Author: Serkadis

  • GM Grants 650M Euros to Fund Opel

    After announcing its new management team that is supposed to help save Opel, Nick Reilly also confirmed that General Motors will give the German brand 650 million Euros until the company manages to raise more funds from other sources. Opel and its British sister Vauxhall are looking to raise up to 3.3 billion Euros to finance the restructuring process, company officials announced in 2009.

    "The payment accelerations serve as a temporary funding source for the (Opel) group’s operations unt… (read more)

  • Alonso Not Bothered by Schumacher’s GP2 Test

    Fernando Alonso doesn’t have any problem with Michael Schumacher’s testing a GP2 development car for three days, prior to the official start of the testing season in Formula One. The Spaniard insisted that the GP2 car is very different from the ones currently raced in F1, and disagreed that the German was given an unfair advantage over the rest of the F1 field.

    The GP2 car is very different from F1; not at all a good point of reference. But for him it would have been good in order to regain h… (read more)

  • Google Censors 'Encyclopedia Dramatica' Entry in Australia

    Google caused quite an uproar last week when it announced that it intended to stop censoring search results on its localized version in China. Its decision is commendable, yet, even as it takes up this fight, Google censors its results in a number of countries, including some European ones, to abide to the local laws. One country which h… (read more)

  • Lexus IS F Circuit Club Sports Concept Revealed

    Lexus has presented the lightweight concept version of it’s IS F sport sedan at the Tokyo Auto Salon (this is a tuning-dedicated saloon), the IS F Circuit Club Sport (CCS).

    The standard (if we can call it so) IS F is a soldier developed by the company to fight in the German Powerwars. It faces enemies like the BMW M3 or the Mercedes C 63 AMG and, although it’s an awesome car, we think it doesn’t quite match the German rivals’ dynamic level.

    It seems that Lexus has finally realized that an… (read more)

  • DTNA Gets $40 Million from US DoE

    Daimler Trucks North America announced last week it has received a $40 million funding from the US Department of Energy (DoE), through the 21st Century Truck Technology Partnership, to be used for commercial vehicle and diesel engine development. This is the largest of the nine project awards totaling $115 million given by the DoE to US-based OEMs for research.

    This grant from the U.S. Department of Energy is essential for us, and will enable our truck and drive technologies to make great pro… (read more)

  • Cal Thomas on Global Warming’s Falling Doctrine

    The collapse of the global warming doctrine as a supposed truth is continuing.  Of course the proposition that we have entered a cooling cycle is just as tenuous.  The gross climate does swing back and forth over a decent range each year with the shifting of the seasons.  Some years a range of forcing agents takes it a little higher and some years they do not.

     

    Since the heat input is pretty uniform and possibly subject to precise measure in time, it is better to understand what causes cooling and what the agents are.  Thinking of climate change in terms of various cooling agents is certain to be more productive.

     

    For example, we have a peak in cosmic ray input to the atmosphere these past few months.  This permitted the prediction of a record cold winter, at least in terms of the past thirty years.  This prediction can now be deemed successful.  Other factors were not particularly in play, so we had an excellent test.

     

    The sea ice comment here is not so correct.  The sea ice is continuing to lose mass as of last summer.  There is a difference between area and mass.  However this winter is cold and this process of mass decline may be halted this year.  As I have posted, this sea ice effect appears to be caused by a change in the geometry of the circum polar current and it is likely a driver of climate rather than a victim of climate change.

     

    And yes, the doctrine of man caused climate change was a bad idea as I pointed out in my first post back in 2007, not least because it was unnecessary in terms of the agendas that need to be pursued, but because the likelihood of it been run over with a truck by Mother Nature approached certainty.  I just did not think she would be so quick of the mark.

     

    Cal Thomas: Global warming is a falling doctrine

    By: CAL THOMAS 


    Examiner Columnist

    January 14, 2010

     

    http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/columns/OpEd-Contributor/Global-warming-is-a-falling-doctrine-8759793-81328022.html

    PORSTEWART, NORTHERN IRELAND – A familiar philosophical question goes like this: If a tree falls in the forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?

    Here’s another: If a doctrine falls, will enough believers admit they were wrong and withdraw support for policies associated with it?

    The “doctrine” of global warming, now euphemistically called “climate change,” suffered a severe blow last week as much of Europe was buried in record amounts of snow and subfreezing temperatures.

    “Experts” who believe in global warming, uh climate change, went on television where they bravely tried to make a distinction between weather, which they said was about what happens today, and climate, which is long term. Most of it fell on deaf — and cold — ears as growing numbers disbelieve the “experts,” relying more on their own “lying eyes.”

    Writing Sunday in London‘s Daily Mail, columnist David Rose analyzed recent scientific data amassed by eminent climate scientists. Rose says that far from a warming planet, “the bitter weather afflicting much of the Northern Hemisphere is only the start of a global trend towards cooler weather that is likely to last for 20 or 30 years.”

    Rose cites data from the U.S. National Snow and Ice Data Center in Colorado, which found that, “Arctic summer sea ice has increased by 409,000 square miles, or 26 percent, since 2007.”

    This, he says, challenges “some of the global warming orthodoxy’s most deeply cherished beliefs, such as their claim that the North Pole will be free of ice by the summer of 2013.”

    During last month’s climate summit in Copenhagen, more than 150 scientists with backgrounds in climate science wrote an open letter to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, a global warming believer.

    The letter begins, “climate change science is in a period of ‘negative discovery’ – the more we learn about this exceptionally complex and rapidly evolving field the more we realize how little we know. Truly the science is not settled.”

    The scientists challenge 10 of the main claims of the global warming-climate change true believers and write, “… there is no sound reason to impose expensive and restrictive public policy decisions on the peoples of the Earth without first providing convincing evidence that human activities are causing dangerous climate change beyond that resulting from natural causes.

    “Before any precipitate action is taken, we must have solid observational data that recent changes in climate differ substantially from changes observed in the past and are well in excess of normal variations caused by solar cycles, ocean currents, changes in the Earth’s orbital parameters and other natural phenomena.”

    That seems more than reasonable, but politicians in Europe and America want to rush through additional restrictions on how we live in order to seize more power. This is the major reason for their panic attack.

    As new scientific evidence adds to the body of information, history and common sense, the power grab by the politicians is in peril. The hurry-up offense, to employ a football term, is being used to rush through legislation before the defense can devise an effective response. But the defense is now on the offense, and the offense is being forced to poorly play defense.

    Should we do nothing about our consumption of petroleum? No, we should use this window of opportunity to decrease our reliance on petroleum; not because of “climate change,” but to deprive the oil-producing nations of money too many of them use to underwrite terrorism.

    This should satisfy both the global warming disciples and deniers and make America and Europe less dependent on nations that wish to destroy our liberty. But threats to liberty are not limited to some oil-producing nations; they can also be found in the British Parliament and in the American Congress.

    The falling doctrines now make so much noise that only those without hearing fail to notice.


    Examiner columnist Cal Thomas is nationally syndicated by Tribune Media, Inc. 
  • The curious case of the expanding environmental group with falling income by Christopher Booker and Richard North, The Telegraph

    Article Tags: Christopher Booker, Headline Story, Pachauri Conflict of Interest, Richard North

    When Douglas Alexander travelled to New Delhi last September to announce Britain was presenting £10 million to the Energy and Resources Institute (TERI), standing alongside him was an imposing, bearded figure.

    Dr Rajendra Pachauri is not only TERI’s director-general but also chairman of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC).

    Best known for the moment when he stood with Al Gore to collect the Nobel Peace Prize, Dr Pachauri was the mastermind of the IPCC’s latest monumental report on the dangers of global warming in 2007, giving him huge prestige and influence as the world’s “top climate official”.

    Since being elected to the IPCC chairmanship five years earlier, he has been appointed to more than 20 positions, including directorships and advisory roles to major banks and investment firms.

    Dr Pachauri insists that the millions of dollars he receives for these posts are all paid to his Delhi-based institute and not to him personally. But during the same period he has also presided over a massive expansion of TERI’s empire.

    Source: telegraph.co.uk

    Read in full with comments »   


  • [Burgos] Nuevo Parque Tecnologico de Castañares

    Los primeros trabajos en el Parque Tecnológico empezarán esta semana

    La constructora Isolux Corsan Corviam iniciará los primeros trabajos de urbanización del parque tecnológico de Burgos esta semana. Está previsto que la empresa realice las primeras catas sobre el terreno con el fin de medir qué cimetaciones tendrá que acometer para levantar los diferentes inmuebles previstos en el proyecto. El mal tiempo ha impedido hasta ahora el comienzo de las obras.
    Isolux fue la adjudicataria de las obras de urbanización del Parque Tecnológico al presentar una oferta con un presupuesto de contrata de 29.461.893 euros, 5,5 millones menos de los presupuestados inicialmente en el concurso de licitación. Esta empresa era una de las 26 que se presentaron a este concurso público, que fue resuelto ayer por el Consejo de Administración de ADE Parques Tecnológicos y Empresariales, empresa pública dependiente de la Consejería de Economía y Empleo.
    Según se establecen en las bases del concurso, Isolux Corsán Corviam deberá urbanizar las 124 hectáreas que ocupa el Parque Tecnológico en un plazo de 24 meses. En concreto, este polígono, ubicado junto al nudo de carreteras de la N-120, la AP-1 y la N-1 y destinado a empresas innovadoras de base tecnológica, ocupa una superficie bruta de 1,2 millones de metros, 600.504 de ellos netos.
    Se trata del Parque Tecnológico más grande de la región, por encima del de Boecillo (118 hectáreas) y León (32). Los requisitos tecnológicos y urbanísticos que definirán las 124 hectáreas son similares a los establecidos en los recintos de Boecillo y León.
    Por lo que respecta a los servicios de control de calidad de las obras de urbanización, éstos se han adjudicado a la firma Incolsa con un presupuesto de licitación de 460.722 euros. Seis empresas se presentaron a este concurso.
    En cuanto a los accesos al Parque Tecnológico, se descarta totalmente la conexión con la autopista AP-1, y se contempla la N-120 como única entrada y salida de este complejo a través de un enlace viario. A este respecto, el documento no hace mención alguna al proyecto de la autovía A-12, una de las interferencias que ha afectado al desarrollo del Parque Tecnológico y que amenazaba con dividir en dos mitades. Así, de las 60 hectáreas destinadas a uso tecnológico, es decir, donde se ubicarán las empresas, 2,6 hectáreas están reservadas a las denominadas actividades nido, empresas que comienzan su andadura. Las parcelas que ocupen no superan los 1.000 metros cuadrados y los negocios que se asienten pueden agruparse en módulos, como ya sucede en el polígono tecnológico de Boecillo (Valladolid).
    Para las actividades tecnológicas medias se destinarán 22,2 hectáreas en total, divididas en parcelas de entre 1.700 y 4.000 metros cuadrados. Y a las actividades denominadas extensivas -las que necesitan más terreno- están reservadas 31 hectáreas, en parcelas de entre 4.000 y 10.000 metros cuadrados. Las empresas o entidades que requieran más espacio podrán adquirir más de un solar.
    Para equipamientos privados, el ámbito reserva 4,8 hectáreas y para públicos, 4,9. Los espacios libres públicos ocuparán 20 hectáreas. Se convertirán en parques y jardines, la mayor superficie de éstos en el perímetro del polígono. De hecho, en esta zona el plan parcial ha ordenado áreas de protección ambiental. La red viaria, contando con el acceso al parque, tiene reservada 23 hectáreas y las playas de aparcamientos, un total de 4,7.
    El parque tendrá en total 8.900 plazas de aparcamiento. De ellas, 4.600 serán públicas y se distribuirán entre las playas situadas en el perímetro del parque (un total de 2.100) y en los viales interiores (2.500). El resto, más de 4.000, serán privadas, y estarán en los exteriores de las empresas.

    Fuente: http://www.diariodeburgos.es/noticia…7863A1C99D1061

  • Nintendo Game and Watch: Cult reborn as keyholders (video)

    game_watc_parachute

    Game & Watch is the name of a series of (now) simple LCD handheld games Nintendo produced between 1980 and 1991. The small devices still enjoy cult status among hardcore retro gamers (just look at these prices on Ebay), which means it’s not that big a surprise that toymaker Takara decided to come up with three new keyholders that are designed exactly like Game & Watch units.

    game_watch_octopus

    Specifically, the keyholders resemble the Octopus, Parachute, and Chef Game & Watches (all of these games were first released in 1981). What sounds good so far has a downside: You won’t be able to play the games, but at least you’ll see sprites moving in pre-determined patterns on the screen (the keyholders are solar-powered).

    game_watch_chef

    So if you’re a hardcore Game & Watch collector (and we know you are out there), you should look out for the Takara keyholders sometime in March. They will be sold only in Japan (for $12 each), which is why I suggest to contact import/export specialists such as Japan Trend Shop, Geek Stuff 4 U or Rinkya.

    Here’s a short video:

    Via Gigazine [JP]


    Buy This Item: [Click here to buy this item]

    Read Original Article

  • Suzuki, GM to Part Ways in Hybrid Development

    Suzuki Motor Corporation finally decided to cut its ties with General Motors in the hybrid sector and fuel-cell technologies and concentrate its efforts on the Volkswagen alliance formed late last year. All projects started with General Motors would end in February, Suzuki announced last week according to a report by Reuters, with new ideas to continue with Volkswagen’s support in every single area.

    "Suzuki is in a comprehensive alliance with Volkswagen. In every field including hybrid, … (read more)

  • Briatore to Sue the FIA Over Loss of Drivers

    Flavio Briatore might have won his appeal over the FIA ban earlier this month, but the Italian manager still has some unfinished business with the international ruling body. According to the Daily Telegraph, the 59-year old Italian vowed to get back at the FIA for loss of income, as a result of several drivers leaving his company and changing manager following the crash-gate.

    Needless to say, once Briatore was found guilty of race fixing in Formula One, the majority of the drivers who used to… (read more)

  • BBC drops top IPCC source for climate change data by Lawrence Solomon, National Post

    Article Tags: BBC, Climate Fools Day, Lawrence Solomon, Met Office, Sammy Wilson

    The British Broadcasting Corporation has put its weather forecasting contract out to tender – the first time since its radio broadcasts began in 1923 – after taking heat from the public for a string of embarrassingly inaccurate long-range weather forecasts. The UK Met Office, the government-owned meteorological department that has had the BBC contract for almost 90 years, is a partner with the Climatic Research Unit at East Anglia University of Climategate fame. CRU and the UK Met Office jointly provide the climate change data that the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change relies on.

    The BBC’s decision comes amid one of the fiercest winters in decades that has left the country unprepared for the snow-related chaos it has seen. In August, the Met Office had forecast a mild winter. Last summer, the BBC had again been embarrassed: Thanks to the forecasts it had received from the UK Met, the BBC had warned its audience of an “odds-on barbecue summer” that instead was cool and rainy. In both cases, the BBC has faced outrage from a public that had been misled by the information the BBBC had provided it.

    Many blame the UK Met Office’s abysmal forecasts record on a climate change bias. The BBC’s own climate correspondent, Paul Hudson, who for a decade had been a UK Met forecaster, believes the UK Met’s problem could stem from flawed computer models at its Hadley Centre, which provides data to the IPCC.

    Click source to read FULL report from Lawrence Solomon

    Also Listen to the Sammy Wilson YouTube below and hear what he says about the Met Office

    Source: network.nationalpost.com

    Read in full with comments »   


  • Solar Irrigation in Africa

    This brings home how easy it is to increase productivity throughout West Africa with a modicum of direct investment.  Just managing water by lifting it as needed and distributing through drip irrigation is a revolution.
    Communal efforts to retain water from the rainy season are also a priority.  Grassy berms can obviously work as well as treed belts.  These are all productive and useful.
    Managed drip based irrigation during the dry season is obviously possible in combination with the aforementioned water conservation.
    My key point is that this is nothing a large landowner with financial resources would not do in a heartbeat.  In the case were few have a hectare of land it becomes a community responsibility to organize this.
    The real insight to take home, it that this is completely within the power of the owners themselves and good example is been shared through the internet today.  What works well in one village is no longer staying there.
    It will still take time, Micro finance is wresting control of the economy back into the hands of the families and it is obvious that these lands can produce several times what they produce today, properly managed and financed.  It will not take generations thanks to internet sharing.
    Solar Irrigation Boosts Local Incomes In Africa
    by Staff Writers

    Stanford CA (SPX) Jan 14, 2010
     Burney and her co-authors noted that only 4 percent of cropland in sub-Saharan Africa is irrigated, and that most rural, food-insecure communities in the region rely on rain-fed agriculture, which, in places like Benin, is limited to a three- to six-month rainy season.
    Solar-powered drip irrigation systems significantly enhance household incomes and nutritional intake of villagers in arid sub-Saharan Africa, according to a new Stanford University study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

    The two-year study found that solar-powered pumps installed in remote villages in the West African nation of Benin were a cost-effective way of delivering much-needed irrigation water, particularly during the long dry season. The results are published in the Jan. 4, 2010, online edition of PNAS.

    “Significant fractions of sub-Saharan Africa’s population are considered food insecure,” wrote lead author Jennifer Burney, a postdoctoral scholar with the Program on Food Security and the Environment and the Department of Environmental Earth System Science at Stanford.

    “Across the region, these food-insecure populations are predominantly rural, they frequently survive on less than $1 per person per day, and whereas most are engaged in agricultural production as their main livelihood, they still spend 50 to 80 percent of their income on food, and are often net consumers of food.”

    Burney and her co-authors noted that only 4 percent of cropland in sub-Saharan Africa is irrigated, and that most rural, food-insecure communities in the region rely on rain-fed agriculture, which, in places like Benin, is limited to a three- to six-month rainy season.

    “On top of potential annual caloric shortages, households face two seasonal challenges: They must stretch their stores of staples to the next harvest (or purchase additional food, often at higher prices), and access to micronutrients via home production or purchase diminishes or disappears during the dry season,” the authors wrote.

    Promotion of irrigation among small landholders is therefore frequently cited as a strategy for poverty reduction, climate adaptation and promotion of food security, they said. And while the role of irrigation in poverty reduction has been studied extensively in Asia, relatively little has been written about the poverty and food security impacts in sub-Saharan Africa.

    Benin demonstration sites

    To address the lack of data, Burney and her colleagues monitored three 0.5-hectare (1.24-acre) solar-powered drip irrigation systems installed the Kalale district of northern Benin. The systems, which use photovoltaic pumps to deliver groundwater, were financed and installed by the Solar Electric Light Fund (SELF), a nongovernmental organization.

    “As with any water pump, solar-powered pumps save labor in rural off-grid areas where water hauling is traditionally done by hand by women and young girls,” the authors said. “Though photovoltaic systems are often dismissed out-of-hand due to high up-front costs, they have long lifetimes, and in the medium-term, cost less than liquid-fuel-based pumping systems.”

    Solar-powered pumps also can be implemented in an easily maintained, battery-free configuration, they added, “thereby avoiding one of the major pitfalls of photovoltaic use in the developing world.”
    In November 2007, the research team began a close collaboration with local women’s agricultural groups in two villages in rural Benin. In Village A, which draws surface water from a year-round stream, researchers worked with residents to install two identical solar-powered pumping systems.

    In Village B, which relies on groundwater irrigation, water was pumped from 25 meters (82 feet) below the surface. Each solar-powered pumping system was used by 30 to 35 women affiliated with an agricultural group. Each woman farmed her own 120-square meter (1,292-square foot) plot. The remaining plots were farmed collectively to fund group purchases and expenses.

    The researchers also chose two control villages for comparison with Villages A and B. Women’s agricultural groups in the control villages continued to irrigate by hand, allowing for comparison of the solar-powered drip irrigation systems to traditional methods.

    “Household surveys were conducted in both treatment and control villages upon installation (November 2007) and following one year of garden operation (November 2008), and included detailed questions concerning consumption and agricultural production, as well as other socioeconomic, health and general questions,” the authors wrote.

    Striking results

    The results were striking. The three solar-powered irrigation systems supplied on average 1.9 metric tons of produce per month, including tomatoes, okra, peppers, eggplants, carrots and other greens, the authors found. Woman who used solar-powered irrigation became strong net producers in vegetables with extra income earned from sales – significantly increasing their purchases of staples and protein during the dry season, and oil during the rainy season.

    During the first year of operation, the women farmers kept an average of 18 percent by weight – 8.8 kilograms (19.4 pounds) per month – of the produce grown with the solar-powered systems for home consumption and sold the rest in local markets.

    “Garden products penetrated local markets significantly,” the authors found. “Vegetable consumption increased during the rainy season (the time of greatest surplus for the women’s group farmers) for the entire four-village sample of households.”

    Survey respondents also were asked about their ability to meet their household food needs. Seventeen percent of the project beneficiaries said they were “less likely to feel chronically food-insecure. In short, the photovoltaic drip irrigation systems had a remarkable effect on both year-round and seasonal food access,” the authors said.

    Nutrition and sustainability

    In terms of nutrition, vegetable intake across all villages increased by about 150 grams per person per day during the rainy season. But in villages irrigated with solar-powered systems, the increase was 500 to 750 grams per person per day, which is equivalent to 3 to 5 servings of vegetables per day – the same as the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Recommended Daily Allowance for vegetables – and most of this change took place in the dry season.

    The research team also concluded that, despite higher up-front costs, using solarpower to pump water can be more economically sustainable in the long run than irrigation systems that run on liquid fuels, such as gasoline, diesel or kerosene.

    “When considering the energy requirements for expanded irrigation in rural Africa, photovoltaic drip irrigation systems have an additional advantage over liquid-fuel-based systems in that they provide emissions-free pumping power,” they added.

    “Overall, this study thus indicates that solar-powered drip irrigation can provide substantial economic, nutritional and environmental benefits,” the authors said.

    “With the proper support, successful widespread adoption of photovoltaic drip irrigation systems could be an important source of poverty alleviation and food security in the marginal environments common to sub-Saharan Africa.”

    Other co-authors of the PNAS study are Rosamond Naylor, director of Stanford’s Program on Food Security and the Environment and professor of environmental Earth system science; Lennart Woltering and Dov Paternak of the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT) in Niger; and Marshall Burke of the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of California-Berkeley.
  • Man found dead after apparent dog attack

    Police are investigating the death of a 54-year-old man found dead


  • The Underlying Haitian Tragedy

    Of course we know how to solve poverty.  Just financially empower every smuck willing to lift a hammer or man a hoe and get out of the way.  Have them organize their communities to allow common assets to be produced.

    We do not have time to wait for the benevolent few to accumulate enough liquidity to do it if they ever will or even could.

    You must help create a proper legal code and establish title to assets that is simple and cheap.  Get used to treating slabs of reinforced concrete like it is land.

    It helps if the community has a prime employer, but that has been solved just about everywhere with government employment of some sort.  At least it distributes cash into the economy.

    The advent of cell phones and cell phone banking is just now making all this way easier.

    In the event, this horrific event opens the door for a full press reorganization of Haitian society.  They themselves have already shed their history of oppressed ignorance and a full international commitment in resources and manpower can turn this into a healthy country. Perhaps we have the will now.

     

     

    The Underlying Tragedy


    Published: January 14, 2010


    On Oct. 17, 1989, a major earthquake with a magnitude of 7.0 struck the Bay Area in Northern California. Sixty-three people were killed. This week, a major earthquake, also measuring a magnitude of 7.0, struck near Port-au-Prince, Haiti. The Red Cross estimates that between 45,000 and 50,000 people have died.

    This is not a natural disaster story. This is a poverty story. It’s a story about poorly constructed buildings, bad infrastructure and terrible public services. On Thursday, President Obama told the people of Haiti: “You will not be forsaken; you will not be forgotten.” If he is going to remain faithful to that vow then he is going to have to use this tragedy as an occasion to rethink our approach to global poverty. He’s going to have to acknowledge a few difficult truths.

    The first of those truths is that we don’t know how to use aid to reduce poverty. Over the past few decades, the world has spent trillions of dollars to generate growth in the developing world. The countries that have not received much aid, like China, have seen tremendous growth and tremendous poverty reductions. The countries that have received aid, like Haiti, have not.

    In the recent anthology “What Works in Development?,” a group of economists try to sort out what we’ve learned. The picture is grim. There are no policy levers that consistently correlate to increased growth. There is nearly zero correlation between how a developing economy does one decade and how it does the next. There is no consistently proven way to reduce corruption. Even improving governing institutions doesn’t seem to produce the expected results.

    The chastened tone of these essays is captured by the economist Abhijit Banerjee: “It is not clear to us that the best way to get growth is to do growth policy of any form. Perhaps making growth happen is ultimately beyond our control.”

    The second hard truth is that micro-aid is vital but insufficient. Given the failures of macrodevelopment, aid organizations often focus on microprojects. More than 10,000 organizations perform missions of this sort in Haiti. By some estimates, Haiti has more nongovernmental organizations per capita than any other place on earth. They are doing the Lord’s work, especially these days, but even a blizzard of these efforts does not seem to add up to comprehensive change.

    Third, it is time to put the thorny issue of culture at the center of efforts to tackle global poverty. Why is Haiti so poor? Well, it has a history of oppression, slavery and colonialism. But so does Barbados, and Barbados is doing pretty well. Haiti has endured ruthless dictators, corruption and foreign invasions. But so has the Dominican Republic, and the D.R. is in much better shape. Haiti and the Dominican Republic share the same island and the same basic environment, yet the border between the two societies offers one of the starkest contrasts on earth — with trees and progress on one side, and deforestation and poverty and early death on the other.

    As Lawrence E. Harrison explained in his book “The Central Liberal Truth,” Haiti, like most of the world’s poorest nations, suffers from a complex web of progress-resistant cultural influences. There is the influence of the voodoo religion, which spreads the message that life is capricious and planning futile. There are high levels of social mistrust. Responsibility is often not internalized. Child-rearing practices often involve neglect in the early years and harsh retribution when kids hit 9 or 10.

    We’re all supposed to politely respect each other’s cultures. But some cultures are more progress-resistant than others, and a horrible tragedy was just exacerbated by one of them.

    Fourth, it’s time to promote locally led paternalism. In this country, we first tried to tackle poverty by throwing money at it, just as we did abroad. Then we tried microcommunity efforts, just as we did abroad. But the programs that really work involve intrusive paternalism.

    These programs, like the Harlem Children’s Zone and the No Excuses schools, are led by people who figure they don’t understand all the factors that have contributed to poverty, but they don’t care. They are going to replace parts of the local culture with a highly demanding, highly intensive culture of achievement — involving everything from new child-rearing practices to stricter schools to better job performance.

    It’s time to take that approach abroad, too. It’s time to find self-confident local leaders who will create No Excuses countercultures in places like Haiti, surrounding people — maybe just in a neighborhood or a school — with middle-class assumptions, an achievement ethos and tough, measurable demands.

    The late political scientist Samuel P. Huntington used to acknowledge that cultural change is hard, but cultures do change after major traumas. This earthquake is certainly a trauma. The only question is whether the outside world continues with the same old, same old.
  • Sony: No God of War III trailer today, but there are new assets

    Hate to disappoint you guys, but the promised new God of War III trailer won’t be coming today. This was confirmed by no less that Sony’s Jeff Rubenstein himself, so you can bet it sure is final.

  • Toyota Adds “G Sports” to the Lineup

    Japanese carmaker Toyota took advantage of the Tokyo Auto Salon and previewed its upcoming sports conversion car series, the so called G Sports. Meant to offer customers some taste of its GAZOO Racing endeavors, the "G Sports" flavors of the vehicles will be offered to customers in the near future.

    "The G’s series is designed for customers who strongly desire to own a unique vehicle, offering them a personalized interior and exterior design along with sports-driving performanc… (read more)

  • Vitaly Petrov to Take Renault Seat?

    With a few more vacant spots still up for grabs for the 2010 Formula One championship, the rumor mill continues to provide the media with plenty of potential rookies for the upcoming season. After being linked with a driving seat at both Campos Grand Prix and Sauber F1 Team, Russian driver Vitaly Petrov is now seen as a strong candidate for a Renault F1 seat for 2010.

    The French manufacturer is yet to name a teammate for Robert Kubica, but the latest reports regarding the Enstone organization… (read more)