How does if feel to hear that you're safe?
Oil on troubled waters (An update on the crisis in Nepal)
From Nepali Times Issue #389 (29 February 08 - 06 March 08)
Now, no one has any excuses left since those who doubted that the polls on 10 April would be held used the unrest in the tarai (southern Nepal) as the main reason.
To be sure, there are still uncertainties. More radical Madhesi groups have to be brought on board, and the militant outfits are still in the wilderness. In the east, there has been progress on autonomy talks with the Limbuwan and Khambuwan, but those groups are taking their cue from the Madhesis to push the government when it's weak.
Then there are the die-hard royals who want to prevent elections at all costs because it will set up a constituent assembly that will have as its first task the abolition of the kingship. There is evidence the king's supporters are using extreme Hindu groups from across the border to prolong the unrest in the tarai so that there would never be the right condition for polls. King Gyanendra's son-in-law was in Delhi earlier this month to lobby.
Playing the Hindu card in India has been a standard modus operandi for Nepal's monarchists who have used the emotional attachment among India's political elite for the retention of a Hindu monarchy in Nepal. In fact, in recent months the BJP and its hardliner backers in the VHP and RSS had been trying to portray the Indian government's involvement in the Nepal peace process as a failure.
Even so, there is a great sense of relief across Nepal as the eight-point agreement lifts a crippling 14-day strike. Not only is there a feeling that the country has pulled back from the brink, but everyday life was becoming a struggle because of the shortage of fuel, food and other essentials. The eastern tarai districts were particularly badly hit as normal life ground to a halt.
Thursday's agreement also brings closure and clarity to a political transition that had dragged on for too long, and finally paves the way for elections. Now the country's focus can be on the elections.
Not everyone in the Madhes will be satisfied with the eight point agreement, and there will be elements in the hills who will feel that the government has given away too much. But a lot of these residual issues can be resolved by the elected 601-member constituent assembly. After all, that is its job.
It will take time for the country to recover from economic and physical loss of the one-year turmoil in the tarai. But there is finally a chance to set right historic wrongs and forge a new beginning.
Now, no one has any excuses left since those who doubted that the polls on 10 April would be held used the unrest in the tarai as the main reason.
To be sure, there are still uncertainties. More radical Madhesi groups have to be brought on board, and the militant outfits are still in the wilderness. In the east, there has been progress on autonomy talks with the Limbuwan and Khambuwan, but those groups are taking their cue from the Madhesis to push the government when it's weak.
Then there are the die-hard royals who want to prevent elections at all costs because it will set up a constituent assembly that will have as its first task the abolition of the kingship. There is evidence the king's supporters are using extreme Hindu groups from across the border to prolong the unrest in the tarai so that there would never be the right condition for polls. King Gyanendra's son-in-law was in Delhi earlier this month to lobby.
Playing the Hindu card in India has been a standard modus operandi for Nepal's monarchists who have used the emotional attachment among India's political elite for the retention of a Hindu monarchy in Nepal. In fact, in recent months the BJP and its hardliner backers in the VHP and RSS had been trying to portray the Indian government's involvement in the Nepal peace process as a failure.
Even so, there is a great sense of relief across the Nepal as the eight-point agreement lifts a crippling 14-day strike. Not only is there a feeling that the country has pulled back from the brink, but everyday life was becoming a struggle because of the shortage of fuel, food and other essentials. The eastern tarai districts were particularly badly hit as normal life ground to a halt.
Thursday's agreement also brings closure and clarity to a political transition that had dragged on for too long, and finally paves the way for elections. Now the country's focus can be on the elections.
Not everyone in the Madhes will be satisfied with the eight point agreement, and there will be elements in the hills who will feel that the government has given away too much. But a lot of these residual issues can be resolved by the elected 601-member constituent assembly. After all, that is it's job.
It will take time for the country to recover from economic and physical loss of the one-year turmoil in the tarai. But there is finally a chance to set right historic wrongs and forge a new beginning.
Who are we?
We are gaians, a "crazy" bunch of people who want to and believe in their hearts that they can change the world. So come and join us!
We are creatures (created and creators) living in a magically evolving world.
We are powerful energy forces in different dimensions interacting in a divine matrix.
We are love manifesting itself in innumerable ways to evolve into that one universal love, being called ONE.
We are a lot more of something that is evolving that no words can as yet describe.
...and to quote the famous song:
When the world must come together as one
There are people dying
Oh, and it's time to lend a hand to life
The greatest gift of all
We can't go on pretending day by day
That someone, somehow will soon make a change
We're all a part of God's great big family
And the truth - you know love is all we need
( CHORUS )
We are the world, we are the children
We are the ones who make a brighter day
so let's start giving
There's a choice we're making
We're saving our own lives
It's true we'll make a better day
Just you and me
Well, send'em you your heart
So they know that someone cares
And their lives will be stronger and free
As God has shown us
By turning stone to bread
And so we all must lend a helping hand
( REPEAT CHORUS )
When you're down and out
There seems no hope at all
But if you just believe
There's no way we can fall
Well, well, well, let's realize
That one change can only come
When we stand together as one
( REPEAT CHORUS AND FADE )
What is life?
Life is a fascinating, pulsating, unpredictable, evolving precious gigamajig.
Now don't you ask me what the last word means.
I also want to share these interesting quotes and verses that I've found:
Life is something edible, lovable or lethal. ~ James E. Lovelock
To live is so startling it leaves little time for anything else. ~ Emily Dickinson
Our lives are like a candle in the wind. ~ Carl Sandburg
Life is a succession of moments. To live each one is to succeed. ~ Corita Kent
The personal life deeply lived always expands into truths beyond itself. ~ Anais Nin
Only a life lived for others is a life worthwhile. ~ Albert Einstein
Only when we are no longer afraid do we begin to live. ~ Dorothy Thompson
If we could see the miracle of a single flower clearly, our whole life would change. ~ Buddha
Where there is love there is life. ~ Mahatma Gandhi
........and from Bertrand Russell:
Three passions have governed my life:
The longings for love, the search for knowledge,
And unbearable pity for the suffering of [humankind].
Love brings ecstasy and relieves loneliness.
In the union of love I have seen
In a mystic miniature the prefiguring vision
Of the heavens that saints and poets have imagined.
With equal passion I have sought knowledge.
I have wished to understand the hearts of [people].
I have wished to know why the stars shine.
Love and knowledge led upwards to the heavens,
But always pity brought me back to earth;
Cries of pain reverberated in my heart
Of children in famine, of victims tortured
And of old people left helpless.
I long to alleviate the evil, but I cannot,
And I too suffer.
This has been my life; I found it worth living.
adapted
"Green Economics"
TREE-HUGGERS TRADE IN ROSE-COLORED GLASSES FOR GREEN EYESHADES
Eco-Economics — Environmental Strategies to Save the Planet and the Economy
Here at Grinning Planet, we're staunch supporters of the free enterprise system—anything that includes a word referencing something from Star Trek is OK by us. But aren't all environmentalists just a bunch of semi-socialist owl-loving wackos who don't understand anything about economics because they spent too much
time watching reruns of utopian science fiction shows when they were young? Um, no...
Free-market economics and environmental issues may at first glance seem incompatible. There are certainly those who try to convince us that environmental progress always comes at the cost of economic progress. But if that were really true, then our position would be hopeless—we would have to choose between (1) having jobs and poisoning ourselves with pollution or (2) being pollution-free but having no jobs. Fortunately, this "jobs vs. environment" assertion is wrong, and the field of environmental economics is coming to the rescue to prove it.
Accounting and economics can be applied not only to the balance sheet for a corporation's finances but also to how resource extraction and pollution balance (or don't) with our environment's physical constraints. Today's article will talk about some of the concepts of environmental economics—also called green economics or eco economics—how standard economic principles can be adjusted so they work with the planet instead of against it. The article comes from the Worldwatch Institute, an independent research organization that works for an environmentally sustainable and socially just society.
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“Green Economics”:
Turning Mainstream Thinking on Its Head
A few years ago, a homeowner in Las Vegas—a place that gets maybe five inches of rainfall a year—was confronted by a water district inspector for running an illegal sprinkler in the middle of the day. The man became very angry. He said, "You people and all your stupid rules—you're trying to turn this place into a desert!"
Ideas about how the world works that don't accord with reality can be unhelpful. That's especially true about mainstream economics, which is based in part on ideas that made a lot of sense at some point in the last 250 years but that have outlived their time and usefulness. These ideas—such as the reliance on Gross Domestic Product (GDP) as the key index of general wellbeing—still dominate assumptions and thinking about economic matters in the media, governments, businesses, and popular consciousness.
But in recent decades, economics theoreticians and researchers have suggested a variety of reforms that would make economics truer, greener, and more sustainable. My colleague Gary Gardner and I describe seven of these in Chapter 1 of the Worldwatch Institute's latest report, State of the World 2008: Innovations for a Sustainable Economy.
GREEN ECONOMICS
1. Scale
How big is the global economy relative to the global ecosystem? This is crucial, because the economy resides totally inside the global ecosystem—the ecosystem gives the economy a place to operate, supplies all of its raw materials, and supports it with many critical services. In physical terms, economic activity is basically converting bits and pieces of the ecosystem to human uses: trees and forests into lumber and houses, grasslands and other habitats into farms to feed the billions of humans, and so on.
We've gotten really good at economic growth. Since Adam Smith's time in the 18th century, the number of people in the world has exploded from about 1 billion to nearly 7 billion. And in the last 200 years, Gross World Product has risen by nearly a factor of 60. The ecosystem has suffered as a result, hence the headlines we see every day: climate change, species extinctions, dwindling rainforests, water shortages, and all the rest.
Piecemeal, we're starting to get the message about the economy's scale. For instance, we know that there's too much carbon floating around for the system to handle benignly. Last year, more than 90 major corporations, including General Electric, Volvo, and Air France, called on governments to set goals for reducing greenhouse gas emissions, and the European Union has set up a carbon cap-and-trade system.
Waste minimization is another way to reduce scale. Every year we dig up and process more than half a trillion tons of raw materials—and six months later more than 99 percent of it is waste. That can be fixed too: Ray Anderson's Interface carpet company is a leader in this area, reducing manufacturing waste by 70 percent since the mid-1990s and saving over $300 million while doing it.
ECO-ECONOMICS
2. Stress development over growth
That is, make the economy better at satisfying human needs, not simply bigger.
This is partly about eco-efficiency. It's now cost-effective to boost resource efficiency by at least a factor of four—and possibly by a factor of 20. And given the need for billions of people to grow their way out of dire poverty, we have to pursue these gains.
But it's also about asking the question, what is an economy is really for? Not only can the global economy not keep growing forever, growth isn't even working for many of us in wealthy nations anymore: U.S. per-capita income has tripled since 1950, for instance, but the share of Americans who say they're "very happy" has dropped over the last 30 years. Studies in hedonic psychology reveal that higher incomes only improve life satisfaction up to a point.
The research also says that the more materialistic people are, the lower levels of happiness they report. And it says that there appears to be a correlation between rising consumption and the erosion of the things that do make people happy, especially social relationships, family life, and a sense of community.
In response, a lot of people are rejecting the competition and get-ahead mentality of consumerism. They're downshifting and pursuing voluntary simplicity all over the globe, and they're taking collective action via campaigns for healthy eating, work leave for new parents, and shortened workweeks. The governments of Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom have made wellbeing a national policy goal, and there is a lot of interest in indicators that measure wellbeing more directly than GDP.
ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS
3. Make prices tell the ecological truth
Cheating a bit here—this isn't really a conceptual reform. Every economist knows that markets fail when prices don't reflect actual costs. The reform would be actually applying this rule to the ecosystem. For instance, climate change is arguably the result of failing to charge for dumping carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Another example is human-caused species extinction.
We're basically dismantling our life-support machinery, and by and large until recently nobody paid for it. Fortunately, governments and business are beginning to experiment with carbon markets, water pricing mechanisms, and conservation banking. Carbon market trading was worth $59 billion in 2007, and there are now several hundred wetlands and species banks in the United States alone.
GREEN ECONOMICS
4. Account for nature's services
This is closely related to #3. In the United States, the pollination performed by honeybees is worth about $19 billion per year. There's also air and water purification, soil generation, pest control, seed dispersal, and nutrient recycling, among the many other services that nature provides. Tearing up ecosystems undermines these services, so some countries have begun trying to value them properly. Costa Rica, for example, pays landowners to preserve forests and their biodiversity, with the money coming from fuel taxes and sale of environmental credits to businesses. Mexico and Victoria, Australia, have also set up systems to assign values to formerly free services.
ECO-ECONOMICS
5. The precautionary principle
This is just the age-old wisdom of "first, do no harm" and "look before you leap," but applied to public policy toward new products (like chemicals) and technologies that could pose serious risk. Ordinary risk analysis asks, "How much environmental damage will be allowed?" But the precautionary principle asks, "How little damage is possible?"
Today we're seeing the principle adopted more and more widely. The Maastricht Treaty that created the European Union in 1991 puts the principle at the center of its environmental policy, and San Francisco made precaution official policy in 2003.
ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMICS
6. Commons management
People generally believe that there are only two workable regimes for managing resources: private property or government control. But commons management regimes are a third way, one that taps the strong human impulse toward cooperation and the common good. Commons management has proven itself over centuries of experience—there are collectively managed irrigation systems in Spain that were begun in the 15th century, for instance, and other commonly managed forests and pastures in Switzerland, Japan, the Philippines, and Indonesia that are centuries old.
Commons management lives and thrives today in such things as Wikipedia, community gardens, and farmers markets everywhere. The writer and entrepreneur Peter Barnes has suggested that the atmosphere, which everyone ought to own, could be successfully managed and protected via a commons regime. Ocean fisheries might be as well.
ECO-ECONOMICS
7. Value women
Economic systems ought to be gender-blind but they're not. A UN report in the 1990s noted that "most poor people are women, and most women are poor." All over the world, women earn less than men for equivalent work, they lack access to land and credit, and they do more than their share of child care and elder care, volunteer work, and other unpaid labor. There is evidence that this gender bias actually suppresses economic activity.
In response, a few governments in industrial countries are trying to develop policies that take unpaid work into account. Muhammad Yunus's Grameen Bank in Bangladesh is using the terms of its loans to help to ensure that wives are legally entitled to their share of a couple's assets. And the microfinance movement appears to have given millions of women a valuable economic boost.
GREEN ECONOMICS
Wrap-Up
These seven ideas are hardly the only changes brewing in economics, but the innovations described in State of the World 2008 can generally be traced to one or more of them. Hopefully, they are on the way to transforming economics from "the dismal science" into more of a delightful one—or, to paraphrase E.F. Schumacher, into an economics as if people and the planet mattered.
Worldwatch Institute, Eye on Earth, www.worldwatch.org, © 2008.
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Water Pollution Cartoons
Water Cartoon
from grinningplanet.comThis water cartoon is a water pollution cartoon, so wear your funny looking hip waders.
IS OUR WATER CLEAN ENOUGH? | ||||||||
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| Peter Barabus — Effluent Manufacturers Industrial Association | |
| Perhaps you accept the Non-Sequitur Society's position on water pollution: 'Some water contaminants are natural, so man-made contaminants are irrelevant.' If not, you might like to find out just how relevant they are in our water pollution effects article. | ![]() |
Resist Not Evil
From care2.com
One effect of divine grace, as Jesus taught it, was to counter evil. Just as judgment is left to the Lord, so is punishing evil. Jesus uses conventional vocabulary at times when he speaks about Satan and possession by demons, but what rings far more true is his teaching that evil should not be resisted. As we saw earlier, learning how to overcome evil without resisting it involves a process. Jesus isn't calling for instant conversion to pacifism, nor is he asking us to be blind to the terrible effects of evil when it goes unchecked.
What he is teaching changes as you pass through the stages of your own spiritual path. Reality is different in different states of consciousness, and that includes evil. You cannot pretend to love your enemy, yet when you come closer to God-consciousness, such compassion comes naturally.
Exercise
Evil, like everything else, depends upon perception. As your perception changes, evil shifts. It's very important that this shift occurs, because if you remain locked in a rigid hatred or fear of evil, you push your own shadow further out of sight. No matter how hard you struggle to overcome evil, unless you understand your own shadow, it will find new ways to bring back the thing you hate and fear.
Brooding on your negative traits isn't going to bring the shadow to light. One act that will is confession. Find someone you feel you can trust. For many people, the only person might be a complete stranger, or it might be an entire support group whose purpose is healing. At a time that feels right to you, divulge something you feel ashamed or guilty about. Don't begin with a serious crime or transgression. The aim here isn't to confess to God, but to relate to your shadow in a new way.
The shadow can be defined as the hidden area of the self where forbidden feelings are hidden. These feelings cover a wide range, including anger, revenge, jealousy, prejudice, rampant sexual desire, and murderous rage. There is so much to uncover that people find it difficult to begin.
The only way to disarm the shadow is to relate to it in a different way, and when you reveal a secret to someone, your life in hiding begins to shift.
Evil is never pure and rarely simple. Instead of resorting to words like "evil" or "sinful," go into the following areas:
• Why am I hiding this bad thought, impulse, or action?
• What am I ashamed of?
• How do I think I am going to be hurt if this is exposed?
• Am I being affected by memories of past punishment?
• When I hear an inner voice judging me harshly, who from my past is actually speaking to me?
• How would my self-image suffer if I revealed this?
• Have I been working within a belief system that sees human beings as innately sinful?
• Why do I choose to live with guilt instead of without it?
You need to ask these questions every time you step into the region of the shadow.
What have you been missing?
How do, or can, we create?
What will tomorrow bring?










