Tuesday, August 11, 2009

A shift toward something new?

Time magazine featured these thoughts:
"Numbers alone do not capture the sense that the balance of global economic power is shifting eastward. There have been several moments that seemed to crystallize the zeitgeist, none more memorable than U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner's speech in June before the best and brightest at Peking University, the Harvard of China. Not long ago, students there would have been the most respectful and polite of audiences. Yet when Geithner tried to reassure one questioner that China's investments in U.S. government debt were "very safe", the response was perhaps an indication of the onset of a new economic order: the students laughed."
Time, August, 10, 2009.

Are we witnessing a global shift in economic and political power? What of the emerging economies of Brazil and India? How will they change the economic and political landscape of our planet? What do you think it could mean for New Zealand? What do you think of the fuss being made of India and China fueling a global economic recovery? Recovery of what and to what? What do you think it could mean for our pursuit of social justice?

Friday, August 7, 2009

Mobilizing to Save Civilization

This book is worth reading, offering solutions to a new way of existing.
http://www.earthpolicy.org/Books/PB3/Contents.htm

A piece taken from it:
Lester R. Brown, Plan B 3.0: Mobilizing to Save Civilization (New York: W.W. Norton and Company, Earth Policy Institute, 2008)
From Chapter 2. Deteriorating Oil and Food Security

INTRODUCTION: The twentieth century was the oil century. In 1900, the world produced 150 million barrels of oil. In 2000, it produced 28 billion barrels, an increase of more than 180-fold. This was the century in which oil overtook coal to become the world’s leading source of energy. 1
The fast-growing supply of cheap oil led to an explosive worldwide growth in food production, population, urbanization, and human mobility. In 1900, only 13 percent of us lived in cities. Today half of us do. The world grain harvest quadrupled during the last century. Human mobility exploded as trains, cars, and planes began moving people at a pace and over distances scarcely imaginable when the century began. 2
Today, we are an oil-based civilization, one that is totally dependent on a resource whose production will soon be falling. Since 1981, the quantity of oil extracted has exceeded new discoveries by an ever-widening margin. In 2006, the world pumped 31 billion barrels of oil but discovered fewer than 9 billion barrels of new oil. World reserves of conventional oil are in a free fall, dropping every year. 3
Discoveries of conventional oil total roughly 2 trillion barrels, of which 1 trillion have been extracted so far, with another trillion barrels to go. By themselves, however, these numbers miss a central point. As Michael Klare notes, the first trillion barrels was easy oil, “oil that’s found on shore or near to shore; oil close to the surface and concentrated in large reservoirs; oil produced in friendly, safe, and welcoming places.” The other half, Klare notes, is tough oil, “oil that’s buried far offshore or deep underground; oil scattered in small, hard-to-find reservoirs; oil that must be obtained from unfriendly, politically dangerous, or hazardous places.” 4
At some point in the not-so-distant future, world oil production will peak and turn downward. When it does so, it will be a seismic event. The only world we have known is one where oil production is rising. In this new world, where oil production is no longer expanding, one country can get more oil only if another gets less.
We are witnessing a fundamental shift in the relationship between oil and food, one that has been in the making for several decades. From 1950 to 1972, a bushel of wheat could be traded for a barrel of oil on the world market. The price of each during that period was remarkably stable, averaging just under $2 per bushel of wheat and per barrel of oil. Since then, oil prices have climbed. In late 2007, even with the recent run-up in wheat prices, it took eight bushels of wheat to buy one barrel of oil. 5
Agricultural analysts have long been concerned about the effect of the coming rise in oil prices on food production costs, but now the price gap is so wide that the United States is starting to convert grain into fuel for cars. When the price of oil rises above $60 a barrel, it becomes highly profitable to do this. An estimated 16 percent of the U.S. grain harvest was converted into automotive fuel in 2006. For the 2008 harvest, the figure could be close to 30 percent. 6
The line between the food and energy economies is becoming blurred as the two begin to merge. As a result, the world price of grain is now moving up toward its oil price equivalent. If the food value of a commodity is less than its fuel value, the market will move it into the energy economy.

Also visit: TerraNature
............. working to conserve land and marine habitat, and protect New Zealand's biodiversity
http://www.terranature.org/

Others books by Lester Brown
http://www.earthpolicy.org/Books/index.htm

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Entitlements - who is worth what?

























The concept of entitlement is currently gripping something of our national focus. Do you feel entitled to something? What? How can entitlement be more than simply what we feel is rightfully ours? How can entitlement be a measure of the mutual responsibility we have toward others, a measure of what we’re actively sharing in/with others? Or is it simply a weapon of mass distraction?
See The Rainbow of Entitlement at www.salvationarmy.org.nz/socialpolicy for some thoughts that could help deepen the conversation.

Tuesday, July 28, 2009



The change machine at Vancouver airport was out of order. This got me thinking as i walked around gastown seeing some real material poverty. Does change ever seem out of order in our situations/our places/our lives/our cities/our streets?
Especially when we walk around places or situations where we feel helpless. All i could do in gas town was smile at the woman with her belongings in a trolley, and the man sitting on the sidewalk with his dog. Its easy to become overwhelmed, its easy to say what can i do. And that is honesty- we are who we are- helpless perhaps sometimes, sometimes full of passion, sometimes we know exactly what to do. But mostly we are us, simply us. Not only do we need to value others for who they are (not what they do), but we need to value our selves for who we are. Because we were created good, to do good, honest and good. more and more as i realise my limitations and potential i love Mother Teresas quote "In this life we cannot do great things. We can only do small things with great love." followed by " If you can't feed a hundred people, then feed just one." change machine- we are the change machine- honest simple and good.

Friday, July 24, 2009

Absorbing Anger... Together

Anger? Are we angry enough? Are we too angry? Is there a place for anger within our faith? Simon Barrow of Ekklessia says this:

"What marks out the Christian community is its vocation to be ‘a holy nation’, unlike all the other nations and religions with their standing armies and hierarchies. Moreover (and this is crucial) it is the self-sacrificial blood of the Innocent One – not the slaughter of the innocents (or the guilty, for that matter) – that lies at the heart of a radical re-visioning of who God is, who we are and what God’s true purposes are about. The Body of Christ is about absorbing rather than inflicting suffering so that the grounds of enmity and division between human beings can be healed and overcome."
http://www.ekklesia.co.uk/

Have a look at the following clip from Jonathan Porritt, director of Forum for the Future, who questions the lack of our angst (sorry for the quality of the sound):

video

What could absorbing anger look like in our communities? Would it mean that we stand in solidarity with creation... wherever it is suffering? What could it mean to suffer together?

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Deep fixes... not making the News

A columist of Newsweek, Fared Zakaria, in Greed is Good (To a Point), June 22, 2009, concludes:

"We are in the midst of a vast crisis, and there is enough blame to go around and many fixes to make, from the international system to national governments to private firms. But at heart, there needs to be a deeper fix within all of us, a simple gut check. If it doesn't feel right, we shouldn't be doing it. That's not going to restore growth or mend globalization or save capitalism, but it might be a small start to sanity."

I love how God keeps on reminding and suprising us.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

The Power of Community

Due to artificial plunges in oil imports, the Cuban people had to radically, yet naturally cope with the hardships of profound change. After the labors of rebirth, there are advantages there that the world can benefit from, aside from higher education and health care. Communities coming together in gardens. 2006 Community Solution © Community Solutions Inc

This documentary is a must see, the world can learn from the crisis that Cuba faced.

How Cuba Survived Peak Oil crisis.
http://www.livevideo.com/media/playvideo_fs.aspx?fs=1&cid=CD893609A0CB495D9A9CF04AC9E4AEFF

To view other documentary's visit:
http://illuminatenetwork.blogspot.com/

Monday, July 13, 2009

Events to be aware of...

Some great things are happening, be a part of it.

Sign on: A petition to reduce NZ 's emissions by 40% by 2020.
http://www.signon.org.nz/

Start Freedom: A campaign for young people, youth groups etc. Oct 14th
http://www.stopthetraffik.org/startfreedom/october2009/

And

World March: For peace and non violence, starts here in NZ. Oct 2nd
http://www.fusecreative.co.nz/worldmarch/index.html

Disclaimer

The contents of 'just comment' [individual postings and comments] soley represent the views of the individual authors.