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The Road from Mokha to Sanaa

August 1, 2011 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Yemen may be where the Arab spring, this sweeping current of democratic upheaval in the Arabic-speaking world, takes a turn definitively toward violence or toward civic solutions. The regime of Ali Abdullah Saleh, a tribal dictatorship using feudal power tactics, based in the capital Sanaa, is now waging one war against extremist Islamists and another against non-violent pro-democracy protesters.

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Oil Globules Found inside Shells of Blue Crabs, from TX to FL

July 12, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Scientists in Mississippi say they have discovered microscopic globules of hydrocarbons, i.e. petroleum, inside the outer shells of blue crab living along the Gulf coast. This discovery appears to show that oil has now entered the food chain. This process cannot be reversed, though measures may be taken to limit the spread of the oil deeper into the local and regional ecosystem.

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Deepwater Horizon Well-Casing Likely Breached

June 16, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

There is mounting concern the ongoing flow of oil from the damaged BP Deepwater Horizon well in the Macondo field may be the result of one or more serious structural breaches in the cement well casing below the sea bed. Statements made on 7 June by Florida Sen. Bill Nelson, to MSNBC’s Andrea Mitchell, suggest the well casing has ruptured, there are multiple points of seepage across the surrounding sea bed, and the well can likely only be closed from below, if or when the two relief wells connect with the damaged well.

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International Response to Congo War: How to Stop the Genocide

February 15, 2010 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The war in the Democratic Republic of Congo has killed 6.9 million people in 12 years. No war has cost more innocent lives since World War II, and the level of extreme violence, brutality against women, and even the enslavement of families and villages, appears to be escalating. The world’s attention has yet to fully focus on the plight of the Congolese civilians living in a state of perpetual extreme crisis day after day.

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Clean Water Scarce for 3 Billion People Worldwide

October 2, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Clean, safe drinking water is scarce for over 3 billion people across the world. At least 1 billion literally never have access to clean, safe drinking water, putting them at constant risk of severe thirst-related ill health effects, infectious diseases or toxic contamination. Over 100 countries face either sporadic or chronic crisis-level problems related to clean water scarcity.

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Chasing the Rainbow: Wall St. Gambled on Fictional Expansion-potential

March 2, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

The hardest thing to understand about the current, and deepening, economic crisis, is that it came about largely because some of the most experienced, well-staffed and prestigious financial institutions in the world gambled on untenable projects of unlimited expansion, without ever producing sound mathematics to back up the projections. Philosophical exuberance replaced philosophical underpinnings, and the dynamo of financial speculation greased the wheels of commerce in a way that masked underlying shortfalls.

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Federal Competitive-Lending Bank Could Be Used to Spur Credit

February 13, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

There is talk of a major overhaul of the US banking system, with some analysts and economists saying the situation is so dire that widespread “nationalization” —or government takeover— will be necessary, and others saying there needs to be a bad-debt takeover bank, that takes on the huge financial risk of major banks’ “toxic assets”, so that the banks can “clear their books” and begin to lend. But another possibility looms as the likely more appealing option: the creation of a Federal Competitive-Lending Bank (FCLB)…

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Resilient Complexity versus Exposure to Entropy

January 31, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

All systems fail, all organized interactions are vulnerable to entropy, ashes to ashes, dust to dust. And at best, we are but stardust, a beautiful yet haunting explanation of our origins. Infused with light. Doomed to shadow. Whatever your spiritual beliefs, in the mortal physical realm, entropy is always interfering. The intellect often uses convenient [...]

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Toward a ‘Transactional’ Cosmology: Web Dynamics for the Information Age

January 6, 2009 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Each information transaction, sometimes as exemplary, sometimes as single element added to a sweeping aggregate of historical sway, is a precedent, which can motivate, influence or redirect the push of future happenstance. And, we must take note, every transaction involving matter or energy contains information, traces of a history of its coming into being, and generates a “footprint”, a trace of its appearance and its transition into something beyond the transactional moment.

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Economic Downturn Cannot Be Allowed to Slow Shift to Green Resources

November 25, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: 3 Comments

The issue is not, as so many would like to believe, whether carbon-based fuels are affordable to the end-user. They are not. The total costs per gallon of gasoline are estimated at more than $11, covered by government subsidies, public-private research funding, tax incentives, military spending, public health funding, and funds devoted to cleaning up the ill effects of pollution. Capitalist markets need not be dependent on unsustainable excesses in resource use, but we are in the current global economic crunch, because they have been.

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Al Gore Pushes National Effort to Produce All U.S. Energy from Renewables in 10 Years

July 17, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Former US vice-president Al Gore is calling on the nation to marshal its resources and divorce itself from the combustible fuels economy. Gore says the US can produce all its energy requirements from renewable resources within 10 years, if action is taken. The bold initiative is designed to drive debate on the topic and move discussions about how to deal with high fuel prices toward the new opportunity they provide for funding renewable infrastructure development.

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Oil Shock: the Coming Economic Unraveling & How We Can Adjust

July 9, 2008 :: staff :: Comments Off

Petroleum is the most pervasive base resource other than water in the global economy of the 21st century, and as demand is exploding, production is nearing its geological peak, and untenable price increases are hitting a strained economy hard. Oil prices could be in a stagflation lock, unable to readjust to consumers’ means, unable to compete as emerging energy sources repeatedly slash development and commercial prices. Whatever factors are at play, crude oil prices have jumped over 900% since 1998, and it looks like production cannot meet global demand.

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Ziggurat Century: Global Civilization as the New Babel, with Reason for Hope

May 25, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

We are living in a time of unprecedented global integration, where economies, security interests, legal systems, and languages and systems of learning have been dispersed and interwoven across the globe. There are obvious positive effects to this integration, along with certain overarching and seemingly intractable problems that cause real worry for even the most hopeful or studied observers.

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Demonstrations Against China’s Tibet Policy Spread to Nepal, Police Attack Demonstrators

March 31, 2008 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

Demonstrations against Chinese rule in Tibet turned violent in Nepal’s capital Kathmandu, yesterday, as police wielded bamboo clubs and beat demonstrators, including Buddhist monks and nuns. The UN has said Nepal’s harsh clampdown on Tibetan demonstrators violates international human rights law, including the right to peaceful assembly, as embodied in treaties signed by Nepal.

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Price of Rice Doubles on World Markets, Undermining Asian Stability

March 29, 2008 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

Rice is a basic food staple for nearly half the world’s population. The world’s two most populous nations, China and India, depend heavily on the grain for basic sustenance, and for economic stability. The price of rice has doulbed in the last 3 months, causing concern about potential for conflict along Asian border regions. The [...]

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Nuclear Material Found in Andes Sign of Proliferation Threat

March 29, 2008 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

Reports out of Colombia cite government sources saying the FARC (Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia) acquired uranium on the black market. Colombian authorities claim to have recoverd 66 pounds of uranium. The radioactive material, which in some forms can fuel to a nuclear device, was said to have been recovered after information on 3 laptops [...]

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Moving Down the Food Chain

March 28, 2008 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

EXCERPT FROM PLAN B 3.0, CH. 9: “FEEDING 8 BILLION WELL” Lester Brown, EPI :: One of the questions I am most often asked is, “How many peo-ple can the earth support?” I answer with another question: “Atwhat level of food consumption?” Using round numbers, at theU.S. level of 800 kilograms of grain per person [...]

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CPF Discussion on Food Supply Security in Africa

March 25, 2008 :: staff :: Comments Off

As part of the Crisis Policy Forum, the HotSpring collaborative innovation initiative is now planning an effort to tackle the problem of food supply management and chronic food and water scarcity in Africa. The lessons from this experiment in collaborative research will be applicable in many cases to other situations around the world, and we [...]

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Crisis Policy Forum Discussion on Food Supply Security in Africa

March 25, 2008 :: staff :: Comments Off

As part of the Crisis Policy Forum, the HotSpring collaborative innovation initiative is now planning an effort to tackle the problem of food supply management and chronic food and water scarcity in Africa. The lessons from this experiment in collaborative research will be applicable in many cases to other situations around the world, and we are open to spurring dialogue in those areas as outgrowths of this ongoing discussion.

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Tibet Crisis Deepens, Chinese State Media Say "Crush" Protesters

March 22, 2008 :: The Editors :: 2 Comments

The Chinese government’s military crackdown on demonstrators in Tibet and in neighboring Chinese provinces has been intense, though foreign media have been unable to confirm reports of mounting death tolls. In Sichuan province, there are allegations of 23 killed by security forces in one incident, including a 16-year-old. Reports of mounting fear among civilians in Tibet and Sichuan have become common in recent days.

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Confluence of Housing, Energy, Commodities, Banking, Jobs & Food-price Strains Called ‘Economic Perfect Storm’

March 17, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

On Thursday of last week, we found on the same day reports that mortgage foreclosures were at an all-time high in the US, the US dollar had fallen to an all-time low against the euro ($1.56 to 1€), the Federal Reserve joined with other central banks to infuse $200 billion into capital markets, oil hit [...]

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Witness.org Brings Truth of Human Rights Abuse to the Eyes of the World

March 17, 2008 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

A revolutionary web-based social networking project, Witness.org has created a platform for delivering evidentiary video documenting human rights abuses for the collective conscience of the online world. ‘The Hub’, as the video sharing platform is called, is designed to ensure that individuals who have documented potential human rights abuses, or who are able to give [...]

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3rd Day of Clashes in Tibet Without Independent Media Being Permitted to Verify Death Tolls

March 16, 2008 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

Two days after peaceful demonstrations across Tibet turned violent in the capital Lhasa, the Reuters news agency has reported that the violent clashes between protesters and Chinese security forces have spread to neighboring provinces. Supporters of the Dalai Lama, the exiled spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhists, say they have confirmed at least 80 deaths among demonstrators.

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Chinese Security Forces Accused of Firing into Crowd of Demonstrators in Lhasa, Tibet

March 15, 2008 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

International media reports say that sources in the Tibetan exile community, from India to New York, have confirmed that at least 30 civilian demonstrators were killed by Chinese security forces as they moved to end a demonstration in the Tibetan capital, Lhasa, on Friday. Demonstrations had begun on Monday, and for four days, reports suggest the majority of demonstrations were peaceful.

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Pharmaceuticals Found in Drinking Water of 24 Major Metropolitan Areas in US

March 10, 2008 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

A new study has found that selective seratonin re-uptake inhibitors (SSRI, or anti-depressants), sex-hormones, painkillers and anti-biotics in significant quantities in the drinking water of 24 out of 28 major metropolitan areas in the United States. Though the term “trace amounts” appears multiple times in today’s reporting of the findings, that term does not necessarily [...]

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Polar Bear May Be Listed by US as Endangered by Global Warming

February 4, 2008 :: The Editors :: 14 Comments

The global climate change crisis may soon enter a new phase in terms of human society’s reaction, efforts to curb harmful activities that exacerbate the problem. The United States Dept. of the Interior is considering a proposal to list the polar bear as the first species facing extinction specifically as a side-effect of global warming. [...]

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Elections, Credit, Fuel Costs, Soil Quality, Water Policy & Access to Food Crucial in 2008

January 2, 2008 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

Sentido.tv :: 2008 will be a year in which the integrity of election processes, the quality and resilience of cultivated soils, the availability of credit to consumers, the affordability of homes and rentals, and access to affordable vital staples like food and water, as well as the cost of transportation, will affect economies the world [...]

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Stability Key Goal Shared by Top Rivals in Pakistan

December 30, 2007 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

In the wake of the assassination of Pakistan People’s Party leader Benazir Bhutto, stability seems to be the key goal among top rivals in secular political leadership. The PPP has announced that in keeping with Ms. Bhutto’s wishes, her son Bilawal Bhutto Zardari, a 19-year-old student at Christ Church College, Oxford, will take the helm [...]

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Bhutto Assassination Signals Deep-running Political Rift that Could Destabilize Pakistan

December 28, 2007 :: The Editors :: One Comment

Fmr. Pakistan prime minister Benazir Bhutto, whose father was executed in the process of a military coup in the 1970s, and who has said she remained “broken” by what had happened to her during 5 years in military prison, was assassinated Thursday, while campaigning to restore free elections to her country. She had been the [...]

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Doctors without Borders reports 10 most underreported humanitarian crises of 2007

December 23, 2007 :: staff :: Comments Off

The top ten most underreported humanitarian crises worldwide are, according to Doctors without Borders (MSF), “Displaced Fleeing War in Somalia Face Humanitarian Crisis; Political and Economic Turmoil Sparks Health-Care Crisis in Zimbabwe; Drug-Resistant Tuberculosis Spreads As New Drugs Go Untested; Expanded Use of Nutrient Dense Ready-to-Use Foods Crucial for Reducing Childhood Malnutrition; Civilians Increasingly Under [...]

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Overcoming Acrimony, Bali Conference Brings Concessions, Start of a ‘Roadmap’

December 16, 2007 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

The UN climate change policy conference on the Indonesian island of Bali has ended in dramatic fashion, as EU and US delegates found themselves in a war of words over differences in how to reach long-term reductions in “heat-trapping gases” emitted by human societies, essentially: carbon emissions. The International Herald Tribune reports on the confrontations [...]

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The 12-year Sea Change, the Green Economy

December 3, 2007 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

TheHotSpring.com :: Between the years 2008 and 2020, we are likely to see a still unimaginably sweeping shift away from fossil fuels and high-contamination modes of powering our economy. The transition will have a political component, but will be driven mostly by cost concerns, resource scarcity, and public demand for cleaner air and responsible climate [...]

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The Time is Now, an Action Plan for Global Emissions Reduction

November 18, 2007 :: J.E. Robertson :: Comments Off

Due to the science we already have, the laws we have to govern our own activity and to force government to act for the public health, we face the real possibility of being forced, in American courts, in the future, to pay for damage done to the most affected populations in other parts of the world, as a result of inaction by our government. And if not in court, then as a matter of the de facto urgencies of international political stability.

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Preventive Measures to Curb Damage from Climate Change: How Close Are They?

October 14, 2007 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

Sentido.tv :: Can the world prepare to face the potential economic fallout from increasingly intense weather phenomena, prolonged heat waves, desertification, ice-melt and flooding? While there is no clear proof Hurricane Katrina was a direct result of climate change, hurricanes of such intensity will become increasingly frequent as Gulf waters warm; the aftermath provides real [...]

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Nobel Peace Prize Awarded for Work to Raise Awareness About Global Climate Change

October 14, 2007 :: The Editors :: One Comment

Climate change is no longer controversial; it has been accepted as scientific fact by a global consensus of researchers and policy makers, including the Bush White House, which resisted acknowledging human activities were a vital contributing factor, until recently. Now the Nobel committee selecting the Peace Prize laureate has raised the issue of warming posing a major international security crisis.

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Darfur Scene of Ongoing Ethnic Cleansing, Largest UN Peacekeeping Force Deployed

October 4, 2007 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

Sentido.tv :: Darfur, beset by years of bloody internecine violence, with the Khartoum-backed janjaweed militia killing civilians in numbers the US government has officially declared to be genocide, is still struggling to find a real beginning for peace. For years, human rights groups have pleaded with the international community to intervene, with or without the [...]

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The Elders Initiative, an Effort to Infuse Wisdom into Global Policy & Conflict Resolution

September 30, 2007 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

The Elders is a humanitarian initiative led by South African archibishop Desmond Tutu and former South African pres. Nelson Mandela, designed to bring the African “village elders” concept to the global village, in an effort to defuse flashpoint crisis situations and speed responsible policy-making. Its foundations are the basic principles of human rights and the [...]

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Clinton Global Initiative Brings Together 1,300, Including 52 Current or Former Heads of State

September 26, 2007 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

Former US pres. Bill Clinton’s Global Initiative (CGI) holds a major international stakeholders’ and donors’ conference each year in conjunction with the UN’s General Assembly, in New York City. This year’s convention brings together 1,300 delegates from 72 countries. 52 active or former heads of state are participating, in only the 3rd year of this [...]

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Geothermal Energy Creates Hope for Global Energy Solution

September 23, 2007 :: l.johr :: Comments Off

The race to tap large quantities of underground, geothermal energy is heating up. In a recent bid to solve their country’s demand for clean energy, the Swiss are digging deep, and the Earth is responding. A scientist at MIT, in the US, says 40% of US geothermal sources could power the entire country’s energy needs in excess of 56,000 times.

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Mozambique’s ‘Tree of Life’ Project Turns Used Weapons into Signs of Hope

September 22, 2007 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

Sentido.tv :: In the wake of Mozambique’s long civil war, lasting from 1976 to 1992, a group of artists, sponsored by Christian aid, set up the Transforming Arms into Tools (TAE) project in the nation’s capital, Maputo. Sculptors use decomissioned weapons, and parts of weapons to make art, expressing the possibility of finding new ways [...]

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Amnesty Reported in 2006: International Arms Trade ‘Out of Control’

September 22, 2007 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

Sentido.tv :: Human rights group says ‘opaque chain’ of private interests increasing shipments of dangerous arms, with little supervision… Amnesty International (Amnesty/AI) has published a new report examining the international arms trade, and its findings indicate there is little control on the expanding web of private interests seeking to profit from a proliferation of dangerous [...]

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Introducing the Crisis Policy Forum, a Casavaria discursive community project

September 13, 2007 :: The Editors :: Comments Off

The Crisis Policy Forum is an online community project with a view to fomenting open debate and discourse on humanitarian, political and economic crises across the world. CPF aims to highlight and bring about new research and policy-proposals, to produce viable, locally-relevant solutions to pervasive crises such as fresh-water scarcity, chronic poverty, access to technology [...]

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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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