Category: General news

Managing director of Ebono Institute and major sponsor of The Generator, Geoff Ebbs, is running against Kevin Rudd in the seat of Griffith at the next Federal election. By the expression on their faces in this candid shot it looks like a pretty dull campaign. Read on

  • The Kink in the Human Brain – monbiot.com

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    The Kink in the Human Brain – monbiot.com

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    George Monbiot news@monbiot.com via google.com 

    5:04 PM (5 minutes ago)

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    The Kink in the Human Brain – monbiot.com


    The Kink in the Human Brain

    Posted: 02 Oct 2014 02:41 AM PDT

    Pointless, joyless consumption is destroying our world of wonders.

    By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian 2nd October 2014

    This is a moment at which anyone with the capacity for reflection should stop and wonder what we are doing.

    If the news that in the past 40 years the world has lost over 50% its vertebrate wildlife (mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians and fish) fails to tell us that there is something wrong with the way we live, it’s hard to imagine what could. Who believes that a social and economic system which has this effect is a healthy one? Who, contemplating this loss, could call it progress?

    In fairness to the modern era, this is an extension of a trend that has lasted some two million years. The loss of much of the African megafauna – sabretooths and false sabretooths, giant hyaenas and amphicyonids (bear dogs), several species of elephant – coincided with the switch towards meat eating by hominims (ancestral humans). It’s hard to see what else could have been responsible for the peculiar pattern of extinction then.

    As we spread into other continents, their megafaunas almost immediately collapsed. Perhaps the most reliable way of dating the first arrival of people anywhere is the sudden loss of large animals. The habitats we see as pristine – the Amazon rainforest or coral reefs for example – are in fact almost empty: they have lost most of the great beasts that used to inhabit them, which drove crucial natural processes.

    Since then we have worked our way down the foodchain, rubbing out smaller predators, medium-sized herbivores, and now, through both habitat destruction and hunting, wildlife across all classes and positions in the foodweb. There seems to be some kink in the human brain that prevents us from stopping, that drives us to carry on taking and competing and destroying, even when there is no need to do so.

    But what we see now is something new: a speed of destruction that exceeds even that of the first settlement of the Americas, 14,000 years ago, when an entire hemisphere’s ecology was transformed through a firestorm of extinction within a few dozen generations, in which the majority of large vertebrate species disappeared.

    Many people blame this process on human population growth, and there’s no doubt that it has been a factor. But two other trends have developed even faster and further. The first is the rise in consumption; the second is amplification by technology. Every year, new pesticides, new fishing technologies, new mining methods, new techniques for processing trees are developed. We are waging an increasingly asymmetric war against the living world.

    But why are we at war? In the rich nations, which commission much of this destruction through imports, most of our consumption has nothing to do with meeting human needs.

    This is what hits me harder than anything: the disproportion between what we lose and what we gain. Economic growth in a country whose primary and secondary needs have already been met means developing ever more useless stuff to meet ever fainter desires.

    For example, a vague desire to amuse friends and colleagues (especially through the Secret Santa nonsense) commissions the consumption of thousands of tonnes of metal and plastic, often confected into complex electronic novelties: toys for adults. They might provoke a snigger or two, then they are dumped in a cupboard. After a few weeks, scarcely used, they find their way into landfill.

    In a society bombarded by advertising and driven by the growth imperative, pleasure is reduced to hedonism and hedonism is reduced to consumption. We use consumption as a cure for boredom, to fill the void that an affectless, grasping, atomised culture creates, to brighten the grey world we have created.

    We care ever less for the possessions we buy, and dispose of them ever more quickly. Yet the extraction of the raw materials required to produce them, the pollution commissioned in their manufacturing, the infrastructure and noise and burning of fuel needed to transport them are trashing a natural world infinitely more fascinating and intricate than the stuff we produce. The loss of wildlife is a loss of wonder and enchantment, of the magic with which the living world infects our lives.

    Perhaps it is misleading to suggest that “we” are doing all this. It’s being done not only by us but to us. One of the remarkable characteristics of recent growth in the rich world is how few people benefit. Almost all the gains go to a tiny number of people: one study suggests that the richest 1% in the United States capture 93% of the increase in incomes that growth delivers. Even with growth rates of 2 or 3% or more, working conditions for most people continue to deteriorate, as we find ourselves on short contracts, without full employment rights, without the security or the choice or the pensions their parents enjoyed.

    Working hours rise, wages stagnate or fall, tasks become duller, more stressful and harder to fulfill, emails and texts and endless demands clatter inside our heads, shutting down the ability to think, corners are cut, services deteriorate, housing becomes almost impossible to afford, there’s ever less money for essential public services. What and whom is this growth for?

    It’s for the people who run or own the banks, the hedge funds, the mining companies, the advertising firms, the lobbying companies, the weapons manufacturers, the buy-to-let portfolios, the office blocks, the country estates, the offshore accounts. The rest of us are induced to regard it as necessary and desirable through a system of marketing and framing so intensive and all-pervasive that it amounts to brainwashing.

    A system that makes us less happy, less secure, that narrows and impoverishes our lives, is presented as the only possible answer to our problems. There is no alternative – we must keep marching over the cliff. Anyone who challenges it is either ignored or excoriated.

    And the beneficiaries? Well they are also the biggest consumers, using their spectacular wealth to exert impacts thousands of times greater than most people achieve. Much of the natural world is destroyed so that the very rich can fit their yachts with mahogany, eat bluefin tuna sushi, scatter ground rhino horn over their food, land their private jets on airfields carved from rare grasslands, burn in one day as much fossil fuel as the average global citizen uses in a year.

    Thus the Great Global Polishing proceeds, wearing down the knap of the Earth, rubbing out all that is distinctive and peculiar, in human culture as well as nature, reducing us to replaceable automata within a homogenous global workforce, inexorably transforming the riches of the natural world into a featureless monoculture.

    Is this not the point at which we shout stop? At which we use the extraordinary learning and expertise we have developed to change the way we organise ourselves, to contest and reverse the trends that have governed our relationship with the living planet for the past two million years, and that are now destroying its remaining features at astonishing speed? Is this not the point at which we challenge the inevitability of endless growth on a finite planet? If not now, when?

    www.monbiot.com

  • Daily update: Citigroup sees solar + battery storage “socket” parity within years

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    Daily update: Citigroup sees solar + battery storage “socket” parity within years

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    Renew Economy editor@reneweconomy.com.au via mail215.atl21.rsgsv.net 

    1:30 PM (3 hours ago)

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    Citi sees solar+battery storage “socket” parity within years; How energy storage will accelerate decline of fossil fuels; 1/3 solar systems in Qld get little or no tariff; Indian supreme court rebuffs coal lobby arguments; Is wearable tech the next frontier of energy savings?; How ‘wind turbine deafness’ got so wrong, so quick; and Japan focuses on zero-energy buildings.
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    RenewEconomy Daily News
    The Parkinson Report
    Investment bank Citigroup says the return on investment for solar plus storage by 2020 will beat the payback from solar now. That means socket parity in some countries by 2020, and in utility scale grid in large parts of the world by 2030. Fossil fuel generators and utiliy business models will be terminally challenged.
    Citigroup analysis says energy storage will have profound impact on fossil fuels such as coal, oil, gas. It’s good news for renewables though.
    Nearly one third of households in Queensland get paid little or nothing for exports to the grid. Despite this, 63,000 households added solar in last year.
    Decision by Supreme Court of India to cancel 214 coal allocations made between 1993 – 2010 was a stunning rebuff to legal arguments from Indian coal lobby.
    How the Apple Watch could live up to its promise.
    Latest cycle of “wind turbines make you sick/deaf/whatever has been instantaneously debunked by the scientist who wrote research.
    Japan is aggressively pushing forward with renewable power options.
  • It. Is. Working. get up

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    It. Is. Working.

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    Mark – GetUp!

    1:26 PM (3 hours ago)

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    Dear NEVILLE,

    It. Is. Working.

    In major headlines yesterday, the Abbott Government is capitulating on billions in cruel cuts to Newstart and social services.1 That’s after GetUp members stepped up with donations to unmissable billboards, holding key senators to their budget promises.

    Now with the Government’s budget strategy in disarray, we’ve got the chance to stop their plans to deregulate university fees too — preventing sickening fee hikes that would deny opportunities to many and shackle others to a lifetime of debt.

    So, we’re partnering with teachers and students on a new TV ad campaign, grounded in the messaging that tested best with swing voters. Then we’re running the ad in areas guaranteed to grab the attention of the key crossbench senators with the power to stop the Government’s plans — because that’s what’s working.

    Critical Senate hearings on uni fee deregulation start next week, so we need to lock in our ad placements now. Check out the ad and chip in to get it in front of key swing voters when it counts.

    Click here to see the ad

    According to recent research, many Australians still don’t know about the proposed university fee deregulation — but when they do hear about it, they’re not happy. That’s where we come in.

    The research shows that for key swing voters the prospect of degree costs skyrocketing to $100,000+ sets off absolute alarm bells. Especially offensive is the idea that money, not hard work, will get you a place at university, and that student debts will take a lifetime to pay off.

    To drive these cut-through messages home, we’re launching an ad with our friends at the National Tertiary Education Union and the National Union of Students that shows what getting into university would become under deregulation: an all-out bidding war. Can you help get it on the air, so we can raise alarm bells with key swing voters, as their senators decide the fate of these bills?

    Yes, I’ll chip in

    Cutting back on higher education in a knowledge-based global economy is a recipe for disaster, especially when a study released this week revealed that Australia is getting huge public returns on its education spending — amongst the highest of any OECD country.2

    University deregulation won’t just hurt students, it will create a drag on our whole economy, by undermining our clever country and creating a generation awash in debt. Let’s be clever ourselves, by getting this new uni fee auction TV ad on the air to the right people at the right time.

    https://www.getup.org.au/at-what-price3

    Thanks for all you make possible,
    Mark and Nat, for the GetUp team

    PS – Just weeks ago, more than 1,400 GetUp members chipped in to get billboards in front of Clive Palmer and PUP senators, to hold them to their budget promises at the critical moment. And it bloody well worked! Below is a picture of Mr Palmer and Senator Glenn Lazarus literally standing in front of their Newstart promise — writ large by GetUp members — as they announced they would not do a deal with the Government. Now to get this uni fees ad on the air at this decision moment for crossbench senators, we need to raise the bar even higher. Click here to chip in!

    PPS – Coming up on the 16 October is the Student’s National Day of Action. Students, teachers, alumni, and parents will be mobilising on campuses across the country, the last hoorah before semester ends. Find out about events happening near you on the National Union of Students website.

    References:
    [1] “Federal Government to introduce new split welfare bill to House of Representative with Labor’s backing”, ABC News, 2 October 2014
    [2] “Australian universities climb Times world rankings, while US and UK lose ground”, Sydney Morning Herald, 2 October 2014


    GetUp is an independent, not-for-profit community campaigning gr

  • The 10 stuff-ups we all make when interpreting research

    Australia
    3 October 2014, 6.20am AEST

    The 10 stuff-ups we all make when interpreting research

    UNDERSTANDING RESEARCH: What do we actually mean by research and how does it help inform our understanding of things? Understanding what’s being said in any new research can be challenging and there are…

    Oh no – not that mistake again. Flickr/Alex Proimos, CC BY-NC

    UNDERSTANDING RESEARCH: What do we actually mean by research and how does it help inform our understanding of things? Understanding what’s being said in any new research can be challenging and there are some common mistakes that people make.

    Have you ever tried to interpret some new research to work out what the study means in the grand scheme of things?

    Well maybe you’re smart and didn’t make any mistakes – but more likely you’re like most humans and accidentally made one of these 10 stuff ups.

    1. Wait! That’s just one study!

    You wouldn’t judge all old men based on just Rolf Harris or Nelson Mandela. And so neither should you judge any topic based on just one study.

    If you do it deliberately, it’s cherry-picking. If you do it by accident, it’s an example of the exception fallacy.

    The well-worn and thoroughly discredited case of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine causing autism serves as a great example of both of these.

    People who blindly accepted Andrew Wakefield’s (now retracted) study – when all the other evidence was to the contrary – fell afoul of the exception fallacy. People who selectively used it to oppose vaccination were cherry-picking.

    2. Significant doesn’t mean important

    Some effects might well be statistically significant, but so tiny as to be useless in practice.

    You know what they say about statistics? Flickr/Frits Ahlefeldt-Laurvig, CC BY-ND
    Click to enlarge

    Associations (like correlations) are great for falling foul of this, especially when studies have huge number of participants. Basically, if you have large numbers of participants in a study, significant associations tend to be plentiful, but not necessarily meaningful.

    One example can be seen in a study of 22,000 people that found a significant (p<0.00001) association between people taking aspirin and a reduction in heart attacks, but the size of the result was miniscule.

    The difference in the likelihood of heart attacks between those taking aspirin every day and those who weren’t was less than 1%. At this effect size – and considering the possible costs associated with taking aspirin – it is dubious whether it is worth taking at all.

    3. And effect size doesn’t mean useful

    We might have a treatment that lowers our risk of a condition by 50%. But if the risk of having that condition was already vanishingly low (say a lifetime risk of 0.002%), then reducing that might be a little pointless.

    We can flip this around and use what is called Number Needed to Treat (NNT).

    In normal conditions if two random people out of 100,000 would get that condition during their lifetime, you’d need all 100,000 to take the treatment to reduce that number to one.

    4. Are you judging the extremes by the majority?

    Biology and medical research are great for reminding us that not all trends are linear.

    We all know that people with very high salt intakes have a greater risk of cardio-vascular disease than people with a moderate salt intake.

    Too much or too little salt – which as worse? Flickr/JD Hancock, CC BY
    Click to enlarge

    But hey – people with a very low salt intake may also have a high risk of cardio-vascular disease too.

    The graph is U shaped, not just a line going straight up. The people at each end of the graph are probably doing different things.

    5. Did you maybe even want to find that effect?

    Even without trying, we notice and give more credence to information that agrees with views we already hold. We are attuned to seeing and accepting things that confirm what we already know, think and believe.

    There are numerous example of this confirmation bias but studies such as this reveal how disturbing the effect can be.

    In this case, the more educated people believed a person to be, the lighter they (incorrectly) remembered that person’s skin was.

    6. Were you tricked by sciencey snake oil?

    A classic – The Turbo Encabulator.

    You won’t be surprised to hear that sciencey-sounding stuff is seductive. Hey, even the advertisers like to use our words!

    But this is a real effect that clouds our ability to interpret research.

    In one study, non-experts found even bad psychological explanations of behaviour more convincing when they were associated with irrelevant neuroscience information. And if you add in a nice-and-shiny fMRI scan, look out!

    7. Qualities aren’t quantities and quantities aren’t qualitites

    For some reason, numbers feel more objective than adjectivally-laden descriptions of things. Numbers seem rational, words seem irrational. But sometimes numbers can confuse an issue.

    For example, we know people don’t enjoy waiting in long queues at the bank. If we want to find out how to improve this, we could be tempted to measure waiting periods and then strive to try and reduce that time.

    But in reality you can only reduce the wait time so far. And a purely quantitative approach may miss other possibilities.

    If you asked people to describe how waiting made them feel, you might discover it’s less about how long it takes, and more about how uncomfortable they are.

    8. Models by definition are not perfect representations of reality

    A common battle-line between climate change deniers and people who actually understand evidence is the effectiveness and representativeness of climate models.

    But we can use much simpler models to look at this. Just take the classic model of an atom. It’s frequently represented as a nice stable nucleus in the middle of a number of neatly orbiting electrons.

    While this doesn’t reflect how an atom actually looks, it serves to explain fundamental aspects of the way atoms and their sub-elements work.

    This doesn’t mean people haven’t had misconceptions about atoms based on this simplified model. But these can be modified with further teaching, study and experience.

    9. Context matters

    The US president Harry Truman once whinged about all his economists giving advice, but then immediately contradicting that with an “on the other hand” qualification.

    Individual scientists – and scientific disciplines – might be great at providing advice from just one frame. But for any complex social, political or personal issue there are often multiple disciplines and multiple points of view to take into account.

    To ponder this we can look at bike helmet laws. It’s hard to deny that if someone has a bike accident and hits their head, they’ll be better off if they’re wearing a helmet.

    Do bike helmet laws stop some people from taking up cycling? Flickr/Petar, CC BY-NC
    Click to enlarge

    But if we are interested in whole-of-society health benefits, there is research suggesting that a subset of the population will choose not to cycle at all if they are legally required to wear a helmet.

    Balance this against the number of accidents where a helmet actually makes a difference to the health outcome, and now helmet use may in fact be negatively impacting overall public health.

    Valid, reliable research can find that helmet laws are both good and bad for health.

    10. And just because it’s peer reviewed that doesn’t make it right

    Peer review is held up as a gold standard in science (and other) research at the highest levels.

    But even if we assume that the reviewers made no mistakes or that there were no biases in the publication policies (or that there wasn’t any straight out deceit), an article appearing in a peer reviewed publication just means that the research is ready to be put out to the community of relevant experts for challenging, testing, and refining.

    It does not mean it’s perfect, complete or correct. Peer review is the beginning of a study’s active public life, not the culmination.

    And finally …

    Research is a human endeavour and as such is subject to all the wonders and horrors of any human endeavour.

    Just like in any other aspect of our lives, in the end, we have to make our own decisions. And sorry, appropriate use even of the world’s best study does not relieve us of this wonderful and terrible responsibility.

    There will always be ambiguities that we have to wade through, so like any other human domain, do the best you can on your own, but if you get stuck, get some guidance directly from, or at least originally via, useful experts.


    This article is part of a series on Understanding Research.

    Further reading:
    Why research beats anecdote in our search for knowledge
    Clearing up confusion between correlation and causation
    Where’s the proof in science? There is none
    Positives in negative results: when finding ‘nothing’ means something
    The risks of blowing your own trumpet too soon on research
    How to find the knowns and unknowns in any research
    How myths and tabloids feed on anomalies in science

  • We Did It SHORTEN

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    Bill Shorten via sendgrid.info 

    7:49 PM (6 minutes ago)

    to me
    .

    Neville, We had a win today.

    Tony Abbott and Kevin Andrews were forced to back down on the cruellest of their pension cuts.

    They wanted to rip away $80 a week from 3.7 million older Australians.

    When I gave my Budget reply, I solemnly pledged to Australia’s pensioners that I would fight for a fair pension. And you stood with me in this pledge.

    You’ve signed petitions, called ministers’ offices and told us your Budget stories. And today, we won this fight together.

    This is our victory – and this is the Abbott Government’s defeat. Thank you.

    Will you share this graphic to spread the news?

    pensioners_vs_libs_fb.png

    Make no mistake: this will not be the last time Tony Abbott tries this on. Tony Abbott wants to cut pensions. He wants to cut billions from schools and hospitals. He has not given up on his GP tax.

    As long as Tony Abbott and the Liberal Party occupy the benches of Government, Australians will always have to fear these people attacking their cost of living.

    Today, we draw the battle lines for the next election. Between a party that protects the pension, and a party that cuts it. Between a party that stands up for families, and a party that forgets them. Between a movement who will always fight for the most vulnerable amongst us, and a Prime Minister who lied to us.

    That’s the choice. That’s the contest. Labor’s up for this fight — and together I know we can win it. We beat the Liberals today, and we’ll beat them at the next election.

    Thanks for standing with me on this,

    Bill

  • Everything at stake

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    Everything at stake

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    Aaron Packard – 350.org Australia <aaron@350.org> Unsubscribe

    4:53 PM (39 minutes ago)

    to me

    Dear friend,

    Climate change places everything at stake for our Pacific Island neighbours. 

    That’s why, in just over a week’s time, we will welcome thirty incredible Pacific Climate Warriors to Australia. Together we’ll stand with them, as they stand up to the fossil fuel industry, whose activities are driving the demise of their cultures and their homelands.

    Here are three ways that you can support the Warriors from Sydney…

    1. Welcome the Warriors to Australia

    Join us to welcome the Warriors as they arrive into Australia:
    • When10am – 12pm, Saturday 11th October
    • Where: Campbelltown Arts Centre, 1 Art Gallery Rd, Campbelltown

    2. Hear first hand from the Warriors about why they have travelled to our shores.

    From youth workers and President’s children to parish secretaries and teachers’ aides, the warriors will leave you humbled and even more resolute to demand the safe and just climate future that is within our reach. Each talk will be part storytelling, part performance and part a call to action.

    Click here to get your free ticket.

    3. Stand in solidarity with the Warriors

    If you want to go further, join us for a Peaceful Direct Action training on Saturday 11 October. Renowned campaigner Nicola Paris will provide a training on the theory of peaceful direct action and then support all of us to prepare a solidarity action to stand with the Warrirors during their tour.

    Click here to register today.

    We hope you’ll join us and be inspired by the Warriors determination to fight for their future, for all of our futures!

    Aaron, Simon, Josh, Blair and Charlie for the 350 Australia team

    PS: Chip in to support 350.org Australia’s work and receive a free copy of Naomi Klein’s new book “This Changes Everything”

    PPS: Click on the image below to share on Facebook.


    350.org is building a global climate movement.

    Become a sustaining donor to keep this movement strong and growing.