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Borderless World - March 2007

Bono, Africa and Everyday People

March 30th 2007 22:32
Bono

An Ithica, New York man once taught first grade school in Zambia. He found a way to re-gift used working Cornell University computers to Africa, without the association, stigma or fact of "technology dumping", the sending of useless non-working electronics, sometimes disguised and described as aid, to Africa.


Cornell University started a Computer Reuse Club in the fall of 2006. In the months since computers have found new homes in which they can contribute in local Ithica community organiziations and all the way to south Africa.

There is a lot of Cornell student partidipation, and, so far more than 50 computers have traveled to another continent.
The Computer Tree

Contact by the student group with the Society For Natural Resources Conservation has been important.

In Time Magazine (online), 3-22-07 Bono wrote, in part,

"Over the next 50 years, we might need a little more poetry. Europe is a thought that has to become a feeling--one based on the belief that Europe stands only if injustice falls and that we find our feet only when our neighbors stand with us in freedom and equality. Our humanity is diminished when we have no mission bigger than ourselves. And one way to define who we are might be to spend more time looking across the eight miles of Mediterranean Sea that separates Europe from Africa.


There's an Irish word, meitheal. It means that the people of the village help one another out most when the work is the hardest. Most Europeans are like that. As individual nations, we may argue over the garden fence, but when a neighbor's house goes up in flames, we pull together and put out the fire. History suggests it sometimes takes an emergency for us to draw closer. Looking inward won't cut it. As a professional navel gazer, I recommend against that form of therapy for anything other than songwriting. We discover who we are in service to one another, not the self.

Today many rooms in our neighbor's house, Africa, are in flames. From the genocide in Darfur to the deathbeds in Kigali, with six AIDS patients stacked onto one cot, from the child dying of malaria to the village without clean water, conditions in Africa are an affront to every value we Europeans have ever seen fit to put on paper. We see in Somalia and Sudan what happens if more militant forces fill the void and stir dissent within what is, for the most part, a pro-Western and moderate Muslim population. (Nearly half of Africa's people are devotees of Islam.) So whether as a moral or strategic imperative, it's folly to let this fire rage."
Zambian Children's Fund


Sources: Cornell University, Zambians Children Fund, Ithica Journal, Time Magazine
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Capitalizing On Immigration

March 24th 2007 20:37
Press Any Key

Business Week has published an interesting article that says...."One-quarter of the publicly traded, venture capital-backed companies started in the past 15 years in the U.S. were founded by immigrant entrepreneurs, according to "American Made: The Impact of Immigrant Entrepreneurs and Professionals on U.S. Competitiveness," a 2006 national survey commissioned by the National Venture Capital Assn. The current market capitalization of these firms exceeds $500 billion, and they employ more than 220,000 people in the U.S. and 400,000 internationally. Immigrants have had the greatest impact in the fields of IT, life sciences, and particularly in the high-technology manufacturing sector, where 40% of publicly traded, venture-backed firms operating in the U.S. today were founded by immigrants. "

Follow the link for insight into the economics of immigration...
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Old and New Cultures

March 24th 2007 16:24
The International Herald Tribune reports on the popularity of a new television show, in:
"Japan Embraces Vulture Culture",

The article states: "Ohtomo said NHK decided to make the program after seeing the intense popular interest in mergers. The first episode attracted an impressive 3.5 million viewers in Tokyo alone, according to Video Research, a TV rating agency.

"The show struck a chord among Japanese because M&A is suddenly something that is close to our lives," Ohtomo said. "Japan is still trying to decide whether M&A is a good thing, or a bad thing."

The level of interest was apparent one recent evening in a Tokyo subway station, where commuting salarymen thumbed tabloids with articles speculating on the foreign vultures' next victims.
Japanese Commuters

"One commuter, Nobutaka Yamada, a 37-year-old bank manager, said Japanese had to adapt to the competition, or risk getting left behind in the global economy. "Japan must learn to live with these vultures," Yamada said, "or it will face takeover from an even bigger vulture, China."



Quite a contrast to the calming site of the Hoshi family, who have owned their family business since 717, that is, 46 generations, and who seek out other family owned businesses around the world to join a loose group who share knowledge about enduring in a complex world....

"An association of family and bicentenary companies, the Henokiens intend to enlarge their family circle.
Hoshi Inn


"Today, there are 38 members: 15 Italian, 10 French, 4 German, 1 Dutch, 1 from Northern Ireland, 4 Japanese, 1 belgian and 2 swiss. At the head of their companies, unique, dynamic managers. In 1981, recognising and co-opting each other, they formed a group, creating a restricted and rigorous international organisation: the Henokiens.

"Henokiens Association membership criteria are: company longevity – a minimum age of 200 years – and permanence – the family must be owner of the company or the majority share holder - one member of the founder must still manage the company or be a member of the board – and the company must be in good financial health. In addition, being modern is a final requirement.
Hoshi Family


"Created in 1981, the objective of the Association is the development of its membership throughout the world around a common philosophy: the value of the concept of the family company, real alternative to the multinationals.


"It is not a brotherhood, the sectors in which the members carry on their activities are in fact highly diversified: craft industries, trades, services, publishing, heavy industry…
Nor is it a businesses club (certain firms may even be competitors). The Henokiens do not exchange services, they exchange only ideas."
Image Against Evil

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Music Makes The World Go 'Round...

March 22nd 2007 22:56
In January, this year, the IFPI published some astonishing numbers about the worlds' love of music...

IFPI Digital Music Report 2007


[ Click here to read more ]
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President Bush Welcomes The Irish

March 18th 2007 15:02
President Bush Welcomes The Irish

The Washington Post reports on immigration this morning from NEW BEDFORD, Mass -- "

[ Click here to read more ]
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The Big Bang and Black Holes, Oh My

March 12th 2007 16:34
The International Tribunereports today on New Delhi, that
“Delhi is bursting and the only way is up. If Baron Haussmann's plan for transforming Paris lay in replacing crowded lanes with wide, unbarricadable boulevards, India's minister of state for urban development, Ajay Maken, dreams of creating new space to house the city's exploding population by growing vertically.”

[ Click here to read more ]
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The International Herald Tribune reports that China intends to diversify and invest its 1 trillion dollar foreign currency reserves.

Meanwhile, the IHT Travel Section has a post on it’s current front page, originally written May 11, 2006 Buying Malaysia, featuring a not new story about Malaysia wanting to cultivate it’s second home My Seond Home, where retired expatriates are invited to live, and spend, in Malaysia. .. Resident guests receive a 10 year social guest pass, if they can deposit approxiamtely $80,000.00 US into a Malaysian bank, and have provable income monthly of about $2,000.00 US.

[ Click here to read more ]
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The Washington Post is reporting “Josh Wolf, a 24-year-old blogger, has spent more than six months behind bars in California -- the longest contempt-of-court term ever served by someone in the media -- for refusing to turn over a videotape he shot of a violent San Francisco demonstration against a Group of Eight summit meeting. Unless a mediation session today can break the impasse, he will likely remain imprisoned at least until the current grand jury's term expires in July.”

“In an interview with PBS's "Frontline," Wolf says: "There was a trust established between people involved in the organization that I was covering and myself . . . that what I chose to release was what I chose to release, and that I wasn't an investigator for the state."”

[ Click here to read more ]
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