Sunday, April 28, 2013

World at War

Curious how the war is progressing?


Now that the developed world controls the global marketplace, the impact on the lesser developed nations has become troublesome.  It took about three centuries.  

In terms of population and income, 80% of the world lives on less than one-fifth of the developed world's norm. If that weren't distressing enough, we find that it's getting progressively worse. Note the rate of progress among the nations.

Governments serve the financial industry and transnational corporations.  That's how we arrive at statistics like those shown here.  Most banks in the developed world are larger in capital and influence than all the nations at the bottom of the list, and the banks have no accountability for the damage they do.

The war?  Apparently it's a contest between those who have and those who don't.  For now, the 'haves' are winning, and the losers are dying at more than a thousand times the western rate from things like tuberculosis, diarrhea, and malaria; all easily dealt with in an equitable economy.

How might an individual of character and conscience respond?  What would they add to their life purpose and goals?

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Short attention span ...




The quantity of information we face in any given day is just too much, almost a technological curse.  I can, therefore obviously I should glance at a dozen web articles, even if I'll forget the first before I finish the second.

I'm compelled.  A thousand times a day, important things cross my view, info-noise which doesn't stick, but it does certainly dilute my attention.

I used to read books when I was younger. Big books, college library stuff, that took weeks to get through, and if they were really thought provoking, I'd read chapters more than once.  They informed me, shaped my thinking, required me to struggle with implications and to make decisions.

Today, if I'm not careful, I'll cover that much ground in an hour, and little if anything will remain after the high-speed fly-by.  Such a flood of knowledge without thoughtful consideration is trivia and without benefit.  It isn't even knowledge, really; more like entertainment, passing the time.

Today, a person is subjected to more new information in a day than a person in the middle ages in his entire life.  Unbelievable.

Fortunately, I have thoughtful friends who give me good books that, once begun, I have to finish. One or two every year or so; it's enough to remind me that thinking is required; and decisions.  It's a bit of a delicate balance, isn't it.  We're having to learn to manage our goals and priorities while living on the flood plain.

Is there a central focus in our lives?
   Is there that which provokes us, empassions us?
       Can we selectively channel this incredible information pipeline so that we move forward?


What are we going to do with what we know?     It's quite an invitation to adventure when you think about it.







Tell the rich folks to quit being so full of themselves and so impressed with their own possessions, which are here today and gone tomorrow. It's not their merit that made them wealthy and others less so. Tell them to go after God who is generous to us all - and tell them to do good, to be rich in helping others, to be extravagantly generous. If they do that, they'll build a treasure that will last, gaining life that is truly life.


1 Timothy 6:17-19

Monday, April 22, 2013

Addition Problem

It must have been pretty important, I guess, and real as opposed to just talk.

Consider it as practical rather than religious   
Peter wrote to some of the gatherings, at least a couple letters we know about. He's reminding them of things they need in order to change for the better.
            
Near the end of his life at the time, he promises to remind them as long as he can, and that he'll do his best to make sure they get reminded after he's gone.

He begins by telling them that their Father has given them what they need and that they can add on to it by choice.  He tells them they can even avoid the rottenness that seems to plague most folks.

If you can read it as practical instead of religious, it's good; an addition problem we can do that makes a difference.

It begins, Peter says, with the faith each one has been given,
 and he says to add virtue or goodness.
      If we're happy about our faith, perhaps it's almost automatic that we'd begin looking for ways to live it well.

Then add knowledge.
      Curiosity and maybe excitement feed our pursuit of knowledge; the more we know, the more fun the journey.

Then on top of the knowledge, add self control.
      This is where we start to reign in our emotions and desires and channel them profitably, but this is getting hard.

Then perseverance, which seems reasonable.
      Harder still, but if we don't stick with it, it won't become our lifestyle, our character, our example for our kids.  (They learn by what they see rather than what we tell them, by the way.)

Then godliness.
      Since we've already looked at virtue, this perhaps refers to sharing His values, His purposes as our own.

Then brotherly kindness.
      If we make it this far, then we're prepared with a heart to genuinely be lovingly related.

And finally love!  Finally.  The magic land!
      We know this love isn't a feeling; it's a choice, a heart; it's doing.  Not just talking about, not wishing or hoping, it's how we live.

This morning, I was reminded that all of this isn't a call to just think about and say, "well that's nice."

It  requires doing, but I know trying all this on my own probably won't get far.  So it's got to be what you do while you're with Him; a learn-by-doing kind of thing.  Kind of like working in the yard with your dad.

This all presumes Peter knew what he was talking about and wasn't just being religious.  What do you think?  Religion or Reality?

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Dark Secret - II

Africa, the 'dark' continent, shares secrets we're just now realizing are relevant. Like the kingdom of Meroë, approximately 200 km north-east of Khartoum.

In the background, the remains
of the capital city of Meroë; ever
heard of it?

The Nubians became rich from trade on the Nile.  Around 750 B.C., they moved their capital to Meroë between the Atbara and the Blue Nile where they flow into the White Nile.  It was a green and appealing place for many reasons.


Protected on three sides, they felt secure, and the environment gave them food and industry.  Unlike the arid climate of the Nile valley further north, Meroë had summer rains sufficient to support their crops even at some distance from the rivers.  With spacious grasslands surrounding them, herds were easily maintained.


Meroë became a thriving economy, and the demand for exotic goods by rising Greek and Roman prosperity fueled their growth.  Meroë was richly endowed with iron ore and the timber needed for the great quantities of charcoal the smelting process required.  Their metal industry produced farm and carpentry tools, shears and even tweezers, as well as weapons of war.  Spears and swords, shields and axes, all in great demand.

The region was broadly successful.  Like Egypt, much evidence remains in Meroë of an expansive civilization, pyramids and walls with sculpture and bas relief along with text.  Although the written language has yet to be deciphered, the engraved stone illustrations tell us of kings and queens, wars and conquest, and of a grand kingdom.  Centuries of stability passed until environmental degradation made their end inevitable.  Trees to fuel iron-smelting furnaces were felled faster than new ones could grow.  Deforestation led to erosion and a loss of topsoil.  The region that had supported thriving agricultural populations for a thousand years could be farmed no longer.  In a brief period, the civilization disappeared.


The region had a 'carrying capacity' that was finally exceeded.
That's the secret, by the way.  In any given model, any actual region, resources are finite.  There's a max-extraction/max-consumption rate or quantity that determines the region's 'carrying capacity'.
 Interestingly, the region has yet to recover from the uninformed exploitation.
Thanks and a hat-tip to John Reader, A Biography of the Continent, Africa.

Meroë was thriving when the world's population was perhaps 200 million people. Today, population density for such developed regions is two orders of magnitude higher, and we're seeing similar problems in a high-speed replay.

Deforestation is troublesome, of course, but that's where the land is that we need for food production. Rivers are being drained before they reach the sea because our need for water now exceeds their natural capacity.  Did you know that it takes around 300 gallons per person per day for food production.  In the western world, the figure is around 900 gallons.


Seventy percent of the world's fresh water goes to agriculture, and sources are under increasing pressure.  Aquifers continue to decline with overuse.  

Humanity devotes more land to food production than anything else - roughly a third of the earth's surface is dedicated to food production.  Much of it used to be forested, of course.  

Increasing production of food hasn't kept pace with demand with a resulting price increase of 100%+ (inflation adjusted) in the last two decades.  The UN estimates that we'll need to increase food production by 70% by 2050 to feed the world.  If production doesn't rise, prices will increase, and hunger will spread.  We've made real progress against hunger in the last 40 years, but it's precarious and now increasingly difficult to continue.

While humanity has a reputation for innovation and creative adaptation, this isn't just one more hurdle.  The reality is that we're reaching natural limits of our world's 'carrying capacity'; limits that can't be pushed back.  


Reducing world population by half would resolve many of the difficulties that we face, of course.  China tried that without success, only managing to slow their growth.  In historical similarly-sized circumstances, the death rate due to deprivation balances the equation.

The next thirty-five or so years will not be business as usual.  Such reality suggests we might begin now to understand the effect it will have on our children who will have to deal with it in their lifetime.  Can we equip them to cope rationally?  Of course.  Know how?

Time for a change; always exciting!  Forecasts by economists and the prophets of old suggest we should probably not be content with the status quo, nor should we hide our heads in the sand now that change is imminent.  

Friday, April 19, 2013

Dark Secret - I

The dark continent ... Africa.


"Africa has been woefully misunderstood and misused by the rest of the world."

"... In western imagery, Africa is the 'dark continent.' A synonym perhaps, but also the potent symbol of a persistent inclination to set Africa and its inhabitants apart from the rest of humanity.  The 'dark continent' does not refer only to the depths of Africa's equatorial forest, to the density of its tropical shadows, to the blackness of African skin, or even to a widespread lack of knowledge concerning the continent.  Above all, the phrase tacitly labels Africa as the place where a very particular form of darkness is found - the darkness of humanity.  In this context, Africa is where people do terrible things, not because the aptitude for such behavior is characteristic of all humanity, but because Africa is believed to be inherently more barbaric and less civilized than the rest of the world."
Thanks and a hat-tip to John Reader, A Biography of the Continent, Africa

Terrible things have been done in Africa, it's true.  Unfortunately, history shows us that such behaviors are not exclusive to Africa.  Today in Syria and Afghanistan, in the last century in Bosnia, Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Russia, China, Japan, Cambodia and Vietnam, and in the century prior, in all of the Americas.  Genocide, massive war casualties without cause, millions of civilian war victims.  Manifest destiny was one of dozens of excuses for driving out the current population or killing them.  Racial superiority fed many national egos as reason for domination, and slavery persists today.


We are all one, and of the same stuff, and share a common mind.  Our roots, genetically speaking, all begin in Africa, and there's little of consequence to distinguish us once you get past color and language.  Similar awareness of good and evil, similar goals for ourselves as individuals and for our communities, similar hopes for our children.

Too, we find a similar willingness to succeed at the expense of another, similar desire to be above and not below, upper rather than lower, above-average at least.  We're virtually giga-tuplets when it comes to such traits.
To be accurate, we might suggest that the darkness did indeed begin in Africa.  And it spread across the world when we did.
So then, how does one go about stepping out of the darkness and into the light?


Wednesday, April 17, 2013

There's nothing 'upper' about upper class.


With the foundations of racism crumbling however slowly, now the issues of class-based discrimination come into question.  Am I caught in it?  From an outside viewpoint, am I being an idiot?

Upper class tantrums ...
Told that the table she wanted wasn't
available, she threw what can only be
described as a tantrum and used the ace
up her sleeve, her daddy.
Andrea Benitez is the daughter of
Humberto Benitez Trevino, who happens
to be the federal attorney general for
consumer protection.
Faster than you can say "do you know
who I am?" Andrea had called her father's
department, which promptly turned up at
our local neighbourhood bistro and closed
it down on spurious administrative grounds.
There's nothing 'upper' about the upper class, by the way; nor 'low' about the lower class folks. Such distinctions are based on an economic culture that disproportionately supports the wealthy few at the expense of regular folks farther down the economic scale.

The 'rising tide' fiscal policies, all of them it turns out, don't raise all boats.  Our best attempts at a fair marketplace are perhaps 80% beneficial and not uniformly so across the population.  The marginalized and the disenfranchised are in every case left behind.  They're just as intelligent, just as creative, just as innovative, and often harder working.  Worthy in every way, but not included.

The 'classes' we so casually include in our thinking are categories based on wealth and influence.  The implied 'worth' and 'status' attending the classes are a discrimination point like 'race' has been.  Class is another way to put yourself above some and perhaps below others.  Walk it through, talk it through and see for yourself.

Then ask yourself some fun questions like:

Am I impressed by celebrity and wealth?
Do I care what the current 'A list' has to say?  
Do I aspire to a life of plenty and a well funded retirement?  Is my version of the American Dream defined by house, comfort, and income?
Do I interact with the 80% of the world that lives below what for me is the poverty line?

It's embarrassing to discover that we've given intellectual assent and we've chosen behaviors to fit the class game. Most of us in the developed world have.  It's part of the culture. It's difficult to shed the comfortable thinking and then choose a better, reasoned path. It's even difficult to hold on to the the issue. That's where you run across something like this and forget it even before you set the mirror down.

Now, what do we do with what we know?  Anything, literally anything at all, as opposed to nothing.


Tell the rich folks to quit being so full of themselves and so impressed with their own possessions, which are here today and gone tomorrow. It's not their merit that made them wealthy and others less so. Tell them to go after God who is generous to us all - and tell them to do good, to be rich in helping others, to be extravagantly generous. If they do that, they'll build a treasure that will last, gaining life that is truly life.
          1 Timothy 6:17-19