Archive for World Issues

Barack seeks the Stillness

// October 13th, 2008 // No Comments » // Art, Music & Poetry, World Issues

(Obama minutes before the first Presidential debate)
I said to my soul, be still, and wait without hope
For hope would be hope for the wrong thing; wait without love
For love would be love of the wrong thing; there is yet faith
but the faith and the love and the hope are all in the waiting.
Wait without thought, for you are not ready for thought:
So the darkness shall be the light and the stillness, the dancing.

T.S. Eliot, East Coker, No.2 of ‘Four Quartets

Post 4-11

// August 1st, 2008 // 2 Comments » // World Issues

The build up to the November elections and the inevitable victory of Mr Obama will provide much needed catharsis for a civilisation wearied under the strain of a system turned against itself. In a rare moment of weakness and fear the institutions that safeguard our democracies were shackled and bastardized, corrupted against their intent and against the general moral compass of decency and the humane. Over this interminably long seven years, these chains have bitten more and more deeply into our collective prosperity- war, incompetence, division and the squandering of opportunity and life. The same chains have awakened us to this bondage and have become the source of our cry for freedom. However, the test for leadership is not winning an election, nor addressing millions with a message of hope and change. The real test after November is how quickly the shackles are undone, institutions reempowered, and the Augean levels of corruption and cronyism washed away with transparency and accountability.

I am the last to speak against engaging leadership and a platform of progress, yet charisma means nothing if it does not lead to action that repairs the damage to rule of law, individual liberty and global peace that has been so ruthlessly violated over this past administration. The danger is that we become so engaged in the catharsis of change, that we accept a superficial difference without the fundamental substance that yields true progress. The damage done is huge and the time to repair critically short, as power, once decried from afar, fits the new king as snugly as the old.

Yet, I am optimistic for a number of reasons. First, I believe the American system is developed enough that the vital institutions will largely self-correct, at least back to pre-Sept 11 standards. Increased economic and military competition from regional powers and new pressures to transform environmentally, socially and technologically, will force the U.S. to innovate to survive. Historically America has been well geared for such change, and I feel that institutions will strengthen through their pragmatic use. Simply put, they can no longer afford to divorce their ideology from reality, and reality has come crashing back in.

Second, there’s Dr B.B. Obama’s Lucky-Time Changey McHope Juice. Ok, I have to admit I’ve also been drinking the cool aid on this one. Although it’s true that the measure of success needs to be made from a critical review of actions once in the Presidency, it is at least a very good sign that Obama looks like the critical-thinking, humanistic, reflective and persuasive leader that the U.S. needs, and that the rest of us need the U.S. to have. Politically, he will have a massive grass roots support base and a majority in Washington- a combination that promises hefty potential for reform. Policy analysis is a topic beyond the scope of this piece, but apart from following the traditional line of uncritical support for Israel, and the radioactive complexity of Iraq policy, his policy positions seem to resonate with progressive experts in the field.

Third, I think Australia is an interesting case study, prepared one year earlier. On 3 December 2007, Kevin Rudd was sworn in as the 26th Prime Minister of Australia, ending the 11 year rule of John Howard’s conservative government. Rudd’s first official act, was to sign the instrument of ratification of the Kyoto Protocol. In February Rudd fulfilled an election promise to apologise to Indigenous Australians for the stolen generation as the parliament’s first order of business. In April he held the Australia 2020 Summit, bringing together 1000 leading Australians to discuss ten areas the government saw as critical for Australia’s future development. And some days ago his government announced an overhaul of the horrific Australian asylum policy which prevented asylum seekers from landing on Australian soil and sent them instead to detention centres on small Pacific islands. These would-be immigrants were kept indefinitely, in legal limbo, and at their own expense. Changes to this policy means that the burden of proving a specific asylum seeker is a risk to Australian society now falls on the government, that the policy will not apply to children, and that cases of around 380 people currently in detention will be reviewed. Rapid and continuing changes of this type should form a litmus test for evaluating Rudd and indeed Obama and his promising administration.

Get Your War On: The Watch List

// August 1st, 2008 // No Comments » // Art, Music & Poetry, World Issues

“This is it. The highly anticipated premiere of Get Your War On, the new animated series from 23/6, based on the popular comic by David Rees.”

Cultures at the far edge of the world

// June 17th, 2008 // No Comments » // World Issues

Spend twenty minutes with Wade Davis, a Harvard-educated ethnobotanist and National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence. He tells an intense and incredibly powerful story that challenges our view of the world and the lives we lead, in inspiring and beautiful ways.

Like Spinning Plates

// June 3rd, 2008 // 2 Comments » // Art, Music & Poetry, World Issues

The photograph below is the final scene of a powerful series capturing the assassination of Pakistani opposition leader Benazir Bhutto, during a rally in the city of Rawalpindi on December 27th 2007. Interview with photographer John Moore, Getty Images, 1st Prize for Stories, 2008 World Press Photo.

While you make pretty speeches
I’m being cut to shreds
You feed me to the lions
A delicate balance

And this just feels like spinning plates
I’m living in cloud cuckoo land
And this just feels like spinning plates
Our bodies floating down the muddy river

- Like Spinning Plates by Thom Yorke of Radiohead

Standing silent in the Old Church (Oude Kerk) in central Amsterdam, I’d made my annual pilgrimage to remember the world unfolding around me. The sermon was strong again this year; suppression of the human condition in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, Kenya and other lands so tortured. How often have we heard this parable and how often have we begged the lesson yet be learned? There was no hymn, no choir of angels to descend upon our fearful souls. We came to see, not listen, and we look until our eyes are filled with tears upon faintest realisation that THIS is happening HERE and NOW, merely outside whatever walls that we imagine line our little lands. There is no priest, except whatever voice wells up from within, and no communion except the few fragile seconds when you let slip and imagine that this man or woman or child is human, just like you.

Citizens’ rights and the rule of law in a civil society: not just yet

// May 21st, 2008 // No Comments » // World Issues

“On the 24th of November 2007, history presented Australia with a choice. To the surprise of some and the delight of a narrow majority, Australia chose the ALP and brought to an ignominious end 11½ years of John Howard’s Government… The magnitude of the choice became clear soon afterwards. In the first sitting of the new parliament, the Government said ‘sorry’ to the stolen generations. It seemed almost too good to be true: the apology so many had waited so long to hear. And it was astonishing and uplifting to hear some of the noblest and most dignified sentiments ever uttered in that place on the hill. It is worth recalling some of the words:

“Today we honour the indigenous peoples of this land, the oldest continuing cultures in human history.
We reflect on their past mistreatment.
We reflect in particular on the mistreatment of those who were stolen generations – this blemished chapter in our nation’s history.
We apologise for the laws and policies of successive Parliaments and Governments that have inflicted profound grief, suffering and loss on these our fellow Australians. …
For the pain, suffering and hurt of these stolen generations, their descendants and for their families left behind, we say ‘sorry’.
To the mothers and the fathers, the brothers and the sisters, for the breaking up of families and communities, we say ‘sorry’.
And for the indignity and degradation thus inflicted on a proud people and a proud culture, we say ‘sorry’. …
We today take this first step by acknowledging the past and laying claim to a future that embraces all Australians.
A future where this Parliament resolves that the injustices of the past must never, never happen again. …”

The 13th of February 2008 will be remembered as a day the nation shifted, perceptibly. The apology was significant not only for marking a significant step in the process of reconciling ourselves with our past: it cast a new light on the former government. It set a new tone. And I think it reminded us of something we had lost: a sense of decency.

Most of the worst aspects of the Howard years can be explained by the lack of decency which infected their approach to government. They could not acknowledge the wrong that was done to the stolen generations; they failed to help David Hicks when it was a moral imperative: they waited until his rescue became a political imperative; they never quite understood the wickedness of imprisoning children who were fleeing persecution; they abandoned ministerial responsibility; they attacked the courts scandalously but unblushing; they argued for the right to detain innocent people for life; they introduced laws which prevent fair trials; they bribed the impoverished Republic of Nauru to warehouse refugees for us. It seemed that they did not understand just how badly they were behaving, or perhaps they just did not care. And they are unable to change their ways in defeat: prominent back-benchers are scrambling for the lifeboats.
One of the most compelling things about the apology to the stolen generations was that it was so decent. Suddenly, a dreadful episode in our history was acknowledged for what it was. Unfortunately, when announcing that the Government would apologize to the stolen generations, the Prime Minister also said that the Government would not offer compensation. Let me explain why I think that was unfortunate. …”

Excerpt from the Ninth Manning Clark Lecture entitled “Citizens’ rights and the rule of law in a civil society: not just yet“. By Julian Burnside QC.

Full transcript is here, unfortunately the podcast has been removed.

Jon Stewart interviews Douglas Feith

// May 13th, 2008 // 1 Comment » // World Issues

One of the most dangerous and infuriating aspects of the Bush administration has been the media-spinning, propaganda producing, history revising, blank-faced lies and denials. Knowledgeable, respectful, willy and determined, Jon Stewart interviews a lead Neocon in the Bush Administration’s planning, execution and justification of the Iraq War- former Undersecretary of Defense, Douglas Feith.

Feel it. That sweet sense of accountability, and almost.. almost a hint of justice.

Putuwa

// May 12th, 2008 // No Comments » // World Issues

The Cammeraygal were the Aboriginal group living near my home in Sydney at the time of the European settlement in 1788. They were members of the Eora language family group, one of hundreds of languages and dialects native to Australia.

In Eora, the word Putuwa means “to warm one’s hand by the fire and then to squeeze gently the fingers of another person.”

The language was first documented by William Dawes, a member of the First Fleet to Australa, a surveyor, engineer, astronomer and botanist. Dawes learnt Eora from a Cammeraygal girl called Patyegarang, being the first European to learn an Aboriginal language- a feat Europeans found incredibly difficult, although the Eora had no problems mimicking English.

Against his wishes Dawes was sent from Australia on the first voyage of marines back to Britain, for his refusal to join punitive expeditions against aborigines. By the early 19th century the Eora people had become extinct, due to European disease and decline in natural food sources.

Putuwa” and the acts of Dawes are a reminder of how kind humans can be when we choose. The settlement, his expulsion and the extinction of the Eora people seem a clear lesson of the destructive danger of indifference.

With thanks to “Cacophony“, by Lewis Nowra, The Best Australian Essays 2005.

Zeitgeist Tech Ninja

// April 12th, 2008 // No Comments » // World Issues

Johnny Lee demos his amazing Wii Remote hacks, bending the $40 game part so it powers a digital whiteboard, a multitouch display and a head-mounted 3-D viewer.

This completely blew my mind. Technology is at its best when it functionality is unlocked on an existing system, i.e. figuring out that regular phone lines could carry high-speed internet. Johnny Lee deserves some form of life sized golden statue. Rest assured the world is going to give this guy whatever he needs to keep inventing in his lab- money, recognition, tenure, unbridled power…

Check out his Wii project page for more, including how the Wii Remote hack can be use to make your laptop screen a touch screen- without an LCD projector.