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New South Wales held local council elections across the state last Saturday and the big winner was the Green Party with a 25% increase in positions won. The importance of the statewide trend is that it might convince both Labor and Liberal that Green preferences, and perhaps state members, will decide the next election. State politicians are notoriously “progress orientated” and it will take the existential fear of win/loss for them to learn that true progress has to be measured on a green basis.

NSW Liberal leader Barry O’Farrell stopped the Electricity sale last month (& broke the government) but we want him and the new federal leader, Malcolm Turnbull, to really chase the green vote by re-orientating the whole of the “business party” policies to clean green including real reductions of over 20% CO2 emissions by 2020. We need the two main parties to be competing to make greater real reductions in CO2 – the Liberal Party would be unstoppable at the next state election if it was in an agreement with the Greens, Barry. Think about it, Malcolm.

At the local level, Marrickville Council is now clearly with Leichhardt and Byron Councils in green hands although we still await final counts. Greens will most likely hold half the seats in Byron & Leichhardt with 5 of 12 in Marrickville. All three councils have been under Green dominance for the last 4 years but with unstable majorities and perhaps as a result they have not been seen to be great successes. This needs to change. The world needs Green local councils to be seen to be stable and very successful, including financially, so the party can go on to win state seats and control who forms government throughout Australia.

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Hitler's spin machine used the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games to show off his nation's muscular ambition. We all know what happened next. In its opening ceremony for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, China's leaders seemed to say to the world: never mind what has come before, ours is a new nation based on China's own unique achievements. They did not need to say that the $40 billion invested in the Games was a rounding error from the most rapid transfer of national wealth in history; from consumer nations to China's national treasury...

Unlike Hitler in 1936 who was in the process of imposing imperial ambitions on the outside world, China's political elite (as opposed to the Chinese military leadership) is most concerned with managing its own internal stressors, including a significant percentage of citizens who live in poverty. The Beijing Olympics in 2008 does not presage some new war: in a certain sense, the impulse to war has been blunted by the peaceful transactions of globalized trade; the victor's ascendence is measured in reverse proportion to the USA's hollowed out industries and scattered Rust Belts. To the masses in Asia, what America's falling economic tide exposes is the first fraction of our standard of living...

China is governed today by a political elite that fully embraces Orwellian focus on security and control. Through this set of circumstances, the sight of President Bush waving on U.S. competitors at the Olympics can be interpreted as either a brand new day based on resurgent, grand achievements or a forced smile at a dynamo he understands better now that his own time clock is running out. [More]

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Towards Global Internet Freedom

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Free Culture, Open Government, Liberty . . read more

In my opinion, the two biggest factors in oil’s high price are the weakness in the U.S. dollar’s exchange value and the liquidity that the U.S. Federal Reserve is pumping out. The dollar is weak because of large trade and budget deficits, the closing of which is beyond American political will. As abuse wears out the U.S. dollar’s reserve currency role, sellers demand more dollars as a hedge against its declining exchange value and ultimate loss of reserve currency status...

There are other factors affecting the price of oil. The prospect of an Israeli/U.S. attack on Iran has increased current demand in order to build stocks against disruption. No one knows the consequence of such an ill-conceived act of aggression, and the uncertainty pushes up the price of oil as the entire Middle East could be engulfed in conflagration...

The crisis that looms for the U.S. is the loss of world currency role. Once the dollar loses that role, the U.S. government will not be able to finance its operations by borrowing abroad, and foreigners will cease to finance the massive U.S. trade deficit. This crisis will eliminate the U.S. as a world power. [More]

Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration.

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Is Big Oil ripping off consumers? Are Wall Street speculators manipulating oil markets? What should be done? Whether or not Big Oil is improperly restricting refinery capacity, whether or not Wall Street traders are driving up the traded price of oil to heights completely disconnected from supply-and-demand fundamentals, a few things are clear about gas prices - and so is the most appropriate, immediate policy response.

The oil companies' staggering profits are a windfall of the purest sort (Websters' definition: "an unexpected, unearned, or sudden gain or advantage"). This is not a moral judgment about the oil companies, it is just a description of what's happening. A windfall profits tax could generate substantial government revenues. Allocated to investment in renewable energy, it could significantly increase funds directed to renewables, and be a small but important down payment on the massive investment needed in mass transit, energy efficiency and renewable energy...

Re-regulating energy markets, imposing margin requirements and lessening investors' ability to trade with borrowed money, and cracking down on market manipulation will all slow the Wall Street frenzy and limit price spikes. For the long term, however, oil demand will continue to shoot up and supply cannot keep up. Ultimately, new sources of oil may become available, including from deep water sites and tar sands and shale, but these will be more expensive to obtain. The world is likely witnessing a long-term, steady (if bumpy) and permanent rise in oil prices. This price increase will impose major economic hardships, unless there is a massive effort to shift to oil-displacing technologies and renewable energy. [More]

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Last week the price of crude oil reached about $130 a barrel after spiking to $140 briefly. The immediate cause? Guesses by oil man T. Boone Pickens and Goldman Sachs that the price could go to $150 and $200 a barrel respectivly in the near future. They were referring to what can be called the hoopla pricing party on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX)... Oil was at $50 a barrel in January 2007, then $75 a barrel in August 2007. Now at $130 or so a barrel, it is clear that oil pricing is speculative activity, having very little to do with physical supply and demand. An essential product — petroleum — is set by speculators operating on rumor, greed, and fear of wild predictions...

The major price determinant has moved from OPEC (having only 40% of the world production) and the oil companies to the speculators in the commodities markets. What goes on in the essentially unregulated NYMEX — and, unlike your personal purchases, untaxed — is now the place that leads to your skyrocketing gasoline bills. OPEC and the Big Oil companies reap the benefits and say that it’s not their doing, but that of the speculators. Gives new meaning to "passing the buck"...

A sane government would see the present price crises as an opportunity to expand our passenger and freight railroad capacity and technology. A sane government would drop all subsidies and tax loopholes for Big Oil’s huge profits and other fossil fuels and promote a national mission to solarize our economy to achieve major savings from energy conservation technology, retrofitting buildings, and upgrading efficiency standards for motor vehicles, home appliances, industrial engines and electric generating plants. [More]

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Climate change threatens the future of civilization, but humanity is impotent in effecting solutions. Even in those nations with a commitment to reduce greenhouse emissions, they continue to rise. This failure mirrors those in many other spheres that deplete the fish of the sea, erode fertile land, destroy native forests, pollute rivers and streams, and utilize the world's natural resources beyond their replacement rate.

In this provocative new book, The Climate Change Challenge and the Failure of Democracy, David Shearman and Joseph Wayne Smith present evidence that the fundamental problem causing environmental destruction - and climate change in particular - is the operation of liberal democracy. Its flaws and contradictions bestow upon government - and its institutions, laws, and the markets and corporations that provide its sustenance - an inability to make decisions that could provide a sustainable society.

(The Climate Change Challenge and the Failure of Democracy by David Shearman and Joseph Wayne Smith, Published by Praeger)

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The Smoking Gun - real government and court documents . . read more
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Titles such as Ancient Maya: The Rise and Fall of a Rainforest Civilization fill faculty bookshelves. It has also provided fodder for literature and films, most recently Mel Gibson's Apocalypto. There is a grim, irresistible appeal to this tale of central American oblivion. Recent events have injected a jarring note into Mayan studies: a sense of anxiety, even foreboding. Serious people are asking a question that at first sounds ridiculous. What if the fate of the Maya is to be our fate? What if climate change and the global financial crisis are harbingers of a system that is destined to warp, buckle and collapse?

No one is suggesting that vines will start crawling up the concrete canyons of Wall Street, or that howler monkeys will chase pin-striped bankers through Manhattan. Mayan kings who screwed up were ritually tortured and sacrificed with the aid of stingray spines to pierce the penis; an emphatic application of moral hazard. In our era, the only thing slashed is a bonus. There are, however, striking parallels between the Maya fall and our era's convulsions. "We think we are different," says Jared Diamond, the American evolutionary biologist. "In fact . . . all of those powerful societies of the past thought that they too were unique, right up to the moment of their collapse."

Complex and organised it may have been but Mayan society resembled a frog who stays in slowly boiling water. The environmental trouble built up over centuries and was partly concealed by short-term fluctuations in rainfall patterns and harvest yields. But when the tipping point came, events moved quickly. "Their success was built on very thin ice. Kings were supposed to keep order and avoid chaos through rituals and sacrifice," says David Webster, author of The Fall of the Ancient Maya. "When manifestly they couldn't do it people lost confidence and the whole system of kingship fell apart."

Which brings us to modern parallels. Webster, watching the season's first snowflakes through the window of his office at Pennsylvania State University, has been waiting for the question. Pinned to his wall is an old clipping about the fall of Enron Corporation in 2001. "That was the first tremor," he muses. "You know, human beings are always surprised when things collapse just when they seem most successful. We look around and we think we're fat, we're clever, we're comfortable and we don't think we're on the edge of something nasty. Hubris? No: ignorance."

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I really like the quality of your content. It's remarkably consistently intelligent. Since I live in the American West a great deal is irrelevant for me personally, but its still worthwhile for the rest. Thank you :) - Anna 

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 Re: Bush: "Don't turn inwarddue to crisis"

Great slice and dicing of an addled administration in its age of collapse. A few rapier hits with Track Changes and Bush and Rice stand naked in cyberspace. Pity they can't hear the laughter. Can we have some more...? - Trish

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 Re: Fidel Castro's Blog

The international community is very close to resume diplomatic relations with Cuba. It will be interesting to see how it plays out. http://machete.gummyprint.com/cubas-reforms-solidarity-in-latin-america-and-declining-us-influence/ - Jonathan

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Re: No God higher than truth

Even tho' I believe truth is flexible under certain circumstances, I still relish Richard Neville's take on disinformation & the U.S military's pitiless war on civilians. Mainly I write to endorse his praise of the SBS series, The First Australians - edgy, balanced, enlightened. Unlike most commentators, this old hippie connects the dots - Emma
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