Rancor Grows Over Planned Oil Pipeline From Canada – NYTimes.com

28 Sep

The State Department concluded last month that the project, Keystone XL, would cause minimal environmental impact if it is operated according to regulations, and the proposed operator, TransCanada, has said the nearly 2,000-mile line would create 20,000 jobs in the United States.

And just what ARE the chances that the pipeline will be operated according to regulations?

Opposition groups around the country, though, said the federal study did not consider the effects of a major spill, while supporters said the nation’s economy had continued to worsen through summer and fall, making Keystone XL all the more crucial.

via Rancor Grows Over Planned Oil Pipeline From Canada – NYTimes.com.

As Scorn for Vote Grows, Protests Surge Around Globe – NYTimes.com

28 Sep

Youth of the world unit, because if you don’t, your elders are just going send the world down the next available hell hole in history.

… from South Asia to the heartland of Europe and now even to Wall Street, these protesters share something else: wariness, even contempt, toward traditional politicians and the democratic political process they preside over.

They are taking to the streets, in part, because they have little faith in the ballot box.

“Our parents are grateful because they’re voting,” said Marta Solanas, 27, referring to older Spaniards’ decades spent under the Franco dictatorship. “We’re the first generation to say that voting is worthless.”

And the Arab spring is the avant-garde.

Increasingly, citizens of all ages, but particularly the young, are rejecting conventional structures like parties and trade unions in favor of a less hierarchical, more participatory system modeled in many ways on the culture of the Web.

In that sense, the protest movements in democracies are not altogether unlike those that have rocked authoritarian governments this year, toppling longtime leaders in Tunisia, Egypt and Libya. Protesters have created their own political space online that is chilly, sometimes openly hostile, toward traditional institutions of the elite.

And democracies are being given failing grades, left and right.

Responding to shifts in voter needs is supposed to be democracy’s strength. These emerging movements, like many in the past, could end up being absorbed by traditional political parties,…. Yet purists involved in many of the movements say they intend to avoid the old political channels.

The political left, which might seem the natural destination for the nascent movements now emerging around the globe, is compromised in the eyes of activists by the neoliberal centrism of Bill Clinton and Tony Blair. The old left remains wedded to trade unions even as they represent a smaller and smaller share of the work force. More recently, center-left participation in bailouts for financial institutions alienated former supporters who say the money should have gone to people instead of banks.

via As Scorn for Vote Grows, Protests Surge Around Globe – NYTimes.com.

Japan Knows How to Power down – NYTimes.com

26 Sep

Still, Japan has shown what can be done, quickly, to overcome an energy crisis. It’s a good lesson for the United States, with its fragile electric grid, huge power needs and raging fossil-fuel addiction: Consumption doesn’t always have to go up.

I repeat: Consumption doesn’t always have to go up.

via In Japan, the Summer of Setsuden – NYTimes.com.

Whatever Happened to the American Left? – NYTimes.com

25 Sep

This asks a lot from ideologues whose heads are firmly buried in yesterday’s sand pile.

…the left must realize that when progressives achieved success in the past, whether at organizing unions or fighting for equal rights, they seldom bet their future on politicians. They fashioned their own institutions — unions, women’s groups, community and immigrant centers and a witty, anti-authoritarian press — in which they spoke up for themselves and for the interests of wage-earning Americans.

Today, such institutions are either absent or reeling. With unions embattled and on the decline, working people of all races lack a sturdy vehicle to articulate and fight for the vision of a more egalitarian society. Liberal universities, Web sites and non-governmental organizations cater mostly to a professional middle class and are more skillful at promoting social causes like legalizing same-sex marriage and protecting the environment than demanding millions of new jobs that pay a living wage.

A reconnection with ordinary Americans is vital not just to defeating conservatives in 2012 and in elections to come. Without it, the left will remain unable to state clearly and passionately what a better country would look like and what it will take to get there. To paraphrase the labor martyr Joe Hill, the left should stop mourning its recent past and start organizing to change the future.

via Whatever Happened to the American Left? – NYTimes.com.

Protesters Are Gunning for Wall Street, With Faulty Aim – NYTimes.com

25 Sep

The group’s lack of cohesion and its apparent wish to pantomime progressivism rather than practice it knowledgably is unsettling in the face of the challenges so many of its generation face — finding work, repaying student loans, figuring out ways to finish college when money has run out. But what were the chances that its members were going to receive the attention they so richly deserve carrying signs like “Even if the World Were to End Tomorrow I’d Still Plant a Tree Today”?

I don’t know what, if anything, will come of these Wall Street protests. But they anger out of which they grow is not going to disappear any time soon. It will deepen. What then?

If it gives way to despair, then this reporter’s obvious contempt for the protesters will seem sharp and realistic, if not wise. If that anger should take shape and organize, what then? The political system is vulnerable to well-organized and persistent anger. The Republicrats could have their death grip on government crumble in their grasp.

via Protesters Are Gunning for Wall Street, With Faulty Aim – NYTimes.com.

LSU audience cheers presidential candidate Paul | Home | The Advocate — Baton Rouge, LA

25 Sep

GOP presidential candidate and U.S. Rep. Ron Paul, of Texas, touted ending the country’s wars, including the war on drugs, to a raucous packed crowd Friday at the LSU Union Theater.

As the Republican candidate with the strongest libertarian streak, Paul, 76, focused his talk on restoring personal and economic liberties and freedoms with his campaign motto “Restore America Now.”

Paul said he loves college campuses and meeting students on his “Youth for Ron Paul” tour. When he does, he said, “I find out the message of liberty is alive and well.”

Paul, who last campaigned in Baton Rouge in 2008, is running in a crowded GOP field of candidates led in the polls and fundraising by Texas Gov. Rick Perry, former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and U.S. Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn.

Gov. Bobby Jindal has endorsed Perry.

via LSU audience cheers presidential candidate Paul | Home | The Advocate — Baton Rouge, LA.

Small Donors Are Slow to Return to the Obama Fold – NYTimes.com

25 Sep

In interviews with dozens of low-dollar contributors in the past two weeks, some said they were unhappy with what they viewed as Mr. Obama’s overly conciliatory approach to Congressional Republicans. Others cited what they saw as a lack of passion in the president, or said the sour economy had drained both their enthusiasm and their pocketbooks.

For still others, high hopes that Mr. Obama would deliver a new kind of politics in his first term have been dashed by the emergence of something that, to them, more resembles politics as usual.

via Small Donors Are Slow to Return to the Obama Fold – NYTimes.com.

FACT CHECK: Slippery assertions in GOP debate – Forbes.com

24 Sep

Also in Thursday night’s debate, Michele Bachmann misread presidential approval polls and denied making a statement that she actually did make just the week before, concerning a vaccine for girls. Mitt Romney denied supporting an Obama administration education program that he had praised.

& others caught making factual errors, but not Ron Paul.

via FACT CHECK: Slippery assertions in GOP debate – Forbes.com.

In the GOP debate, Ron Paul again showed he isn’t particularly upset with, or allied with, anyone. – Washington Wire – WSJ

24 Sep

So what does frost the 76 year-old former obstetrician? Any suggestion that his position–he’s for a highly limited government, a non-interventionist foreign policy, and an overhaul of the federal monetary system—isn’t politically practical.

“If you give up on your principles I don’t think that’s being pragmatic,” says Mr. Paul, whose support ranges from 9% to 13% in recent polls. “Doing the wrong thing, even partially, isn’t being practical…if you have the right ideas and are forceful enough…I think you can get the support you need.”

As proof, he cites his work with Democratic Reps. Dennis Kucinich (Ohio) and Barney Frank (Mass.) and independent Sen. Bernie Sanders (Vt.) to stop the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and fight government curbs on civil liberties.

via In the GOP debate, Ron Paul again showed he isn’t particularly upset with, or allied with, anyone. – Washington Wire – WSJ.

World Island: A Permanent World’s Fair for a World that’s Permanently Fair

23 Sep

Our sense of what to do tomorrow is conditioned by what we want to happen after that, and then after that. That is to say, our sense of how to act in the present is strongly determined by our sense of that future. If we have hope for the future, if we can see a world for our grandchildren that’s better than our own, then we read the current situation as the starting point of a journey to that world. If the future looks bleak, then the current situation is taken as an arena in which we must begin constructing defenses against impending doom.

The mood in America is bleak, and has been for some time. The current recession has darkened the bleakness, but it did not create it. Nor did the bleakness descend, all of a sudden, on 9/11. It’s been with us, in one way or another, for some time.

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Some years ago I met a man who changed my sense of the possible, and the necessary. He had a dream, this Jerry Greenberg (he now calls himself Zeal), and he called it World Island. He called it a World’s Fair for a World that’s Permanently Fair. Though it could be built anywhere in the world, he planned it for Governors Island, a 172 acre island off the tip of Manhattan in New York Harbor. Governors Island had been a Coast Guard base until it was finally decommissioned and turned over to the joint custody of New York State and New York City.

The State and the City created the Governors Island Preservation and Education Corporation to come up with a plan for the Island. GIPEC decided to solicit proposals for the private development of the Island. I worked with Zeal and others over a period of several years to craft a proposal, which we entered into a competition. We lost, but then so did everyone else. Just what’s being done with the Island is not exactly clear, though interesting things do happen there.

But Governors Island is a side-issue at this point. What’s important is Zeal’s vision for this World Island. That changed my sense of what is possible in the world, and of what is necessary. I’ve appended to this post a short work of fiction that takes the form of a news paper story announcing plans to construct World Island on Governors Island. As I said, however, this could happen anywhere in the world. Perhaps, in view of the Arab Spring, it should most fittingly happen in the Middle East.

That is one thing. That will give you a sense of the proposal. As you read it, remember that it is fiction. None of the events described therein have happened, or will happen. Should you want more, I have uploaded the executive summary from our proposal. You can download that here.

* * * * *

Governors Island to be World Resource Center

By SOME REPORTER

At a press conference later today the Governor and the Mayor will announce plans to transform Governors Island into a world resource center. “Our goal is to create a place where the world can experience the world,” says the Governor. “The redevelopment of Governors Island is the key to revitalizing New York’s waterfront so that it is truly the gateway to the world,” says the Mayor.

The overall development will take place under the joint guidance of the Governors Island Preservation and Education Corporation (GIPEC) and the World Development Endowment Foundation (WDEF). GIPEC is an agency of New York City and New York State governments that was formed to administer the Island when the Federal government transferred it to New York State and City in 2003. The WDEF is a private not-for-profit corporation founded by businessman Gerald “Zeal” Greenberg for the purpose of developing Governors Island as a center for world culture, education, tourism, trade, and economic development.

The project is expected to take twenty years to complete and will employ an evolutionary approach designed to organize the participation of people, governments and organizations around the world while also giving New Yorkers a chance to experience the Island and guide the development of this new “city within a city.” An essential aspect of this process is that it will be guided by an bold and imaginative vision of the Island’s full potential. The WDEF and GIPEC have already proposed such a vision and will work with others in New York and around the world develop and modify it over the life of the project. Given the scope of the proposed development the project is being called World Island.

“The World Island vision is truly remarkable,” observes a former Secretary of State, who has become an advisor to the project. “The State and City are to be commended for proposing such an innovative approach to development. This will be a landmark to future generations.”

Two Signature Projects

Several things will happen during the first phase of development, which will concentrate on the northern part of the Island and on the Battery Maritime Building (BMB) in lower Manhattan. The WDEF will develop the BMB as a multi-use center with harbor-view restaurants, performance venues, and retail shops. The BMB is also the terminal for ferry service to Governors Island, which GIPEC will enhance.

One other signature project is planned for the first phase: The New York Time Exchange. It will be an interactive historical theatre and museum telling the story of New York City from 17,000 years ago, when the land was covered with glacial ice, through settlement by Native Americans, the arrival of the Dutch, through to New York’s current status as one of the premier cities of the world. The time-exchange will use multi-media technology and live actors to create an experience of living history.

While these two signature buildings are being developed GIPEC and the WDEF will oversee the general development of hospitality, restaurant, and water recreation facilities in the historical portion of the Island along with Island infrastructure and transportation. GIPEC will oversee the physical development of these structures while WDEF will concentrate on developing marketing strategies to present the Island to the public.

“The idea is to take a conservative approach initially,” says GIPEC’s President. “We want projects that can draw people to the island and sustain themselves economically.” WDEF’s President, Zeal Greenberg, agrees. “This will be the first time the Island is open to the public. We need to get people here and make the Island a part of New Yorker’s lives. At the same time we need a chance to build international awareness so that we can do something really special and spectacular with the rest of the Island.”

Global Marketing Campaign

While the first phase development is taking place, the WDEF will be orchestrating a world-wide campaign to present the Island to the world and to bring the world to the Island. In this effort the WDEF will be working closely with Good News Broadcasting, headed by Emmy award winner Paul Sladkus. “Good news helps people keep their spirits up,” says Sladkus, “and the project is good news for everyone.”

To present the Island to the world the WDEF and Good News have developed a campaign called “Nurture Our World” (NOW). The campaign is based on a song, “The Heart of the World is in Your Hands,” written by Greenberg and composer Carman Moore. “It’s not so much a song, as it is a world philosophy,” says Moore, “its about how are young people hold the future in their hands.” Together with composer Jim Papoulis, Moore will tour the world with a children’s choir, presenting the song to children and their parents in 20 cities. At the same time Moore and Papoulis will work with children in those cities to teach them then song and let them develop it in their own way.

The tour will be filmed and the film will be made into a documentary and section of it will be incorporated into a short animated film about how a band of children save the earth from destruction by repairing the heart of the world.“ The WDEF will be working with a Japanese anime master to develop the film in anime style. “Anime’s the hottest thing in world youth culture,” says WDEF’s Associate Director, William Benzon, “and we want to use it to bring the World Island story to the world’s youth.” The WDEF will be showing the film in theaters around the world and has created a website where people can participate in the story by suggesting ideas and episodes for an ongoing manga adventure presented on the web. The website will also serve as a gateway to other youth-oriented websites and allow users to make suggestions about what they want to see on World Island.

At the same time the WDEF will be bringing the world to the Island in a series of World Investment Summit Expositions (WISE). The WISE events will be trade shows oriented to the development needs of municipalities and will take place on Governors Island two times a year for the next three years. Each WISE will focus on a different region of the world and last a week. Development officials, financial institutions, non-government organizations, philanthropies, tourist experts, and organizations selling goods and services to municipalities will be invited to participate. The WDEF is currently working with online media experts to establish an online community called The WISE Network.

“The World Island complex will be New York City’s gift to the world,” says the Mayor, “but the world has to play an active role in developing it if it is to work. We’re providing the Island, a general framework for development, some ideas, and some financing. The rest is up to the world. What do you want?”

An Evolutionary Process

In its current state, the WDEF’s vision calls for office space, hotels, a convention center, restaurants, schools, stores, and recreation facilities. “What’s important, though, is not the buildings, but what takes place in them,” says Greenberg. “We want to focus on education, culture, and economic development at the municipal level.” “Every community has institutions devoted to culture, education, commerce, and spirituality,” notes WDEF’s Benzon. “Our objective is to maintain a balance among these sectors as development unfolds.”

“What we’re doing,” notes Greenberg “is starting an evolutionary process. We have a goal and we’re going to move toward it, using what we learn to modify the development plans so that the goal is always in sight.” The project is planned in five phases. The plan has been developed so that each phase is complete in itself. Funding is in place for the first phase and some funding has been committed for later phases as well. As the design is refined and as funding is secured, later phases will be constructed.

The urban plan is being developed by Some Appropriate Architects. “As the project moves through its phases master architects from all over the world will be invited to create designs. “A World Island should be designed by architects the world over” says Senior Partner. “The trick is to blend the designs into a harmonious whole.” Some Partner, an expert in environmentally responsible design with Some Other Appropriate Architects, will be working with Senior Partner on the plan. “Our goal is to make World Island a model of sustainable development,” he says, “enhancing the harbor environment, not detracting from it.”

WDEF’s Greenberg says that we are creating a model city within the greater city of New York. “As World Island unfolds, we want people to think about it from the point of view of their children’s children. What will it mean to them, what is our legacy to them?” “We have lived through a century of war,” observed the Secretary of State. “We must act now to create a century of peace. That is what World Island is about.”