Thursday, May 28, 2015
Sunday, May 24, 2015
The French Model: Will Climate Change Spark a World Wide Revolution?
by Nomad
Can we afford to ignore the growing impact of climate change on the stability of nations? Are we facing the potential of a global chaos that will make the French Revolution look like a playground squabble?
On the Brink
Scientists tell us that the world
stands on the brink of a radical shifting of the global climate patterns. From the data, we can at the very least assume,
the effects will be unpredictable and it is very likely that there will be more
losers than winners.
However, if you think that those
dire predictions lay in the distant future, you would be incorrect. A report
from the UN's climate science panel last year noted that climate change has
already cut into the global food
supply. What caught the attention of the government officials from 115
countries who reviewed the report was a blunt and categorical statement.
Climate
change, the report warned, could
threaten all aspects of global food security. At this time there was enough
evidence, the scientists said to say "for certain that climate change is
affecting food production on land and sea."
That is not based on
projections but effects found in real-time.
Sunday, May 17, 2015
Tuesday, May 12, 2015
Reflections on an Ungrateful Nation
by Nomad
In free countries, it is natural to complain about how the nation is being run. The public must hold high standards when it comes to the kind of government it expects. However, that shouldn't mean being blind when things are done properly. It should not mean refusing to give credit when it is due.
Not long ago I saw this newspaper clipping (on the left) and it started me thinking about the negative attitude of so many Americans.
"The hardest arithmetic to master," said Eric Hoffer, "is that which enables us to count our blessings."
When you listen to people talking you start to wonder how this nation became such a collection of complainers and pampered brats.
A recent poll by USA Today/Pew Research Center shows Americans say the biggest problem facing the country today is the state of the economy. And yet, so many Americans still seem ungrateful even as things have begun looking brighter on that front.
After some somewhat less than sterling numbers at the beginning of the year, analysts saw the U.S. labor market "snap back from another brutal winter with a return to healthy job growth." Last month, initial claims for unemployment benefits fell to the lowest level in 15 years.
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