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Africa, prosperity and its ever-seeking union
In 1940, in order to put a warm glow over their war efforts, the Japanese Imperial Army announced that the reason they were hacking their way through Asia was the pursuit of a Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere.
The Imperial Army were not demolishing local governments and murdering people, they were simply chasing out Western imperialists and promoting regional economic union.
The reason this was a complete failure was that “union” - either political or economic - requires that the parties to that union actually want to be together. A shotgun wedding works as well as a shotgun economy.
And the eyes are always on us
“One can't help thinking wistfully of our father's day, when the world hadn't grown so small. But one could move about in it without being watched so closely. Nowadays, we're treated like demented or delinquent children. And the eyes are always on us,” said Orson Welles in 1955.
Since then, much has happened. Technology has allowed free speech to spread as easily as the seasonal flu. It has also allowed governments to track individuals like never before. Despite this tracking, those who would do others harm seem to have little obstruction to causing that harm.
Copenhagen, Consensus and The Gathering of the Trees
“The trees gathered to agree a response to the growing threat of the Homo sapiens,” said the story-telling old lady who waylaid me in a park. “After several weeks of debate had passed, up rose Sam Sequoia who said, ‘You have spent so much time in organising and fighting for who will be leader that you have all completely lost sight of your objectives.’”
The tale could almost be a complete summary of the UN summit on climate change which took place in Copenhagen in December. After decades of research, years of talks and months of preliminary negotiations, the summit ended with a whimper and a partial agreement that is worse than no deal at all.
Read more: Copenhagen, Consensus and The Gathering of the Trees
The World Cup is further away than many thought
Europeans are waking up to the realisation that South Africa is not Germany.
“The short haul meant thousands of supporters were able to make last-minute trips to Germany and they discovered excellent transport, plentiful accommodation and sympathetic policing when they arrived,” writes Simon Austin at the BBC of experiences at the 2006 World Cup.
Promoting Innovation is more than tilting at windmills
What would you expect to see if you walked into a roomful of successful innovators?
Would you expect them to dress the same? Have the same haircuts, or the same educational background or ethnic or cultural origins? Would they speak the same language, share the same jokes or be driven by the same goals?
Read more: Promoting Innovation is more than tilting at windmills
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