May 2 Pakistanis are complaining of no electricity for long periods of time. They are complaining about their utility bills and about food prices that have affected their eating habits. There is concern that the judges whom Musharraf dismissed have not yet been restored. There is widespread disappointment with the new government. One Pakistani who was interviewed said that life is becoming unlivable. People are talking about emigrating.
May 2 Another exceptionally powerful wind disaster has occurred, this time a cyclone that has hit Burma.
May 3 An article in the May issue of Vanity Fair reports: "Monsanto already dominates America’s food chain with its genetically modified seeds. Now it has targeted milk production. Just as frightening as the corporation’s tactics–ruthless legal battles against small farmers–is its decades-long history of toxic contamination."
May 3 In Cuba, a law against owning a home computer has been lifted. In recent weeks, thousands of Cubans have been spending their savings on other previously banned goods, such as mobile telephones and DVD players.
May 4 In describing troublesome trends that distinguish the 21st century from the 20th, General Michael V. Hayden, director of the Central Intelligence Agency, puts exploding populations at the top of his list.
May 7 In Lebanon, rifle and grenade fire has broken out between opponents and supporters of the Western and Saudi backed government. Opponents are largely Hezbollah supporters. Driving the opponents are protests against rising feul and food prices. The armed rising followed the pro-Western Siniora government deciding to strip Hezbollah of its private underground telecommunications system, which was crucial to Hezbollah during the war with Israel in 2006.
May 7 In an English court of law, the People's Mujahedin of Iran (Mujahedin e-Kalq) has won removal from England's list of terrorist organizations. The organization is listed as a terrorist group by the European Union and the United States.
May 8 In the U.S., conservative commentator Rush Limbaugh proclaims that Barrack Obama will "lose big." Limbaugh describes himself as always right, and today he says that Obama "has shown he cannot get the votes Democrats need to win -- blue-collar, working class people. He can get effete snobs, he can get wealthy academics, he can get the young, and he can get the black vote, but Democrats do not win with that."
May 8 The government of Burma states that 22,000 have died as a result of the cyclone that struck on May 2. Estimates by other observors are that the dead will rise to more that 100,000. (Hurricane Katrina, which hit New Orleans in 2005, killed 1,836.) The cyclone has damaged much of Burma's rice growing region, putting more pressure on the food supply.
May 11 Rice production in Uganda has increased as a result of tariffs on imported rice. Rice prices in Uganda have improved, unlike elsewhere in the world. Ugandan importers have moved their investments into Ugandan rice growing. Importing rice from Pakistan, Vietnam and the United States had been inhibiting the development of Uganda's rice industry. (See G. Pascal Zachary, Foreign Policy magazine.)
May 12 China's worst earthquake in 32 years strikes in Sichuan Province (central China). Ten months ago, scientists warned that the region was ripe for a major quake.
May 13 Many see nothing wrong with guilt by association or don't recognize it. A version of it is employed by presidential candidate John McCain, McCain saying that Barack Obama is the favored presidential candidate of Hamas.
May 13 New figures from the CIA's World Factbook show Iraq leading India, Mongolia and Russia, among others, in "life expectancy at birth." Iraq's is 69.62 years. Russia: 65.94. Japan leads the world at 82.07. The U.S. is listed 47th, at 78.14.
May 15 Californians and others who see marriage as an absolute are upset at what they see as a creative interpretation by the California Supreme Court. That court rules unconstitutional a ban on marriage between same sex couples. One upset Californian describes marriage as something that has existed since the "dawn of time." When people went from merely coupling to institutionalized declarations and definitions remains for many unclear.
May 15 Lizabeth Diaz reports that businesses in the border town of Tijuana, Mexico, are collapsing, that business people daily are facing "threats of extortion," that investments in industry are being scared away and that downtown Tijuana is virtually deserted. Rival gangs are warring for control of the city.
May 16 In a speech, President Bush compares negotating with terrorists with the British and French having appeased Hitler in 1938. Confusion and upset follow from a failure to differentiate between negotiating and appeasing. One can talk or negotiate without giving the other side anything in particular or everything as the British and French did at Munich regarding Czechoslovakia. In fact, one can negotiate and give the other side nothing.
May 16 Liberals point out that President Bush has negotiated with North Korea and Libya, that Israel has negotiated with the PLO, Syria and Egypt and that the British negotiated with the IRA.
May 17 The European Union is "cracking down" on illegal immigration, trying to stop voyages of Africans reaching Europe by boat. Italy's newly elected conservative government has conducted a week-long raid that has rounded up nearly 400 suspected illegal immigrants. Italians are expressing hostility toward Romanians, who can legally migrate where they want within the EU. In Naples, people have set fire to the makeshift homes of Gypsies.
May 19 A Gallup survey estimates that in the U.S. tolerance for divorce has risen to 70 percent, up from 67 percent in 2006. Those believing that divorce is morally wrong has declined to 22 percent.
May 21 Speaking in London, the chairman of the China Banking Regulatory Commission, LIU Mingkang, says that "accountability and responsibility for managing risks are, and must remain, with individual financial institutions and investors, " but "...this needs to be firmly backed up by strengthened national regulatory and supervisory frameworks."
May 21 In Kenya, a gang goes from home to home killing ten accused of witchcraft.
May 21 Talks in Qatar result in Lebanon's Hezbollah (Party of God) having veto power in a new Lebanese cabinet of national unity. The use of arms or violence will be forbidden in settling political differences." In the U.S., the Bush administration considers Hezbollah a terrorist organization, but Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice approves of the talks, saying, "We view this agreement as a positive step toward resolving the current crisis."
May 22 Presidential candidate John McCain breaks with Pastor John Hagee over remarks about God and Hitler. (Opinion: Hagee, McCain and History Methodology.)
May 23 An article by Syed Rashid Husain in the Saudi newspaper Arab News describes a claim that "60 percent of today's crude oil price is pure speculation... driven by large trader banks and hedge funds." The accusation is that people trying to make money on a continuing rise in the price of oil prices are doing to oil what speculators did to the price of gold in 1979-80 and to the price of homes a few years ago. Decrease in supply, increase in demand and decline in the dollar do not add up proportional to the rise in the price of crude oil over the past few years. Today's price is more that $131 per barrel and reached a high of $135. In 2002 it was at $20. It began this year at around $100 - a more than 30 percent rise in five months.
May 23 China's People's Daily describes The Wall Street Journal Asia Edition (U.S.), the Globe and Mail (Canada), the Guardian (U.K.) and other foreign news agencies as having lauded earthquake relief efforts in China. China has fully mobilized in response to its earthquake disasters, and, unlike Burma in response to its Cyclone disaster, China encourages efforts from individual citizens. And, in many ways, individuals have volunteered support for quake victims.
May 25 The U.S. lands a spacecraft on Mars, its scientific instruments intact.
May 25 In Lebanon, General Michel Suleiman wins a virtually uncontested election for president, agreed to in Qatar last week as part of resolving Lebanon's recent crisis. Jim Muir reports for the BBC that "Never before has an election here produced such an eruption of jubilation among the people, across the spectrum of sect and politics."
May 26 For gasoline, Norwegians are paying what amounts to almost 11 U.S. dollars per gallon. Some of this is a gasoline tax. Norwegians have launched an organized protest against Shell Oil and the Norwegian oil company Statoil.
May 26 According to a recently published statement by the World Health Organization, "42 percent of children under five years of age in South-East Asia and 43 percent in Africa suffer from chronic malnutrition."
May 28 In China, 67,183 are confirmed dead from the earthquake and 20,790 are still missing. Problems with insurance companies regarding damages will not extensive. China's citizens can buy private insurance, but many look instead to government to fix things. Regarding state control, for those who lost a child in the quake, China lifts its one-child policy.
May 28 In Nepal, the newly-elected abolishes declares their country independent, indivisible, sovereign, secular and an inclusive democratic republic. Nepal's 240 year-old monarchy is abolished. A three-day holiday is declared. King Gyanendra is given 15 days to leave his palace.
May 29 More than 100 countries, including Britain, have approved a ban on cluster bombs. Not joining the agreement is Russia, China, Israel, India, Pakistan and the United States.
May 30 Mexico's conservative government announces its plan to give poorer citizens 120 pesos ($11.55) a month to help them cope with rising food prices. Mexico also gives free public transportation to the poor. One-third of Mexico's population is said to be below the "poverty-line."
May 30 Per capita health care expenditure in France is about half what it is in the United States. WebMd.com reports that just 8% of the French qualify as obese, compared to 33% of Americans." Snacking is blamed, which a lot of French find "distasteful." In the U.S., "snacking is a $30 billion industry that has increased 33% since 1988."
Jun 2 In China the government steps up its drive to discourage smoking. Twenty-six percent of the population smokes, and smoking-related diseases kill about one million people every year. The government's Center for Disease Control and Prevention blames advertising for an increase in tobacco addiction.
Jun 2 It has been one month since the cyclone struck Burma, and foreign aid agencies complain that as many as 250,000 cyclone victims have not yet been helped.
Jun 2 In Norway, car traffic deaths have increased 50 percent so far this year. An organization dedicated to improving road safety, Trygg Trafikk, attributes the increase to speed by reckless young men.
Jun 2 John McCain denounces an unconditional summit meeting with Iran's president. He says: "Such a spectacle would harm Iranian moderates and dissidents, as the radicals and hardliners strengthen their position and suddenly acquire the appearance of respectability."
Jun 3 Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, responds to the accusation of Iran building a nuclear bomb. He says "No wise nation would be interested in making a nuclear weapon today. They are against rational thought." In his speech he criticized President Bush and his advisors: "Sometimes they threaten, sometimes they order assassinations... and sometimes they ask for help - it's like mad people staggering to and fro."
Jun 3 George Soros, the billionaire investor who seems to know markets, tells the U.S. Senate Commerce Committee that oil prices "have a strong foundation in reality" (supply and demand). He also says he believes that the doubling in the price of oil over the last year is due partly to investment institutions, such as pension funds, pumping money into indexes that track the cost of crude. He worries about an oil price bubble.
Jun 4 King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, a Sunni, is holding a three-day conference in Mecca. He speaks of the tolerant nature of Islam. Attending the conference, and sitting next to the king, is the former president if Iran, Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, a Shi'a, who asks that Muslims emphasize what they have in common.
Jun 4 In California, developers are unable to satisfy state law requiring long-term water supplies. And water shortages are impacting farming, which will contribute to rising food prices. California's governor, Arnold Schwarzenegger, proclaims a statewide drought and orders immediate action.
Jun 6 China offers counseling and reverse sterilization by medical teams free to parents who lost their only child in last month's earthquake.
Jun 8 President Hugo Chavez urges Colombia's rebels, FARC, to end their four-decade struggle. "The guerrilla war is history," he said. "At this moment in Latin America, an armed guerrilla movement is out of place."
Jun 8 Iraq's prime minister, Maliki, meets President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran, who pledges to help Iraq's security. Maliki is quoted as saying, "Iraq is looking forward to Iranian companies taking part in developing its infrastructure."
Jun 10 Writes Jeffrey Stinson In USA Today, "Germany's economy is showing gains while the United States' has hit the skids and most of the rest of Europe sputters."
Jun 11 Cuba announces its plan for wage differentiation, overturning what has been in place in Cuba since 1959. It is hoped that it will improve production and services.
Jun 13 Hamas admits that it lied in blaming yesterday's deaths in Gaza on an Israeli air strike. It admits that the massive explosion was an accident by militants preparing to attack Israel.
Jun 13 Libya's Colonel Gaddafi calls Barack Obama "our Kenyan brother" but criticizes his pro-Israeli position on Jerusalem. Gaddafi complains that opportunism might be making Obama "more white than white people" rather than holding to solidarity with African and Arab nations.
Jun 15 President Mugabe vows not to surrender his country to his enemies for mere Xs on a ballot. Elections have been scheduled for June 27 and supporters of the opposition party are being beaten and jailed. But the UN still hopes for supervision that will produce a fair election.
Jun 17 National Geographic reports that neuroscientists at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm have found brain formations that differ for homosexuals and heterosexuals. This suggests a genetic connection for homosexuality but not necessarily for all homosexuality.
Jun 18 Danes define as poor anyone who earns less than the equivalent of 2,320 U.S. dollars (11,194 Danish kroner) per month. Responding to a poll, the Danes agree that one's income is below an acceptable level if he cannot afford a mobile phone, a yearly holiday abroad and a dinner out every month, and they agree that Danes must have money for internet access, a monthly visit to a movie and putting a child into organized sports. Denmark has an estimated 2007 per capita GDP of $37,400 compared to $45,800 for the US. And the average Dane is taxed around 50 percent of his income.
Jun 18 The unusually heavy rains that have also caused recent flooding in southern China have, according to Reuters News, killed at least 171 persons while 52 are missing.
Jun 18 Regarding the heavy rains and worst flooding in a decade in the Midwest, the New Orleans and Dutch examples of preparedness and infrastructure again appear. Erik Loehr, professor of civil engineering at the University of Missouri. says, "... for the most part we know how to design levees to withstand the floods. It's a matter of getting the financing to be able to support that construction ..."
Jun 19 Three opinions in the U.S. contrary to the Dutch spirit on flooding: (1) "Water stops for no one. If it is going to smash levees, there isn't anything you can do about it." (2) "I have a great idea to cut down on the need for levees. Stop building in the middle of swamp and flood plains." (3) "Aren't you sick of working for the IRS?"
Jun 19 In a close vote, Sweden's parliament approves a plan to scan international calls, faxes and e-mails for the sake of national security. It is described as Europe's most far-reaching eavesdropping plan.
Jun 19 China announces that it is raising feul prices in order to reduce demand and lower consumption. The announcement helped send oil prices on the world market downward $4.75 a barrel to $131. Recently, Taiwan, Malaysia, and Indonesia also announced plans to pass higher gasoline prices to its citizens, and India has announced that it will cease diesel subsidies to all commercial establishments.
Jun 20 Latin Americans respond with anger to a new European Union law designed to discourage more illegal immigration. Illegal immigrants could be imprisoned for 18 months before being deported. Hugo Chavez, Rafael Correa, Evo Morales and the retired Fidel Castro are among the upset.
Jun 21 A recent Gallop Poll (May 19-21) recorded 57 percent of U.S. citizens supporting drilling for oil in off-shore and wilderness areas and 41 percent opposed. Proponents believe that drilling will increase supply, enabling people to burn more home-produced oil at a cheaper price. Some opponents deny this could happen within the coming ten years and repeat that for the sake of the environment we are supposed to burn less of it. The presidential candidates have been arguing the issue, with McCain on the side of drilling and Obama opposed.
Jun 22 At the oil summit held in Saudi Arabia, King Abdullah speaks of his willingness to pump more oil, but he joins his oil minister in asserting that supply is not the problem. The king has seen the price of oil rise despite his move to put more oil on the market. He again blames soaring oil prices on speculators. He criticized high fuel taxes and spoke of increased consumption by developing economies. And he spoke against blaming OPEC.
Jun 23 The European Union officially lifts sanctions on Cuba, and move that has been championed by Spain, which normalized relations with Cuba last year. The sanctions were created in 2003 in response to Cuba's government moving against dissidents.
Jun 23 In the U.S., flood experts remind us of a government program in the Mississippi Valley to create more wetlands out of flooded farmlands, to give floodwaters a place to drain. Higher levees move more water downstream and create more pressure on existing levees, and it is said that levees cannot be built high enough to escape this cycle. But not enough farmers are willing to leave any of their land as wetland.
Jun 24 Palestinian militants fire at least two rockets from the Gaza Strip into Israel, violating the truce that began six days ago agreed to by Israel and Hamas.
Jun 24 Frontline reports on pastoral communities with a history of living with drought now being overwhelmed by drought worse than the past. The pastoralists of Turkana, in Northwestern Kenya, are being kept alive by food aid. Turkana men are leaving the way of life that had worked for them and are joining others in growing dysfunctional slums.
Jun 25 Saudi Arabia's Interior Ministry has announces that in the last six months security forces have arrest 701 persons suspected of plotting to carry out terrorist attacks on oil facilities and other vital installations. According to the Arab News, the minister described among the arrested Saudis and foreigners who "were trying to regroup and strengthen the Al-Qaeda terror network in Saudi Arabia." The minister said among those arrested "181 have been released as there was no evidence to prove their connection with terrorist groups.”
Jun 25 Tibet reopens to tourism, the first two from Sweden.
Jun 25 Malaysian authorities estimate there are 130,000 illegal immigrants in the province of Sabah - on the island of Borneo. Many of them are Filipino or Indonesian. The Malaysian government announces that it will begin deportations, including those illegals who have lived in Sabah since the 1970s.
Jun 26 In response to North Korea beginning to disable its Yongbyon nuclear facility, President Bush lifts some trade sanctions and acts to remove the country from a list of states that sponsor terrorism. Bush describes North Korea's move as one step and tells reporters that "Multilateral diplomacy is the best way to peacefully solve the nuclear issue with North Korea."
Jun 27 Some people who want to prohibit people from having guns in their home point to statistics about the frequent misuse of such guns. Those who favor guns in the home think that misuse by some should not be a reason to deny everybody freedom to possess a gun. They point to studies that show home break-ins are less frequent where guns are allowed. They are praising yesterday's landmark Supreme Court declaring that Washington DC's ban on guns violates “the right of law-abiding responsible citizens to use arms in defense of hearth and home.”
Jun 29 In Wengan county in China's southern province of Guizhou, people demonstrate that they are not intimidated. Believing that the son of an official raped and killed a girl and that a cover-up is taking place, "about 10,000 people" are described as having "totally burned down the county Party office building, and burned other offices in the county government" and also "burned about 20 vehicles police cars, including police cars." (The BBC quoting an "official" wink .
Jun 30 In Norway a man is sentenced to four years in prison for violating a law against forced marriages and for kidnapping his daughter and taking her back to Iraq.
Jun 30 India's government complains that carbon emissions per person in India is a fraction of that in rich nations and that the people of India have a right to economic and social progress. But it vows to shift from fossil to non-fossils fuels in the interest of combating climate change. (India is estimated to increase its population this year by 13 million. This will help keep its per capital carbon emissions down.)
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Interesting things
Yes this does have some of my older work in it, but it is mostly facts and history.