Saturday, March 19, 2005

Today I felt very "old" attending a lecture by Dr. Marc Von der Ruhr at the DCA. I listened to a nice young man voice his heartfelt beliefs, only to wonder how he had earned a doctoral degree in economics without ever getting his hands dirty. Privileged to be elevated - the sage on the stage with classic backdrop of Powerpoint slides - he played a perfect Custer facing an unsympathetic Apache audience that called to question much of his sterile, clinical approach to globalization. One can only hope that Marc gets stranded for a few months in Bangladesh or Kuala Lumpur without his credit cards, luggage and passport in order to gain a true grassroots understanding of world economics.

On a kinder note... I'd like to see Dr. Marc spend some time travelling as a Winess for Peace in order to experience firsthand how global economic and military policies affect the people of Latin America and the Caribbean.

Several DCA staffers leaked the news that Dr. Marc called in advance to find out the DCA's policy on dealing with vocal hecklers, so at least he came prepared for a frosty reception. Cheers to the students at his home base. SNC activists have worked to make Fair Trade coffee the exclusive variety served in all St. Norbert facilities.

"Two magazine covers stood out in poignant contrast on newsstands last week," says Scott Klinger in The Cavernous Divide. "Forbes magazine released its 29th annual listing of the world's billionaires. Time magazine's cover story wondered "How to End Poverty."

The Time article was written by Jeffrey D. Sachs a noted economist who stands at sharp odds with Dr. Marc Von der Ruhr. Sachs leads the U.N. Millennium Project and is director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University. His latest book should be required reading (especially at St. Norbert College where Catholic charities strongly support Sachs' opinions) The End of Poverty: Economic Possibilities for Our Time.

“The system is not working right now — let’s be clear,” he says. “There’s a tremendous imbalance of focus on the issues of war and peace, and less on the dying and suffering of the poor who have no voice.”

According to a recent UN report on poverty, 1 billion people live on a dollar a day or less, many of them going to bed hungry every night; life expectancy in the poorest countries is half that of people in high-income countries. And every month, for example, 150,000 African children die of malaria because they don’t have bed nets to keep out mosquitoes, a tragedy Sachs calls the “silent tsunami.”

In 1970, the world’s nations agreed to provide 0.7 percent of their gross national income for development assistance, and that figure was reaffirmed by the U.N. conference on financing development in Monterey, Mexico, in 2002.

So far, only five countries have met or surpassed the target: Denmark, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden. Six others have made commitments to reach the target by 2015: Belgium, Finland, France, Ireland, Spain and Britain.

Where's the USA? We're busy trying to force corporate-driven global policy like NAFTA, CAFTA and FTAA on the poorer nations of the world, while fighting terrorism with bombs and bullets. It's no wonder Paul Wolfowitz, architect of the invasion of Iraq will now migrate to president of the World Bank.

Wednesday, March 16, 2005

"When you go looking for the Weird, the Weird also comes looking for you," says Richard Hendricks. He's the editor and publisher of Weird Wisconsin. He's always looking for articles, photos, websites, new books or references to books about Wisconsin-related materials, stories or photos of your encounters with weird phenomena and any research into the lore and legends of Wisconsin.