Archive for the ‘Personal’ Category

070527 – Sunday – Religion vs. Atheism debate

Sunday, May 27th, 2007

– A friend of mine recently turned me onto an on-line debate between Andrew Sullivan and Sam Harris on the subject of religion vs. atheism. This territory has, of course, been raked over many times before but this example is well worth reading because of the clarity and power of these two men’s intellects. All of the major points are brought out into high relief. If you consider yourself an open-minded intellectual then you owe it to yourself to spend some time and grind through long but excellent exchange.

Sam Harris Andrew Sullivan

– I’ve decided to put this debate into the category of the PerfectStorm because both of these men believe that religious fundamentalism is going to play a part in the coming chaos. I offer here a quote from Andrew Sullivan as he closes his side of the debate:

…we are in a civilizational crisis outside the monastery’s walls. Fundamentalist religion is on the march, its certainty dangerous, its ambitions terrifying, its capacity for destruction incalculable. In my more realistic moments, I have come to accept the inevitability of large-scale global destruction in my lifetime.

Later: Now that I’ve had time now to read and digest the debate between Andrew Sullivan and Sam Harris I wanted to make some follow-up comments on it::

– In virtually every debate I’ve ever been in with someone who’s defending religion, the debate process always runs up on the shoals of faith and forward progress ends. Both sides begin with logic and reason but, at some point, the one defending religion comes to a point where they are forced to say, “I cannot defend this by logic and reason – it is by an act of faith that I believe thus.” And I’ll confess here to having been on both sides of this divide.

– I find that debates, in general, are deeply unsatisfying because there is so seldom a 1:1 correspondance between the points and questions put by person A and the responses and answers given by person B. Harris commented more than once on Sullivan’s failure to address his points in the debate. I think that debating, as a form of truth seeking, needs something like, perhaps, the Roberts Rules of Order. Some system that ensures that if A makes a point, that B must reply to it directly. One might complain that asking a question, by its very form and content, can stack things in the questioner’s favor. But, since both sides would ask an equal number of questions, the playing field would be as level as their respective skills at debating would allow.

– As a continuation of the last comment’s theme, I think it would also be helpful if one or more folks sat to the side and sifted the logic of statements made to see if they really are logical or simple one of any number of logical fallacies (such as out detailed wonderfully in Robert Gula’s book, “Non-Sense – A Handbook of Logical Fallacies“). Then, debate might actually product results that materially advanced our search for truth.

– My last comment involves Harris’ belief that moderate religion indirectly supports fundamentalism. I, for one, did not feel that the points offered by either of the debaters settled this point for me.

070521 – Monday – Why New Zealand?

Monday, May 21st, 2007

I’ve put up a new page here that discusses why New Zealand might be the place to go if you are beginning to get concerned about how things are going in the world.

This piece is not meant to be a recommendation that you consider leaving or not – that’s up to you. It’s merely information about one of your possible alternatives.

If all the doom and gloom is getting to you, it’s something to think about. If you are more of the “What, me worry?” type, then Disney World might be what you’re looking for <smile>.

070512 – Saturday – Deep into Spring

Saturday, May 12th, 2007

Listening to Amethystium…

I like to write a personal piece every once in a while. Behind the news stories I gather and post about a world coming into crises, there’s a real life I’m living here. Bills, work, pains, aging, friends, doubts, family. They all gather here behind the screen – just like they do where you are.

At the moment, we’ve just returned from one of our favorite Mexican restaurants and a Margarita. A nice respite after a long hard day.

We opened at 9 Am and closed at 5 PM. Eight hours of one customer after the other, shifting tasks, loading plants, answering questions, juggling priorities, searching the database over and over again, dealing with all the myriad personalities that come in. Taking a few moments to honor your friends when they arrive amidst the controlled chaos. Walking, walking, walking. Radios, invoices, plant identifications, coordinating getting things dug and loaded into every type of vehicle, talking to new customers about how things work here at the nursery. Finding a few moments to grab a bite for lunch and maybe a cup of coffee. Watching at every spare moment to see where you can take up the slack.

What we do

I like it but it’s tiring. The more so since I had my knee surgery which is just a month ago now. My legs still feel weak and they complain when I push them, they complain when I give them stairs, they complain when I bend my right knee too far. I’m used to feeling strong. All my life I’ve been strong for my weight and feeling weak is fairly alien to me. But, I’ll be 60 next August so patience in these matters is becoming a virtue.

Our season’s rolling along well. The numbers are good and if they keep up, we very well may beat last years numbers. At least half the customers who arrive are new, having seen us on the web (www.woodscreeknursery.com) or heard about us by word-of-mouth. It’s good. We’re a family owned business and we like what we do and we like the people who work for us and so, I think, it feels good here and people who come respond to it.

Sharon’s a genius about plants as well and so every where you look, there are good looking plants – green, healthy and vibrant.

SharonSharonSharon in her garden

I’m not complaning. I’m just trying to render a slice of what being here and being me looks like. It’s been a long and twisted path to arrive here as a nurseryman at 59. Someday, I’ll have to write the second half of the autobiography I began under about me. The part still to be written is, by far, the more interesting part.

Sharon and I in New Zealand

These last weeks, among all the work, blogging and recovery from my knee surgery, something very special happened. My younger son, Chris, with whom I’ve been estranged on and off for a number of years, contacted me. It all began long ago with a personal loan gone bad but over the years since, I’m not sure anyone really knows all the reasons that have kept us apart. But, a few weeks ago, I got an E-mail from him after a very long time and a reconciliation was begun. Over the next week or so, we shared a lot of things with each other by E-mail that have always been there in the picture but which we’ve always just walked around. It was a good experience. I’d even call it a beautiful experience. I’ve always loved Chris very deeply in spite of all of the misunderstandings and getting back with him and opening our hearts was one of those things that marks a turning point in your life and your memories. Last Tuesday, I drove him from Bellevue over to Kennewick in eastern Washington. About a four hour drive. On the way, we continued to share our thoughts, experiences and feelings and I’m thinking we’ve left the rough spots behind.

Chris and I in Kennewick at his Mom’s placeChris, his mom, Rose, and sister, Jenny

Life is always such a rich tapestry. There are threads that come up that you want to deal with and, sometimes, there just isn’t time and you watch them recede until they slowly become irrelevant due to the passage of time.

A good friend of mine in Europe who is a global climate change doubter sent me an interesting speech by Michael Crichton. Like the Great Global Warming Swindle business a few months ago, it cries for analysis, decomposition and rebuttal but I look at the hours I’ve had these last two weeks and I think, ‘but where?’

The things I’m blogging about evolve as well. Some ideas like Peak Oil descend in my perceived priorities while others like the problems swirling around the ascendancy of corporate power in man’s world ascend and beg for commentary. Then there’s also a growing feeling of frustration at all of the good hearted and well meaning writing I’ve read on the web about mankind’s problems. Many people just don’t seem to get that we don’t need another Noam Chomsky to explain it all to us one more time even more clearly before we all catch fire, hit critical mass and all come together and solve the world’s problems. People come up with charts, analysis, scientific papers – as if these new bricks in the wall of our understandings will somehow precipitate the solution. I find myself wanting shout, “Detach, watch the patterns, see where they are going without prejudice, feel the wind in history’s trees. Think about what human nature is, ask yourself if humanity has EVER responded significantly to problems like the ones that face us now. I want to shout that you all should be thinking about your plans, your end games, about the people you love and recognize that inside most of you is an irrational belief that all of this is going to somehow work out so that it isn’t going to affect the world you live in – no matter how bad it looks on paper.

I keep publishing the stories and assembling them into patterns that seem irrefutable to me. I keep thinking that maybe I’ll figure out how to say things even more clearly. And then I see myself in the mirror. But at least, I rationalize, I’ve got a plan that’s commensurate with what I perceive to be happening – I’m not just going to sit here.

I’m going to go down stairs now and watch something or other that we’ve recorded on our DVR with Sharon and chill out. Tomorrow, accounting, wells, plants, pumps, invoices, customers, and a hundred other things wait for me.

Outside my door, the world and its history still move in their glacially slow arc towards what humanity’s first technological civilization will end as.

But tonight, I’m going to go lay about.

Cheers.

070509 – Wednesday – buried

Wednesday, May 9th, 2007

I’m absolutely buried under stuff to do so I may not post for a day or two.   Cheers!

070504 – Friday – Trust your brain?

Friday, May 4th, 2007

– I’ve got a nice collection of relatively unpopular books. They concern how poorly our brains work and I suspect they are unpopular because we, as a species, just don’t want to take a hard look at this issue. We are, after all, the smartest animal on the planet, right? I mean, look how well we are running the place.

– Here a little problem that just might give you a glimmer:

There are three boxes on the table and I’ve put a $100 bill into one of them. I know which one it is but you don’t. I ask you to pick one box and you do and you slide it over to your side of the table without opening it. Then I open one of the remaining two boxes that I know is empty and and I show you that there’s nothing in it. (The fact that I know the box is empty before I show you is the key bit here.)

Now, I ask you if you want to keep the box you originally chose or would you like to trade for the remaining closed box that I have?

You can either keep your original box or trade for mine. Which ever you choose to do, you need select and complete one of the following statements to explain your choice:

(1) It was important to stick with your original box because <fill in the blank>.

(2) It was important to switch to my box because <fill in the blank>.

(3) It wouldn’t make any difference if you switched or not because <fill in the blank>.

THINK about your answer for a bit before you click on the following link to get the answer.

:arrow:

 

Oh, and that collection of books? I thought you’d never ask.

A Mind of its Own – How Your Brain Distorts and Decieves by Cordelia Fine

Non-sense – a handbook of Logical Fallacies by Robert J. Gula

Inevitable Illusions – How the Mistakes of Reason Rule Our Minds by Massimo Piattelli-Palmarini

Mean Genes – from Sex to Money to Food Taming our Primal Instincts by Terry Burnham and Jay Phelan

Thought Contagion – How belief Spreads Through Society by Aaron Lynch

– And if you want to buy any of these books, make your way to Amazon through one of the following links and a few pennies will come my way so that my on-line raving does not go totally unrewarded.

Minor postscript: I originally wrote this piece yesterday and entitled it, 070403 – Thursday – Trust your brain? Then, after it was all written and I was making a few final tweaks, my brain, which I trust very little indeed, caused me to press some unknown combination of surprise keystrokes (while thinking it was doing something brilliant, no doubt) and the entire piece vanished from the screen and, I thought, from the face of the Earth forever. It was GONE. It was also fairly late in the evening and so I got up, said a few choice words about bad luck and the illegitimate parentage of this particular computer (note, I left any culpability on the part of my brain entirely out of my carefully thought out post-mortem analysis) and went off and had a glass of Sake to quell my irritation. Have I ever mentioned, that with few exceptions, I hate doing anything twice? So, imagine my surprise, when I checked my E-mail this morning, to find a copy of the lost piece in my mail box! Apparently, the WordPress system, which E-mails out copies of the pieces I write to those who’d prefer not to read them on web browsers, had snagged a copy in those lucky few second between my completing the piece and my final aberrant keystrokes. My conclusion (this is my brain talking here so be wary) is that either some one loves me or someone has a strange sense of humor. Either way – I’m clueless and happy.

– Thx to Rolf A. for suggesting a change to this piece that made it more effective.

070427 – Friday – The train ride to Hell

Friday, April 27th, 2007

In the five plus years I’ve been talking about the Perfect Storm concept, I’ve often told a story I call The Train to Hell story. It’s a simile, but I find it’s useful when people tell me that things are going to be alright because everyday more and more people are becoming concerned about the environment. It explains clearly how things can be getting better – and why that’s just not enough. As you read this, think of it as a dream story – something someone might relate to you just after they’ve woken up.

So imagine we’re on a train and we’re rolling across the flat countryside at high speed in a straight line. Ahead, the tracks lead right to the edge of a very deep cliff and then they just end. If the train doesn’t stop before we arrive at the cliff, we’re all going over the edge together and it is going to be very bad indeed.

The train has one of those cords you pull to signal that the train should make an emergency stop. This cord works a bit differently, however. With this cord, how well it works depends on how many people are pulling on it.

Now, some folks have leaned way out the windows or maybe even climbed atop the train and they’ve seen the cliff coming and they can also see what’s going to happen if we don’t stop. Now they’re down in the cabin pulling on the cord and talking to everyone around them trying to convince them that there’s a big problem up ahead and they too should start pulling the cord. Some folks, a few, believe them and help with the cord. A few more lean way out the window and see that they are right and they begin to lend a hand as well.

But most folks listen for a moment, glance out the windows casually and don’t see anything so they go on about their business. After all, train rides are fun.

Now, I’m on the train and I’m helping with the cord but I’m worried that not many people are. I tell my friend who is also pulling the cord about my concern and he says, “Hey, don’t worry. Look, more and more people all the time are joining us and helping with the cord.

Unfortunately, I’ve done a calculation. Even with more new people adding their efforts all the time and even with the train’s increasing rate of slowing, I can see it’s just not going to be enough to stop us before we go over the edge. The new folks are adding in too slowly and the rate we are approaching the cliff’s edge is much too fast.

I tell my friend we may not have time to try to convince people to help by reason or example. But he says it is critically important that everyone makes the decision to help on their own. We cannot interfere in another person’s decisions and in the exercise of their free will.

I look out the window and I’m thinking, “What will the nicety of respecting their free will gain either them or us if we all go over the edge together?

At some point, a problem can become so critical that it must begin to percolate up through the levels of one’s priorities until it reaches a level where decisions can be made that can effectively deal with the problem. If we are not willing to rearrange our priorities in favor of survival and defer, instead, to the considerations of lesser levels and priorities, then we are quite likely not to survive.

So where’s the limit? Should we avoid taking action because we might get our clothes dirty and they are expensive? Should we avoid taking action because we might have to speak loudly and forcefully and that’s unseemly? Should we not act to save all of us because we might have to force some of us to help against their will?

There’s a similar riddle which concerns a rowboat with a few too many people in it out on the open sea. It bears thinking through.

These are not easy questions but, unfortunately, we’ve put ourselves into the position of having to answer them.

Some of us believe we can see the magnitude of the problems facing mankind and the entire biosphere at this point in history. But, most folks don’t believe there’s a problem at all. And many others acknowledge that there is but they are talking politely about it and trying to get more folks on board to deal with it by reason and example.

But the scientists are telling us clearly that we are very near the point where if we don’t act decisively, the Earth’s weather system’s are going to move into configurations we’ve never seen before and the results will be a very large disruption to civilization, the death of millions and millions of people and a massive die-off of species the likes of which hasn’t happened here since the comet smashed into the Yucatan 66 million years ago.

Meanwhile, the majority of the people in the most powerful nation on Earth don’t believe in the relevance of science or the reality of evolution. Some of the most powerful constructs mankind has ever conceived and unleashed, entities called corporations, which have power which exceeds many small and medium nation states, press on with their monomaniacal pursuit of money and power – as if there will be a place to spend the money and a place to wield the power in the future. Meanwhile, the majority of the world’s populations do not care for anything more distant or abstract than the probability that they will receive their next paycheck and be able to put food on the table.

Do you see the problem, Lambchop? It’s likely we’re going to be toast.

BlueHost – a most excellent company!

Thursday, April 26th, 2007

– The following is an E-mail I sent earlier today to Matt Heaton of BlueHost.com. This Samadhisoft Blog is hosted on BlueHost’s servers and in the year that I’ve been dealing with this company I have had nothing but admiration for how they do things.

– If, after reading this testamonial, you decide to check BlueHost out and perhaps signup, do me a favor and go to the BlueHost website using the small BlueHost ad you’ll find if you scroll down the right side of this page. On top of everything else they do that’s cool, they’ll credit me $65 if you sign up with them after accessing them through my ad. It’ll cost you nothing extra and I get $65 – now is that cool or what?

———————————————-

Matt,

I’ve never written one of these before. Frankly, when it comes to computers and the Internet, I’m long-in-the-tooth and fairly hard to please. But, I’ve been with BlueHost now for nearly a year and I am still extremely impressed at the value and the service I get for my $6.95/month.

Just now, I talked with two of your technical folks on two calls 15 minutes apart and they were both quick to take my call and both very clear and knowledgeable as they helped me. And this has been my experience on every single tech call since day one with BlueHost.

I find working with your company far and away the best experience I’ve had with any similar company and maybe with any company I’ve ever worked with in any domain.

My fear is that something this good just can’t last in today’s dog-eat-dog capitalistic free-for-all. I fear that if BlueHost is this good, some big fish like Google or Microsoft will come and gobble them up and then turn their value and quality into the same everything-for-maximum-profit-and-minimum-effort pabulum that most of the market is full of. In this nightmare, your tech support will go to India where script-drones will deaden its sharp edges into utter mediocrity. Calls to tech-support will go into long queues where the unfortunate will be forced to listen to inane advertisements for services they don’t want or need. And any small change to DNS servers or whatever will incur a transaction charge like the banks require for every small thing and God help you if you ask for anything that a non-technical individual operating within their script can’t noodle out. Your $6.95/mo price will be adjusted upwards in search for the sweet-spot of maximum profit which must reside just below the nearest competitor’s price-point.

I’m a bit cynical about some aspects of Capitalism. I don’t think that maxima of quality and value necessarily reside at the same location as the profit maxima. After all, the profit-centric idea of extracting the maximum of my money while serving me the minimum of service doesn’t exactly put me in mind of quality.

I don’t think that everything a corporation does should be judged by the single yardstick of what the investment returns are to the investors next quarter. I don’t think customer loyalty is something that should be distilled and optimized by legions of marketing psychologists working out how to dazzle and manipulate the unwise and the unaware subliminally.

In the past, some companies, IMHO, had a grip on the equations of quality and reputation. I’m thinking here of American Express and Hewlett-Packard. But, they both slipped under the waves beneath the guidance of profit-oriented marketing gurus. And look what’s become of Ted Turner’s CNN Headline News. It’s gone from being a national resource to becoming a Fox News clone with just a slightly different mini-skirt on. A lot of the malaise in the world and in America in particular is because of this ascendancy of the short term gains and goals over the long term consequences in all things.

But, I digress, so back to the point. In short, you are an utter phenomenon in the market and I can only hope you will last and endure. I’ve told a number of folks about your company and when I find myself describing everything one gets for the $6.95/mo., it sounds so unrealistic and over-the-top that I feel like most folks won’t believe me because it is all too good to be true.

You’ve got a very loyal customer here and I sincerely wish and hope that whatever vision of Capitalism and corporation building you subscribe to might get successfully propagated out into today’s markets which very badly need to hear it.

Feel free to use any and/or all of this testimonial as you like. I’m going to post this letter on my Blog as well.

With my very best wishes to you,

Dennis Gallagher

070421 – Saturday – wee knees

Saturday, April 21st, 2007

On April 11th, I had an Arthroscopy proceedure done on my right knee.  It’s been needing a repair since I hurt it running last November in New Zealand.

I’d had the same procedure done almost ten years ago on my left knee and it worked out fine then.   Minimum fuss and minimum hassle.

This time has been different.  In the days after the surgery, my leg swelled up seriously and by the 10th day, I had blood pooling in my ankle area as evidenced by the large blue bruises on either side as if I’d sprained my ankle badly.

Of course I’ve quizzed myself as to why it should have been so different this time – other than the fact that I’m almost ten years older and 10 to 15 pounds heavier.

The clue, I believe was always there.   When I was in New Zealand sometime in December, I noticed that when I took my socks off in the evening, my shins above where the socks had gripped my legs, were swollen.    I have no idea how long they’d been like that.  Noticing something like that just seems to creep up on me – hanging out there at the edge of consciousness until one day I consciously note it and idly wonder why it looks like that.   It could have been getting worse and worse for months.  My wife says I’m fairly clueless about such things and she’s probably right.

In any case, when I went in to see my GP in March to start the process towards getting the Arthroscopy done, we discussed the leg swelling and he said that it can indicate, most commonly, heart of kidney problems.   I asked him to run what ever tests were necessary to confirm or preclude these and he did.   Blood work quickly showed that my kidney functions were fine.   Later, I had a visit with a Cardiologist and got to become a giant hamster and ran on a treadmill while an EKG machine watched my cardiac functions.   Then, when my heart was beating at about 140 beats per second, they slapped an ultrasound paddle on my chest and looked at my heart beating physically.   It was all good.  100% A-OK cardiac functions.  I was glad about that.

But, it still left the swelling cause unknown.  My GP tried me on diuretic pills for two weeks but I couldn’t see that they made much difference in the swelling.   He’d also told me that this just happens to some folks as they age for no known reason though more often to women than men.   The long and the short of it was that we decided to just let it be and pressed on for the Arthroscopy on the knee.   The doctor who was going to do the Arthroscopy had been appraised about the swelling and requested my kidney and cardiac test results – so he was in the loop as well.

Well, a four or five days after the Arthroscopy procedure,  my sense was that I wasn’t healing as well as I thought I should.   Of course, in that situation, you have to wonder if your own impatience is interfereing with your judgement.   On day five or six, we noticed that I had a lot of bleeding under the skin on the back of my right thigh and I’d been noting for days that the muscles along the outside of that thigh were as tight as a drum and very painful to touch or use.   So, I called the doctor’s office to see if I could send them some digital photos and they could then decide if I was having abnormal symptoms or not.  The nurse called back and declined the photos and said I could come in but also said that they clamp the leg at the thigh with a tourniquet during the surgery and that this can often semi-crush the muscle and lead to pain and some bleeding afterwards.   That reassured me so I let it go and continued to limp about.

I was taking three to four Percocets a day to deal with the pain and so that I could sleep.   And that’s an awful lot of pain medication for me.

On Thursday evening, on the 8th day, I noticed that my leg was swollen all the way down to and including the foot and that I had dark brusing marks on either side of my ankle indicating that blood was pooling there.   I decided to push to see the doctor the next day, Friday, rather than waiting through the weekend for my first scheduled follow up visit on Monday.

That same evening, as I wondered yet again what could be causing all these problems, it finally occurred to me that I’ve been taking blood pressure medicine, Diovan,and that it works by keeping your blood vessels from contracting.  Something was beginning to click.
Earlier, my GP had told me that swelling like this is basically caused by the clear portion of the blood leaking out through the walls of the blood vessels into the muscles and such.   The real question, of course, is why the leakage occurs and that’s why we’d run the kidney and cardiac tests.   But now I was wondering if one of the possible side-effects of Diovan might be swelling due to it contributing to increased leakage.  I stopped taking Diovan the next morning and went into see the Arthroscopy surgeon.

He said that my reaction was unusual but not all that rare and this kind of swelling just seems to happen to some folks after the surgery.   He was concerned however least I might have formed any blood clots which, if undetected, might break loose and form a blockage in the lungs or heart which can be fatal.   So we scheduled an ultrasound session that afternoon with a vascular laboratory to check this possibility out.    I told him my thoughts about the Diovan and he acknowledged that it might be possible but I don’t think he was deeply impressed by the idea.

The vascular ultrasound workup showed I was free of blood clots and everything was flowing fine so we went home.

Now, it is Saturday evening, at the end of day 10 and I’ve not been taking Diovan for 48 hours and my swelling has diminished significantly.  I’ve also been getting by on half-Percocets rather than full tablets every six hours.

Is there a moral to this long medical ramble?

Well, I don’t think so.   At least, nothing definite.   Perhaps, Diovan aside, today just happened to be turn-around day and all my symptoms would have improved even if I’d continued to take the Diovan.   Maybe.    But, just a few minutes ago, I changed clothes and took my socks off for the first time today.   Virtually NO swelling above the sock-line.   And, it seems to me that the general swelling up and down my leg has decreased significantly as well.   My wife and I looked up Diovan on-line by Googling “Diovan Side Effects Swelling” and kicked out a lot of interesting stuff including some reputable sites which discuss drugs and side effects like these: :arrow:.

If I had it all to do over again,  I would have dropped Diovan sometime ago to see if my leg swelling went away.   And, for sure, I would not have been taking it at the time of the surgery.

Diovan, and blood pressure control, for me, is not an imperative.  I have what’s called border-line blood pressure and Cholesterol and my GP told me that long statistical studies had shown that people with these two together in borderline areas benefited by taking these drugs and  lived a bit longer.   I was willing so long as I could afford them and they had no adverse effects.   Now, I’m going to have to rethink all that.

/medical-rant off

070421 – Saturday – Corporate lawlessness

Saturday, April 21st, 2007

– My output here has been light of late. I’m dealing with the fallout from a knee surgery that didn’t go as well as it might have. It seems to be healing now but it’s been a major distraction over the last 10 days or so.

– In the year I’ve been Blogging and following various threads, I’ve been coming to an increasingly strong conviction. And that is that one of the root problems facing mankind in its evolution now is the fact that it has made the mistake of allowing corporations too much power in human affairs. Corporations are, after all, entities which exist to seek profit for their stockholder/owners. That’s their point. That’s their reason for being. But, in some nations, the United States notably, corporations have been granted the same rights as citizens and this has led to many problems.

– I don’t want to rag on this theme until I’ve put together a better exposition on it but just read the following story and ask yourself if we should allow powerful corporate entities like these to do what they are doing around the world in the name of profit? What ever happened to the idea of governments and institutions for the people? We seem to have drifted a period in which many governments seem to exist primarily for their most powerful citizens; corporations.

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Vast forests with trees each worth £4,000 sold for a few bags of sugar

· Congo village chiefs not told value of concessions
· World Bank blamed over deals causing ‘catastrophe’

Lamoko, 150 miles down the Maringa river, sits on the edge of a massive stretch of virgin rainforest in central Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). On February 8 2005, representatives of a major timber firm arrived to negotiate a contract with the traditional landowners.

Few in the village realised that the talks would transform all their lives, but in just a few hours, the chief, who had received no legal advice and did not realise that just one tree might be worth more than £4,000 in Europe, had signed away his community’s rights in the forest for 25 years.

In return for his signed permission to log thousands of hectares for exotic woods such as Afromosia (African teak) and sapele, the company promised to build Lamoko and other communities in the area three simple village schools and pharmacies. In addition, the firm said it would give the chief 20 sacks of sugar, 200 bags of salt, some machetes and a few hoes. In all, it was estimated that the gifts would cost the company £10,000.

It was the kind of “social responsibility” agreement that is encouraged by the World Bank, but when the villagers found out that their forest had been “sold” so cheaply, they were furious.

They complained to the local and central government that there had been no proper consultation, that the negotiations had been conducted in an “arrogant” manner, and that people had been forced to sign the document. They demanded that the company pull out.

Since February 2005, logging roads have been driven deep into the forests near Lamoko and the company has started extracting and exporting trees, but the villages have yet to see their schools and pharmacies.

“We asked them to provide wood for our coffins and they even refused that,” said one man who asked to remain anonymous.

The Lamoko agreement is just one of many contracts, or concessions, that European companies have signed with tribal chiefs in the DRC as the country begins to recover from a decade of civil wars and dictatorship.

But according to a Greenpeace report released today, Lamoko did better than many communities. Some contracts seen by the Guardian show only promises of sugar, salt and tools worth about $100 (£55) in return for permission to log. Others have reported that pledges made three years ago have still not been fulfilled. The report, which took two years to compile, claims that industrial logging backed by the World Bank is now out of control. “Younger people feel that elders have failed to look after the long-term interests of the community,” it says.

Last week many community leaders told the Guardian that their villages would sink into destitution if logging went ahead. As many as 40 million of the poorest people in Africa depend on the Congolese forests and all the concessions handed out by the transition government in May 2002 are in inhabited areas. More than a third are home to pygmy communities.

“If the trees go, then we will have nothing. We will be consigned to poverty forever. The forests are our only hope. If they go, we only become poorer”, said one man who lives near Kisangani. Like most people in the area, he did not want to give his name for fear of intimidation from local authorities, who are known to be mired in corruption.

“The companies are obliged to employ local people, but they bring in their own people and we are left at best with unskilled jobs that pay the minimum wage – less than 50p a day,” said another man.

It is believed that 20 foreign-owned forestry companies are active in the DRC, and that Chinese and other logging groups are also seeking to gain concessions. The companies should be prevented from doing so by a moratorium negotiated by the World Bank in 2002 as part of an initiative to control the forestry industry.

Most of the major logging companies, including Danzer, Trans-M, TB, NST, Olan, and Sicobois, have concession contracts signed after the World bank moratorium, but although there is an investigation into their legality the majority are expected to be rubber stamped this year.

“Most of the companies have benefited from the World Bank’s failure to ensure that the moratorium it negotiated with the transitional Congo DRC government has been enforced,” said Greenpeace’s Africa forests campaigner, Stephan van Praet.

The companies, which export both logs and sawn timber, supply wood all over Europe but considerable amounts are thought to be shipped to Britain, mostly as finished products such as flooring, windows, furniture and doors.

African teak wood is protected by global agreement and cannot be exported from some tropical countries such as Cameroon, which have few trees left, but there are still no restrictions on its export from the DRC.

Greenpeace and other international forestry groups say the fate of the Congo forests depends on the World Bank and other donors, including Britain, rejecting industrial logging, demanding a comprehensive land-use plan for a country that is effectively lawless, and insisting that the government tackles corruption.

The bank accepts that logging could destroy the forests in a short time, leading to immense social problems.

“If we do nothing it is certain that the forests will disappear and poverty will increase. Not one dollar of tax that has been collected has returned to the provinces,” said Kankonde Mukadi, the forest officer for the World Bank in Kinshasa.

There is also concern because rainforests provide important carbon reserves. Up to a quarter of all greenhouse gas emissions are now linked directly to tropical deforestation, the report says.

Original article is here:

Thx to the Globalisation and the Environment Blog for alerting me to this

070416 – Monday – How to Start a Blog

Monday, April 16th, 2007

A friend of mine recently asked for some advice on how to start a Blog and so I thought I’d write a piece on the subject.

You’ll find it here:

This is how, by the way, this Blog is done.

Enjoy!