Thursday, January 31, 2008

Are you hip?

This you need to know about ......


SPIEGEL ONLINE January 22, 2008

GENETICS REVOLUTION

Craig Venter wants to email life


By Christian Stöcker


A pioneer in the field of genetics can envision a fantastic future in which genetic codes are sent by email and then reassembled as living beings at the other end. Or so Craig Venter forecast at an Internet conference in Munich. He also hopes to solve the problem of global warming—with designer microbes. ...


CRAIG VENTER: LIFE VIA EMAIL
Start Slide Show: Click on photo (6 photos)


It is a dense network. At the annual gathering of the digital elite, organized by Burda Media in Munich, cell phone networks have barely enough capacity. WLAN and UMTS are groaning under their full load, as everyone calls, surfs the Internet, types—everywhere you look people have their Smartphones and their laptops, and the crowds of Blackberry devotees now also have an iPhone handy.


The event is called DLD. Previously this stood for the "Digital Lifestyle Day," but it is now "Digital Life, Design." The attendees are first-rate—in part because the event is so opportune: many of the international business stars to whom the publisher pays tribute in Munich will subsequently travel on to Davos for the World Economic Forum. And so this year we are running into people like Richard Dawkins and Marissa Mayer of Google in the hallways. And Jason Calacanis, who invented the concept of blogging, chatted with Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales—oh yeah, and even Naomi Campbell will make an appearance today.


Bio-revolutionaries amidst technology fans


The excitement is palpable, latching on to topics like the new markets in India and China, social networks, and above all the mobile network. Although it possible that this last issue seems especially urgent because everyone is constantly trying to get on the Internet, and failing.


Amidst all the enthusiasm for technology, one conversation had more explosive potential than the talking points of all the old and new digital entrepreneurs put together. Only hardly anybody noticed. DLD is always so crowded that you have to stand for the interesting events. But when genetics entrepreneur Craig Venter and genetics revolutionary Richard Dawkins, who took on the entire religious Right with his antireligious tome The Selfish Gene, got up on stage yesterday to talk about a "gene-centric world view," noticeably fewer people were standing than is often the case. And this even though their talk contained more revolutionary statements and wild forecasts by far than the other presentations looking toward future.


Venter, who last made headlines when he published his personal genome in full on the Internet, made brazen claims, but nobody reacted. Venter insisted that climate change represents a much greater risk to humanity than genetic engineering, which could actually help fight it. For example, with genetically manipulated microbes capable of absorbing CO2: "We can change the environment through genetic engineering." John Brockman, who is the literary agent of both Dawkins and Venter, had the role of moderator, but let Dawkins take over. When Venter began to speak of specific genetically engineered correctives for the environment, however, he abruptly woke up. Somebody once explained to him that when you talk about these subjects in Germany, "it causes an uproar—but everyone appears so calm!" And he is right.


"Life is becoming technology"

The momentum was building and, always one to provoke, Venter was on the ball. Dawkins’ was inevitably the role of Devil’s advocate and he asked whether Venter considers that all life is technology. "Life is machinery," he answered, "which as we learn how to manipulate it, becomes a technology." Dawkins, who wore shirt sleaves and an eccentric white and gray tie, and who came across a bit like a friendly math teacher, suddenly found himself delivering a tentative warning: the unchecked intermingling of gene pools could have unforeseen consequences. He drew a parallel to the unforeseen devastation that introducing new microbes, plants, or animal species can cause to ecosystems.

Dawkins knows what he is talking about—in the ’70s he acheived fame with his book entitled The Selfish Gene. At the start of his talk, he declared that "genes are information." From this Venter transitioned into the depiction of a future in which genetic information could be sent over email for the receiver to reassemble as a living being: "We can already reconstruct a chromosome in the laboratory." Last October, the Guardian already reported that Venter would soon be the first to create an entirely artificial life form—something he is accomplishing even as he speaks of a future in which genes are software and humans, at their discretion, can produce life that conforms to their wishes. The question of what happens when genes, which behave all too selfishly in Dawkins’ own portrayal of them, breed freely did not come up.

At the same time as this staggering conversation took place on the podium, between a radical genetic engineer and a mastermind in the science of genetics, who evoked a future with artificially designed life and DNA-printers that is already emerging from their current scientific revolution, directly next door a group of Web Entrepreneurs and venture capitalists were engaged in a heated discussion about social networks and earning opportunities. But next to the two dignified grey haired figures onstage, they suddenly seemed a little colorless—almost even a little outdated.


Translated by Karla Taylor
German Language Original

Want more on Craig Venter and the work of his Institute?

Click here:http://www.edge.org/documents/archive/edge234.html#what

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Global Economics that Trickle Down to your Neighborhood

We check in again, with the writers at The Black Commentator for a perspective on world events that major news outlets simply will not offer. This website manages to stay abreast of, and offer insight on a wide range of topics, that affect us all. If you find their efforts valuable, I encourage you to support their work with a subscription.

Left Margin:

The Elite Huddle in Davos----Meanwhile, in Stockton California..........

By Carl Bloice

Editorial Board

The Black Commentator


When over 2,500 delegates gather at the plush resort town of Davos, Switzerland a week from now, they will have a lot on their plate. They had planned to open the annual meeting of the international elite with discussions of the environment and terrorism but that could change. Since the gathering last year, things are different and a new sense of urgency will mark the deliberations. It’s unlikely that the official theme of the meeting - “The Power of Collaborative Innovation” - will encompass the most critical items on the agenda.



Of the five listed “pillars” of discussion at this year’s meeting, the one titled “Economics and Finance: Addressing Economic Insecurity” will surely command the most attention. “You can bet that all the heads of the European, Asian, and American central banks will be in Davos doing their own version of collaborative innovation, trying to coordinate interest-rate cuts to stem the recessionary tide rolling in,” Business Week said last week.



“The global outlook is currently marred by greater levels of political and economic uncertainty than at any point during the past decade,” warned a report co-sponsored by the World Economic Forum, the organizers of the annual meeting in Davos, wrote Gillian Tett in the London-based Financial Times, Jan. 10. She went on to quote one of the report’s co-authors David Nadler: "Systemic financial risk is the most immediate and, from the point of view of economic cost, most severe risk facing the global economy. With so many potential consequences of the 2007 liquidity crunch unresolved, the outlook at the beginning of 2008 is more uncertain than it was a year ago."



The new uncertainty is a reality for a lot of people right now, including the maybe two million in the U.S. faced with losing their homes due to the “credit crunch,” the newly unemployed, and those who have been jobless for a good while. Working people are faced with stagnant or declining wages and the impact of the economic recession that may or may not have begun. But none of these people will be at Davos. Instead, the state of the world at the beginning of 2008 will be pondered by 27 heads of state, 113 government cabinet ministers, a handful of religious figures, hand-picked media leaders, and heads of non-governmental organizations (NGOs). Around 60 percent of those enjoying the snowy Swiss Alps and exchanging calling cards for five days will be business executives from 1,000 of the leading companies in the world. It’s by invitation only and costs a least five figures to attend.



This is no expense account junket. These people take what they do at Davos seriously.
“The unique combination of the world's top business and political leaders, together with the heads of the world's most important NGOs, and religious, cultural and media leaders allows us to approach the problems that face the world in a systematic way and with an eye to tackling the major issues that face us all,” says the Forum’s founder and Executive Chairman Klaus Schwab. “The annual meeting gives all of us a chance to understand and shape the global agenda for the year ahead and beyond, serving global society by making sense of a rapidly changing world and harnessing collaborative innovation to the benefit of us all."



And if you think chart rooms are is just for kids, think again. This year, in partnership with YouTube, the World Economic Forum has launched The Davos Question, with the aim of “creating a global video conversation.”



When the mucky mucks huddled at Davos last year, they talked a lot about globalization. True, some spoke of worrisome economic trends, however, a highlighted message out of those sessions was that the world economy was trending in the right direction and generally all was well. The problem, it was noted, was that the economics shifts and growing economic inequities within and between societies was engendering political problems. This year will be different. The political problems remain but things are far from alright in the world economy – particularly in some of the more advance capitalist countries.



One of the regulars at Davos is Martin Wolf of the Financial Times, who has been described as “conservative doyen of British economic commentators.” Wolf now says he has had a reluctant change of mind since last year. He now favors some regulation of the compensation packages of executives in the world of finance. “I now fear that the combination of the fragility of the financial system with the huge rewards it generates for insiders will destroy something even more important - the political legitimacy of the market economy itself - across the globe. So it is time to start thinking radical thoughts about how to fix the problems.”



Financial services are “virtually the only businesses able to devastate entire economies,” Wolf wrote recently. “Many market liberals would prefer to leave the financial sector to the rigors of the free market. Alas, the evidence of history is clear: we, the public, are unable to live with the consequences.”



Handing huge bonuses to bankers who have been on the job only a short time tempts them to take uncalled-for risks while making it look like they’re making lots of money, Wolf says. “We cannot pretend that the way the financial system behaves is not a matter of public interest - just look at what is happening in the US and UK today; and, second, if the problem is to be fixed, incentives for decision-makers have to be better aligned with the outcomes.”



Of course, the economic problems now facing the U.S. and the UK today cannot be ascribed solely, or even principally to bankers’ pay; it’s more systemic than that. But he does have a point. Wolf was one of those who, last year at Davos, had an “optimistic view of prospects for the world economy” and “pessimism about political prospects”.



“I missed the details of the link between subprime loans, securitization, special investment vehicles and a meltdown in money markets,” Wolf now says. “But I did note that ‘the underpricing of risk and the combination of low interest rates with fast growth almost invite economic blunders. My mistake was to underestimate the ability of the world's premier financial institutions to sink themselves in a quagmire. But I was in good company: theirs.” (He insists on blaming the bankers – not for being greedy or corrupt but for being dumb and that’s surely debatable).


In laying out this semi-mea culpa, Wolf, I think, reveals something very important about the current mortgage crisis in the U.S. and the UK and the looming economic downturn. He quotes approvingly the thesis of two U.S. economic scholars who maintain that the build up of the housing bubble through credit was similar to what brought on debt crisis of the 1980s. This time, surplus savings were, in their words, "recycled to a developing country that exists within the US: the subprime borrowers.”


A developing country that exists within the U.S.? Well, we all know who lives within those borders. They’re the working people and their families who are now in danger of losing their homes – a disproportionate number of whom are African American, Latino, Asian and female. The head of one of the biggest moneylenders once referred to them as an “emerging market.” Then there are the millions of others whose mortgages were not “subprime” but whose lives have been rendered precarious as a result of the finance moguls’ greed, corruption or stupidity. Or, whatever.


The economic situation in the U.S. has indeed taken on a sharp political dimension, coming as it does amid a hard fought Presidential election contest. With the Bush Administration and each of the candidates of both major parties belatedly rushing forward with economic stimulus proposals, the question is, will any of the packages be enough to arrest a sharp economic downturn?


The world of high finance has not been overly impressed by the proposals to date. The Bush administration’s initial statement was followed by a sharp stock market decline. "It's disappointed in the size of the economic growth package. Wall Street's showing its displeasure," one research analyst told the Associated Press. “By the time they actually pass anything, it will be past the time we need it.” James W. Paulsen, a strategist at Wells Capital Management. “I suspect that it’s already too late to prevent a recession,” New York Times columnist Paul Krugman wrote last week, adding that “the next year or two could be quite unpleasant.”
Times columnist Bob Herbert penned an instructive piece Jan. 18. The policy makers, he wrote “should stop, take a deep breath and acknowledge the obvious: the way to put money into the hands of working people is to make sure they have access to good jobs at good wages. That has long been known, but it hasn't been the policy in this country for many years.”


“Big business and the federal government have worked hand in hand to squeeze the daylights out of working people, stripping them (in an era of downsizing and globalization) of much of their bargaining power while ferociously pursuing fiscal policies that radically favored the privileged few,” wrote Herbert.


“There is no question that some kind of stimulus package geared to the needs of ordinary Americans is in order,” continued Herbert. “But that won't begin to solve the fundamental problem. Good jobs at good wages - lots of them, growing like spring flowers in an endlessly fertile field - is the absolutely essential basis for a thriving American economy and a broad-based rise in standards of living.”



Robert Kuttner, co-editor of The American Prospect magazine, has urged Congressional Democrats to come up with a stimulus packed much bigger than those now being proposed and then move beyond it toward measures to reform the economy as a whole. Appearing before an economic town hall meeting on Capitol Hill, co-sponsored by the Congressional Progressive Caucus and the Campaign for America’s Future, Kuttner invoked the “D” word. “If you look at subprime and all its glory, it recapitulates all of the abuses of the 1920s in all their glory,” he said, concluding “we should be very alarmed.”



Reporting on the meeting, blogger Isaiah J. Poole, wrote, ”Kuttner suggested that an adequate stimulus package should perhaps be three or four times that size, given the size of the economy and the severity of the ripple effects of the housing market implosion on the rest of the economy. Plus, none of the remedies most prominently on the table would address investment in public infrastructure, which would create a broad range of jobs, or seed the growth of urgently needed green-energy technologies — to name just two of the suggestions for stimulus raised during the town hall meeting. More importantly, Kuttner said, they would not address the fundamental need to, as he put it, ‘re-regulate financial capital,’ tax it appropriately, and use the proceeds efficiently to meet national and human needs.”



“The challenge, as the national debate heats up over how to address the looming recession, is to draw the right lessons from history — and from the present — and be bold about both the nature of the problem and the right solutions,” wrote Poole.



There is little likelihood that any such discussion will take place at Davos, where the suits will try to “shape the global agenda for the year ahead and beyond,” just as is was unlikely that any of the major U.S. media would report what Kuttner had to say. But the political concern will be there, surely more pronounced and urgent than it was at the Forum in 2007. Martin Wolf, who is worried about “the political legitimacy of the market economy itself,” says he is more nervous about the potential political repercussions in 2008 than he was last year, saying, "What is happening in credit markets today is a huge blow to the credibility of the Anglo-Saxon model of transactions-orientated financial capitalism."



Meanwhile back here in California, where the jobless rate has jumped to 6.1 percent, clever entrepreneurs have come up with a new way to profit from the economic crisis. They are conducting "Repo Home Tours," reported public television station KQED in a segment titled: “The Bus Tour of Broken Dreams.” “Instead of dealing with clients one-on-one, an enterprising realtor is offering bus tours so groups of interested buyers can see the real estate ‘steals’ in the area resulting from foreclosure.”


Davos and Stockton: worlds apart in more ways than one.




BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member Carl Bloice is a writer in San Francisco, a member of the National Coordinating Committee of the Committees of Correspondence for Democracy and Socialism and formerly worked for a healthcare union. Click here to contact Mr. Bloice.

The Black Commentator:Home

Wednesday, January 23, 2008

Fresh poetry





I Am
warm amber honey
sweetening and holding all phenomena in my golden light.

Thick and sticky, refusing to give in
to your efforts to pull away and separate from me.

I cling while you squirm,
and hold you fast until the rich chemicals of my Being have seeped into your pores…..
Changing you forever.

There.

Now, you have been infected too.

Previously distasteful, transmuted into the delicious.
Requalified energy, refined and made wholesome useful matter.

Sun





Plant




Bee


An alchemical blend~

Magic wrought in Nature
not in the lab.


I Am
warm amber honey
sweetening and holding you in my golden light.

The Power of the Holy Trinity
has done It’s work,
and you are saved.


Be still .......... and Accept your Healing



Kentke



The three images below are: Beekeeping (left), Bee and Sedge (a plant) right, and Pouring honey (below).




Honey has been used in wound healing and body care for thousands of centuries. Dating back as far as 6,000 BC references have been found on the use of honey in wound healing. During World War I, Russian soldiers used honey to prevent infections and to accelerate healing. The healing properties of honey can be described as:




- Anti-bacterial activity




- Anti-inflammatory activity




- Stimulation of healing



The above poem was written during a weekend workshop with John Fox, Founder of the Institute for Poetic Medicine. Invite him to do a workshop for your group, attend one already schduled, or pick up his book, Poetic Medicine: The Healing Art of Poem-Making. His website is: www.poeticmedicine.org


Saturday, January 19, 2008

As We Prepare to Honor Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.
Remembered and Forgotten



“Why Have We Frozen Martin Luther King at the ‘I Have a Dream’ Speech?”



Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Day Keynote Address Delivered at Lewis and Clark College
January 15, 2007

By Dr. G. Mitchell Reyes


Tonight we gather around memory. Strange thing, to gather around memory. When we think about memory, most of us think about our own personal memories, our greatest triumphs and most painful defeats; but I’d like for us to consider another dimension of memory—what we might call collective memory, for it is true that we remember as individuals, but we also get remembered by others, and great leaders are remembered by whole societies.


The patterns by which we remember the past are curious and interesting, and so I enjoy thinking and writing about collective memory. I ask questions like “Who gets to be remembered” and “Who gets to do the remembering,” because the curious and interesting thing about public memory is that it’s anything but objective. In fact, I would suggest that the first step toward understanding public memory is realizing that it is more motivated by political desires in the present than by fidelity to the past. Once you realize that, you will realize there is no “real” Martin Luther King Jr. If anything, our commemoration marks his absence. We are here tonight because he no longer can be.

So when we remember Dr. King we do so in our own image, which leads me to my first question:
Why have we frozen Martin Luther King at the “I Have a Dream” speech? It wasn’t his final statement on race relations, it didn’t achieve much in the way of political results, and it offered no practical solutions to the racial problems of the day. It was an eloquent, beautiful, charismatic oration to be sure, but today we hold the speech up so high, we glorify it so that its light blinds us to the older, wiser thoughts of Dr. King.


Today we remember that speech for the dream, but King meant for that speech to narrate a nightmare. Today we remember King’s optimism, but we seem incapable of acknowledging his outrage. The angry, acerbic, realistic King has been lost in the shadows of his dream. The accomplished academic and public intellectual Michael Dyson notes that King has become “a convenient icon shaped in our own distorted political images. He is fashioned to deflect our fears and fulfill our fantasies. King has been made into a metaphor of our hunger for heroes who cheer us up more than they challenge or change us” (Dyson, I May Not Get There With You, 3).


Tonight I will attempt to remember the older, wiser King and to ask this King some questions about contemporary racial problems. In doing so I hope to challenge us as King challenged himself. In the end, if I can encourage you to think of Dr. King in a different light and thus to free his legacy from the manacles of the dream I will consider this speech a success. I’m not interested in consensus tonight, I’m advocating we begin again the journey towards racial reconciliation by resurrecting the lost Martin Luther King.



----



The youthful King of the “I Have a Dream” speech believed that appeals to conscience combined with the hope of a color-blind society would end racism. Shortly after the March on Washington, however, King came to understand these early views on race as naive at best and misleading at worst. They were naïve because King realized that racism breeds not only in the hearts and minds of men and women, but in their pocket books as well. Racism feeds off of material poverty and financial inequality, which is why race and class have been connected in this nation since its birth.


The Katrina disaster in New Orleans was only the most recent event that put this truth on spectacular display: race and class say the same thing in American culture. The mature King came to realize that in order to seriously challenge the causes of racism, Americans would need to address the conditions of poverty that produced it.


King realized his dream was naïve, but late in life he was more concerned with how it misled well intentioned citizens and was easily appropriated by ill-intentioned racists. In the former, what King called the “quasi liberal”, he saw a political philosophy “so bent on seeing all sides that it fails to become committed to either side” (King in Dyson, I May Not Get There With You, 19). In the latter could be found the same old southern segregationists, individuals who used King’s dream of a color-blind society to stall programs promoting equality and racial reconciliation. Because these arguments dominate contemporary conversations about race in the US, we must take a few minutes to engage them.


Using King’s “I Have a Dream” as the basis of their authority, many of today’s race advocates have successfully undermined programs like affirmative action that are meant to level the playing field for disadvantaged minorities. These advocates assume that a color-blind society exists, and from that premise they reason that affirmative action programs are a form of reverse racism. These advocates are so severely confused that they believe King’s dream has become reality.

Ignoring the existence of inequality along racial lines, the fact that it is much more difficult for African Americans to get loans and, thus, to build wealth for example, they argue from a self-help, “bootstraps” philosophy, a philosophy that believes, everything being equal, people should succeed according to their merit.

One problem among many with this reasoning is that everything isn’t equal! Prior to the civil rights movement race was used as the sole criterion for education and employment decisions, creating such an unbalanced distribution of opportunities between races that the merit argument is simply invalid. Merit is a dependent good—it depends on a relatively even playing field. What these contemporary advocates have done is mistake King’s dream for reality, ignore facts to the contrary, and rebuke affirmative action advocates for betraying their greatest civil rights leader.

Here we see what King saw late in life, that “As an ideal, the color-blind motif spurs us to develop a nation where race will make no difference. As a presumed achievement, color-blindness reinforces the very racial misery it is meant to replace” (Dyson, I May Not Get There With You, 22).
We should not pretend that the centuries of slavery and racism in this country that gave tremendous psychological and material advantages to whites can be eradicated by the simple elimination of state-sanctioned racial apartheid. As King noted, “the nation must not only radically readjust its attitude toward the Negro in the compelling present, but must incorporate in its planning some compensatory consideration for the handicaps he has inherited from the past” (King cited in Dyson, I May Not Get There With You, 23).



King foresaw the coming of these arguments, and he did what he could to challenge them in the final years of his life, but even his grandiloquence couldn’t fight the overwhelming desire for a happy myth, one in which we could all pretend innocence to the persistence of racism, suspend our disbelief, and convince ourselves the dream was reality.
"The Age of Innocence"
That’s why we’ve frozen King in the shadow of the Lincoln memorial—as long as we embrace his dream we can continue to believe in our own innocence without seriously confronting the realities of racism. Indeed, since King’s assassination and his immediate sanctification among the pantheon of black saints, American racial discourse has been stuck in what I will call “the age of innocence.”
In the age of innocence racism is a private affair rather than an institutional or social problem. In the age of innocence racism is contained between racist and victim. In the age of innocence the Civil Rights movement washed America clean of its racist past. In the age of innocence white people can claim to be anti-racists, enjoy the financial benefits of being white, and refuse to acknowledge those benefits all at the same time. In this age where everyone is innocent, any social program that grants benefits to minorities based on race is an example of reverse-racism.

--

The age of innocence is precisely what Tony Hall, a Democratic Congressman from Ohio, confronted in 1997 when he proposed that the U.S. government make an official apology to African Americans for the abuse “their ancestors suffered as slaves under the Constitution and laws of the United States until 1865” (House Concurrent Resolution 96, 12 June 1997).
In the late 90s Hall was surprised to find that Congress had never apologized for slavery—an astonishing and revealing fact in itself. Hall was equally surprised when his proposal generated a torrent of public debate and conflict. His office received nearly two thousand letters and calls. Some supported the idea, but a majority of the responses ranged from disagreement to blatantly racist condemnations of Hall as a Congressional representative.
The popular television pundit Chris Matthews said in response to Hall’s proposal: “We had a civil war in this country, and I hate to say it, but 600000 guys were killed, all of them white…They paid a horrible price for slavery.” David Horowitz wrote: “IF not for the sacrifices of white soldiers and a white American president…blacks in America would still be slaves. Where is the acknowledgement of black America and its leaders for those gifts?” and Dick Snider suggested that: “When only 275000 out of 27 million owned slaves, that leaves the vast majority of Americans, then and now, free of any involvement, or blame.”
Needless to say, Hall’s proposal was defeated. We are as incapable today of apologizing for slavery as our ancestors were during reconstruction.


These are arguments fresh out of the age of innocence, where most white people’s hands are clean of slavery, where the benefits of slavery are contained within the slave master/slave relationship, and where benevolent white people fought life and limb to free the poor and helpless slaves—who, of course, had no ability to help themselves, no history of resistance, and no role in abolition or the civil war.
When I hear these arguments given voice over and over in today’s conversations about race, I wonder what the older, wiser, and largely forgotten Martin Luther King would have to say, and then I remember the words he spoke two weeks before his assassination: “yes it is true . . . America is a racist society,” but even an older King balanced his realism with optimism: “For years,” the older King recalled, “I labored with the idea of reforming the existing institutions of the society, a little change here, a little change there. Now I feel quite differently. I think you’ve got to have a reconstruction of the entire society, a revolution of values.”
A reconstruction in the entire society, a revolution of values—is it possible that while the Civil Rights movement ended state sanctioned racism, 40 years later we have yet to begin the process of reconciliation? And is it possible that the process of reconciliation and real forgiveness begins with an apology? If I do someone a great harm, and I refuse to apologize, can I expect that person to be my friend, to forgive and forget, to let bygones be bygones? I think not. What I do believe, and this is my parting thought, is that if we are ever to escape the age of innocence and begin real reconciliation between the races, we must apologize, we must be willing to place the power of forgiveness in the hands of those who we have long since wronged.


This speech was found on the following website:
The York Center Memory Conference York Memorial Project Heroes of Color Project Homepage

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Latest Update: Gorilla Sanctuary Is Congo War Front

My Way News - Gorilla Sanctuary Is Congo War Front
Click on purple title to read article


Please visit Sept. 24, 2007 Post, where the situation and threat to the gorillas and people working and living in the area was first introduced here.

This is why I'm not interested in the antics of this election.

The video and the website you must check out~

Earlier this year, after a conversation with a close friend about the Bush Administration's lack of action, despite citizen and local government efforts to stem the flood of economic refugees that illegally enter the U.S. overwhelming cities and government services, my friend informed me of the plan underfoot to make one political/economic nation out of all the three countries of North America. (Thank you Dedan)


That's Canada, Mexico and the U. S. No borders....and one unified form of money called the Amero. This unification of the nations of the continent is similar to what Europe has done, and it allows North America greater strength in dealing with the power of the European Union. He sent me this website, which is devoted to covering what's going on, that is really played down in the major media, if mentioned at all.


http://www.augustreview.com/ Definately visit this site. I do endorse your checking here from time to time, and even subscribing to their newsletters if their material interests you. I've sent a few emails with news from this site to some of you in 2007.


Now here's a video that sums it all up.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vuBo4E77ZXo
Check out this video!!! (Thank you Mose) And share it. Even if you don't agree or believe it....share, so that others can be informed and make their own decisions about what it presents. Check for updates on the process at the above website and also pay attention to the news. I did, and so when Bush went up to Canada to meet with Calderon from Mexico and the Canadian president last year...I knew what was up. And true enough, the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America as it's formally called was on the agenda.
http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/06/20070615-10.html


This is happening. Some form of it for sure.
http://www.spp.gov/
That is unless citizens decide NO DEAL. Canada is not excited about it. Mexico, of course wants this. And Americans have no idea what is in the works and being planned. We're being entertained by the latest popular show. Everybody is all caught up in talking about who's going to be the next American Idol, oops.....'my bad'....America's next Top Mod...stop it Kentke.

Okay......the next American President.

Stay tuned.
Kentke


Disclaimer:
Often times, interest groups one may be in opposition to offer valuable information that is not easily located elsewhere. In the case of the SPP/North American Union, right wing conservative groups have proved to be excellent watchdogs and conveyors of information, because of their staunch resistance to such a union. Though I may refer you to their websites, it is just for the article or information I'm specifically wanting to share with you. I am not endorsing or supporting what you find there, beyond that item.

Links with more articles and the video
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vuBo4E77ZXo


http://www.spp.gov/
http://www.humanevents.com/article.php?id=15954
http://www.voanews.com/english/archive/2007-08/2007-08-20-voa40.cfm?CFID=184839665&CFTOKEN=84707546 - The Voice of America's take on the meeting.
Please note I am not endorsing any of these groups.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Kenya in Flames- by Bill Fletcher, Jr. Executive Editor of The Black Commentator

Food For Thought ~from one of the major internet websites focused on political, economic and social issues important to African-Americans.

Pardon the ads, but do support them as their work is valuable.

The Black Commentator - January 10, 2008 - Issue 259
Click on purple title to read article

Hold on to your marbles Boomers.....Help is on the way!

Dementia drug instant hit claim
Story from BBC NEWS - January 10, 2008

US scientists claim a drug can reverse some of the early symptoms of Alzheimer's disease - with the first effects seen within 10 minutes.

The Journal of Neuroinflammation reports how the memory of an 81-year-old man improved sharply after etanercept was injected into his spine. His wife described it as her husband being "put back to where he was".

But UK experts warned that a single success did not prove that the drug would work for every dementia patient.

"He's not the same person he was. I see he's clearer, more organised", said the wife of the Alzheimer's patient in study. An ageing population means a substantial increase in the numbers of people suffering Alzheimer's disease. Some studies have suggested that too much of a body chemical called tumour necrosis factor-alpha may be at least partly to blame for the advance of the condition.

Etanercept, which is licensed for use as a rheumatoid arthritis drug, works to block this body chemical. Scientists from the University of California at Los Angeles, and the University of Southern California, have already published a study which suggested that this could benefit Alzheimer's patients.

In previous studies, they noticed that injecting the drug into the neck spine seemed to deliver almost immediate effects - so set out to test this on just one patient, a former doctor in the early stages of the disease.

Before the drug, they measured his performance on cognitive tests, and he performed poorly, unable to remember the name of the doctor treating him, the date, or the state in which he lived. He could not perform simple mental arithmetic, or name more than two animals.

Relatives astounded

Ten minutes after a dose of etanercept, he was noticeably calmer, more attentive, and less frustrated. He knew he lived in California, and knew the day of the week, and the month.
He could name five animals, and performed better at the arithmetic test.

Interviewed at that point, his wife said that the improvement was "like some kind of science fiction story". "He's not the same person he was. I see he's clearer, more organised. "There is something has put him back to where he was before. We almost fell off our chairs watching this."


His son said that the change immediately after the drug was administered was the "single most remarkable thing I've seen."


Placebo question

Rebecca Wood, of the Alzheimer's Research Trust, said: "This is promising and innovative research but in the early stages and further work is needed before we can conclude etanercept could work as a treatment for Alzheimer's. "We need to investigate whether it is safe and works in a larger number of patients as well as monitor the long-term effects. "Scientists also need to check the benefits weren't just due to the placebo effect and establish whether any benefit is just temporary or whether the disease itself is slowed. "

Neil Hunt, of the Alzheimer's Society, echoed that view: "It is crucial more research is carried out, before any conclusions are drawn on TNF alpha and the development of Alzheimer's disease."

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/7179060.stm 2008/01/10 00:34:09 GMT© BBC MMVIII

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

Kenya President Says No Recount, or Vote

Kenya President Says No Recount, or Vote
Click purple title to read the article.

This ain't Jomo's Kenyatta's Kenya - More Coverage of Kenya's Politics and Violence

Two Kenyan Cheetahs


On the ground with Kenya's bloggers~

AfroMusing Juliana (left), Kenyan Pundit Oyo Okolloh



Reviewing some of the photos of the TEDGlobal 2007 Conference that was held in Arusha Tanzania last year, I ran across this photo of two of Africa's bloggers --- beautiful young women that have sites rich in critical analysis, content and information on the nation of Kenya. They also have great links to other websites and blogs that cover their homeland.


Kenya is of course in the public's eye right now because of the images and stories of the people's violent reaction to their recent presidential elections. I find all of this quite note-worthy, especially as America is also in the beginning of what will be an intense period of campaigning for the job of America's next ----no not Top Model,---- but President.

And yes, all disrespect was intended.


Juliana, the young woman behind AfroMusing left Kenya last week. The link to her site is below. Be sure to surf her list of links to get even deeper coverage, photos, interviews, etc.



Ory Okolloh, who writes Kenyan Pundit, left Nairobi last Thursday, flying with her family to South Africa. Yet once she hit the ground, this young woman immediately set about creating a new website soley for the purpose of in real-time, tracking incidents of violence, and need in Kenya. Technology functioning at it's best. Check out Ushahidi.com.



My Kenya

I visited Kenya some 40 years ago. It was a particularly special visit as I had a cousin living there, who drove down to Mombasa where the ship I arrived on (World Campus Afloat) docked, and drove us back up to Nairobi where he lived. Mel McCaw had a wonderful personality, was very intelligent and gregarious and this made him very popular with native Kenyans, Black Americans and the white professional and social scene in the capital. Flowing easily and freely through all strata of Kenya's vibrant urban life, his presence allowed my best friend Shelley and I to have a much deeper exposure to the country and people, than the other students traveling on the ship with us.


Mel worked for IIE, and also served as the Cultural Affairs Officer for the American Embassy in Nairobi. The wonderful time he showed us he later extended to Malcolm X when he visited Kenya, during his historic trip second thru Africa. The parties that Mel gave in Malcolm's honor to introduce him to the local Black American community caused Mel trouble with his boss, William Attwood, who was the U. S. Ambassador to Kenya at the time. Click on this link, to read the fascinating story of what happened. http://books.google.com/books?id=0HvtoSjfJ74C&pg=PA213&dq=melvin+mccaw+nairobi+kenya&sig=x_UqxK1ZRVgFs-IMmKpFe8k6KHs#PPA215,M1




I will always remember this nation, because one of my most vivid impressions was that it was my first time being in a country where all the police and people of authority were Black. It was startling to see every police officer directing traffic a tall crisply uniformed dark skinned man. This was a profound phenomenon for a young person born of African and Native American descent in America, to experience. This was long before affirmative action and America's law enforcement agencies were forced to do more to increase the numbers of people of color within their ranks.



It became most evident when Mel announced we'd been invited to lunch with his friends, who were some of the countries' judges. I think it was my first or second day in Nairobi. Lunch was to be at their main High Court complex, where in a formal cosmopolitan dining environment, the judges and barristers dined al fresco on a lovely terrace. Can you image seeing very dark men, looking very professional, all wearing long black robes, and full barrister's wigs! You've got to picture this: Formal outdoor dining with men dressed like the gentleman in the center of this photo all around me.



This 1977 photo is of the Inaugaration of the Kenya Court of Appeal



I was still a teenager, so the sight of the contrast of tall, distinguished looking dark skinned barristers (attorneys) and judges, sporting these long lamb's bottom-looking white other century wigs, made it really difficult not to stare and frankly....giggle.



Allow me to digress a bit more as I'm going to borrow from another website I just found to give you a little more insight on why the gentlemen were dressed this way. It stems from Kenya's (East Africa's) evolution/development being interrupted, to function as a colony of Britain during the era of European imperialism.



"Courtroom lawyers in the English tradition don’t have to make these sartorial decisions. Barristers are required to present their cases while wearing a black robe. The most experienced barristers – those who have been granted the title “Queen’s Counsel” or “Senior Counsel” -- wear a robe made of black silk and are referred to as “silks.” Junior counsel – and all barristers, regardless of age, who are not silks are called “juniors” – wear a black robe made of more common material.Barristers wear wigs in court. Why? Because wigs were the height of fashion for upper-crust European gentlemen in the 1600s and also helped prevent the spread of lice in Jacobian England; ergo, barristers wear them in 2007. Once you have been trained to “think like a lawyer,” this explanation makes complete sense.The wigs are made from horsehair, often by the London boutique of Ede and Ravenscroft. There are three types of English barristers’ wigs: a “bar wig” worn by the advocates, a “bench wig” worn by judges and a “full-bottom wig” worn by the most senior members of the Bar on ceremonial occasions when they want to look like cocker spaniels. The wigs cost between US$800 to US$4,000, according to The Washington Post, but many barristers buy second-hand wigs, in part because an older, yellowed wig is a symbol of status and experience. "

There's a link with a photo for each wig mentioned above, so be sure to click it and see the example for each type.




The above excerpt came from the Knife Tricks Blog: Hunting the Wild Barrister, and the blogger was writing as an American lawyer, checking out his counterpart in Hong Kong! So if you think these photos have been humorous, wrap your mind around the idea of seeing a bunch of Asian gentlemen, their usual height and build, in the long black robes and white wigs!!! Yep.....this is a good visualization for today's Laughter Yoga session.















The first African Chief Justice (r) Kitili Mwendwa ----- ------ Current Hon. Mr. Chief Justice J. E. G icheru




Pardon me friends, ....I'm all over the place with this post. In fact, about the only thing I haven't included here is a photo of Mt. Kilimanjaro, the highest peak in Africa .


Mt. Kilimanjaro

Did you know they have snow and glaciers in Africa?













Kibo Glaciers
Lucky Traveler at Kilimanjaro's Summit



There she is East Africa's famous mountain. So I think I'll let this post rest by letting some of her magnificent wildlife roam across the plain.........





Buffalo




Elephant families tanking-up









Slinky stealthy leopards



Simba and Nala - The purrfect couple


Peace~



Kentke






http://blog.ted.com/ - Scroll down to Jan 8 post
Jan 6 post -a must read/ Features N.Y. Times Opinion piece by Binyavanga Wainaina- offering backstory on the conflicts and violence.




Tuesday, January 8, 2008

I'll tell you one thing that really gets me....

What do you think of Arnold's extortion of the wealth of California Native Americans to pay for the scandalous economic spending habits and folly of White Men? (His fiscal ineptitude and that of previous administrations.)

I don't get it.

See he's not from here ~ as in 'born in the U.S.A.', so he has NO SHAME in 'stickin' up the po Indians for their wampum'. He has no idea of the history of pain men like him have wrecked upon these very deeply sensitive people. America has a prominent place in my Museum of Genocide, as the success of the program of ethnic cleansing this nation waged upon the Native peoples is legendary. The history of this period has been so strikingly portrayed, that even Japanese and Italian filmmakers wanted in on the fun of making Western movies. Spaghetti westerns and some of the most notable samurai classics are based on the battles between Cowboys and Indians.

All these years..... robbed, driven to drink and go crazy. Made the butt of jokes, the recipient of physical abuse, and most popularly used as team mascots. Outcasts in their own land....Finally they have something going that's good for them, and that gives them a chance to revive themselves. And here come the White Man again.

In my book, anyone with any conscience, would have a hard time fixin' their mouth to ask the Indians for Anything.....so much is still owed to them for genocide and theft.

No body says anything.
What?!?!?! Am I the only one here thinking, questioning the ethics of this? Am I alone in wondering just 'What the (@#%8!) Bleep is going on?!?!

The ads are run, to make you feel like Arnold is such a great negotiator. "He got money from the Indians to help balance the budget". So white folks (the tax paying/voting majority) are happy, because they don't have to have their taxes increased to settle the misappropriation and stupid expenditures of their own white legislators.

My non-melanated brothers and sisters, don't fall for this. All voters do not fall for this. He's playing to a vile side in human nature. Arnold is practicing extortion, plain and simple. And he's presenting it so that you feel good that he accomplished this for your economic benefit. He's saving you from a tax increase. Rear-end released Buffalo Patties!!!

Why should the Native American Nations have to pay to help out the budget?
Tax the oil companies doing business in California. Tax Hollywood- the film and the music industry. Tax the amusement parks in California. Tax the auto dealers and manufacturers. Tax the Sports owners and their respective team organizations. There's a million huge entities I could think of that have made and continue to make tons of millions of dollars here in California. Tax them. Let them bail out the California government.

Native Americans had no part in making the decisions that created the budget fiasco, little part in reaping the benefits of that spending, and no rewards from the flimflam games of politicians, industry and high finance that resulted in scandals like California's recent electric and insurance debacles.

Leave the Native Americans and their assets for income alone.

Arnold and his crew are no better than the Mafia. Using the threat of the ballot box to limit what Indians can do/or how much they can make, on their own National Lands....
if they don't pay up for protection that is.

What do you think of that?

Kentke


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