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market forces


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12 Million Children in the United States Face Hunger

December 19, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

An estimated 12 million children across the United States are currently facing hunger on a daily basis. With nearly 40 million people living below the government’s officially recognized “poverty line”, chronic undernourishment affects as many as 1 in 6 American children. In 2007 98% of US families with “very low food security” reported being afraid they would not have enough to make it to their next opportunity to acquire food, while 97%, reported that the food they bought was simply not enough to avoid going hungry, and that there was no money left to buy more.

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Ripe for Change: What will this season of turning bring? (photos + essay)

November 16, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

A “wave election”, with public sentiment clearly moving in a new direction, calling for principled governance, with a new focus on progressive aims… economic crisis, having built up over a decade, hidden in the esoteric workings of financial instruments reliant on advanced physics for mathematical proof of viability, worsened by unprincipled exaggerations and manipulations… the potential for a major swing in global opinions about the meaning of political systems… the climate is ripe for change, and we now face the problem of conceptualizing change, in order to see and understand its implementation.

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Obama Healthcare Plan Emphasizes Generics to Bring Down Costs Across System

November 14, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

President-elect Barack Obama’s healthcare proposal, as laid out, aims to expand availability of safe generic prescriptions drugs, in order to bring down costs across the system and help secure full treatment for all Americans. High prescription-drug costs inflate insurance premiums and often determine whether patients will receive adequate treatment for sometimes serious health conditions. A prescription-drug plan, passed by George W. Bush, in concert with a bipartisan coalition in the then Republican-controlled Congress, aimed to help increase availability, but was not aggressive in reducing costs.

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Bottom Falling Out: CNN Reports Failure of Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac Could Push Economy into Depression

July 11, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Amid plummeting stock values and fears of an expanding threat of mass numbers of mortgage foreclosures —estimates range from 3 to 6 million homes in foreclosure within one year—, observers have suggested failure of one of the two major government-backed lenders could push the American economy into “depression”. The Treasury Department is reported to be considering a takeover of one or both of the mortgage-backing giants, which between them control $5 trillion in debt.

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Transparent Dyes Allow Windows to Act as Super-powerful Solar Panels

July 11, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

Special transparent dyes coating glass or plastic panes concentrate the Sun’s rays, guiding them to solar-voltaic cells lining the edges, allowing a window to act as a solar panel with 10 times the electricity generation capacity of solar cells, by current standards. The ‘organic solar concentrator’ (OSC) system also reduces cost, by reducing the surface area that needs to be coated by solar-voltaic cells and by eliminating the need for large concentrating mirrors and sun-tracking mechanisms.

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Oilman T. Boone Pickens Wants to Create National Wind-energy Network in the US

July 10, 2008 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

T. Boone Pickens has started what USA Today reports will be “the biggest public policy ad campaign ever” to promote a national economic shift from oil to renewable fuels, primarily wind. The campaign is centered on the PickensPlan website, which shows the oil tycoon explaining how and why the US can and must break its dependence on foreign oil —for which American consumers pay $700 billion per year— by transitioning to an energy economy founded on exploiting the massive wind resources of the Great Plains.

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

July 9, 2008 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

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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Gasoline Record Price $4.11/gallon in U.S.: Are Pricing Mechanisms Legitimate?

July 7, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

As the United States emerges from its national independence celebration, traditionally a holiday when citizens across the nation take to the roads to visit family, friends or vacation sites, regular unleaded gasoline has hit a record high price of $4.11 per gallon. With some economists having forecast an unusually slow driving holiday, and anecdotal reports [...]

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What the Market Doesn’t Know Can Hurt You, Whoever You Are

July 3, 2008 :: J.E. Robertson :: No Comment Yet

TheHotSpring.com :: Every participant in any system, is dependent upon the quality of information behind the major forces at play, just as any player in any system is beholden to the quality or jeopardy posed by the system’s prevailing methods. Free flow of information is the best hope of achieving the optimum level of functionality [...]

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World Facing Huge New Challenge on Food Front: Business-as-Usual Not a Viable Option

June 23, 2008 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

A fast-unfolding food shortage is engulfing the entire world, driving food prices to record highs. Over the past half-century grain prices have spiked from time to time because of weather-related events, such as the 1972 Soviet crop failure that led to a doubling of world wheat, rice, and corn prices. The situation today is entirely different, however. The current doubling of grain prices is trend-driven, the cumulative effect of some trends that are accelerating growth in demand and other trends that are slowing the growth in supply.

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Global Wind Power Capacity Reaches 100,000 Megawatts

March 4, 2008 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

At its current growth rate, global installed wind power capacity will top 100,000 megawatts in March 2008. In 2007, wind power capacity increased by a record-breaking 20,000 megawatts, bringing the world total to 94,100 megawatts—enough to satisfy the residential electricity needs of 150 million people. Driven by concerns regarding climate change and energy security, one in every three countries now generates a portion of its electricity from wind, with 13 countries each exceeding 1,000 megawatts of installed wind electricity-generating capacity.

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Geothermal Energy Creates Hope for Global Energy Solution

September 23, 2007 :: l.johr :: No Comment Yet

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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Water Resource Stress: Global Economic-Ecological Challenge for the 21st Century

August 14, 2007 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

Water is one of the “fundamental building-blocks of life”, as is often said in science, in biology classrooms, in medicine, theology, environmental policy debates, and in cosmology and space exploration. It is also a commodity whose economic reality is increasingly defined by chronic scarcity and often intensely uneven distribution.

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A Bubble Too Far: Property Pricing Boom is Putting Pressure on Entire World Economy

January 22, 2006 :: J.E. Robertson :: One Comment

In the summer of 2005, the Economist magazine led with a story entitled “After the Fall”. The article discussed in detail the problems inherent in what appears to be the most expansive boom real estate has seen since records began, and of all markets studied, only Germany, Japan and Hong Kong were not contributing to the inflation.

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Economy of Errors: How Abundance May Bring Scarcity

November 22, 2005 :: J.E. Robertson :: 2 Comments

The global economy in its present form is not only full of and forced to deal with problematic distortions; it has come to depend a great deal on the “bubble” effect of certain miscalculations and manipulations. Assumptions built into weak threads in the economic web mean that markets are not able to set prices or distribute wealth at sustainable levels.

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Population Growth Sentencing Millions to Hydrological Poverty

June 21, 2000 :: staff :: No Comment Yet

At a time when drought in the United States, Ethiopia, and Afghanistan is in the news, it is easy to forget that far more serious water shortages are emerging as the demand for water in many countries simply outruns the supply. Water tables are now falling on every continent. Literally scores of countries are facing water shortages as water tables fall and wells go dry.

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