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Is Hu Tone-deaf, or is He Bargaining?

January 19, 2011 :: Eva Scherson :: Comments Off

China’s president Hu Jintao is visiting the United States and will be the focus of several state-level functions, including a full state dinner and a special luncheon hosted by the vice president, Joe Biden. In the face of US demands that China remove rate controls and allow its currency to appreciate, Pres. Hu has said the yuan should be thought of as the world’s currency standard, with other currencies priced against its value.

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21st Anniversary of Tiananmen Square Massacre Sees New Censorship

June 5, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

On 4 June 1989, the Chinese military moved into Tiananmen Square to disperse a long-running student and citizen protest in favor of democratic reforms. The military were reportedly ordered to use deadly force and opened fire, killing an unknown number of unarmed civilians. The anonymous man in the above photo became known around the world as an icon of human rights, when he stopped a column of tanks by standing in their way, a moral and human challenge to the military crackdown.

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Google to Stop Censoring Search Results in China

March 24, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Google has announced it will stop censoring search results for users in China. This radically reverses the dynamic of its relationship with the Chinese government, which had demanded as a condition of being searchable in China that the internet giant systematically bar certain content from appearing in lists of search results. Google had agreed to enter the Chinese market filtering out search results related to the Tiananmen Square protests and massacre of June 1989, even to the word “democracy”, but a cyber-spying attack that originated in China caused Google to rethink the validity of the initial agreement.

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The Hong Kong Model: How China Can Democratize & Hold Together

December 30, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

China may be fast moving toward global superpower status, with rates of industrialization and wealth-creation nearly unprecedented in human history. But the ancient imperial state still faces pervasive problems of regional and ethnic disharmony and multiple separatist movements intent on breaking up the map of the modern political state. To hold together, Beijing will have to democratize public and private institutions at a rapid pace and in a credible way.

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China’s Carbon-fuel Economic Trap

December 24, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

China has outraged political and diplomatic leaders around the world by aggressively blocking agreement on hard targets for binding emissions cuts, refusing even to agree to any accord that would include mention of other nations’ specific cuts. One observer told the BBC that he observed China, India and Saudi Arabia as the key powers working to prevent binding targets from being adopted, but China was the most immovable opponent to a binding agreement.

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Glaciers Are not just a ‘Canary in the Coal Mine’

December 23, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

As ongoing global climate destabilization builds momentum, and fundamental climate-linked environmental processes come apart, we are hearing time and again that melting ice, whether in glaciers or in the Arctic Ocean, is “the canary in the coal mine”. The metaphor is very tempting, indeed, as coal is the most carbon-intensive fuel in use and a major contributing factor to global warming and climate destabilization, but the problem with the metaphor lies in the meaning of the canary being nothing more than an alarm signal. Glaciers are very much more important to human civilization than that.

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US Pledging $100 Billion for Climate-change Mitigation

December 18, 2009 :: Anjika Sridhar :: One Comment

The United States is pledging to “take the lead” on a global fund of $100 billion over ten years, designed to help developing nations transition to a zero-combustion energy economy and fend off the already mounting ravages of climate destabilization. The offer was announced yesterday by Sec. of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, and was intended in part to put added pressure on China to agree to a binding climate deal with emissions reduction verification processes built in.

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China, World Bank Plan Industrial Development Zones for Africa

December 14, 2009 :: Evelyn Winston Perez :: Comments Off

The World Bank is working with the Chinese government to fund major industrial development in specific areas across Africa, as part of an effort to spur development and create jobs. The effort is needed in order to breathe new life into African cities that are experiencing population explosions, with little new investment to match the demand for resources and jobs. But three key factors raise questions about whether the China plan for African industry will be good for Africa.

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World Food Supply Under Threat from Environmental Factors

December 10, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The global food supply is facing major security challenges, as warming global average temperatures and the destabilization of climate patterns and natural services undermine dependable agricultural cycles and threaten resources. The food supply is the most direct and visible connection between the breakdown of global climate systems and human health and wellbeing, but not the only link. The possible collapse of a major part of the human food supply means the collapse of agriculture, i.e. the breakdown of the human habitat.

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Obama Weekly Address: Overseas Trip to Bolster US Economy

November 21, 2009 :: staff :: Comments Off

From WhiteHouse.gov: “In an address recorded in Seoul, South Korea, the President discusses his trip to Asia. He talks about his push to stop nuclear proliferation in North Korea, Iran, and around the world. He talks about promoting America’s principles for an open society in China while making progress on joint efforts to combat climate change. And talks in-depth about the primary objective of his trip: engaging in new markets that hold tremendous potential to spur job creation here at home.”

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Can We Expect China’s Cooperation on Cutting Emissions? (discussion)

November 21, 2009 :: Eva Scherson :: Comments Off

Can we expect China’s cooperation on emissions reduction? It’s clear that China has shifted its energy policy somewhat, to take account for the potential long-term strategic economic benefit of being a major source for green energy technology, know-how and to use green energy to fill out the nation’s energy supply and possibly permit exportation of energy or fuels.

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Obama Secures China Cooperation on Recovery, Climate

November 18, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Pres. Obama has reportedly secured Chinese president Hu Jintao’s pledge of cooperation on global economic recovery, efforts to curb emissions and combat climate destabilization, and nuclear non-proliferation, both in Iran and North Korea. The pledge of cooperation came despite Obama’s demand that China honor the “universal” human rights of its people, alongside differences over how strongly to pressure Iran to guarantee its nuclear pursuits are legal and peaceful in nature.

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Obama’s Green Message to Gen. Assembly Wins China Support

September 22, 2009 :: staff :: One Comment

Pres. Barack Obama today delivered his first address to the UN General Assembly, promoting cooperation to green the global economy and combat climate change. He pledged the US would lead by example, and called on other nations to find common ground and work to secure the global environment against irreversible degradation.

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UN Gen. Assembly Seeks Global Consensus on Economy, Environment, Rights

September 22, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The UN General Assembly, which brings together every head of government in the world, to offer their country’s position on issues, their country’s demands regarding trade and conflict negotiations, their country’s hopes for a more harmonious world, this year truly grapples with issues of global consensus. Economic recovery, for many parts of the world, will require an unprecedented expansion of women’s rights and sustained attention to responsible environmental stewardship.

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Mass Protests in Urumqi Force Ouster of Xinjiang Party Chief

September 9, 2009 :: staff :: Comments Off

The Communist party boss for Xinjiang province was is known as one of China’s toughest remaining strongmen, according to numerous reports. But when somewhere between 1,000 and 20,000 residents of Urumqi, the regional capital, took to the streets, Beijing reacted by removing the party chief in hopes of curbing inter-ethnic unrest and growing anti-government sentiment.

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53 Million in ‘Emerging Markets’ Plunged into Poverty by Great Recession

August 15, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

A World Bank study has projected that the global financial crisis and resulting recession will plunge some 53 million people across “emerging markets” —like China and India— into absolute poverty, in 2009 alone. In China, tens of millions of people have lost jobs related to the export-dependent manufacturing sector.

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U.S.-China Relations & Human Rights in the Developing World

July 29, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The United States is working to develop closer strategic and economic relations with China. The relationship has always been tricky, due to the binary opposition of strategies, which is convenient for those who would like to disqualify the other side’s policies as “evil” or contrary to all reason. Pres. Barack Obama has been clear that he sees the US-China relationship as one of global ethical responsibility, and the driving economic and political bond in the 21st century.

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Internet Access Must Be a Human Right

July 23, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Access to the internet must be a basic human right, across the globe, for a number of reasons. First of all, legitimate, transparent democratic processes of government require in today’s world that information flow freely and that citizens be empowered to share information and to find information, according to their choices and their needs.

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The Evils of the Purge: Crushing Dissent & the False Promise of Finality

July 19, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

The Khmer Rouge sought to establish a red Khmer empire in Cambodia, with some ambitions of expansion beyond the nation’s borders, by stamping out any human life or mind that varied from the project, as narrowly conceived by Pol Pot and his murderous regime. The “killing fields” that ensued, with the mass slaughter of an estimated 1.5 million people, were an attempt to establish a new break in time, the time before and the time after the purification —as the regime proposed— of all Cambodia.

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Death Toll in Xinjiang Unrest Rises, as Public Assembly Banned

July 12, 2009 :: staff :: 5 Comments

The death toll in the capital of Xinjiang rose last week from initial reports of 100, to 140 killed, then 156. Now, there are reports that over 180 people have died in the inter-ethnic clashes between Uighur muslims and ethnic Han Chinese, relative newcomers to the region, brought in by policies imposed from Beijing. Reports of who exactly has borne the brunt of the violence are still difficult to confirm.

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L’Aquila Major Economies Forum Takes on Climate Change

July 10, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

US president Barack Obama convened a G8-parallel Major Economies Forum on Energy and Climate, comprised of 17 nations representing over 80% of the world’s industrial and consumer greenhouse gas emissions. The goal was to push governments to move their emissions and energy strategies closer to consensus for meeting bold targets for carbon emissions reductions, in anticipation of the September G20 summit in Pittsburgh and the UN climate summit at Copenhagen in December.

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G8 Summit Hits Snag in Establishing Global Emissions Reductions

July 8, 2009 :: Denver Lessing :: One Comment

Developing nations have failed to deliver the collaborative consensus sought by US president Obama and other G8 leaders in anticipation of the Copenhagen Climate Conference scheduled for later this year. While G8 leaders agreed global climate policy should be oriented toward avoiding any increase in global average temperatures of more than 3º Fahrenheit, they did not reach agreement on how to cap or reduce emissions to set levels by 2050.

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Uighur Protest in China Turns to Massacre, 156 Dead (updated)

July 6, 2009 :: staff :: Comments Off

A demonstration for Uighur rights in Urumqi, capital of the Xinjiang province, turned violent when security forces clashed with demonstrators, raising the specter of deepening ethnic tensions between Uighur muslims and ethnic Han Chinese. At least 156 people were killed and over 800 injured in the rioting that ensued. Military police were brought in to “lock down” the entire section of the city typically seen as the Uighur quarter.

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Nuclear Weapons-free World the Right Goal, Best Way to Serve American Ideals

July 5, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

Barack Obama has been observing, researching and critiquing nuclear weapons policy for three decades. He seeks to put in motion the most ambitious global denuclearization effort ever conceived, grounding his approach in a hard pragmatist awareness of what drives the build-up of ever more destructive weapons arsenals. He has said throughout this year that his plans would never remove the US nuclear deterrent capability while any nuclear threat remains in the world. Now, he goes to Russia to seek a bilateral strategic arms reduction treaty.

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Is Obama’s Economic Team Really Ready to ‘Green’ the Economy?

July 3, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Larry Summers and Timothy Geithner have a few things in common, among them that they know the rigors of market economics, the ups and the downs, the arguments for and against regulation. They have both seen duty at high levels during good times and bad. But neither of them has a strong record of pushing to include real ecological math in the standard approach to judging value or resource availability across the economy broadly.

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China Backs Away from ‘Green Dam’ Censorship Technology

July 1, 2009 :: staff :: 3 Comments

Amid a storm of protest from Chinese citizens, businesses, rights activists and foreign governments, China has suddenly halted its planned installation of a new enhancement to the ‘Great Firewall’ called ‘Green Dam’. In a statement the UK’s Guardian calls “terse”, the state-run news agency Xinhua reported “China will delay the mandatory installation of the ‘Green Dam-Youth Escort’ filtering software on new computers.”

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Liu Xiaobo Arrested for Suggesting Reform to China’s One-party System

June 25, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

Chinese rights activist Liu Xiaobo has been detained on charges of “inciting subversion of state power”. Liu was jailed for 2 years following the TIananmen Square protests in 1989 that ended with a massacre of unarmed protesters. He was one of the co-authors of Charter 08, a petition calling for the diversification of China’s one-party system. Human Rights Watch and other watchdog organizations have strongly condemned his arrest.

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Transition to Renewables Cannot Wait, Devotion to Carbon Fuel is Folly

June 18, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: 3 Comments

There are still skeptics who say that wind power cannot generate enough power to be useful, or that the transition to renewable sources of energy is not really of urgent necessity. Here I offer some ideas to counter that argument. First of all, the US is shamefully behind in developing wind power generation, but that doesn’t mean it will never happen, as some suggest.

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Ling & Lee Sentenced to 12 Years Hard Labor in North Korea (video)

June 8, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

California-based Korean-American journalists Laura Ling and Euna Lee have been sentenced to 12 years hard labor in North Korea for “grave crimes” allegedly stemming from their filming video across the North Korean border, from Chinese soil. Reports suggest the two women were abducted by North Korean border guards, who crossed into Chinese territory to seize the journalists in a military raid, while the two women were reporting for Current TV.

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AP Reports Repression Marks 20th Anniversary of Tiananmen Massacre

June 5, 2009 :: staff :: One Comment

The Associated Press is reporting that China has marked the 20th anniversary of the bloody military assault on demonstrators gathered peacefully in Tiananmen Square with a comprehensive crackdown on media or public mention of the tragedy. While the regime refuses to acknowledge what was done to unarmed Chinese citizens on 4 June 1989, an effort has been underway for months to prevent reporting online or in print, as well as to track or block text messages that might mention the day’s meaning.

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June 1989 Was Not the First Tiananmen Military Crackdown

June 5, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

On 8 January 1976, Zhou Enlai died. He had been Chinese premier and was viewed by the Chinese people as a true idealist and “man of the people”, a public servant at odds with the violent radicals who had imposed the reign of terror known as the “Cultural Revolution”. In a spontaneous outpouring of mourning, hundreds of thousands of people began building a memorial altar to Zhou, with wreaths of white flowers, white paper chrysanthemums, and short poems called xiaozibao, which extolled the virtues of the fallen premier.

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150,000 Gather in Hong Kong’s Victoria Park to Remember Tiananmen Victims

June 4, 2009 :: staff :: One Comment

On this the 20th anniversary of the massacre that ended the pro-democracy demonstrations in Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, 150,000 people gathered in Hong Kong’s Victoria Park to remember the dead. Hong Kong is the only place on Chinese soil where such an event was permitted to occur, with authorities in Beijing cracking down on all media across the nation and banning public demonstrations.

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BBC Report from 4 June 1989, as Military Fires on Crowds at Tiananmen Square

June 3, 2009 :: staff :: Comments Off

BBC reporting from 4 June 1989, day of the massacre at Tiananman Square. A BBC reporter delivers her report from among the crowd, under constant gunfire. She reports: “the air was filled with shouts of ‘fascists! stop killing!’” / “they’re shouting ‘stop the killing!’ and ‘down with the government’” / “the young man in front of me fell dead; I fell over him” / “two ambulance drivers were shot and injured” / “There was not one voice on the streets that did not express despair and rage. ‘Tell the world’ they said to us.”

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One Anonymous Man Stops Column of Tanks Moving on Tiananmen Demonstrators (video)

June 3, 2009 :: staff :: Comments Off

Historic video footage of the unknown man who risked his life to stop a column of Chinese tanks moving on demonstrators in Tiananman Square, where hundreds were massacred in 1989…

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China Still Seeks to Hide What Happened at Tiananmen Square 20 Years Ago (video)

June 3, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

The Chinese government, in Beijing, controlled by a Communist party that allows no dissent, and no opposition, continues to suppress public awareness, discussion or inquiry, regarding the events of June 1989, in which the Chinese military massacred hundreds of student demonstrators. The term Tiananmen produces filtered results in web searches, and the regime has blocked access to Twitter, Flickr, Blogger, the Huffington Post, LiveJournal, MSN’s Bing, and other sites, in an effort to prevent Chinese internauts from locating any reporting on the massacre of 4 June 1989.

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North Korea Has Tested a Nuclear Device

May 26, 2009 :: staff :: Comments Off

The isolated Communist regime of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea has reportedly tested a nuclear device, raising fears its posturing could escalate or that the outcome of failed negotiations could be an attack on South Korea, US interests or other allies. Later in the day, it was reported North Korea had also launched at least 3 missiles, possibly capable of intercontinental range.

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‘A Tragedy to Shock the World’: Secret Zhao Memoirs Acknowledge Tiananmen Massacre

May 14, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

The private memoirs of former Chinese Communist party (CCP) leader Zhao Ziyang are to be published, as we near the 20th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square protests and the massacre that ended them. The diaries will be published this month, under the title Prisoner of the State: The Secret Journal of Zhao Ziyang.

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Yi Guan, Virologist Famed for Isolating SARS, Says WHO Slow on H1N1

May 4, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

Yi Guan —who gained worldwide fame as a virologist when he isolated the SARS virus in the masked palm civet, in specimens being sold at a feral animal market in Guangdong province, China— says the World Health Organization (WHO) was slow in responding to the outbreak of influenza A H1N1, otherwise known as swine flu. Yi has devoted most of his career to flu virology and has a doctorate in swine flu virology.

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Lin Zhao, Poet Executed for Dissent, Remembered as Tiananmen Anniv. Nears

May 3, 2009 :: Riga Listin :: One Comment

Lin Zhao was a Chinese poet who hoped that the end of feudal imperialism in 20th century China would lead to real democratic rights for its people. She was executed in 1968 as the regime of Mao Zedong sought to crush all dissent and sweep away potential cultural and conceptual rivals to its rule.

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Laura Ling & Euna Lee, Two American Journalists Jailed in North Korea, to Face Trial

April 24, 2009 :: Riga Listin :: One Comment

North Korea is proceeding with a trial against two Korean-American journalists from California, despite witnesses claiming they were detained when North Korean border guards entered Chinese territory to seize them while their cameras were rolling. The trial will be held behind closed doors, and foreign governments have expressed concern the process will not allow the journalists a fair hearing or even a defense.

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‘Ghost Net’: Cyber-spying Probe Reveals Vast Network of Cyber-espionage Based in China

March 30, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Investigators in several countries say they have uncovered a global “ghost net” of cyber-espionage, with major centers in three Chinese provinces and a foothold in California. Just one of the group’s alleged cyber-spies is said to have created a system that hacked into 30,000 computers per day. The investigation began with a probe into alleged hacking of computers used by the Dalai Lama in exile in India.

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It’s Time for China to Start Defending those Victimized by Corruption

March 11, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: 3 Comments

The best thing China’s ruling Communist party can do for itself, for its people and for the stability of the nation, is take seriously all petitions for redress of grievances, investigate all claims of official corruption, negligence or assault, give weight to collective or individual property claims by punishing officials who steal property, blaze a path toward transparency in banking, ban government cover-ups and establish a zero-tolerance policy for public officials who use their power to punish or intimidate citizens who come forward seeking justice.

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Russia, Ukraine reach gas transit deal; Guantánamo trials suspended 120 days by Obama order; Zimbabwe power-sharing talks collapse over allocation of ministries…

January 21, 2009 :: staff :: One Comment

Russia and Ukraine have confirmed that they have arranged for the flow of natural gas from Russia, through Ukraine, to the EU, to be restored, though the two states differ on the details of when that resumed service will occur exactly, and EU monitors will be watching to ensure compliance with ongoing agreements. The trials [...]

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China jails man who applied for permit to protest during Olympics; Zimbabwe gov’t accused of abuses against opposition; family of Iraqi man who threw shoes at Bush fears for his safety…

January 16, 2009 :: staff :: Comments Off

China has sentenced a would-be Olympic protester to 3 years in prison. The Beijing government set up a process whereby protests could be held only in specifically designated zones, and only with a permit; Ji Zizun appears to be victim of a deliberate strategy of using the application process to ferret out protest leaders, then jail them.

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China Blocking Websites in Effort to Crack Down on Press Freedom

December 16, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

The Communist party government of China has resumed blocking some websites it had unblocked as a gesture of good will, after foreign reporters complained during the Olympics that certain foreign information sources were not available to them. The BBC and Reporters without Borders (RSF) report their sites being blocked, and the Chinese government says sites that contain information sympathetic to Tibetan or Taiwanese independence movements cannot be allowed to be read in China.

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UN Marks 60th Anniversary of Universal Declaration of Human Rights

December 10, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), one of the United Nations’ founding charters, today marked 60 years since its official adoption. Promising the most sweeping raft of protections for human beings around the world, the document has long been controversial, as the major powers have each been accused of selectively enforcing the document’s provisions, according to their own governments’ ideologies or convenience.

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Massive Pollution-based Weather-system Choking South & East Asia

November 17, 2008 :: Denver Lessing :: One Comment

The cloud of soot and smog choking India and China and their neighbors is worsening. The massive brown cloud hovering over Asia now poses serious long-term health risks and environmental dangers to much of the continent, according to a new UN report. The world’s largest pollution phenomenon already drastically reduces the amount of daylight reaching ground level in many Chinese cities, and there is concern the sunlight-blocking effects could impede agricultural production.

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US Removes North Korea from List of State Sponsors of Terrorism

October 11, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK), commonly known as North Korea, has been removed from the United States’ government’s official list of “state sponsors of terrorism”. The move comes as part of an agreement among the Six Parties involved in denuclearization talks regarding the DPRK, which will restart the dismantling of all nuclear facilities in North Korea, and will include inspections, document review, and other measures designed to prevent the further production of nuclear weapons in the secretive state.

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Clean Desert Energy to Fix China’s Rampant Pollution & Energy Deficit?

August 29, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

China is choking under a thick covering of contaminants produced from burning carbon-based fuels for industrial production, power-generation, and transport. Environmental degradation is so rampant that much of the northwest of the country is being lost to rapidly expanding deserts. And desertification threatens the already shaky balance between China’s available arable land and its skyrocketing demand for cheap food. Policy makers and market theorists in China and abroad should be thinking about whether that desert can produce something to help China escape the mounting environmental and public health cataclysm.

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8 Killed in Aftermath of Bomb Attack in China’s Xinjiang Province

August 11, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

News reports suggest that 7 bomb suspects and at least one security guard were killed after a bombing attack on police and government facilities in China’s far western Xinjiang province. Xinjiang is one of the regions that many believe may attempt to separate from China, if there is any opportunity, political or military to do so. There are active separatist movements there, a large Muslim population that wants independence from Communist China, and they see the example of former Soviet republics of central Asia as evidence that independence is possible.

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Against the Good Nukes / Bad Nukes Fallacy

Cynicism often lends itself to the construction of intellectually convenient, overly facile descriptions of future events, which —bolstered by the impassioned worries and self-promotion of the cynic, the anti-prophet— quickly assume an air of prophetic certainty. Buoyed by the psychological satisfaction of carrying prophetic certainty within, the cynic then commits more and more fully to the proclamation of unshakeable doctrines about the future, based on bad-faith arguments and a passion for the despairing global outlook.

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