a teenager confessed to murdering a taxi driver by trying to copy a
scene from the game. Bangkok police Captain Veerarit Pipatanasak said: "He
wanted to find out if it was as easy in real life to rob a taxi as it was
in the game.”
Emotiv's
New Mind-Control Headset for PCs – (BusinessWeek – July 30,
2008) What if you could simply think about an action, and
your computer would respond? The executives at a San Francisco startup
called Emotiv Systems have spent the last half-decade researching so-called
brain-computer interfaces. Emotiv is currently fine-tuning a mind-reading
headset called the Epoc, which should ship late this year. The $299 device
purports to eavesdrop on your thoughts and translate them into computer
instructions, so you can play a game or arrange photos without using your
hands or speaking words.
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TERRORISM, SECURITY AND THE FUTURE OF
WARFARE
• Web Security Report Outlines
Structure of Cybercrime Gangs •
Bees Join Hunt for Serial Killers • Photography as a Weapon
Web
Security Report Outlines Structure of Cybercrime Gangs – (E-Week
– July 15, 2008) In its trends report for Q2 2008,
researchers at Finjan got inside the underground hacker economy and found
that as threats have grown more sophisticated, so have the organizations
pumping them out. Individual hackers and loosely organized groups have
apparently gone the way of the dinosaur, replaced by well-structured
organizations complete with a boss and underboss. Competition between the
groups can be fierce, as Finjan researchers reported the commodization of
certain types of stolen data has dropped profit margins. Credit card and
bank account numbers with PINs not too long ago were selling for $100 each
or more, according to the report. Today, prices have fallen to $10 to $20
each in some cases.
Bees
Join Hunt for Serial Killers – (BBC News – July 30, 3008) Just as bees forage some distance away from their hives, so
murderers avoid killing near their homes, says the University of London
team. This "geographic profiling" works so well in bees that future
experiments on the animals could now be fed back to improve crime-solving.
Bees create a "buffer zone" around their hive where they will not forage,
to reduce the risk of predators and parasites locating the nest. It turns
out that this pattern of behavior is similar to the geographic profile of
criminals stalking their victims. "Most murders happen close to the
killer's home, but not in the area directly surrounding a criminal's house,
where crimes are less likely to be committed because of the fear of getting
caught by someone they know," Dr Raine explained.
Photography
as a Weapon – (Zoom – August 11, 2008) On
July 10, various major daily newspapers published a photograph of four
Iranian missiles streaking heavenward; then Little Green Footballs
(significantly, a blog and not a daily newspaper) provided evidence that
the photograph had been faked. Later, many of those same papers published a
Whitman’s sampler of retractions and apologies. It begs the question:
Why do we tend to trust photographs? Hany Farid, a Dartmouth professor and
an expert on digital photography who has published a number of journal
articles and a recent Scientific American article on digital photographic
fraud, looks at that question in light of the way the brain processes
visual information.
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GLOBAL EPIDEMIC
AIDS
Infection Rate in U.S. Higher Than Previously Estimated – (Washington
Post – August 2, 2008) Updated federal estimates of
the annual number of new HIV infections in the United States reveal that
while the AIDS epidemic here is worse than previously thought, prevention
efforts appear to be having some effect. Even though the number of
Americans living with HIV has risen by more than a quarter million people
since 1998 - largely the result of life-extending antiretroviral drugs -
the number of new cases each year has declined slightly over that period.
That suggests that a person's likelihood of transmitting the virus to
someone else is substantially lower now than it was a decade ago.
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TRENDS OF GOVERNMENT
• Travelers' Laptops May be Detained at
Border • FBI Admits Spying on
Multiple US Reporters, Apologizes
Travelers'
Laptops May be Detained at Border – (Washington Post – August
1, 2008) Federal agents may take a traveler's laptop
computer or other electronic device to an off-site location for an
unspecified period of time without any suspicion of wrongdoing, as part of
border search policies the Department of Homeland Security recently
disclosed. Also, officials may share copies of the laptop's contents with
other agencies and private entities for language translation, data
decryption or other reasons, according to the policies, dated July 16 and
issued by two DHS agencies, U.S. Customs and Border Protection and U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement. DHS officials said the newly disclosed
policies - which apply to anyone entering the country, including U.S.
citizens - are reasonable and necessary to prevent terrorism. Officials
said such procedures have long been in place but were disclosed last month
because of public interest in the matter.
FBI
Admits Spying on Multiple US Reporters, Apologizes – (RawStory
– August 9, 2008) “We're sorry.” That's
the message from FBI Director Robert Mueller to the executive editors of
the New York Times and the Washington Post, after an inspector general
discovered that the agency had seized telephone records from four US
reporters without a grand jury. Neither Mueller nor his agency offered any
explanations regarding the nature of the subject of the investigation that
involved spying on American reporters based overseas. Writing in the Post
today, Johnson noted that the reporters were writing about Islamic
terrorism in Southeast Asia.
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ECONOMIC INDICATORS
• Shipping Costs Crimp
Globalization • Pace of
Falling Home Prices Gain Speed •
A Second, Far Larger Wave of U.S. Mortgage Defaults is
Building • $2 Trillian in Losses
Shipping
Costs Crimp Globalization – (New York Times – August 3,
2008) Globalization may be losing some of the inexorable
economic power it had for much of the past quarter-century, even as it
faces fresh challenges as a political ideology. Some see evidence that
companies looking to keep prices low will have to move some production
closer to consumers. To avoid having to ship all its products from abroad,
the Swedish furniture manufacturer Ikea opened its first factory in the
United States in May. Some electronics companies that left Mexico in recent
years for the lower wages in China are now returning to Mexico, because
they can lower costs by trucking their output overland to American
consumers.
Pace
of Falling Home Prices Gain Speed – (Bloomberg – July 29,
2008) Home prices in 20 U.S. metropolitan areas fell at a
faster pace in May, indicating the three-year housing slump has not
stabilized. The S&P/Case-Shiller home-price index dropped 15.8% from a
year earlier, the biggest decline since records began in 2001, after
decreasing 15.2% in April. The gauge has fallen every month since January
2007. One in every 171 households was in some stage of the foreclosure
process, an increase of 121% from a year earlier, according to RealtyTrac
Inc., a real estate database firm.
A
Second, Far Larger Wave of U.S. Mortgage Defaults is Building –
(Herald Tribune – August 4, 2008) The first wave of
Americans to default on their home mortgages appears to be cresting, but a
second, far larger one is building with alarming speed. After two years of
upward spiraling defaults, the problems with mortgages made to people with
weak, or subprime, credit are showing the first, tentative signs of
leveling off. But with the U.S. economy struggling, homeowners with better
credit are now falling behind on their payments in growing numbers. The
percentage of mortgages in arrears in the category of loans one rung above
subprime, so-called alternative-A, or alt-A, mortgages, quadrupled to 12%
in April from a year earlier. Delinquencies among prime loans, which
account for most of the $12 trillion market, doubled to 2.7% in that
time.
$2 Trillion
in Losses – (CNN – August 4, 2008) This video
clip is an interview with Nouriel Roubini, professor of economics at New
York University, as he discusses what he sees on the economic horizon: a
severe recession that might last until the middle of next year, with the
total losses becoming as much as $2 - $3 trillion.
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DEMOGRAPHICS
• Secret Report: Biofuel Caused Food
Crisis • Mideast Facing Choice between Crops
and Water • Lord of the Memes
Secret
Report: Biofuel Caused Food Crisis – (Guardian – July 4,
2008) An internal World Bank study has delivered a blow
to plant energy drive. Biofuels have forced global food prices up by 75% -
far more than previously estimated - according to a confidential World Bank
report. The damning unpublished assessment is based on the most detailed
analysis of the crisis so far, carried out by an internationally-respected
economist at global financial body. The figure emphatically contradicts the
US government's claims that plant-derived fuels contribute less than 3% to
food-price rises.
Mideast
Facing Choice between Crops and Water – (New York Times – July
21, 2008) Global food shortages have placed the Middle
East and North Africa in a quandary, as they are forced to choose between
growing more crops to feed an expanding population or preserving their
already scant supply of water. For decades nations in this region have
drained aquifers, sucked the salt from seawater and diverted the mighty
Nile to make the deserts bloom. But those projects were so costly and used
so much water that it remained far more practical to import food than to
produce it. Now, the worldwide food crisis is making many countries in this
politically volatile region rethink that math.
Lord
of the Memes – (Herald Tribune – August 8, 2008) This tongue-in-cheek editorial to a failed
pseudo-intellectual claims that “over the past few years, there has
been a tectonic shift in the basis of good taste.” Satire aside, what
this article examines is the idea that media has displaced culture. As
commenters on The American Scene blog have pointed out, the means of
transmission replaced the content of culture as the center of historical
excitement and as the marker of social status. Now the global
thought-leader is defined less by what culture he enjoys than by the
smartphone, social bookmarking site, social network and e-mail provider he
uses to store and transmit it.
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JUST FOR FUN
Amazing
House Designs that Get You Close to Nature – (Green Upgrader –
July 29, 2008) Here are 14 amazing house designs that can
help you reconnect with your environment. And don’t worry:
there’s a little something here for everyone from billionaires
to… well, the homeless.
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A FINAL QUOTE...
The distinction between the past, present and future
is only a stubbornly persistent illusion. Albert Einstein
A special thanks to:, Erik Beaumont, Philip Bogdonoff, Bernard Calil, Ken
Dabkowski, Neil Freer, Ursula Freer, Paul Hoffman, KurzweilAI, Planet 2025,
Sebastian McCallister, Diane C. Petersen, John C..Petersen, Planet 2025,
the Schwartzreport, Joel Snell, Gary Sycalik, and Steve Ujvarosy, our
contributors to this issue.
If you see something we should know
about, do send it along - thanks. johnp@arlingtoninstitute.org
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