Interesting back and forth between the 99% and the 1% in China:
Celebrity real estate developer Pan Shiyi, who has previously pushed for cities to publish more detailed air quality data and who is a delegate to Beijing's legislature, called Tuesday morning for a "Clean Air Act." By late afternoon, his online poll had received more than 29,000 votes, with 99 percent in favor.
On Monday, Wang Anshun was elected Beijing's mayor after telling lawmakers the municipal government should make more efforts to fight air pollution, according to Xinhua.
Last week, he announced plans to remove 180,000 older vehicles from the city's roads and promote government cars and heating systems that use clean energy.
Of course it took air so poisonous that you can't breathe it...or see...to spur this!
http://news.yahoo.com/smog-thick-enough-cancel-flights-hits-beijing-074510816.html
Matt
Celebrity real estate developer Pan Shiyi, who has previously pushed for cities to publish more detailed air quality data and who is a delegate to Beijing's legislature, called Tuesday morning for a "Clean Air Act." By late afternoon, his online poll had received more than 29,000 votes, with 99 percent in favor.
On Monday, Wang Anshun was elected Beijing's mayor after telling lawmakers the municipal government should make more efforts to fight air pollution, according to Xinhua.
Last week, he announced plans to remove 180,000 older vehicles from the city's roads and promote government cars and heating systems that use clean energy.
Of course it took air so poisonous that you can't breathe it...or see...to spur this!
http://news.yahoo.com/smog-thick-enough-cancel-flights-hits-beijing-074510816.html
Matt
I think the important thing to take from Ed's post is that inequality in the world (and US) is growing...and that wealth is being concentrated in fewer and fewer people. To the point that a relatively few people hold a historically high proportion of the worlds wealth. And, without change, are going to hold a higher and higher proportion of it.
When wealth (power) becomes so concentrated, it's self-reinforcing in many cases: Money buys access and influence over policy. And this can be beneficial (in the case of, say, advocating for a benevolent cause)...or self-serving (in the case of, say, Too Big To Fail Banks ensuring that real regulatory oversight doesn't happen...or oil companies ensuring that tax loopholes remain and safer clean air standards don't become law). It's not a Democrat or Republican issue. It's an issue of money, power and influence. With over a BILLION dollars by each side spent directly and through Super PACs on the last election (and increasingly by Mega Donors), the impact of money on politics is becoming even worse.
Most people seem to think everything's OK. They got theirs, so F everyone else. Or are at least too busy watching the Kardachians or trying to make out one party or the other as the boogie man to do anything about it. Fortunately some of the mega rich are trying to work for progress. And lots of little people CAN make a difference.
China over the next decade is going to an interesting case study in the excesses of hyper growth / unregulated (crony) capitalism. Like our country at the turn of the 20th century (after the Gilded Age or Robber Barons and the like), China will be shaken by labor strife, corruption, environmental damage and other factors. If anyone is paying attention, China's neo-colonial activities in Africa and the Caribbean are in full swing. Deals with despots in Sudan? No problem...just give us your oil. Extract the (public) resources. Pay a few. And the populace suffers. I've seen that movie before. It doesn't end well. Although it's had a few sequels...
Matt