finished my stats tutorial finally, whilst plodding through lecture slides and constantly referring to the notes!
- Mood:
melancholy
Ban Ki Moon just warned that the world is heading toward a climate 'abyss' if it continues to disregard, systemically, the dangers posed by global warming. Despite his choice of words, I don't think anything significant is gonna come out of Copenhagen.
But consumers do have power. Us normal people. The world economy in goods and services can effect change on the political level if we would think carefully and act in a responsible way.
The current real economy runs on overproduction. Artificial and forced downward pressure on costs and prices have resulted in overproduction and excess capacity that is fed only by consumeristic tendencies of us people in the richer world. Big companies become ever bigger for no good reason, except to reduce competition and narrow the market.
What we need to do is stop our consumeristic ways, buy only what we need and only what is of good quality, and send the message out to these companies that consumers will not be taken for a ride.
Only then will they be forced to streamline their operations to produce higher-quality, reasonably-priced goods. Reasonable in the sense that it pays the factory worker a reasonable wage, the middleman a reasonable cut, and is low enough for the average consumer. which means final profits should take a beating. Only so will the trend of increasing inequality be reversed.
When I see shops like FOS, with good quality tshirts made in the US going at prices as cheap as under 20, suffer, I doubt the ability of SIngaporean consumers to seriously discern what is good for their budget.
We need to force those pollutive China factories to close by significantly reducing demand for their poorly made goods, so that the labour can go into more meaningful occupations that help the local economy to sustain itself.
The new expensive stuff you wear only goes to feed your ego when you go out and people look at you. For people who really matter, will they be ultimately impressed by all of that unimportant stuff?
Gandhi once said, and I paraphrase, "whenever you are not sure of your next step, think of the poorest, hungriest face you can think of, and ask if the action you want to take will benefit him or her."
Our world has turned its attention on itself, neglecting more worthy pursuits like literature, scientific research, music, astronomy, and the rest of the arts for the sole purpose of furthering human knowledge. Today, all these things mainly take place under the umbrella of economic necessity. I find that a rather sad indictment of our world.
Support good quality and reasonable prices. Think humane.
8 months of holiday are coming to an end, and the next section of our lives is going to start soon. decisions were ever so hard to make because they will one day come true.
As intelligent people, we want to maximise our happiness and also keep spending within our budget (unless you're American, in which case I will lament the misinterpretation of the Declaration of Independence). How do you maximise your happiness? Not the consumerist way, which is essentially acquisition of needless property. Ads spur your desire to buy something. But does having it give you anything more than a fleeting sense of happiness? Does it provide self-fulfilment? Does it really make you smile even weeks down the road?
My ex-colleague used to comment that Singaporeans like to engage in no-brainer activities that probably only give them 6/10 happiness. They do not look beyond the banal and ordinary, like watching movies, going shopping at the new mall, or downloading music in order to fill their spare time. Instead, 8/10 or even 9/10 happiness could be found, if one would only exercise independent judgement and think more creatively. For example, the same colleague used to do horse-riding competitively, and still follows up on events and how favourite horses are doing. It gives her great satisfaction thinking back on that part of her life. For others, it might be trying out Mediterranean recipes from the Net, or cosplaying. These activities still require money, and in some cases, a lot of it. But wouldnt it give you much more happiness and satisfaction than spending the money on stuff you don't need?
Constraining your consumerist tendencies makes sense economically and ethically. When the market is driven by consumerism, resources are diverted away from capital goods and goods that contribute to real development. You are enforcing, unwittingly, the market failure mechanism that is the 'dollar vote'. It's obviously not fair to poorer people in your country and in other countries, if you think about it seriously.
You might complain about the lack of freedoms that governments give their citizens. Yet you blindly obey the big corporations when they tell you that new bag is going to make you more sophisticated, or that new pair of shoes is going to get you noticed at the club. So what? The cloth you overpaid for might have been used to make cheap clothing for poor peasants in rural China. Or the slowdown in production due to the lack of demand on your side might have just saved the health or even lives of the poor farmers living around the factory.
You learnt economics for a reason. Think, folks.
In November (I)
The leafless forests slowly yield
To the thick-driving snow. A li
And night shall darken down. In sho
The woodmen's carts go by me homeward-wh
Past the thin fading stubbles, half conc
Now golden-gray, sowed softly throu
Where the last ploughman follows st
Turning black furrows through the whiten
Far off the village lamps begin to gleam,
Fast drives the snow, and no man co
The hills grow wintry white, and bleak w
About the naked uplands. I alone
Am neither sad, nor shelterless, no
Wrapped round with thought, content to w
i seriously think many Singaporeans do not understand the power of the consumer vote. they buy according to their notion of prevailing fashions and hip-ness, and then complain that brands only go for style and not substance. if you dont approve, dont buy! if you bewail the loss of small neighbourhood shops, then for goodness sake buy from them.
too many cries
too many tears
too many lies
just too many barriers
Mean World Syndrome
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mean World Syndrome is a phenomenon where the violence-related content of mass media convinces viewers that the world is more dangerous than it actually is, and prompts a desire for more protection than is warranted by any actual threat.[1] Mean World Syndrome is one of the main conclusions of cultivation theory. The term was coined by George Gerbner, a pioneer researcher on the effects of television on society, when he noted that people who watched a large amount of television tended to think of the world as an intimidating and unforgiving place. [2]
Individuals who watch television infrequently and adolescents who talk to their parents about reality are said to have a more accurate view of the real world than those who do not, and they are able to more accurately assess their vulnerability to violence. They also tend to have a wider variety of beliefs and attitudes.[3]
I watch the telly almost zilch! I wave my hand proudly. Lol. This is very Fahrenheit 451. shudders involuntarily.
My face is lobster-red now, not a healthy pink. A slight jump of sorts from the fair pig I was up till this morning, 8 am. The first game killed me and my self-esteem, the second just killed me through and through.
dinner now.
(Times online)
this is really scary.
Tell me, what constitutes upgrades for the human being? wider neural pathways? bigger skulls? what? scientists who predict and work towards a future of human 'improvement' through the wonders of genomics and technology are emitting rather large amounts of hubris.
:)
loves Mozilla Labs.
The hilarious thing was, the chinese version of the banner had the address exactly correct. Maybe it was a ploy to only hire people who could do Chinese. Secretly discriminatory, I say happily.
I had a little bird,
Its name was Enza,
I opened the window,
And in-flew-enza.
-American Skipping Rhyme circa 1918
The way it does it is to merge the energy and the environment ministries under one minister, so that there is no longer the traditional view that the minister of the environment only wants to hold back development and not add value. on the ohter hand this also prevents the energy minister from wanting all-out growth through exploitation of energy resources. With this framework the country has managed to take a long-term view on sustainable development more effectively than probably any other country in the world.
And, the most amazing fact is, it has twice the amount of forest it used to have 20 years ago. It actually pays the indigenous peoples to keep the forests intact, and imposes a 3 plus percent carbon tax on emissions. that's brilliant economics.
I do hope other countries with significant energy resources to use for growth pay attention to how costa rica has done it.

