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Showing posts with label Country. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Country. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

New York Times Turns on Obama - Can Flyover Country Be Far Behind?


The new test of liberal political ideology seems to be, not whether you favor Obama's health care plan, but how long it takes you to realize what a disaster it is.

The American people were, as usual, first out of the gate to demonstrate their common-sense conservatism.  Although a slim majority voted for Obama in November, a growing preponderance has been telling pollsters they disapprove of the President and his handling of health care.   On Sunday, Rasmussen reported that Obama had reached a new low in their Presidential Approval Index, with health care one of his lowest-rated issues.

Like a teacher indulging a failing student's pleas to find a way to give him extra points on his test, the Congressional Budget Office has spent all summer admonishing Obama for presenting legislation that will be more expensive than advertised, produce no savings, and yield expanding and unsustainable deficits for the next 10 years.  ("Now, Barry, I've already given you all the credit I can-next time you'll just have to try harder.")

The Mayo Clinic, which Obama cites as a model for cost-cutting measures, called the Medicare payment model proposed by Congress a "catastrophe."

Seven state medical associations banded together with private medical societies and two previous AMA presidents in a letter to the President opposing the legislation.  The American Hospital Association is imploring hospital directors to counter Congress's bill, as are specialty associations such as the American College of Physicians.

John Mackey, CEO of Whole Foods, penned an op-ed in the Wall Street Journal cataloging the myriad flaws in Democrats' proposal.

After Obama insulted the Postal Service in his quest for a bill, the National Association of Postal Supervisors wrote Obama a letter expressing "our collective disappointment that you chose to use the Postal Service as a scapegoat ...  [I]t was a kick to the chest to have you take a shot at a group of federal employees who are working hard every day to support this country."

Pseudo-moderate network CNN recently chronicled "Five Freedoms You'd Lose in Health Care Reform," including the freedom to negotiate details of your plan, cut costs by living healthier, choose a high-deductible plan, keep your current plan, and select your doctors.

The Associated Press fact-checked Obama's claims and called him out for continuing to tell the same lies: e.g., if you like your health insurance, you can keep it-the implication being that you can keep it for as long as your employer and insurance company would otherwise have offered it without government health care, which is outlawed in Congress's plan.

The Washington Post, no friend to conservatives, has been barraging readers with columns opposing ObamaCare.  Columnist David Hilzenrath affirmed that the administration would not be able to ensure that employees can keep the plans they have now.  Martin Feldstein explained that the 85% of Americans who now have insurance would pay higher taxes and receive fewer services.  Maya MacGuineas ridiculed the administration's pledge that it can add an expensive new health care plan covering millions more Americans that will cost no extra and actually alleviate the budget deficit.

The Post's editorial board also reminded the administration of the CBO's harsh projections and warned him not to treat these lightly.  In a separate editorial, they scorned Democrats' stubborn, mindless fixation on a public option.

Obama's own Hyde Park doctor suggests that Congress's legislation is worthless and adds of his patient, "I'm not sure he really understands what we face in primary care."

In the workers' paradise to our north, the current and incoming presidents of the Canadian Medical Association recently bemoaned the failures of Canada's universal health care system, calling it "sick," "precarious," and "imploding," and urged Canadian doctors to support free market reforms to the system.

The artist of the Obama "Joker" poster, Palestinian socialist and Dennis Kucinich supporter Firas Alkhateeb, admitted, "[Y]ou had all of these people who basically saw him as the second coming of Christ.  From my perspective, there wasn't much substance to him."

Air America host Christiane Brown decried Obama's reversal of his promise not to bar negotiation for lower drug prices, then purred, "He's such a charming liar, though.  He's such a nice guy when he lies like that."

On Sunday, Senator Joe Lieberman, who caucuses with Democrats, said he's changed his mind on proposed legislation and urges postponing it until the economy recovers.

Now The New York Times has gotten on the bandwagon; you might say they finally have some "skin in the game."  Times reporter David Pear reported a few days ago that there is, after all, a legitimate basis for elderly Americans' fear that legislation will lead to rationing of health care.

Paul Krugman criticized the President's priorities, belittled his dwindling ability to inspire confidence, and lamented that "his speeches and op-eds still read as if they were written by a committee."

Bob Herbert scolded Obama for not explaining why a gargantuan new government program is in our country's interest in the middle of a recession: "Many sane and intelligent people who voted for Mr. Obama... have legitimate concerns about the timing of this health reform initiative...  [He] has not been at all clear about how the reform that is coming will rein in runaway costs...  [P]eople are starting to lose faith in the president."

I'm glad the Times is finally starting to see the light on Obama's executive inexperience and his disastrous agenda.  Maybe now millions of Middle Americans who hang on Krugman and Herbert's every word will develop more confidence in expressing their opposition at all those town hall meetings I keep hearing about.




http://www.scottspiegel.com




Monday, January 16, 2012

Your Country Is Called Earth! Global Economics Are the New Truth


In a recent article by Jeff Seigel, he cited a number of responses to a news release outlining General Electric's decision to commit to a Joint Venture with Harbin Power Equipment to build wind generation turbines in China.

I was flabbergasted to read that there are still people on this planet who are living under the illusion of "our patriotic duty" being to horde all business activities within the boundaries of their homeland rather than abroad.

Even President Obama does not seem to wave the "Buy American" flag much anymore.

After all, what is there to buy that is all American, or even completely made in the United States? I will bet you that even your favourite American car or even Harley Davidson motorcycles are not completely made of parts made in the "Good Old US of A".

This type of patriotism died back in the 1980s when US manufacturers set up factories in Mexico, China, Indonesia and other smaller nations with cheap labor. That was the time people should have been voicing their opinions about nationalism.

I remember years ago speaking with an engineer at a pulp mill in a small town in northern Canada. He told me that the unionized staff was going on strike because they were going to have whatever pay raise they wanted and would stay off the job until they got it. Their rationale was that since they were the only pulp mill in town, they could ask for whatever they wanted!

I don't mean to seem insensitive to people's concerns or to disrespect their right to speak out, but I do want to say that everyone, including these people, need to understand that we now live in a world economy. We need to understand that the competition to the pulpmill in Mackenzie, BC is located in Norway.

Almost everything we purchase today is produced somewhere else. In order for your American or Canadian based company to prosper, we all need to support their ambitions and investments in other countries.

The people who provoked Jeff's writing of this article even went more insane when they chided GE for building the turbines in China. If they had read the article further, they would have realized that rather than chastising GE, they should be looking for ways to invest in the project. After all, the turbines were for Chinese use (so they can produce all those great toys you like to have).

The world is changing. It will continue to change. We may want to keep things the way they were and we may even feel fear over losing control of our lives, however, this tide is here and is almost at Tsunami proportions.

Trying to hold on to old concepts of protectionism is just going to leave you behind. With the challenges we are facing in the world economics, we just cannot afford to have one person hanging on to the old ways. After all, this will just leave broke and frustrated people in its wake.

China in particular, but also India, Brazil and several other countries that are becoming the rising stars of world economics need to be in your view. If you are an investor, they must be in your portfolio or you will continue to see your funds slipping away as we have seen for the last two years.

The world is our country. Be proud of where you live and do what you can to make it a better place to live but for your sake and for the sake of the world's economic future hold your hand to your heart and adapt the world as your home!




Monty Ritchings, the contributor of this article, is a free lance writer who provides IP support services to Lucky Strike Resources Ltd.

This article is inserted for reader interest only. It is the opinion of the writer and not necessarily the opinion of the owners of this website or Lucky Strike Resources Ltd. ( http://www.luckystrikeresources.com )

At no time are any statements that appear in this article intended to lead the reader to invest in any particular stock. Due diligence is always encouraged before making any investment.




Thursday, December 22, 2011

Academia Says the United States is a Declining Country - But They Also Voted for You Know Who?


A good number of highly educated folks tell us that great nations have a life cycle and America has enjoyed two-hundred years on the upside and will now go over the top and it will become a declining nation. Many of these folks say that the United States of America is already in decline and they point to the rise of China. However, I would submit to you that just because one nation rises doesn't mean another nation is necessarily falling.

Further, I would say that there are a good number of nations in the world which are all rising quite quickly and rapidly due to the United States, and the way we have spread liberty, democracy, and capitalism around the world. If anything those folks that claim America is in decline ought to look how we spread our wealth around the world helping other people out of poverty, and building nations up to be great like us. Only a great nation, a truly sincere and caring nation would ever do that.

Does that mean because we are helping other nations move up in the world that we are somehow declining - absolutely not! In fact, the United States is not declining, we are still the largest nation by GDP of any other nation on earth by a factor of three. As our economy returns to full speed, firing on all cylinders, we will be doing something like $17 trillion per year. Right now, China is only about 5 trillion per year in GDP. Does that mean the United States is declining because China went from a 2 trillion GDP to a 5 trillion GDP in 10 years - certainly not!

And, I'd like to remind everyone that the reason China is doing so well is because that the United States middle class is doing so well, as we have bought all the goods that China has produced, and without us there would be no great China rising. The same stands true for a good number of other nations in the world. Even the European Union and their great rise has been thanks to that of the United States. Yes Academia says the United States is a declining nation. I'm here to tell you that; that is absolutely 100% Hogwash.

The only way that this great nation will ever decline is if the people within it lose faith, not in the nation but in themselves. For we are the government, and sometimes the people forget that. We are the ones that make the nation great. Indeed, hope you'll never forget that. So please think on it.




Lance Winslow is a retired Founder of a Nationwide Franchise Chain, and now runs the Online Think Tank. Lance Winslow believes writing 23,100 articles was a lot of work - because all the letters on his keyboard are now worn off..




Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Secret Intelligence in the Undiscovered Country


This presentation does not reflect the opinions of the Defense Intelligence Agency or the U.S. Department of Defense.

Consider for a moment the words of William Shakespeare who characterized our fear of the future in Hamlet. Hamlet tells us that it is better to suffer the ills of the day than to travel to the Undiscovered Country.

"The undiscovered country, from whose borne no traveler returns, puzzles the will, and makes us rather bear those ills we have than fly to others that we know not of" Hamlet is not expressing a fear not of dying, but of not knowing what lay ahead. He was saying it is the future we fear. And in a world so characterized by turbulent change, it is understandable why so many are unsettled by the future. Historical accounts generally show the feeling amongst the populace was the same in the Renaissance and in the Age of Enlightenment.

Today I would like to share with you another vision of the future. In this scene there are two children playing in the sand. They are arguing over how the sand castle should be built. In the background one can see a massive tidal wave. It is 100 feet high and stretches as far as the eye can see. The roar is deafening, and yet the children keep arguing, oblivious to the coming future.

That is what the future looks like to me. We are in the beginning of a fundamental restructuring of civilization and most of us are asleep at the wheel or worse yet, so engaged in our everyday activity that we can't see it coming.

I'd like to talk for a few minutes about the future and what it means for intelligence and national security. I think the best way to address this subject is in four parts:

1. What is the current environment of change?

2. What does this Undiscovered Country look like?

3. What is the future context of National Security?, and

4. What intelligence capabilities will we need for National Security?

Let's talk about the current climate of change first. A few years ago I was leading a Space Architecture Study for the National Security Space Office. The work was supposed to consider how space would operate 20-25 years into the future. Someone commented to me that nothing we do would change; that we had space capabilities that we have been working on that long that still have not been fielded.

I thought for a moment to consider what actually had changed in just that time period:

1. No Global Positioning System - a capability that is not only a pillar of our military force projection; but an essential element of the global economy.

2. No cell phones A technology which most can't do without. (no text messaging)

3. No Internet or at least no World Wide Web. I don't have to tell you how much global connectivity has changed the planet.

4. Twenty-five years ago there were also no laptop computers, digital cameras, cable TV, DVDs, hybrid cars, or MP3 players. The list is almost endless.

The importance of these changes is that no longer is technology just a solution to a problem; but it is actually altering the way the inhabitants of this planet think and act. But change is in fact, even more fundamental. Societies are actually restructuring due to the changes brought about by technology. For the next few decades, national security efforts will have to operate in this context.

In the United States, as in many other places in the world, we have moved from agrarian based societies to industrial ones to now information based society. Shrinking work units, decentralization, distributed media outlets, rapid re-capitalization, customized products, short product life, etc. All these changes are the hallmarks of a knowledge-based society.

** We are becoming a "Service Based" society. Is that a bad thing? If it is you equate services to McDonalds. But remember services also include doctors, scientists, engineers, writers, printers, software developers, etc. Knowledge will become the currency of the future.

We are living in a time when we are witnessing a crash of the institutions and civilization we have known. We are also lucky to be witness to the civilization that is arising. This fundamental change is causing frictions in this country and even greater frictions throughout the world. It is likely to do so for decades yet to come.

THE UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY

Let's now turn our attention from our present-day changing society to the future. If chaotic change is the nature of modern day society than what can we say about the future? What can we say about trends for the future? Let's look at just a few future trends.

1. Future Trend. Societies will continue to integrate globally. While the majority of information-enabled societies will integrate well, there will be a clash of cultures with extremist societies enabled by the global transportation and information flow. This clash is very likely going to be with us for decades. Also, many countries are going through periods of industrialization and in a lesser-developed state and therefore more inclined towards nationalism. They are resentful of outside influence. Economic engagement (often seen as intrusion) into these countries will be a source of friction.

2. Future Trend. Climate Change will stress global resources. Impoverished countries will feel the effects of global climate change in crop failures, starvation, infectious diseases, mass population movements, and water shortages. As governments are unable to cope with these conditions, they will be ripe for revolutions, societal upheavals, and terrorism. I want to put a caveat on the issue of global climate change. While the affects of global climate change are likely to be challenging; particularly for susceptible nation-states; they may be somewhat mitigated for the world as a whole by technology. It is for this reason that I would be hesitant to be too great a predictor of gloom concerning global climate change.

The fundamental problem with most predictions is that they make a critical and often false assumption that things will continue as they are.

A classic example of this problem occurred about 110 years ago. It was the great horse-manure crisis. *

In the year 1900 London had 11,000 horse drawn cabs and several thousand buses, each of which required 12 horses per day, a total of more than 50,000 horses. In addition, there were countless carts and drays all delivering goods needed by the rapidly growing population of the world's largest city. Writing in the Times of London in 1894, one writer reflected the results of a study concluding that in 50 years every street in London would be buried under nine feet of manure. There were numerous cities with a similar problem and numerous studies with similar dire predictions.

The problem did indeed seem intractable. The larger and richer that cities became, the more horses they needed to function. The more horses, the more manure. Moreover, all these horses had to be stabled, which used up ever-larger areas of increasingly valuable land. And as the number of horses grew, more and more land had to be devoted to producing hay to feed them and this had to be brought into cities and distributed by horse-drawn vehicles. Urban civilization was doomed. Well I think we all know the story from here. Henry Ford applied assembly line production techniques to the automobile. The crisis was averted. History has shown that necessity is still the mother of invention. And even now, we are seeing environmentally friendly" products in vast numbers and environmental issues are rank "third" on the list of most important issues in the upcoming presidential election.

If I were to predict anything about the future of global climate change; it would be that the threat of it will drive a new technology revolution that surpasses the recent revolution in telecommunications. That said, I think we can still expect some stressing of global resources to support those countries that are particularly vulnerable to climate change.

3. Future trend. We will experience a revolution in new environmental and related technologies introduced into society. These include alternative technologies for production of power, food, drinking water, construction, transportation and a host of other necessities. These technologies will be created based on the fear of global climate change, global telecommunications, economic pressures, aging populations and the desire for better quality of life.

4. Future trend. Population migration. There was a time when one was born, lived, and died within a 50-mile radius. I think anyone who has lived in the US knows that this is no longer the case. We see world migration trends that the show movement of people from developing societies to developed societies in search of a better life. Families of the future will be spread over continents impacting the concept of the family and relationships between nation states.

(The great horse-manure crisis. Stephen Davies, senior lecturer in history at Manchester Metropolitan University in England.)

5. Future trend. The population of the Earth - particularly industrialized countries has moved from large families to small ones. These nations are growing older. For example, in Japan the median age will be 50 by the year 2020. Many other advanced industrialized countries show similar trends. Many European nations have negative growth rates. This global trend will have impact on labor pools, tax bases, health care, and the development of health related technologies. With an older global population we are likely to see enormous social and economic stresses.

6. Future trend. Job movement. US Dept of Labor assessments show that six of the top 10 jobs did not exist five years ago. Technical knowledge is doubled every two years. So we are training future workers for jobs that don't yet exist on technology that has not yet been invented, to solve problems we don't even know are problems yet.

The American worker of the future will work for at least 10 companies by the age of 38. That person will be a member of a knowledge based work force. Most traditional manufacturing jobs will continue to move overseas; a byproduct of globalization. The advancements in technology that are driving changes in manufacturing processes are a particularly important and underlying aspect of this trend. For thousands of years agriculture was the main product of civilization. The Industrial Revolution shifted production and the work populace along with it as factories came into being and cities grew. In its infancy, the United States had over 85% of its workers involved in agriculture. Today that figure is between 1% and 2%. In Europe that number hovers at around 13%.

The same trend is occurring now as numbers of manufacturing jobs shrink and the numbers of knowledge based jobs increase. Advances in robotics technology, digital imaging, and computing capabilities are changing the manufacturing base. Less and less people are working in manufacturing as robotic systems replace humans. In the same way the numbers of persons involved in agriculture diminished, so to will the numbers of persons operating machines. Manufacturing processes known as Additive Layer Manufacturing will allow small factories and even individuals to create single products from a fine powder of metal, nylon or carbon-reinforced plastics. However, more and more educated people with specialized technical skills will be required to develop, install, and maintain specialized equipment.

The evolution of the future "information worker" may, in fact, cause a new economic paradigm with a small number of information innovators, leaders, and workers producing the majority of society's wealth. What happens to the rest of us?

7. Future Trend Ubiquitous Sensors. Miniaturized sensors are becoming pervasive in society, particularly industrialized nations. Governments and companies alike use sensors to mange public transportation, track product delivery, manage warehouse and store inventories, regulate public utilities, provide public health and safety, characterize environmental conditions, and secure property.

8. Future Trend Loss of Nationalism. The US and other advanced "information based" societies will suffer a degrading belief in nationalism. I was amazed to read a recent study that surveyed members of "Gen Y" on friendships. The study showed Gen Y made no distinction between on-line friends and ones they see on a regular basis. What a profound situation: "Our kids view their contacts all over the world the same way they see friends every day." This trend along with global migration patterns one asks "what does this mean for the concept of a nation state now, and two generations from now? For America, the concept of a nation state, as we know it is crumbling and we are in for some extraordinary changes in a very short period.

Another factor driving the loss of nationalism is the growth in Internet. The speed of Internet doubles approximately 12 months. There is no theoretical limit to this trend. The increase in speed is allowing more and more information to be shared. This increase will allow people to maintain a virtual global presence sharing 3D real time video, massive data, and globally connected processing. In decades to come we will reach a point where the human race will be fully integrated. Societies will be come economically, legally, socially, and politically intertwined. Education and scientific knowledge will become globally available.

9. Future Trend "Loss of the Masses." I'm not quite sure what to call this trend but it is perhaps the foundation of change that is occurring globally. Our society used to be one characterized by masses: mass media, mass production, mass industrialization, and mass movements.

Mass media is a term used to denote the media designed to reach a very large audience such as the population of a nation state. The term was coined in the 1920s with the advent of nationwide radio networks, mass-circulation newspapers and magazines, although mass media (like books and manuscripts) were present centuries before the term became common.

Gone is the concept of "Mass" as one point of the distribution of knowledge. A more accurate term is "public media" where Internet has opened up communications to every individual through electronic media and print media to include:

• Broadcasting, in the narrow sense, for radio and television.

• Various types of discs, tapes, digital storage devices.

• Film

• Blogs, web casts, and podcasts, for news, music, speech, and video

• Mobile smart phones

• Mobile computing, iPods, Galaxy Tab, etc.

• On demand publishing -books, magazines, and newspapers.

• Massive Multi Play on-line games PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, and Wii.

Every person can publish materials to every one of these communications media leveling the playing field with corporate media giants. I suspect we will also see the same "de-massification" trends in unions, religions, education, politics, etc. As the means for global communications and production increases so too does the ability for self-expression and individualism. Therefore, the future will feature small groups bonding together for a specific cause before going their own way again. Enhanced telecommunications and media production is the key for enabling this trend.

The impacts of Internet and expanding global telecommunications infrastructure and technology are difficult to predict. Only now are we witnessing the effects of instantaneous public communications on political institutions. Nations and non government organizations will grapple to control regional and global communications to limit, manipulate, or direct the popular will of people. Limiting Internet will prove exceedingly difficult as global communications becomes inextricably integrated to economic well being.

Manufacturing too is becoming distributed or "de-massified". Digital imaging, Computer Aided Design, and advanced robotics allows for machines to convert to different product lines allowing for short production runs. This capability allows for a small factory to make short run multiple product lines at minimal cost. The extreme of this process is 3-D printing allowing for individuals to make items at home. In decades to come consumers will benefit from low cost tailored product lines.

FUTURE CONTEXT FOR NATIONAL SECURITY

Okay, those are just a few trends that are on the horizon. Now let's consider for a minute the impact of these trends on national security.

We are going to operate in a dramatically different environment then we do today. The society we know will be different; likely with different perspectives and probably different (and multiple) value systems as well. The same will be true for many countries drawn into globalization.

Our concept of what it means to "defend ourselves" decades from now may be dramatically different from what it is today. With globalization accelerating, defending a nation state may become an exercise more in cyber warfare, global policing functions, nation building and support, small unit combat operations, and exerting diplomatic, political, and economic influence.

With this future in mind certain conditions will exist as critical aspects of our National Security.

Cyber Security Cyber security will be required not just for military or government operations but for the national economy as well. In decades to come, the majority of the U.S. economy will rely on Internet. No single element of national infrastructure offers a greater vulnerability. Cyber attacks combined with physical attacks against select facilities could cripple the U.S. economy, perhaps beyond recovery.

Think about business, defense, local, state, and national government functions, etc. all occurring at literally the speed of thought. This is what the future holds and the World Wide Web is the key component integrating consumer and government services into our lives. These services continue to increase as more business migrate their presence on to the World Wide Web. Less than 20 % of US businesses are on the web now.

Some would say there is already a cyber war on going between nation states, and between nation states and individual actors. The US Department of Defense alone is on the receiving end of one billion cyber attacks each day. And yet with all this activity global doctrine for cyber warfare is as primitive as nuclear doctrine in the late 1940s. How do you respond if your country is attacked? What if the attack is not lethal? Targeted against industry or critical infrastructure? What level of attribution is appropriate for what type of response? The future safely and well-being of cyberspace cannot be over emphasized for any modern society.

Power of the People. Theorists in international relations try to identify what factors drive nations to war. They attempt to answer the crucial question at what point is a population willing to risk the lives of its sons and daughters in support of its national interests? I suggest that the advances in technology, globalization, and the resultant changes in culture and societal structure are altering those paradigms to a considerable degree. For example, democracy has lost its zeal, especially in long standing democratic societies. People who do not have to fight for freedom and judicial equality prefer living off the achievements of those who did. The opposite, however, can be said for those eager to taste the fruits of democratic existence.

I know it seems hard to imagine now, but in the future, with less children per family, an older population, being fully "globalized", and facing the stresses of health care and food costs, we will find a citizenry far less supportive of armed conflict. The same will be true in advanced industrialized societies with low birth rates (i.e. Europe, Japan). Those states will be more likely to go to war for economic reasons than ideological ones. And when that is the case, the preference will be to execute conflict with little to no causalities. War may in fact become a uniquely robotic adventure.

Destructive Power Going Up. For many years after WWII the United States and parts of Western Europe led the world as the nexus of scientific knowledge. That situation has changed and will continue to do so.

Scientific and technological centers of excellence are emerging in Eastern Europe, China, Japan, India, Italy, and Russia. Global communications has fueled the spread of scientific and engineering knowledge. Along with the spread of scientific and engineering knowledge come the ability to develop energetic explosives, chemical and biological weapons, and high-energy weapons. Individuals and small groups can posses the same destructive force of armies.

Cities vs. the Countryside. There is an argument to be made that WMD development efforts, terrorists, and insurgents will retreat to the countryside as pervasive sensor networks of the future emerge in cities and at border crossings.

Decision Making. The decision to go to war will, more and more, become a decentralized decision-making process. The Federal Government (President and Congress) will lose considerable decision making power to people, foreign governments, and International bodies. Thus, decisions become micro and macro with a loss of power in the middle.

The U.S. is a representative form of democracy. At the micro level, the dispersion (demassifying) of the media fueled by the Internet provides communication capabilities allowing for direct engagement between the government and the governed. It allows for the average person to be heard by millions and exert political pressure on the governing apparatus. Our current system of representative government is not particularly suited to this form of direct democracy. In fact, by design the framers of the Constitution ensured decision-making processes were slow to make sure emotions of the moment did not drive national policy. The speed of global communications will set in place a high level of friction between politicians and constitutes as the former tries to respond to the instantaneous demands of the latter.

At the macro level, foreign governments and international bodies are taking a greater role in national decision making. This situation is true not only for war, but for environmental issues, political issues, legal decisions, economic and trade issues, business and investment practices, information technology standards, etc. Even today, there is great international pressure against the independent action of nation states. And yet the processes for transnational decision-making are, at best, immature. The world continues to rely on diplomats, global, or quasi-global bodies based on "pre-digital age" organizational structure and processes. There is no construct, process, model, or simulation that understands and integrates nation state values and decision-making practices. The result is that international treaties and agreements go through a time consuming and arduous process of negotiation, analysis, re-negotiation, analysis, recommendation, and approval. This process often outlasts the assignments of those subject matter experts supporting them. At this point we have looked at the current environment of change, some future trends, and the type of environment in which national security will have to be executed. Let us finally turn our attention to future national security requirements.

SECRET INTELLIGENCE IN THE UNDISCOVERED COUNTRY

Intelligence at the Speed of Thought. For future national security needs, the most stressing intelligence requirements will be for remote-sensing systems to detect, track, cross-que, and characterize fleeting targets in real time. This ability will require a global network of sensors to detect and track individuals, vehicles, chemicals, materials, and emanations. Pervasive CCTV systems now present worldwide in airports, border crossings, railroads, busses, and on the streets of many cities will be integrated and supported by powerful computers, smart software agents, vast facial pattern and retina recognition databases, and communications infrastructure. These systems will be integrated with sensors and databases detecting, identifying, and characterizing spectral signatures, chemical compositions, DNA, effluents, sounds, and much more.

Precision Targeting/Precision Strike. Exquisite characterization of intelligence targets will be required for future wars. We have seen the nature of warfare move historically from the employment of mass armies, mass navies, and mass bombings to policing actions, special operations, assassinations, and precision strike. Does this trend mean massive regional or global conflicts are not possible? Of course not, but those conflicts have become far less likely over recent decades. A single battle such as Stalingrad where 1.5 million people were lost will not be representative of the vast majority of future national security actions.

Global Network of Sensors. The global network of sensors will provide the ability to intervene in near real time state and non state actors. This capability will enable immediate police or combat actions requiring a global presence (whether by single nation or through allies). Immediate precision response is possible provided the international agreements are in place. In other words, it doesn't do any good to be able to detect weapon's grade uranium or perhaps a terrorist in country A. if that government will not do anything about it. Real Predictive Intelligence The future National Security environment will require great strides in predictive intelligence and associated modeling capabilities. Advanced modeling software and analytical capabilities pulling from global data (multi media, multi lingual) sources will do the following:

• Provide situational awareness

• Understand human social interaction and media impact on events

• Calculate political stability

• Assess technology developments

Robotics There is less willingness to sacrifice sons and daughters as advanced societies grow wealthier and the family unit grows smaller. This is particularly true when the reasons for military action are not clear and survival of the nation state is not at stake. Many future combat actions will necessarily be conducted by robots. In fact, this is already occurring. But the future will see robots employed in large numbers providing discrete reconnaissance, unattended (and manned), pervasive surveillance, combat support, and security functions. These intelligence missions will require expanded communications, advanced processing capabilities for target discrimination, and mems technology for miniature structures, sensors, actuators, and microelectronics.

Scientific and Technical Intelligence Perhaps one of the greatest challenges for Intelligence Services is the "demassification" of scientific knowledge. Of course, the world as a whole is probably better off having scientific knowledge pervasive in societies. However, the downside to the demassification of the world's scientific knowledge will be the near pervasive ability to create weapons of mass destruction, associated delivery systems, technology advanced reconnaissance systems and new generations of weapons.

Demassification of Intelligence Like much of societal structure and services Intelligence Services will continue to "demassify" in their collection capabilities. Collecting a country's secrets will be important. But increasingly so too will be the ability to collect thousands of indicators from open source documents, global sensors, and physical phenomena to ascertain a country's true intentions. The greatest challenges for those intelligence services will be in the integration, exploitation, and analysis of vast amounts of data. "Smart software" will be the wave of the future.

Cyber Espionage I wrote in the mid 1990s that China's intelligence services had invested heavily in cyber capabilities to collect information. In 2011, the US National Counter-intelligence Executive affirmed this conclusion naming China and Russia as the world's two most active players in cyber espionage. I see this trend only accelerating.

CONCLUSION

The Undiscovered Country will be one characterized by turbulence and uncertainty. For the next few decades Intelligence Services will be stressed as they try to adapt to global changing environment.







Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Top Manufacturing Country: The USA Is Still The Number One Manufacturing Country On Earth, By Far!


What a shock, isn't it?

"All the manufacturing jobs are going overseas" is the common cry. The truth is, manufacturing is growing in the USA. There is some confusion in this. It might pay to know what you're talking about. In a few minutes you'll have a much more clear picture of global manufacturing.

The USA currently produces about 22% of all manufactured goods on the planet. The USA reached it's all-time manufacturing peak as expressed as a percentage of world production in 2006!

The USA reached a peak dollar volume of manufacturing, and peak profits in (you guessed it) 2006.
The USA's manufacturing output is about 2.5 China's output.
In world ranking for size of economy, the USA is number one, Japan is a distant second, and China is third.

So, what is all the scary talk about?

Well, when expressed as a percentage of our over-all economy, manufacturing is shrinking. In other words, after World War ll about 28% of OUR economy was manufacturing. That percentage is now about 11% and falling.

And we are losing manufacturing jobs at a fast rate. Part of this is because we are the most efficient workers on earth! What that mean is, that for every hour an American worker works, more goods or services are produced than by any workers from any other country on earth. Why? Because we are hard workers and driven people, and we apply technology which allows one person to do the work of many.

Why are we driven?

Think about it: The USA was originally populated by immigrants from around the globe, and we still allow huge immigration numbers. What kind of people give up their family history and everything they are comfortable with to travel thousands of miles to a completely strange land? I'll tell who does this: people with guts, gumption, energy, and the entrepreneurial spirit, that's who! The meek and mild mannered stayed home.

What you end up with is a country full of winners.

Combine this with freedom and limited government, and you have the makings of a world-leading nation. America is far from "over." And manufacturing in America is far from over. For example, pipe welding is in high demand, yet the USA is short about 200,000 welders. Only about 5% of all welders can weld pipe. We are once again building nuclear plants, pipe lines, and all sorts of projects that require welding here, in America. Pipe welders typically earn between $60,000 and $100,000.

What should you do now?




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