Saturday, January 7, 2017

The Keys



Why might millions of folks follow DJ Khaled with bated breath? What does he have to say?

He's one of many voices explaining Millennial and Gen Z thinking. His centerpiece issue, inequality, with a broad and detailed narrative.

Khaled is an American Muslim whose family immigrated from Palestine to New Orleans where Khaled was born and raised. He faced prejudice and discrimination as a child and numerous impediments to progress.  Recounting the story, he talks about “they,” and those who “don’t want you to win… don’t want you to progress… didn’t want you to prosper.”

Do we need to hear (understand) any of that noise?




Absolutely.  You may or may not appreciate his style but the content is extraordinarily relevant.

In the first chapter of Khaled's book, The Keys, he advises readers to, “Stay Away From They.”  Khaled explains that “they” are the “enemy” and must be avoided in order for you to prosper.


AND NOW I GOT THE KEYS. AND “THEY” HATE IT. “THEY” HID THE KEYS FROM ME BECAUSE THEY WANTED TO END ME. “THEY” DIDN’T WANT ME TO LEARN THAT IF I WORK HARD AND DREAM BIG I’LL WIN. THIS IS EXACTLY THE LESSON THAT I WANT TO SHARE WITH YOU. DON’T LET “THEY” EVER TELL YOU ANYTHING DIFFERENT. 

Note: Music producer DJ Khaled, who’s sometimes called the “Quincy Jones of hip-hop and R&B,” has produced hits for the likes of Jay Z, Kanye West, Drake, Ludacris, T.I., and Nicki Minaj, among others. He recently spoke at Harvard Business School to professor Anita Elberse's class on the businesses of entertainment, media, and sports.  His visit was sponsored by Get Schooled, a nonprofit that seeks to motivate young people to graduate from high school and go to college. 

Monday, January 2, 2017

Greenland is as big as ...








Having an accurate worldview doesn't happen automatically.  In the Mercator projection map here, the world is warped to match the European view at the time it was created.  Although grossly inaccurate, it's the one still used in classrooms and textbooks.

The equal area projection shows relative land area accurately.  Among the errors made visible, South America and Africa are appropriately larger than formerly presented.  India is correctly bigger than Alaska, and Africa is almost twice the size of Russia.

The view from directly above the equator gives a better
perspective; Brazil is the world's 5th largest country.
The Brazilian ecosystem is larger than most countries, and it contains perhaps greater biodiversity than any other place on earth. Studies suggest it has greater significance in planetary atmospherics than that of any other country in the world.

Curious what difference it makes?
Rainforests are often called the lungs of the planet for their role in absorbing carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas, and producing oxygen, upon which all animals depend for survival. Rainforests also stabilize climate, house incredible amounts of plants and wildlife, and produce nourishing rainfall all around the planet.  The Amazon basin contains 60% of the world's remaining rainforests.  And when you realize the actual size, you see the difference it makes, perhaps.

There are bigger and more important things than reality tv.  ðŸ˜Ž Some of the Kardashians have been to Brazil, but probably not for the eco-stuff.

Sunday, January 1, 2017

Wall Street 2017

How much blood can you suck out of an entire country?

University of Missouri economic historian and former Wall Street economist Michael Hudson explains, his job on Wall Street was to be the balance and payments economist for Chase Manhattan Bank. His first job there was to calculate how much debt third world countries could pay, and the answer was, "‘Well, how much do they earn?’ And whatever they earned, that’s what they could afford to pay in interest. And our objective was to take the entire earnings of a third world country and say, ‘Ideally, that would be all paid as interest to us.’” 

National and international trade have had benefited many albeit with a few problems well worth our attention.  With deregulation and globalization, however, the finance industry has become deadly, reminiscent of the death toll of wars and plagues.

Today, Wall Street is less constrained.  In terms of harm done and number affected, our finance industry leads the continuing war of conquest.

With this year's regime change, what should we be watching for in emerging government policy?

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

In Defense of Inequality




In Congress on the defense of inequality -- 
"This is not the proper occasion, but, if it were, it would not be difficult to trace the various devices by which the wealth of all civilized communities has been so unequally divided, and to show by what means so small a share has been allotted to those by whose labor it was produced, and so large a share given to the non-producing classes. The devices are almost innumerable, from the brute force and gross superstition of ancient times, to the subtle and artful fiscal contrivances of modern." ~Senator John Calhoun on the legitimacy of slavery, 1837
The senator's argument in favor of slavery is much like the current arguments in favor of unregulated business, unregulated wages, and unregulated trade.  Ethically, they're identical.  We've changed some laws since 1837, of course, but not the problem.  Nothing trickled down below the top 10%, and the rising tide only lifted the rich merchant ships.  Inequality continues in the developed world at the insistence of the privileged.  One wonders if we see what's in front of us.

______________________________
In the world's richest country, why would 20% of the children live in poverty?

Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Inaccessible to Modern Science

Science: we depend on it for answers.  Are there areas inaccessible to scientific inquiry?  If you ask a scientist, the answer is no.

So ask them what their favorite music might be and how they arrived at that preference.  And why.  Surprisingly, there's no scientific answer.  (Give it a try yourself, if you like.*)

Similarly, that freedom of speech which we so sincerely defend is scientifically unexplainable.  It suggests an underlying independence of thought which requires free choice and will, all of which are unsupportable concepts.  The deeper we delve into neuroscience, the more conclusive the argument that we are just programs running on a bio-computer.  No soul, nothing original, just processing data with predictable results.

There is agreement now in the scientific community that the firing of neurons determines not just some or most but all of our thoughts, hopes, memories, and dreams.

That's the best that hard science offers.

In 1924, Max Wertheimer gave a now-famous talk about Gestalt Theory, “Ãœber Gestalttheorie.”  ('Gestalt' is a whole, greater than the sum of the parts, for those of us who might wonder.)  His interesting speculation, that when we pursue a scientific answer exclusively, it can leave us without the whole of what we were looking for.


*What's your favorite music?  Why?  How do you feel when you hear it?

  1. It's a style I enjoy or a particular song or preformance. 
  2. It really speaks to me, it transports me to ____.
  3. So how do the mechanics of this music (but not that other music) transform my feelings? 
  4. In my brain, do I hear and choose to enjoy this but not that?
  5. Or is it an unconscious process?  A program running in my brain?  And another running in the brain of the composer and performers?
  6. Neuroscience maps the brain activity, and science insists it's a bio-computer process, not a 'self'.
  7. So I'm not an autonomous individual, just a helpless passenger in an automatic vehicle.  Hmmm.
  8. Do my choices come from me or from the brain program?  Science says it's just neurons following specific processes, all deterministic.  All.  Composer, performer, listener, ... all.
  9. So why my music preference?  According to modern science, I'm just an electro-bio-machine that follows its programming.  Apparently 'I' don't exist.  ðŸ˜ƒ  And the jazz I like just randomly happened.
Modern science can disassemble and explain the parts, but it can, on occasion, miss the greater whole.  This is just one of hundreds of such examples.  Read the references for a beginning point.  It's a fascinating inquiry.  Do 'we' even exist?

_______________________________________
So, does 2+2=4?  Of course it does, but I'm not a number, and neither, I suspect, are you.

Monday, December 19, 2016

In case you were wondering ...


You'll notice in the graphic that the richer a country becomes, the greater their CO2 emissions per person. The richest 10% of folks produce about half of the CO2, and the rest of the world produces much less per person.

As we address quality of life issues worldwide, the increase in emissions for all is projected to rise to the common levels we see in the developed countries.

The remaining question is the degree of impact our CO2 emissions will have on the world climate system. While the debate continues, the evidence accumulates.  You might appreciate Modeling Sustainability by an objective group focused more on facts than interpretation.  Do your own research of the facts.

___________________
False.  
Fake science.  A friend offered this
as a rebuttal.  ðŸ˜ƒ  Lack of information,
lack of inquiry, lack of understanding.

False.
Mount Aetna does not produce 10,000 times more CO2 than all of mankind, despite the fake memes. All the world's volcanoes produce about 200 million tons of emissions each year which seems like a lot until you see that humans produce more than a hundred times that amount.  
Actual measurement: volcanoes vs. humans

An indication that human emissions dwarf those of volcanoes is the fact that atmospheric CO2 levels, as measured by sampling stations around the world set up by the federally funded Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center, have gone up consistently year after year regardless of whether or not there have been major volcanic eruptions in specific years. “If it were true that individual volcanic eruptions dominated human emissions and were causing the rise in carbon dioxide concentrations, then these carbon dioxide records would be full of spikes—one for each eruption.  Instead, such records show a smooth and regular trend.” ~Coby Beck, writing for Grist.org.

Interestingly, COlevels and climate have been closely linked for thousands of years, and now we're contributing more than the volcanoes. Much more.  See the USGS.gov report.