Saturday, October 13, 2007

The Great Rivers Partnership: IBM and the Earth

It is going to take changes in consciousness, changes in legislation, changes in strategy, deeper scientific understanding, deeper communication of scientific understanding to business owners and managers, new production technologies, new philosophies AND MORE to prevent the ever growing negative footprint on the earth by industrial civilization.

But at least IBM is prepared to develop IT technologies that allow us to monitor and understand what is happening. You may find interesting The Great Rivers Partnership.

Column: Et Tu, George by Nicholas Kristof

Nicholas D. Kristof

New York Times columnist Nicholas D. Kristof has done amazing work bringing the situation in Darfur to the attention of the American public. He also has an elegant way of analyzing the failures of leadership of President George W. Bush.

I particularly like his January 23, 2007 column Et Tu, George?.

Column: China's Sunshine Boys by Thomas Friedman

New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman has argued in many of his pieces that we America must consider energy policy as critical to the future of our security, economy and environment.

I particularly liked his December 6, 2006 article China's Sunshine Boys.

Column: Who Will Succeed Al Gore? Our Crucible Moment by Thomas Friedman

Al Gore and Tipper Gore at the 79th Academy Awards


A lot deservedly has been said about the Nobel Committee's decision to award the 2007 Peace Prize to the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and to Al Gore. But I thought an interesting perspective on Mr. Gore and on American Politics is Thomas L. Friedman's October 14, 2007 column Who Will Succeed Al Gore?.
Thomas L. Friedman 

Thursday, October 04, 2007

The War: Directed/Produced by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick (Florentine Films, PBS-WETA)



Six years in the making, Ken Burns and Lynn Novick's The War is a magnificent documentary of World War II, and its affects on the Americans who served in the military, and those who lived through it at home. Focusing primarily on about a score of families from 4 smaller cities of the United States, and including many hours of actual combat footage, this is an amazingly comprehensive view of the War. The coverage of the social environment just before and during and after the War is elegant. Very highly recommended.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Financial Costs of Iraq War could be $2 Trillion

While the deepest loses from the chaos in Iraq in which American troops participate are of course the deaths of Americans, non-combatant Iraqis, and other internationals, following by the severe life-altering injuries that Americans, non-combatant Iraqis and other internationals sustain, followed by the fact of how many Iraqis have been forced to flee the country or endure years of chaos... even the pure financial cost to the United States is already staggering. Based on recent work by well-regarded economists, using information from the Congressional Budget Office, the likely cost of this war is $2 Trillion. The amount of positive benefit this money could have provided to the people of the world, and to the non-military aspects of the struggle against terrorism, is almost beyond contemplation. (Low estimates are $1.2 Trillion BTW).

For an interesting summary, see this article from the May-June 2007 issue of Harvard Magazine: The $2-Trillion War.

Sunday, September 09, 2007

Persistence of Myths - Recent Research Results

On September 4, 2007, the Washington Post ran an article entitled Persistence of Myths Could Alter Public Policy Approach by Shankar Vedantam. Very interesting reports of research on how many people's minds work in terms of associating "truth" with messages they have heard many times, even when many of those times were statements saying the statement itself was incorrect.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Film: No End In Sight (2007, Charles Ferguson, Representational Films/Magnolia, 102 min)

No End In Sight

No End In Sight, directed by Charles Ferguson, reconstructs the period from 3 months before the US attacked Iraq through the period of the first Iraqi parliamentary elections using interviews with journalists, diplomats, military personnel, and intelligence officials. It argues that a series of willfully foolish decisions in Washington made civil war and insurgency in Iraqi extremely likely. Meanwhile, it explains the human, cultural and financial cost of this historic blunder. This is a film that you simply must see.

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Film: The Ground Truth (Patricia Foulkrod, 2006, 80 min)

Patricia Foulkrod's film
The Ground Truth is a series of interviews with US veterans of the Iraq War. This is a truly unique and important film.

Film: SiCKO by Michael Moore (Dog Eat Dog/Lionsgate/Weinstein, 2007, 116min)

            


Michael Moore has blended several amazing tales in his new film about the American Healthcare System. One tale is about individual Americans who were covered by health insurance, but whose insurance companies, in an attempt to control costs, denied them coverage leading to human suffering.

Another tale is about how health care is delivered in 4 foreign countries, each of which developed its own version of universal no-cost or ultra-low-cost medical care, and each of which, while spending less than the US does, produces dramatically better health outcomes and seems to have much more satisfied health care providers.

A third tale is about Moore's hypothesis that making health coverage connected to employment is just one of several systematic tactics to keep citizens fearful, stressed, and passive.

Amazingly, using a wide-range of archival footage, interviews he did in 2004 through 2006, and a sense of irony and humor, this dense material, and often tragically sad material, comes across elegantly and enjoyably. In the end, Moore believes that foundational social values in a country end up determining how much the voices of citizens can influence how systems, like the health care system, are operated. A terrific and timely film.

View the trailer, or see the movie website.

Sunday, March 18, 2007

Film: First Lesson in Peace by Yoram Honig (2006, Hebrew-Arabic-English)




First Lesson in Peace is a 56-minute video letter from director Yoram Honig to his young daughter Michal, consisting of narrated video he took when she was 6-years-old and attending the School for Peace bi-national and bi-lingual elementary school at the Israeli village of
Neve Shalom/Wahat-al-Salaam. This is a real gem.

Saturday, February 24, 2007

Film: Binta and The Great Idea by Javier Fesser

A delightful 30-minute film is Binta and The Great Idea by Spanish Filmmaker Javier Fesser. The film takes place in Senegal and is a real gem.

Film: West Bank Story by Ari Sandel


A very-well done 30 minute comedy musical film.