EFTA00692956.pdf
dataset_9 pdf 2.4 MB • Feb 3, 2026 • 24 pages
From: Gregory Brown
To: undisclosed-recipients:;
Bcc: jeevacation@gmail.com
Subject: Greg Brown's Weekend Reading and Other Things.... 01/20/13
Date: Sun, 20 Jan 2013 20:04:54 +0000
Attachments: A_sweltering_planers_agenda_TWP_Editorialianuary_12,2013.pdf;
U.S._Child_Poverty_Second_Highest_Among_Developed_Nations_Report_Saki_Knfo_Huf
f_Post_05_20 I2.pdf;
Ranks of working_poor_increasing_Michael_Fletcher_TWP_January_16,2013.pdf;
Thurg(Tod:Marshalln bio.pdf;
America is_not in decline or retreat EJ Dionne TWP January_13,_2013.pdf;
Justice_Elarenc Tiomas rheas Hi; SiTence_Aaam_uptak_NYT+Janualy_14,_2013.pdf
China Begins_to_Lose_Edge_as_World's_Factory_Floor_Yajun_Zhang_WSJ_Januaty_16,_
20137df;
4
Peter_Diamandis_Says_Eight_Technologies_Are_Making_the_World_Better_Steve_Rosenb
ush_CIO_Joumalianuary_15,2013.pdf;
Whati s_Driving_Growth_in_Govemment_Spending_Nate_Silver_NYT_January_16,_2013
•Pdf;
THE_NEXT_QUAGMIRE_Alexis_Okeowo_The_New_Yorkerianuary_17,2013.pdf;
Get stuck in_but_don't_get_stuck_The_Economist_January_19,_2013.pdf;
4_PTnocchTos_for_a_slashing_NRA_ad_on_security_at_Sidwell_Friends_School_Glenn_Ke
ssler_TWP_January_17,2013.pdf; Peter_Diamandis.pdf
Dear Friends
This week I had the pleasure of both attending a talk and meeting its speaker, the visionary Peter Dianmadis,
who is the Founder and Chairman of the X Prize Foundation, a nonprofit whose mission is simply "to bring
about radical breakthroughsfor the benefit ofhumanity" By offering a big cash prize for a specific
accomplishment, the X Prize stimulates competition and excitement around some of the planet's most important
goals. The X Prize Foundation offers large cash incentive prizes to inventors who can solve grand challenges
like space flight, low-cost mobile medical diagnostics and oil spill cleanup. Diamandis is also co-founder and
chairman of Singularity University which runs Exponential Technologies Executive and Graduate Student
Programs on exponentially growing technologies.
http://www.ted.comitalks/peter_diamandis abundance js_our juture.html
Before the X Prize, Diamandis ran a company that studied low-cost launching technologies and Zero-G which
offers the public the chance to train like an astronaut and experience weightlessness. The X Prize's first $10
million went to a space-themed challenge, and Diamandis' goal now is to extend the prize into health care, social
policy, education and many other fields that could use a dose of competitive innovation.
EFTA00692956
Onstage Diamandis begins by making a case for optimism under the title of his latest book "Abundance" --
that we/mankind will invent, innovate and create ways to solve the challenges that loom over us. Diamandis,
"I'm not saying we don't have our set ofproblems; we surely do. But ultimately, we knock them down." He then
showed a video -- Announcer: Threats, in the wake ofBin Laden's death, have spiked. Announcer Two: Famine
in Somalia. Announcer Three: Police pepper spray. Announcer Four: Vicious cartels. Announcer Five: Caustic
cruise lines. Announcer Six: Societal decay. Announcer Seven: 65 dead. Announcer Eight: Tsunami warning.
Announcer Nine: Cyber-attacks. Multiple Announcers: Drug war. Mass destruction. Tornado. Recession.
Default. Doomsday. Egypt Syria. Crisis. Death. Disaster Oh, my God.
Peter Diamandis: So those are just a few of the clips I collected over the last six months -- could have easily
been the last six days or the last six years. The point is that the news media preferentially feeds us negative
stories because that's what our minds pay attention to. And there's a very good reason for that. Every second of
every day, our senses bring in way too much data than we can possibly process in our brains. And because
nothing is more important to us than survival, the first stop of all of that data is an ancient sliver of the temporal
lobe called the amygdala. Now the amygdala is our early warning detector, our danger detector. It sorts and
scours through all of the information looking for anything in the environment that might harm us. So given a
dozen news stories, we will preferentially look at the negative news. And that old newspaper saying, "Ifit bleeds
it leads," is very true. So given all of our digital devices that are bringing all the negative news to us seven days a
week, 24 hours a day, it's no wonder that we're pessimistic. It's no wonder that people think that the world is
getting worse.
Peter Diamandis: But perhaps that's not the case. Perhaps instead, it's the distortions brought to us of what's
really going on. Perhaps the tremendous progress we've made over the last century by a series of forces are, in
fact, accelerating to a point that we have the potential in the next three decades to create a world of abundance.
Now I'm not saying we don't have our set of problems -- climate crisis, species extinction, water and energy
shortage -- we surely do. And as humans, we are far better at seeing the problems way in advance, but
ultimately we knock them down. So let's look at what this last century has been to see where we're going. Over
the last hundred years, the average human lifespan has more than doubled, average per capita income adjusted
for inflation around the world has tripled. Childhood mortality has come down a factor of 10. Add to that the
cost of food, electricity, transportation, communication have dropped 10 to 1,000-fold. Steve Pinker has showed
us that, in fact, we're living during the most peaceful time ever in human history. And Charles Kenny that global
literacy has gone from 25 percent to over 80 percent in the last 130 years. We truly are living in an extraordinary
time. And many people forget this.
And we keep setting our expectations higher and higher. In fact, we redefine what poverty means. Think of this,
in America today, the majority of people living under the poverty line still have electricity, water, toilets,
refrigerators, television, mobile phones, air conditioning and cars. While, the wealthiest robber barons of the last
century, the emperors on this planet, could have never dreamed of such luxuries. Underpinning much of this is
technology, and of late, exponentially growing technologies. My good friend Ray Kurzweil showed that any tool
that becomes an information technology jumps on this curve, on Moore's Law, and experiences price
performance doubling every 12 to 24 months. That's why the cellphone in your pocket is literally a million times
cheaper and a thousand times faster than a supercomputer of the '70s. Now look at this curve. This is Moore's
Law over the last hundred years. I want you to notice two things from this curve. Number one, how smooth it is
-- through good time and bad time, war time and peace time, recession, depression and boom time. This is the
result of faster computers being used to build faster computers. It doesn't slow for any of our grand challenges.
And also, even though it's plotted on a log curve on the left, it's curving upwards. The rate at which the
technology is getting faster is itself getting faster.
EFTA00692957
And on this curve, riding on Moore's Law, are a set of extraordinarily powerful technologies available to all of
us. Cloud computing, what my friends at Autodesk call infinite computing; sensors and networks; robotics; 3D
printing, which is the ability to democratize and distribute personalized production around the planet; synthetic
biology; fuels, vaccines and foods; digital medicine; nanomaterials; and A.I. I mean, how many of you saw the
winning of Jeopardy by IBM's Watson? I mean, that was epic. In fact, I scoured the headlines looking for the
best headline in a newspaper I could. And I love this: "Watson Vanquishes Human Opponents." Jeopardy's not
an easy game. It's about the nuance of human language. And imagine if you would A.I.'s like this on the cloud
available to every person with a cellphone.
Four years ago here at TED, Ray Kurzweil and I started a new university called Singularity University. And we
teach our students all of these technologies, and particularly how they can be used to solve humanity's grand
challenges. And every year we ask them to start a company or a product or a service that can affect positively the
lives of a billion people within a decade. Think about that, the fact that, literally,
Diamandis says it's our moral imperative to keep exploring space -- and he talks about how, with the X Prize and
other incentives, we're going to do just that. He says that in the future we will be more empowered as
individuals to take on the grand challenges of this planet. That we have the tools with this exponential
technology. That we have the passion of the DIY innovator. That we have the capital. And that we have three
billion new minds coming online to work with us to solve the grand challenges, to do that which we must do.
As such he believes that we are living into extraordinary decades ahead.
http://www.ted.comitalks/peter_diamandis on our next giant_leap html
It is inspiring being in the presence of someone who as the curiosity of a child and the drive of an explorer.
Having been someone who has always looked beyond the edge of the envelop, it was refreshing to meet a
kindred spirit who reminded me that in 1986 a friend and I bought the Westar 6 telecommunications satellite
after it was retrieved by NASA's Space Shuttle from the Merritt Underwriters at Lloyds of London before we
had an orbital slot, engineering commence, funding to launch was secured or a business plan to implement, it
was refurbished and relaunched on April 7, 1990 as Asatl and today that company is AsiaSat — now the largest
regional satellite system in Asia and to give substance to the business plan we became its first customer and
today that company is StarTV — now the largest satellite broadcasting network on the planet. My father use to
say, `5fyou can see it, you can get there." People like Peter Diamandis inspire everyone around them of the
possibilities of "tomorrow" -- and that tomorrow most likely will be more exciting than yesterday -- and most
of all; everything is possible if we only believe.... I invite you to be inspired.... I invite you to dream
the impossible.... I invite you to believe in tomorrow....
One of my all-time heroes is Thurgood Marshall (July 2, 1908— January 24, 1993) who was an Associate
Justice of the United States Supreme Court, serving from October 1967 until October 1991. Marshall was the Court's 96th
justice and its first African-American justice. Before becoming a judge, Marshall was a lawyer who was best known for his
high success rate in arguing before the Supreme Court and for the victory in Brown v. Board ofEducation. He argued more
cases before the United States Supreme Court than anyone else in history. He served on the United States Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit after being appointed by President John F. Kennedy and then served aS
the Solicitor General after being appointed by President Lyndon Johnson in 1965. President Johnson
nominated him to the United States Supreme Court in 1967.
EFTA00692958
Of the three leading black figures of the civil rights ,movement in the last century were Martin Luther King,
Malcolm X and Thurgood Marshall, who was the least well-known of the three. Martin Luther King Jr., with his
preaching of love and non-violent resistance, and Malcolm X, the fiery street preacher who advocated a bloody
overthrow of the system, are both more closely associate in the popular mind and myth with the civil rights
struggle. But it was Thurgood Marshall, working through the courts to eradicate the legacy of slavery and
destroying the racist segregation system of Jim Crow, who had an even more profound and lasting effect on race
relations than either of King or X.
It was Marshall who ended legal segregation in the United States. He won Supreme Court victories breaking the
color line in housing, transportation and voting, all of which overturned the 'Separate-but-Equal' apartheid of
American life in the first half of the century. It was Marshall who won the most important legal case of the
century, Brown v. Board of Education, ending the legal separation of black and white children in public schools.
The success of the Brown case sparked the 1960s civil rights movement, led to the increased number of black
high school and college graduates and the incredible rise of the black middle-class in both numbers and political
power in the second half of the century.
And it was Marshall, as the nation's first African-American Supreme Court justice, who promoted affirmative
action -- preferences, set-asides and other race conscious policies -- as the remedy for the damage remaining
from the nation's history of slavery and racial bias. Justice Marshall gave a clear signal that while legal
discrimination had ended, there was more to be done to advance educational opportunity for people who had
been locked out and to bridge the wide canyon of economic inequity between blacks and whites. He worked on
behalf of black Americans, but built a structure of individual rights that became the cornerstone of protections for
all Americans. He succeeded in creating new protections under law for women, children, prisoners, and the
homeless. Their greater claim to full citizenship in the republic over the last century can be directly traced to
Marshall. Even the American press had Marshall to thank for an expansion of its liberties during the century.
Marshall's lifework, literally defined the movement of race relations through the century. He rejected King's
peaceful protest as rhetorical fluff that accomplished no permanent change in society. And he rejected Malcolm
X's talk of violent revolution and a separate black nation as racist craziness in a multi-racial society.
The key to Marshall's work was his conviction that integration -- and only integration -- would allow equal rights
under the law to take hold. Once individual rights were accepted, in Marshall's mind, then blacks and whites
could rise or fall based on their own ability.
Marshall's deep faith in the power of racial integration came out of a middle class black perspective in turn of the
century Baltimore. He was the child of an activist black community that had established its own schools and
fought for equal rights from the time of the Civil War. His own family, of an interracial background, had been at
the forefront of demands by Baltimore blacks for equal treatment. Out of that unique family and city was born
Thurgood Marshall, the architect of American race relations in the twentieth century.
After Marshall died in 1993 there was still no authoritative, thorough account of his life and the impact his work
had on the nation. The combination of his reclusiveness and his standing in popular culture as an elderly,
establishment figure blinded much of the nation to the importance of Marshall's work. Young people were
especially uninformed about the critical role Marshall had played in making history.
EFTA00692959
TIMELINE
1908 - Born July 2 at Baltimore, Maryland, United States.
1930 — Graduates with honors from Lincoln University (cum laude).
1934 — Receives law degree from Howard University (magna cum laude) and begins private practice in
Baltimore, Maryland.
1934 — Begins to work for Baltimore branch ofNAACP.
1935 — Working with Charles Houston, wins first major civil rights case, Murray v. Pearson.
1936 — Becomes assistant special counsel for NAACP in New York.
1940 — Wins Chambers v. Florida, the first of twenty-nine Supreme Court victories.
1943 — Won case for integration of schools in Hillbum, New York.
1944 — Successfully argues Smith v. Allwright, overthrowing the South's "white primary".
1946 — Awarded Spingam Medal from the NAACP.[38]
1948 — Wins Shelley v. Kraemer, in which Supreme Court strikes down legality of racially restrictive covenants.
1950 — Wins Supreme Court victories in two graduate-school integration cases, Sweatt v. Painter and McLaurin
v. Oklahoma State Regents.
1951 - Visits South Korea and Japan to investigate charges of racism in U.S. armed forces. He reported that the
general practice was one of "rigid segregation."
1954 — Wins Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, landmark case that demolishes legal basis for segregation
in America.
1956 — Wins Browder v. Gayle, ending the practice of segregation on buses and ending the Montgomery Bus
Boycott.
1957 — Founds and becomes the first president-director counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational
Fund, Inc., a nonprofit law firm separate and independent of the NAACP
1961 — Defends civil rights demonstrators, winning Supreme Court victory in Gamer v. Louisiana; nominated to
Second Circuit Court of Appeals by President John F. Kennedy.
1961 — Appointed circuit judge, makes 112 rulings, none of them reversed on certiorari by Supreme Court
(1961-1965).
1965 — Appointed United States Solicitor General by President Lyndon B. Johnson; wins 14 of the 19 cases he
argues for the government (1965-1967).
1967 — Becomes first African American named to U.S. Supreme Court (1967-1991).
1991 — Retires from the Supreme Court.
1992 — Receives the Liberty Medal recognizing his long history of protecting individual rights under the
Constitution.
1993 — Dies at age 84 in Bethesda, Maryland, near Washington, D.C.
1993 — Receives Presidential Medal of Freedom, posthumously, from President Bill Clinton.
"I wish I could say that racism and prejudice were only distant memories. We must dissentfrom
the indifference. We must dissentfrom the apathy. We must dissentfrom thefear, the hatred and
the mistrust... We must dissent because America can do better, because America has no choice but
to do better."
- Thurgood Marshall
And this is as true today as it was fitly years ago
EFTA00692960
I first met Charlie Rose in the 1980s when a was an up and coming man-about-town in New York, working in
television and drinking a bit too much. Since then he has become an acclaimed interviewer and broadcast
journalist who has interviewed many of America's best thinkers, writers, politicians, athletes, entertainers,
business leaders, ... This week Charlie Rose hosted a discussion on the current military conflict in Mali, with
Max Boot of the Council on Foreign Relations; Peter Pham, director of the Africa Center at the Atlantic
Council and Jennifer Cooke, director of the Africa Program at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies.
http://www.charlierose.conilview/interview/ 12740
Mali, officially the Republic of Mali, is a landlocked country in West Africa and in the middle of the Sahara Desert. Mali is
bordered by Algeria on the north, Niger on the east, Burkina Faso and Cote d'Ivoire on the south, Guinea on the southeast.
It is Africa's third largest African producer of gold and once was involved in the slave trade, which persists to
this day, with more than half of the population living below the international poverty line of $1.25 a day. At its
peak in 1300, Mali was one of the most expansive/largest empires in the world. In the late 19th century, during
the Scramble for Africa, France seized control of Mali, making it a part of French Sudan. French Sudan (then
known as the Sudanese Republic) joined with Senegal in 1959, achieving independence in 1960 as the Mali
Federation. Shortly thereafter, following Senegal's withdrawal from the federation, the Sudanese Republic
declared itself the independent Republic of Mali. After a long period of one-party rule, a 1991 coup led to the
writing of a new constitution and the establishment of Mali as a democratic, multi-party state.
The conflict began in northern Mali began in January 2012 and on 22 March 2012, a group of junior soldiers
seized control of the presidential palace and declared the government dissolved and its constitution suspended.
On 6 April 2012, rebels from the National Movement for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA) declared the
secession of a new state, Azawad, from Mali. Shortly after, the MNLA were sidelined by Islamist groups
associated with Al-Qaeda[citation needed], and dropped their demands for secession. The soldiers who seized
power allowed Dioncounda Traore, the President of the National Assembly, to take office as head of state in
accordance with the constitution, but they have continued to wield considerable power. And on January 11, 2013
the French military launched Operation Serval, intervening in the conflict with the interim government
promising to hold national elections, after the rebellion is suppressed.
Having first worked in Africa since the early 1970s and visited Mali in the 1990s, I watched the discussion with
much interest only to discover that these presumed experts truly had either no understanding of what actually
was going on/regional dynamics or were pushing their own propaganda as the consensus of the panel is that the
current conflict is a danger to the Western Powers because Islamists will turn Mali in a new base for international
terrorism. The panelist used the usual code of al Qaeda, safe havens, insurgents, jihadists, criminal networks,
ethic divisions, possible attacks against the US, etc....
To underscore this theory, Jennifer Cook suggested the attack against the gas installation in Algeria
internationalizes the Mali conflict, because foreign nationals were taken hostage. When the truth is that Mali and
Algeria are totally different countries, and the conflict in Mali is about a bunch of local war lords trying to seize
power against a weak central government. Ms. Cooke then goes on to suggest that this is somehow an
amalgamation who have joined up together, when in reality they are individual warlords and groups, some
EFTA00692961
secular, some tribal. Realizing that this may be a bit much, she dials back explaining that they not monolithic, as
each out for their own with the goal of ascendancy.... like crabs in a barrel. Peter Pham then suggests that the US
should target suspected Islamist, to give the Western Powers time to install a friendly new national government.
Supporting the other panelist, Max Boot liberally sprinkled "al Qaeda" as the reason for more American
involvement.
WHY? If these experts are examples of whose advising America's foreign policy, it is easy to understand why
our country is hated around the world. Do you think that people in Brazil, Japan, Iceland or New Zealand are
worried about Malian jihadists.? The fact that it was American trained soldiers who overthrew Mali's
democratically elected government, the current government is ripe with corruption and that successive
governments have mismanaged the country's resources, it is understandable why this current insurgency is
happening. And to frame this conflict as the bad against the good, Islamist against a central government....
which is universally acknowledged as corrupt.... While the smart thing to do is to wait until the dust settles and
then work with the winner to do whatever we can to better the lot in life for the average Malian.
Starting with yesterday's National Day of Service, this weekend Americans across the country will participate
in service projects in their communities to celebrate the legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr. and all that he stood
for..... As such, I would like everyone to remember his August 28, 1963 1 Have A Dream speech as it truly
symbolizes the promise of America.
I have a dream.
Myfour little children will one day live in a nation where the), will not he judged by the color of their skin but
by the content oftheir character.
I have a dream today.
MLK
http://www.youtube.corn/watch?v=smEqnnkIfYs
Tomorrow, Barrack Hussein Obama will be sworn in for a second term as President of the United States in the
country's 57th formal Presidential Inauguration ceremony since 1789. The official theme for the 2013
inauguration is "Faith in America's Future," commemorating the United States' perseverance and unity, marking
the 150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation and the placement of the Statue of Freedom atop the
Capitol Dome in 1863.
EFTA00692962
Whether you are an American or voted for President Obama, this weekend is evidence that what I was taught is
school in the 1950s and 1960s..... is true everyone born in American has a possibility of becoming
President.... Although the search for equality is still "a work in progress," and the inequality today includes
gender, age, immigrants, children, haves and have-nots, the words of both Thurgood Marshall and Martin Luther
King should serve as inspiration to all that The American Dream is Alive and Well
As the country celebrates the heritage of Martin Luther King this weekend and the 2nd Inauguration
of President Obama today, on CBS's Sunday morning show, FACE THE NATION television
columnist Tavis Smiley gave a commentary on MLK's legacy to remind everyone of its promise
here and abroad, as there is so much more is left to do.
(CBS News) Tomorrow's ceremonial presidential inauguration falls on a most auspicious day, in the view
of our contributor Tavis Smiley:
"Barack Hussein Obama will be sworn in as president tomortvwfor a second term, on the holiday honoring the
person I have long regarded as the greatest American this nation has ever produced. Obama will be in the
foreground, but Martin Luther King, Jr is the backdrop.
i've heard people exclaim that President Obama is thefulfillment (ilIM: King's dream.
Well, not exactly.
Obama might be a good down payment, but he is not thefulfillment of King's dream. We're still a long way away
from that.
The interrelated triple threat ofpoverty, militarism and racism that King talked about still looms large in a yet-
deeply-divided America.
In the spirit ofMLK, it's timefor President Obama to deliver a major policy speech on the eradication ofpoverty
in America. He ought to tell us how the richest nation in the history of the world is going to confront the scourge
ofpoverty.
In the spirit ofMLK, President Obama should rethink the random use of hisfavorite weapon - the unmanned
aerial vehicle, better known as "drones," which have killed too many innocent women and children.
In the spirit ofMLK, President Obama should not continue tofeel boxed in by his blackness, butfeel liberated in
a second term tofind ways to push back on the most intractable issue in America -- racism.
EFTA00692963
The president wants to channel King so badly that he's decided to use DE King's Bible at the inauguration
ceremony tomorrow.
Obama is a politician, and a pretty good one, but King was a prophet And while I can appreciate the president's
fascination with King's legacy of unarmed truth and unconditional love, I'mfeeling some son of way about King
being used symbolicallyfor public pomp and circumstance, but disregarded substantively when it comes to
public policy.
Ourfuture as a nation depends on how seriously we take the legacy of Dr King: Justice for all, service to others,
and a love that liberates people.
For all the dysfunction that our country is exhibiting at the moment, DE King reminds us that the time is always
ripe to do right. We should never be afraid to do what's right, especially if the well-being of a person is at stake."
Society's punishments are small compared to the wounds we inflict on our soul when we look the other way.
Tavis Smiley
"While the Poor and Middle Classfightfor us in Afghanistan, and most Americans struggle to make ends meet,
we mega-rich continue to get our extraordinary tax breaks. I would say that in a country with an average
$50,000 GDP per person, nobody should be hungry, nobody should lack a good education, nobody should won);
about medical care and nobody should worry about their old age and that doesn't meet lookingfor an equality
results, because you want great inequality results, you want the Steve Jobs just to be working in those garages,
the Dave Packards, the Bill Gates and you name it... but you do not want anybody to go to bed hungry or having
medical care denied to them or just the basics of life...."
Warren Buffet (CBS Sunday Morning -- January 20, 2013)
If we add PEACE to this, we will be well on our way in delivering the promises that Martin
Luther King Jr challenged us 50 years ago
THIS WEEK'S READINGS
EFTA00692964
Economy Rankings - best & worse countries to do business
http://www.doingbusiness.org/rankings#
In the weblink above, please find an interactive chart by the International Finance Corporation and the World Bank
based on their data — on doing business in 185 countries. Economies are ranked on their ease of doing business, from 1
—185. A high ranking on the ease of doing business index means the regulatory environment is more conducive to the
starting and operation of a local firm. This index averages the country's percentile rankings on 10 topics, made up of a
variety of indicators, giving equal weight to each topic. The rankings for all economies are benchmarked to June 2012.
Overview
Doing Business 2013: Smarter Regulations for Small and Medium-Size Enterprises assesses regulations affecting
domestic firms in 185 economies and ranks the economies in 10 areas of business regulation, such as starting a business,
resolving insolvency and trading across borders. This year's report data cover regulations measured from June 2011
through May 2012. The report marks the 10th edition of the Doing Business series. Over the past decade, these reports
have recorded nearly 2,000 regulatory reforms implemented by 180 economies.
Key findings:
• Poland was the global top improver in the past year. It enhanced the ease of doing business through four institutional or regulatory
reforms, making it easier to register properly, pay taxes, enforce contracts, and resolve insolvency.
• Besides Poland, nine other economies are recognized as having the most improved ease of doing business across several areas of
regulation as measured by the report: Sri Lanka, Ukraine, Uzbekistan, Burundi, Costa Rica, Mongolia, Greece, Serbia, and Kazakhstan.
• Worldwide, 108 economies implemented 201 regulatory reforms in 2011/12 making it easier to do business as measured by Doing
Business. Reform efforts globally have focused on making it easier to start a new business, increasing the efficiency of tax administration
and facilitating trade across international borders. Of the 201 regulatory reforms recorded in the past year, 44% focused on these 3
policy areas alone. Read about reforms.
• Singapore topped the global ranking on the ease of doing business for the seventh consecutive year, followed byHong Kong SAR,
China; New Zealand; the United States; and Denmark. Georgia was a new entrant to the top 10.View the rankings.
The Doing Business Project provides objective measures of business regulations and their enforcement across 185
economies and selected cities at the subnational and regional level. Doing Business offers economic date from 2003 to
the present. The data is presented in a variety of ways useful to researchers, policy makers, journalist and others.
The Doing Business Project, launched in 2002, looks at domestic small and medium-size companies and measures the
regulations applying to them through their life cycle.
By gathering and analyzing comprehensive quantitative data to compare business regulation environments across
economies and over time, Doing Business encourages countries to compete towards more efficient regulation; offers
measurable benchmarks for reform; and serves as a resource for academics, journalists, private sector researchers and
others interested in the business climate of each country.
In addition, Doing Business offers detailed sub-national reports, which exhaustively cover business
regulation and reform in different cities and regions within a nation. These reports provide data on the
ease of doing business, rank each location, and recommend reforms to improve performance in each
of the indicator areas. Selected cities can compare their business regulations with other cities in the
country or region and with the 185 economies that Doing Business has ranked.
The first Doing Business report, published in 2003, covered 5 indicator sets and 133 economies. This year's report covers
11 indicator sets and 185 economies. The project has benefited from feedback from governments, academics, practitioners
and reviewers. The initial goal remains: to provide an objective basis for understanding and improving the regulatory
environment for business around the world.
******
EFTA00692965
The National Rifle Association (NRA) went to a new low when this week they released a television ad on gun-
control measures and in a longer 4-minute video presentation that labeled President Obama as an "elitist" and
"hypocrite" as his children are "protected by armed guards at their school," and he said he was skeptical that
armed guards were the "only answen" First of all, the facts are completely wrong with Fact Checker giving both
the ad and the 4 minute video Four Pinocchios (a complete falsehood.) BIG LIE!
Far from being elitist, Sidwell has a relatively small force of unarmed security guards which is not unusual for a
school of its size. Moreover, the ad also suggests that Obama rejects out of hand boosting security at schools,
when in fact his proposals include provisions that would provide funding for more school security. If the NRA
is also trying to count Secret Service protection for Obama's children as part of that force of armed guards, that's
even more ridiculous. As Fact Checker noted, such protection is mandated under federal law — and only exists
for the president's children. But the real big ugly demonstrates a level of insensitivity and disrespect that N.E.A.
members wouldn't tolerate in any classroom in America. And to include the President's daughters, Malia, 14,
and Sasha, 11, and suggesting that he holds their safety to a different standard than he is willing to offer for other
children..... this was a new low, even for the NRA.
With global warming finally on the national agenda and scientists not knowing the extent that man-made emissions influenced
the heat and calamitous drought. The NATIONAL Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) announced last week that
2012 was the warmest year on record in the contiguous United States. By far — a whole degree Fahrenheit. Predicting the
consequences of a given temperature rise is also difficult. That's an argument not for doing nothing but for managing the risks,
spending now to avoid the likelihood of much greater costs later, as any good business would do in the face of certain threats of
uncertain magnitude. Last week in an editorial —A Sweltering Planen Agenda — The Washington Post advocated
implementing a national carbon tax.
The year offers a vision of what will happen more often on a planet that is heating — slowly and fitfully, not every year warmer
than the last, but inexorably. Though scientist have a range of estimates, they still do not know exactly how sensitive the global
climate system is to human carbon emissions and exactly how steep the long-term temperature line will be. As such The
Washington Post believes that smartest hedge would be a national carbon tax. As it would marshal the market's power to wring
carbon out of the economy, putting decisions about the direction of energy and manufacturing in the hands of consumers and
businesses that meet their demands, not Congress and interest groups that lobby lawmakers. Because when people must pay
something for their pollution, they pollute less and invest in cleaner alternatives. A carbon tax would provide more certainty to
industry and investors who currently can only guess at what climate policy will look like year to year.
Another consequence of a carbon tax might be more appealing to policymakers: revenue. Resources for the Future estimates
that a tax set at $25 per ton of carbon dioxide would raise $125 billion annually — more than would be saved by eliminating the
mortgage interest tax deduction. Even if much of that were rebated to ensure that low-income households weren't unduly hurt
— the right policy — a sizable chunk would be left to shrink the deficit or ease the major tax reform that Washington's leaders
have been promising. Implementing a national carbon tax would be only one step toward addressing climate change, a
problem that must ultimately be dealt with globally. But it would be a big one and it could be use to off-set the deficit
In a recent UNICEFs report on child poverty in developed countries, it found that 3o million children
in 35 of the world's richest countries live in poverty. Among those countries, the United States ranks
second on the scale of what economists call "relative child poverty" -- above Latvia, Bulgaria, Spain,
EFTA00692966
Greece, and 29 others. Only Romania ranks higher, with 25.5 percent of its children living in poverty,
compared with 23.1 percent in the U.S.
The term "relative child poverty" refers to a child living in a household where the disposable income is
less than half of the national median income. Many critics argue that relative poverty isn't the same as
real hardship, or absolute poverty. But the report brushes that away. Poverty is "essentially a relative
concept," it says. For example, a little more than a century ago, the wealthiest people in the world
didn't have cars. It concedes, however, that the measurement has some weaknesses. First, a child's
well-being doesn't always correspond to the parents' income. Second, comparing the relative poverty
rates of various countries doesn't make sense unless the countries have similar median incomes.
The report is scaled on "child deprivation." To measure this, researchers produced a list of 14 items
found in most middle-class households and counted the number of children whose families couldn't
afford them. The list included Internet connection, new clothes, three daily meals, two pairs of
properly fitting shoes, and "the opportunity, from time to time, to invite friends home to play and eat."
Ten percent of children in France lack at least two of these things, compared with a little more that 5
percent in the United Kingdom and less than 1 percent in Iceland. Romania lagged well behind most
of the developed world, with nearly three-quarters of its children experiencing such deprivation. The
U.S. didn't have enough data for a rating.
Danziger said he was especially impressed by a figure showing Canada and the U.S. have the same
relative child poverty rate -- 25.1 The chart also showed that after government taxes, benefits and
other social programs, Canada's child poverty rate drops to 13.1, while America's barely budges,
hovering above 23.1 percent. "Basically, other countries do more," he said. "They tend to have
minimum wages that are higher than ours. The children would be covered universally by health
insurance. Other countries provide more child care."
Some economist say that it is unfair to compare the U.S. to small, homogenous countries like Sweden
and Luxembourg, but it's harder to write off Canada, he added. Or the United Kingdom In a new
book, Jane Waldfogel, a professor of social work at Columbia University, writes that the Labour
Government's efforts to combat child poverty in the U.K. were "larger and more sustained than in the
United States." Shortly after he became prime minister in 1997, Tony Blair found himself staring at a
UNICEF report similar to this new one, except that England's child poverty ranking was much higher.
So Blair's government instituted programs modeled after former U.S. President Lyndon Johnson's
War on Poverty. The U.K. developed Sure Start -- an early-care program for low-income children
similar to the U.S. Head Start. British families could apply for the Working Tax Credit, similar to the
U.S. Earned Income Tax Credit.
The Labour Party spent more on these programs, even as the U.S. spent less, and within five years the number
of children living in "absolute poverty" in the U.K. had fallen by half. According to the UNICEF report, 12.1
percent of British children now live in relative poverty -- nearly half the percentage of American children. As
Waldfogel wrote in a 2007 article, the Labour government "boosted the share of the United Kingdom's gross
domestic product being spent on public support for children by close to 1 percentage point, the equivalent of
over $20 billion per year extra today. If Washington budgeted an additional 1 percent of our GDP to eliminate
child poverty, we would have about $130 billion to work with." And children living in poverty could be cut in
half. For more information feel free to take a look at The Huffington Post article - Can government
EFTA00692967
spending lift poor childrenfrom poverty? - by Said ICnafo. We have to ask why in the richest country in
the world that we have millions of children living in poverty, when there is evidence proving that spending i%
more of our GDP for programs supporting children will substantially cut child poverty
In The Washington Post this week — Ranks of Working Poor Increasing — by Michael Fletcher, according to
a new report nearly a third of the nation's working families earn salaries so low that they struggle to pay for their
necessities. The ranks of the so-called working poor have grown even as the nation has created new jobs for 27
consecutive months and is showing other signs of shaking off the worst effects of the recession. "Although
many people are returning to work, they are often taking jobs with lower wages and less job security, compared
with the middle class jobs they held before the downturn," according to a report released Tuesday by the
Working Poor Families Project, a national initiative aimed at fostering state policies to help low-income working
families.
Although more than 70 percent of low-income families and half of all poor families were working by 2011. The
problem is they did not earn enough to cover their basic living expenses. "We're not on a good trajectory," said
Brandon Roberts, who manages the Working Poor Families Project. "The overall number oflow-income
workingfamilies is increasing despite the recovery." Analyzing 2011 data from the Census Bureau's American
Community Survey, the report said that 32 percent of working families earned salaries that put them below
double the poverty threshold. For a family of four, double the poverty threshold was $45,622. That percentage
has crept up from 28 percent in 2007, the year the recession began. And 37 percent of the nation's children —
23.5 million — were part of working poor families in 2011, the report said, up from 33 percent in 2007. Nearly
three in five low-income working families were headed by at least one minority parent, even though minorities
headed 42 percent of all working families.
The growth in the ranks of the working poor coincides with continued growth in income inequality. Many of the
occupations experiencing the fastest job growth during the recovery also pay poorly. Among them are retail jobs,
food preparation, clerical work and customer assistance. At the same time, researchers have found that many
jobs that do not require much in the way of educational credentials but pay relatively well have lagged in the
recovery. They include carpenters, painters, real estate brokers and insurance professionals. Jobs typically filled
by college graduates fared better than others during the downturn, helping to widen the gap between those at the
top of the wage scale and those at the bottom. In 2011, the top fifth of working families had incomes that were
10.1 times greater than those in the bottom fifth of income earners. In 2007, the top fifth of working families
earned 9.5 times those in the lowest fifth. Meanwhile, the best means for climbing the income ladder —
improved education — is growing more uncertain and more expensive, the report said. Also, the federal
government is facing huge budget deficits, meaning that policies that would help bolster working poor families,
such as a higher minimum wage, are unlikely to be implemented. Still, Roberts said, "we have to be more
aggressive" with policy. "We're not talking about allfamilies. We're talking aboutfamilies that work, and
they'refalling behind."
In an article this week in the New York Times - Justice Clarence Thomas Breaks His Silence, Adam
LipLiptak wrote that one of the abiding mysteries at the Supreme Court is why Justice Clarence Thomas has
failed to say a word in almost seven years of arguments. On Monday, when he finally broke his silence, the
EFTA00692968
mystery was replaced by a riddle: Just what did Justice Thomas say? It turns out it was a bit of banter/joke. At
the time the justices were considering the qualifications of a death penalty defense lawyer in Louisiana, and
Justice Antonin Scalia noted that she had graduated from Yale Law School, which is Justice Thomas's alma
mater.
The fact that after seven years of silence Justice Thomas made a joke, it is not the issue today. It is that after
replacing Throughout Marshall who for 24 was the moral compass in the Supreme Court, Thomas has
contributed nothing other than saying me to along with the other Conservatives in the court. Political scientists
who study the court say it has been more than 40 years since a justice went an entire term, much less seven years,
without saying a word at oral arguments. Since a joke is not a question, it may fairly be said that he has still not
asked a question for almost seven years, so his record still continues
Thurgood Marshall died on January 24, 1993, at the age of 84. He stands alongside Martin Luther King Jr. and
Malcolm X as one of the greatest and most important figures of the American Civil Rights Movement. And
although he may be the least popularly celebrated of the three, Marshall was arguably the most instrumental in
the movement's achievements toward racial equality. Marshall's strategy of attacking racial inequality through
the courts represented a third way of pursuing racial equality, more pragmatic than King's soaring rhetoric and
less polemical than Malcolm X's strident separatism. In the aftermath of Marshall's death, an obituary read: "We
make movies about Malcolm X we get a holiday to honor Dr: Martin Luther King, but every day we live with the
legacy ofJustice Thurgood Marshall." I wish that Justice Thomas understood this....
As E.J. Dionne Jr wrote this week in The Washington Post — America is not in decline or retreat — The
declinists are wrong as they underestimate the resilience of the American economy, the magnetism of our culture,
the continuing appeal of the democratic idea and the difficulties our competitors, particularly China, confront.
Some of this will play out in the confirmation hearing/battle over Chuck Hagel's nomination as secretary of
defense and the related argument over how long American troops should stay in Afghanistan. And for those
defense hawks who believe that President Obama's decisions to pull out of Iraq and now Afghanistan are naïve
to believe that expanding our military efforts or staying will lead to some sort of a win. There are limits to what
the United States or any major power can do halfway around the world. When the truth is that today our priority
should be getting our domestic and economic act together. Even Republican by Richard Haass, President of the
Council on Foreign Relations and a quintessential realist has just released a new book: "Foreign Policy Begins
at Home: The Case for Putting America's House in Order." The truth is that preserving America's influence
abroad depends on first restoring economic growth, upward mobility, fiscal stability and enhanced social
solidarity at home. This will require a somewhat leaner defense budget for a time, but the idea that Obama will
slash it indiscrimina
Entities
0 total entities mentioned
No entities found in this document
Document Metadata
- Document ID
- 14694c7d-9e0e-4e30-93fe-d2bbf3db4a42
- Storage Key
- dataset_9/EFTA00692956.pdf
- Content Hash
- b866431eeb38b6e027de3ebcbfa26530
- Created
- Feb 3, 2026