Friday 18 December 2015

Economics: Index of Financial Inequality

Index of Financial Inequality

How about the graph below, taken from the book The Spirit Level? Just ponder it for a while. The index of financial inequality results in a host of social and health problems. Piketty’s work “Capitalism in the 21st Century” only confirms this and tells how this has come about (unequal accumulation of capital) and points towards a solution (raise taxes on capital accumulation).

The Rebellious Seeker

p.s. This graph is a survey of industrialized countries. Guess which one has the highest level of inequality? Guess what will happen with billionaires, military types and climate deniers in charge?


 Index of Financial Inequality 

Development: DART Water Mission

DART water team at work
    
DART Water Mission

This describes work in Sri Lanka after the tsunami hit the east coast in 2004     
Local borehole and pump

The recent DART mission to Sri Lanka was located in Ampara district on the east coast of Sri Lanka. This was the region that was the worst hit on the island, with a total of 10,000 of the island’s 30,000 deaths being recorded there. The DART installed 4 reverse osmosis units in two sites in Ampara district. Each one of these units was able to purify 50,000 litres a day of water from a nearby lagoon.

I visited the northern location of the DART water supply point while I was also in Sri Lanka helping with the relief efforts related to water supply and sanitation. The soldiers at the DART water supply point were doing a heroic effort. They lived in simple conditions and worked tirelessly for the period of over a month while they were there. They water they purified was able to keep a steady stream of water trucks supplied with water for the many nearby refugee camps that housed survivors of the recent tsunami disaster.

Saturday 17 October 2015

Syria: A witch's brew

How can we understand Syria? How far back in history should we go?

Let’s start with the Sykes-Picot agreement between the UK and France which divided up the area during the First World War in 1916. France got control of Syria, without of course any consultation with the Syrians who were then part of the crumbling Ottoman empire. Local dissatisfaction with this arrangement is still alive and emerging today.

Hafez al Assad, the father of Bashar al Assad ruled Syria for 30 years (1971-2000). In 1982 he put down civil unrest in Hama with a bloody massacre in which an estimated 20,000 people were killed.
“The 1982 massacre is regarded as the single bloodiest assault by an Arab ruler against his own people in modern times and remains a pivotal event in Syrian history” (The Guardian).

Later when another peaceful civil uprising in Deraa occurred in 2011, Bashar al Assad used the same brutal force as his father to suppress this. This was the beginning of the civil war that is now raging throughout Syria.

The Bashar al Assad regime now counts on the support of three outside powers.

Saturday 18 April 2015

Religion & Society: “Fields of Blood; Religion and the History of Violence” by Karen Armstrong

Karen Armstrong is a giant in the history of religion. It is hard to believe that she served for 6 years as a Catholic nun. Her many books have spanned all of the major world religions. Her latest work can help us to understand the recent rise of religiously motivated violence. This is why I read Fields of Blood; Religion and the History of Violence. I am trying to better comprehend to the rise of the Islamic State in the Middle East.