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

March 31, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

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 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

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.

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Nuclear Material Found in Andes Sign of Proliferation Threat

March 29, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

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 seized led authorities to it.

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Moving Down the Food Chain

March 28, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

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 annually for food and feed, the 2-billion-ton annual world harvest of grain would support 2.5 billion people. At the Italian level of consumption of close to 400 kilograms, the current harvest would support 5 billion people. At the 200 kilograms of grain consumed by the average Indian, it would support a population of 10 billion.

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Cloud Clarity vs. Shadow Banking

March 23, 2008 :: jr3o :: 3 Comments

The United States is facing what some experts are calling an “economic perfect storm”, with historical economists worrying about symptoms and reactions “not seen since the Great Depression”. Resources (natural and financial) are increasingly scarce, strained by tight credit markets and by competition from major emerging economies (China and India), and food prices are soaring.

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Food Supply Restoration & Security: Africa

March 23, 2008 :: admin :: 2 Comments

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 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

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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Web 3.0 Must Make Information More Free, the Individual More Autonomous

March 17, 2008 :: jr3o :: No Comment Yet

We are on the verge of a major communications and global economic revolution, in which major media, technological advances, cloud computing and dispersed optimization, adapt to and take over new models for living and producing in human society. The New Scientist magazine reports in its March 15-21, 2008 edition that “web 3.0 will be about making information less free”.

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

March 17, 2008 :: admin :: 2 Comments

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 an all-time record of $111/barrel, gold hit an all-time record of $1,001/ounce, Asian and European markets plummeted on news that Carlyle Capital —one of the world’s largest capital management funds— was in collapse, and Chrysler would shut down its entire corporation for 2 weeks in July, with no pay, to “increase productivity”.

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

March 17, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

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 their testimony via video, can put their message before the eyes of the world.

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

March 16, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

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. Xinhua, China’s official state-run media organization, reports only 10 civilian deaths and a number of policemen injured.

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

March 15, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

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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Neckband Senses Nerve Impulses, Reconstitutes Speech Not Spoken

March 14, 2008 :: jr3o :: No Comment Yet

The news may best be stated as smart neckband makes “telepathic” chat possible. But it is more appropriate to say that a group of cunning neurological researchers and engineers have found a way to tap thought about speech and recreate speech, even where the person in question chooses not to utter a word, or is unable to.

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Pittsburgh Jobs Conference to Focus on Greening of US Industry, Spurring Transition to ‘Green-collar’ Workforce

March 13, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

The emergence of ecological economic trends, methods and industries, means that a wave of job creation could be the stabilizing factor which helps American industry recover both momentum and public appeal, potentially helping to ease pricing pressures and banks’ concerns about lending to individuals and small and medium-sized businesses.

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Green Economy: Resilience Services Will Meet Opportunity & Urgency

March 13, 2008 :: jr3o :: One Comment

The ongoing transition to an environmentally sustainable economy, focusing on energy and agricultural resources, is already opening the door to a range of new industrial and engineering services related to resource and ecosystem resilience (now understood to be vital to the stability of the natural environment whose own services underpin every element of our civilization).

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Nano-chemical Computation Heralds New Era in Molecular IT

March 12, 2008 :: jr3o :: No Comment Yet

Scientists have achieved the goal of creating a nano-scale “chemical brain” that can transmit instructions to multiple (at present as many as 16) molecular “machines” simultaneously. The new molecular processor means that nano-chemical computation may soon be possible, ushering in a new era in super-light, super-fast, more versatile computer processing capabilities and, by extension, robotics.

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

March 10, 2008 :: admin :: No Comment Yet

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 speak to quantity.

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Cloudscape Computing: the Dispersed Matrix as ‘Infinite’ Computing Platform

March 8, 2008 :: jr3o :: 2 Comments

As the web moves into a more mature stage of its adolescence, the beginnings of an all-media platform, computing has begun to move to the “cloud” format. Cloudscape computing means that software, files, private accounts and processing power are dispersed over an extensive array of machines across the world.

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