Sandra Finley

Apr 242012
 

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George Orwell was prescient in so many ways.

This week, Michael discusses how an essay the author wrote in 1946 has much to say about political discourse in 2012. Language gurus train politicians in the fine art of never-ending conversation that is devoid of substance and truth.

You can see it most clearly in the United States, but it’s also creeping into political discussions north of the border.

FULL TEXT

Sixty-six years ago this month, George Orwell published an essay in the British literary magazine, Horizon. It was called Politics and the English Language. Since its publication, it has become one of Orwell’s most read, most cited and most popular essays.

In it, he tried to make connections between the decline in the proper use of English as he saw it and the degradation of politics in the world’s democracies.

What he called slovenly language, in his mind invariably led to foolish, even dangerous ways of thinking about politics. QUOTE: “The decline of a language must ultimately have political and economical causes. In our time, political speech and writing are largely the defense of the indefensible.”

Orwell was writing shortly after the end of the Second World War, during which England had flirted with the idea of fascism. The country was struggling with the huge costs of the war, there was rationing and high unemployment and fearful things were being written about the state of its democracy.

A close reading of his essay suggests that his complaint about the debasement of English and its consequences have a certain relevance to our politics today, especially in North America. Political speech has become, in our time, what Orwell warned against in his – an instrument for concealing or preventing thought. The clearest example of this is what is happening in the politics of the United States.

A writer-slash-consultant named Frank Luntz has made a lot of money instructing politicians, particularly Republicans, in how to make successful use of political doublespeak. Mr. Luntz has been a guest speaker at Conservative gatherings in Canada. In his book Words that Work: It’s Not What You Say, It’s What People Hear, he outlines how to manipulate the language to hide or at least fudgify reality.

For example, in economic discussions, never use the term capitalism. It has an unsavoury connotation. Instead say “economic freedom” or “free market.”  Don’t talk about government spending; call it government waste. Never say that government taxes the rich. Say instead “the government takes from the rich.” Don’t talk about huge payouts to bankers and CEOs as a bonus. Instead call them “pay for performance.”

Elements of Luntzism have crept across the border. In Canada, our politicians at every level talk about savings instead of cuts to services. Unemployment insurance has become employment insurance. Oil companies have persuaded our media to use the term oil sands instead of tar sands even though the thick bitumen looks very much like runny tar. Oil sands, good; tar sands, bad.

Deficits, instead of calling them what they are, a fiscal tool in the economy, are called debt burdens we are leaving to our children. As Orwell put it in his essay, QUOTE: “Political language is designed to make lies sound truthful and murder respectable, to give an appearance of solidity to pure wind.”

Or as that other great public intellectual of modern times, George Costanza of Seinfeld, put it, QUOTE: “It’s not a lie if you believe it.”

Apr 242012
 

Group fighting results in 7 ridings,  says poll shows calls targeted at non-Conservatives

By Laura Payton,  CBC News

Posted: Apr 24, 2012   5:12 PM ET

Last Updated:  Apr 24, 2012   6:56 PM ET

Read 139 comments139

A group supporting a Federal Court challenge of the election results in seven ridings says a new poll it commissioned shows fraudulent election calls were widespread and targeted at people previously identified as Conservative non-supporters.A group supporting a Federal Court challenge of the election results in seven ridings says a new poll it commissioned shows fraudulent election calls were widespread and targeted at people previously identified as Conservative non-supporters. (Cole Burston/Canadian Press)
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Read the report from Ekos (pdf)

A group supporting a Federal Court challenge of the election results in seven ridings says a new poll it commissioned shows fraudulent election calls were widespread and targeted at people previously identified as Conservative non-supporters.

The Council of Canadians, which announced last month it was supporting an attempt to overturn the election results in seven ridings, hired Ekos Research Associates to survey Canadians about whether voter suppression techniques were used to influence the election results in those ridings.

The poll also looked at whether the techniques deliberately targeted supporters of a particular political party.

Nine people are challenging the results of the May 2, 2011 election in the following ridings:

  • Don Valley East in Ontario, won by Conservative MP Joe Daniel by 870 votes.
  • Nipissing-Timiskaming in Ontario, won by Conservative MP Jay Aspin by 18 votes.
  • Saskatoon-Rosetown-Biggar in Saskatchewan, won by Conservative Kelly Block by 538 votes.
  • Vancouver Island North in B.C., won by Conservative John Duncan by 1,827 votes.
  • Winnipeg South Centre in Manitoba, won by Conservative MP Joyce Bateman by 722 votes.
  • Elmwood-Transcona in Manitoba, won by Conservative MP Lawrence Toet by 300 votes.
  • Yukon won by Conservative Ryan Leef by 132 votes.

The poll suggests that voters in the seven subject ridings were more likely to receive voter identification calls than people in 106 comparison ridings — 60.8 per cent versus 44.3 per cent.

Those who had already answered questions about for whom they would vote were almost twice as likely to receive a call that their polling station had changed, the poll found, with 34 per cent who identified their voting intention reporting polling station calls versus 18 per cent who wouldn’t say for whom they planned to vote.

Voters surveyed by Ekos in the seven target ridings were more likely to get misleading calls claiming their polling stations had changed. The poll found 3.8 per cent of those surveyed in the subject ridings got misleading calls, while 2.2 per cent in the comparison ridings reported fraudulent calls. That difference is statistically significant, Ekos says.

The results within the seven ridings varied greatly.

Conservative officials have said it’s possible voters got calls from the parties about real polling station changes, but that callers may have had old addresses or otherwise wrong information that meant the polling location they were given was incorrect.

But Elections Canada reports only one polling station change in those seven ridings, in Vancouver Island North. Elections Canada does not phone voters.

Results ‘illegitimate’

Garry Neil, executive director of the Council of Canadians, says the poll shows the calls were “widespread” and that the federal election results in the seven ridings polled are illegitimate.

“We believe in all seven ridings that there is sufficient quantum of data to indicate the elections were stolen in those ridings,” Neil said.

“The results of the Ekos research were conclusive and shocking.”

A spokesman for the Conservative Party attacked Frank Graves, the head of Ekos, for donating to the Liberals in the past.

“Frank Graves … is the same pollster who predicted an NDP government last year,” Fred Delorey said in an email to CBC News.

“I can’t believe anyone would ever take him seriously. But, as you know, we don’t comment on polls so I won’t say more.”

Delorey says the party will defend the results of the elections and that he’s confident the court will dismiss the application.

“This is a transparent attempt to overturn certified election results simply because this activist group doesn’t like them,” he said.

Results ‘robust’

Graves says he doesn’t make moral judgments on the “inappropriate activity” he surveyed about and didn’t draw any conclusions about who was behind the calls.

“I would have found the exact same conclusions if I’d been asked to do this for the Conservative Party of Canada or any other agent. The results are, I believe, within the margins of error and the measurement problems that exist, are robust. They’re sound.”

Ironically, Ekos used robocalls to conduct the poll. Respondents could select an answer through their telephone keypads rather than telling them to an operator.

The survey was conducted April 13 to 19, 2012, using random digit dialing. Ekos surveyed 3,297 adults across the ridings under dispute and polled 1,500 Canadians in comparison ridings. The margin of error for the total number of people surveyed is plus or minus 1.7 per cent, 19 times out of 20, but is between 4.0 per cent and 5.6 per cent, 19 times out of 20 when the results are divided by riding.

Apr 242012
 
This from the movement to reform the electoral system, Fair Vote Canada:

Friends

Matt Gurney has quickly and cleverly connected the dots.

It appears that many Liberal and NDP supporters in Alberta felt it necessary to vote PC to prevent the impending victory of an ultra-Conservative Wild Rose party.

It’s negative voting, the opposite of sincere voting – and under certain conditions it changes the outcome. It is also highly demoralizing for the parties and politicians abandoned as their supporters try to neutralize the cruel and undemocratic logic of the winner-take-all voting system.

How much better  the Alberta legislature would be if, instead of conceding the Progressive  Conservatives yet another four year waltz,  Alberta voters had been able to vote sincerely and elect the array of representatives they most wanted.  . . .

John

http://fullcomment.nationalpost.com/2012/04/24/matt-gurney-if-strategic-voting-killed-the-wildrose-others-should-take-note/

Apr 24, 2012 – 12:19 AM ET | Last Updated: Apr 24, 2012 11:41 AM ET
Danielle Smith
Wildrose leader Danielle Smith greets supporters at Wildrose HQ in High River Monday night
  • Contrary to what pretty much everyone expected, Danielle Smith and the Wildrose did not win a majority government on Tuesday night. Or a minority. In fact, they didn’t win a government at all — if the current seat projections hold, they’ll form the opposition, with roughly 20 seats. Alison Redford and the Alberta Progressive Conservatives, meanwhile, will form a strong majority, with 60-ish seats.
  • In the abstract, there’s nothing shocking about the Alberta PCs doing well. They’ve been doing well since 1971. But it is certainly shocking that outside a few PC hopefuls, few would have seen this coming based on the last few weeks. The polls have been consistent, showing a strong Wildrose lead. But the popular vote totals coming in on Tuesday evening showed that the polls generally had the levels of support for the Wildrose and PCs flipped. What exactly happened here will take some time to sort out. Already questions are being asked about the polling firms who seem to have completely blown it, and the seat-count prediction formulas that feed on those polls. Those are questions worth asking, but it will only offer a partial explanation. Some attention will have to be paid to the campaign itself.
    Was it the so-called “bozo eruptions” that collapsed the Wildrose’s momentum? It’s certainly possible that the string of embarrassing incidents over the last few weeks, where Danielle Smith was forced to react to uncomfortable social conservative comments by Wildrose candidates, made some people nervous about voting for a party that would be essentially composed of unknowns (not that that stopped the Orange Crush from sweeping Quebec not even a year ago, but hey, could be).
    But many are already speculating that, faced with the prospect of a Wildrose government, Liberal and NDP supporters chose to vote strategically for the PCs. In 2008, the Liberals and NDP accounted for 35% of the popular vote in Alberta. This time, the early numbers suggest they secured somewhere less than 20%. That 15% may have been enough to give the PCs the boost they needed to stay alive and fight off the Wildrose.
    At this point, it’s as good a theory as any. And if strategic voting is indeed determined to be the cause, or at least a major contributing factor, to this election-day surprise, it will be interesting to see how other political parties across the country react.
    Specifically, it will be interesting if an exodus of NDP and Liberal voters to the Alberta PCs might convince some federal Liberal and NDP strategists to consider the possibility of some form of co-operation against the Harper Tories. The situations are hardly directly comparable — in Alberta it seems as though strategic voting may have saved a long-running government, which would not be the goal of any strategic voters in the next federal election. But we’ve heard a lot about the the different cultures between Liberals and Dippers these last few years. Are they any more different than the Alberta opposition parties are from the PCs?
    If Alberta Liberals and Dippers can hold their nose and vote for Alberta’s PC dynasty to stave off something even more unpalatable, there’s no reason that the federal opposition parties couldn’t consider, maybe in just some ridings, trying to find a way to threaten the Tory stranglehold on Canada’s Western provinces and its new strength in the Greater Toronto Area. Alberta might not be the right place to try that out federally, but the conversation could start there. Even if they can’t find the right ridings to road test a co-operative agreement in, it could be worth a shot somewhere in the country, especially in ridings where the NDP (which generally has little reason to do the Liberals any favours) are weak.
    It’s hard to look forward that far. And it may be that strategic voting played little role in tonight’s surprise. But if it did, it might help those in the parties already speaking, quietly, of co-operation. If so, the real consequences of tonight may not be fully appreciated for another three years.
    National Post
    mgurney@nationalpost.com
    Apr 242012
     

    http://www.scottberkun.com/essays/40-why-smart-people-defend-bad-ideas/

    By  Scott Berkun, April, 2005

    We all know someone who’s intelligent, but who occasionally defends obviously bad ideas.  Why does this happen? How can smart people take up positions that defy any reasonable logic? Having spent many years working with smart people I’ve cataloged many of the ways this happens, and I have advice on what to do about it. I feel qualified to write this essay as I’m a recovering smart person myself and I’ve defended several very bad ideas. So if nothing else this essay serves as a kind of personal therapy session. However, I fully suspect you’ll get more than just entertainment value (“Look, Scott is more stupid than we thought!”) out of what I have to say on this topic.

    Success at defending bad ideas

    The monty python argument sketchI’m not proud to admit that I have a degree in Logic and Computation from Carnegie Mellon University. Majoring in logic is not the kind of thing that makes people want to talk to you at parties, or read your essays. But one thing I did learn after years of studying advanced logic theory is that proficiency in argument can easily be used to overpower others, even when you are dead wrong. If you learn a few tricks of logic and debate, you can refute the obvious, and defend the ridiculous. If the people you’re arguing with aren’t as comfortable in the tactics of argument, or aren’t as arrogant as you are, they may even give in and agree with you.

    The problem with smart people is that they like to be right and sometimes will defend ideas to the death rather than admit they’re wrong. This is bad. Worse, if they got away with it when they were young (say, because they were smarter than their parents, their friends, and their parent’s friends) they’ve probably built an ego around being right, and will therefore defend their perfect record of invented righteousness to the death. Smart people often fall into the trap of preferring to be right even if it’s based in delusion, or results in them, or their loved ones, becoming miserable. (Somewhere in your town there is a row of graves at the cemetery, called smartypants lane, filled with people who were buried at poorly attended funerals, whose headstones say “Well, at least I was right.”)

    Until they come face to face with someone who is tenacious enough to dissect their logic, and resilient enough to endure the thinly veiled intellectual abuse they dish out during debate (e.g. “You don’t really think that do you?”or “Well if you knew the <insert obscure reference here> rule/law/corollary you wouldn’t say such things”), they’re never forced to question their ability to defend bad ideas. Opportunities for this are rare: a new boss, a new co-worker, a new spouse. But if their obsessiveness about being right is strong enough, they’ll reject those people out of hand before they question their own biases and self-manipulations. It can be easier for smart people who have a habit of defending bad ideas to change jobs, spouses, or cities rather than honestly examine what is at the core of their psyche (and often, their misery).

    Short of obtaining a degree in logic, or studying the nuances of debate, remember this one simple rule for defusing those who are skilled at defending bad ideas: Simply because they cannot be proven wrong, does not make them right. Most of the tricks of logic and debate refute questions and attacks, but fail to establish any true justification for a given idea.

    For example, just because you can’t prove that I’m not the king of France reincarnated doesn’t make it so. So when someone tells you “My plan A is the best because no one has explained how it will fail” know that there is a logical gap in this argument. Simply because no one has described how it will fail, doesn’t necessarily make it the best plan. It’s possible than plans B, C, D and E all have the same quality, or that the reason no one has described how A will fail is that no one has had more than 30 seconds to scrutinize the plan. As we’ll discuss later, diffusing bad thinking requires someone (probably you) to construct a healthier framework around the bad thinking that shows it for what it is.

    Death by homogeny

    shelf of boxesThe second stop on our tour of commonly defended bad ideas is the seemingly friendly notion of communal thinking. Just because everyone in the room is smart doesn’t mean that collectively they will arrive at smart ideas. The power of peer pressure is that it works on our psychology, not our intellect. As social animals we are heavily influenced by how the people around us behave, and the quality of our own internal decision making varies widely depending on the environment we currently are in. (e.g. Try to write a haiku poem while standing in an elevator with 15 opera singers screaming 15 different operas, in 15 different languages, in falsetto, directly at you vs. sitting on a bench in a quiet stretch of open woods).

    That said, the more homogeneous a group of people are in their thinking, the narrower the range of ideas that the group will openly consider. The more open minded, creative, and courageous a group is, the wider the pool of ideas they’ll be capable of exploring.

    Some teams of people look to focus groups, consultancies, and research methods to bring in outside ideas, but this rarely improves the quality of thinking in the group itself. Those outside ideas, however bold or original, are at the mercy of the diversity of thought within the group itself. If the group, as a collective, is only capable of approving B level work, it doesn’t matter how many A level ideas you bring to it. Focus groups or other outside sources of information can not give a team, or its leaders, a soul. A bland homogeneous team of people has no real opinions, because it consists of people with same backgrounds, outlooks, and experiences who will only feel comfortable discussing the safe ideas that fit into those constraints.

    If you want your smart people to be as smart as possible, seek a diversity of ideas. Find people with different experiences, opinions, backgrounds, weights, heights, races, facial hair styles, colors, past-times, favorite items of clothing, philosophies, and beliefs. Unify them around the results you want, not the means or approaches they are expected to use. It’s the only way to guarantee that the best ideas from your smartest people will be received openly by the people around them. On your own, avoid homogenous books, films, music, food, sex, media and people. Actually experience life by going to places you don’t usually go, spending time with people you don’t usually spend time with. Be in the moment and be open to it. Until recently in human history, life was much less predictable and we were forced to encounter things not always of our own choosing. We are capable of more interesting and creative lives than our modern cultures often provide for us. If you go out of your way to find diverse experiences it will become impossible for you to miss ideas simply because your homogenous outlook filtered them out.

    Thinking at the wrong level

    Several story tall buildingAt any moment on any project there are an infinite number of levels of problem solving. Part of being a truly smart person is to know which level is the right one at a given time. For example, if you are skidding out of control at 95mph in your broken down Winnebago on an ice covered interstate, when a semi-truck filled with both poorly packaged fireworks and loosely bundled spark plugs slams on its brakes, it’s not the right time to discuss with your passengers where y’all would like to stop for dinner. But as ridiculous as this scenario sounds, it happens all the time. People worry about the wrong thing at the wrong time and apply their intelligence in ways that doesn’t serve the greater good of whatever they’re trying to achieve. Some call this difference in skill wisdom, in that the wise know what to be thinking about, where as the merely intelligent only know how to think. (The de-emphasis of wisdom is an east vs. west dichotomy: eastern philosophy heavily emphasizes deeper wisdom, where as the post enlightenment west, and perhaps particularly America, heavily emphasizes the intellectual flourishes of intelligence).

    In the software industry, the common example of thinking at the wrong level is a team of rock star programmers who can make anything, but don’t really know what to make: so they tend to build whatever things come to mind, never stopping to find someone who might not be adept at writing code, but can see where the value of their programming skills would be best applied. Other examples include people that always worry about money despite how much they have, people who struggle with relationships but invest their energy only in improving their appearance (instead of in therapy or other emotional exploration), or anyone that wants to solve problem X but only ever seems to do things that solve problem Y.

    The primary point is that no amount of intelligence can help an individual who is diligently working at the wrong level of the problem. Someone with wisdom has to tap them on the shoulder and say, “Um, hey. The hole you’re digging is very nice, and it is the right size. But you’re in the wrong yard.”

    Killed in the long term by short term thinking

    Tasty foodFrom what we know of evolution it’s clear that we are alive because of our inherited ability to think quickly and respond to change. The survival of living creatures, for most of the history of our planet, has been a short term game. Only if you can out-run your predators, and catch your prey, do you have the luxury of worrying about tomorrow.

    It follows then that we tend to be better at worrying about and solving short term issues than long term issues. Even when we recognize an important long term issue that we need to plan for, say protecting natural resources or saving for retirement, we’re all too easily distracted away from those deep thoughts by immediate things like dinner or sex (important things no doubt, but the driving needs in these pursuits, at least for this half of the species, are short term in nature). Once distracted, we rarely return to the long term issues we were drawn away from.

    A common justification for abuse of short term thinking is the fake perspective defense. The wise, but less confident guy says “hey are you sure we should be doing this?” And the smart, confident, but less wise guy says “of course. We did this last time, and the time before that, so why shouldn’t we do this again?”. This is the fake perspective defense because there’s no reason to believe that 2 points of data (e.g. last time plus the time before that) is sufficient to make claims about the future. People say similar things all the time in defense of the free market economy, democracy, and mating strategies. “Well, it’s gotten us this far, and it’s the best system we have”. Well, maybe. But if you were in that broken down Winnebago up to your ankles in gasoline from a leaking tank, smoking a cigarette in each hand, you could say the same thing.

    Put simply, the fact that you’re not dead yet doesn’t mean that the things you’ve done up until now shouldn’t have, by all that is fair in the universe, already killed you. You might just need a few more data points for the law of averages to catch up, and put a permanent end to your short term thinking.

    How many data points you need to feel comfortable continuing a behavior is entirely a matter of personal philosophy. The wise and skeptical know that even an infinite number of data points in the past may only have limited bearing on the future. The tricky thing about the future is that it’s different than the past. Our data from the past, no matter how big a pile of data it is, may very well be entirely irrelevant. Some find this lack of predictive ability of the future quite frustrating, while others see it as the primary reason to stick around for a few more years.

    Anyway, my point is not that Winnebagos or free market economies are bad. Instead I’m saying that short term bits of data are neither reliable nor a wise way to go about making important long term decisions. Intelligent people do this all the time, and since it’s so commonly accepted as a rule of thumb (last time + the time before that), it’s often accepted in place of actual thinking. Always remember that humans, given our evolution, are very bad at seeing the cumulative effects of behavior, and underestimate how things like compound interest or that one cigarette a day, can in the long term, have surprisingly large impacts despite clearly low short term effects.

    How to prevent smart people from defending bad ideas

    smart people defending bad ideasI spent my freshman year at a small college in NJ called Drew University. I had a fun time, ingested many tasty alcoholic beverages, and went to lots of great parties (the result of which of course was that I basically failed out and had to move back to Queens with my parents. You see, the truth is that this essay is really a public service announcement paid for by my parents – I was a smart person that did some stupid things). But the reason I mention all this is because I learned a great bit of philosophy from many hours of playing pool in the college student center. The lesson is this: Speed kills. I was never very good at pool, but this one guy there was, and whenever we’d play, he’d watch me miss easy shots because I tried to force them in with authority. I chose speed and power over control, and I usually lost. So like pool, when it comes to defusing smart people who are defending bad ideas, you have to find ways to slow things down.

    The reason for this is simple. Smart people, or at least those whose brains have good first gears, use their speed in thought to overpower others. They’ll jump between assumptions quickly, throwing out jargon, bits of logic, or rules of thumb at a rate of fire fast enough to cause most people to become rattled, and give in. When that doesn’t work, the arrogant or the pompous will throw in some belittlement and use whatever snide or manipulative tactics they have at their disposal to further discourage you from dissecting their ideas.

    So your best defense starts by breaking an argument down into pieces. When they say “it’s obvious we need to execute plan A now.” You say, “hold on. You’re way ahead of me. For me to follow I need to break this down into pieces.” And without waiting for permission, you should go ahead and do so.

    First, nothing is obvious. If it were obvious there would be no need to say so. So your first piece is to establish what isn’t so obvious. What are the assumptions the other guy is glossing over that are worth spending time on? There may be 3 or 4 different valid assumptions that need to be discussed one at a time before any kind of decision can be considered. Take each one in turn, and lay out the basic questions: what problem are we trying to solve? What alternatives to solving it are there? What are the tradeoffs in each alternative? By breaking it down and asking questions you expose more thinking to light, make it possible for others to ask questions, and make it more difficult for anyone to defend a bad idea.

    No one can ever take away your right to think things over, especially if the decision at hand is important. If your mind works best in 3rd or 4th gear, find ways to give yourself the time needed to get there. If when you say ” need the afternoon to think this over”, they say
    “tough. We’re deciding now”. Ask if the decision is an important one. If they say yes, then you should be completely justified in asking for more time to think it over and ask questions.

    Find a sane person people listen to

    Some situations require outside help. Instead of taking a person on directly, get a third party that you both respect, and continue the discussion in their presence. This can be a superior, or simply someone smart enough that the other person might possibly concede points to them.

    It follows that if your team manager is wise and reasonable, smart people who might ordinarily defend bad ideas will have a hard time doing so. But sadly if your team manager is neither wise nor reasonable, smart, arrogant people may convince others to follow their misguided ways more often than not.

    And yet more reasons

    I’m sure you have stories of your own follies dealing with smart people defending bad ideas, or where you, yourself, as a smart person, have spent time arguing for things you regretted later. Given the wondrous multitude of ways the universe has granted humans to be smart and dumb at the same time, there are many more reasons why smart people behave in stupid ways. For fun, and as fodder, here’s a few more.

    If you have some thoughts on this essay, or some more reasons to add, leave a comment:

    • Smart people can follow stupid leaders (seeking praise or promotion)
    • Smart people may follow their anger into stupid places
    • They may be trained or educated into stupidity
    • Smart people can inherit bad ideas from their parents under the guise of tradition
    • They may simply want something to be true, that can never be

    References

    • If you liked this post, you’ll love  Mindfire: Big Ideas for Curious Minds, a new best-of collection of Berkun’s famous essays and posts from 2000-2011.Buy now on Amazon.com $8.69 (print / kindle), Barnes &  Nobles, & iBookstore.
    Apr 232012
     

    Note:

    • the top executives of the board received $7 million in bonuses”  (in one year, which happened to be 2009 when the CPP fund lost $24 billlion.)
    • over the last 10 years, the fund has grown from nearly $49 billion in assets to almost $153 billion“.  I need to look up how this figure is arrived at.  Does it include, for example, an excess of contributions over pay-outs?
    • the fund has a strict “investment only” mandate and, by law, cannot take political or moral considerations into account when choosing investments. “We have essentially said we will invest in anything that would be legal or a business that would be legal if carried on in Canada,” Raymond said.”

    BUT the CPPIB HAS a policy on “socially responsible” investing.   They have staff dedicated to this purpose.  Please go to the upper right-hand corner of this blog to “search” and enter “CPPIB”.   Scroll down past the top headings to the computer-generated list of postings on this topic.

    I don’t think you can have it both ways, Mr. Raymond?

    • There should NEVER be an investment fund of this size;  it has too much potential for impacting the market in too large a way.  Qubec is smart to have control of its own CPP investment money.

    Now, on to tootsie rolls.

    http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/taxseason/story/2012/04/20/f-taxseason-canada-pension-plan-fund.html

    By Mark Gollom,  CBC News

    Next time you’re sucking on a Tootsie Roll, just think — you’re sucking on your financial future.

    You may also be sipping on it during your morning coffee or slowly squirting it out on your favourite hotdog.

    That’s because Tootsie Roll Industries, Tim Hortons Inc. and H.J. Heinz Company are just a few of the hundreds of companies Canadians have a stake in as part of their Canada Pension Plan fund.

    The fund, managed by the Toronto-based CPP Investment Board (CPPIB), was set up in 1997 by the federal government and provinces to invest the contributions not needed to pay for current benefits to the CPP.

    The investment philosophy is simple – “maximize investment returns without undue risk of loss.”

    “It was set up to build a diversified global portfolio, to help contribute to the sustainability of the CPP,” said Don Raymond, senior vice-president and chief investment strategist for the CPPIB.

    And those investments are diversified among different assets, like real estate holdings, bonds and public equity investments that include 2,600 international and 500 Canadian public companies.

    A list of some of the companies in the CPP fund portfolio

    Air Canada, Athabasca Oil Sand Corp, B2 Gold Corp

    Bank of Montreal, Bombardier, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, Canadian Tire

    Haliburton, Heniken, H.J. Heinz Company, Home Depot, Johnson and Johnson, Kraft Foods,Lockheed Martin

    Imperial Tobacco Group, Lululemon Athletica, Lockheed Martin

    MasterCard, Mitsubishi Corp, Nintendo, Nissan Motor Co.,

    Pepsi, Philip Morris International, Procter and Gamble, Rogers, Qantas, Quebecor,

    Rolls Royce Group, Shoppers Drug Mart, Telus, Tim Hortons Inc., Time Warner

    Toshiba, Toyota Motor Corp., Tootsie Roll Industries Inc, Wal-Mart

    (As of March 31, 2011)

    For example, take the Rockefeller Center and the McGraw-Hill Building shown in the opening credits of Saturday Night Live – Canadians own a part of them.

    Complaining about the profits of banks and oil companies? Canadians may think twice, since they’re invested in those, too.

    And next time Ontario motorists are driving along Highway 407, they may be surprised to learn that they own a 29 per cent chunk of that roadway as well. (In fact, it’s CPPIB’s biggest direct investment in a private asset.)

    Fund more than triples

    Canadians used to own a $300-million stake in Skype, until it was purchased by Microsoft. But that purchase more than tripled the CPPIB’s initial investment.

    Air Canada, Apple, LuluLemon, Best Buy, KraftFoods, Heinken, Wal-Mart — all make up part of the largest single-purpose pension in Canada and one of the largest in the world.

    According to the CPPIB website, over the last 10 years, the fund has grown from nearly $49 billion in assets to almost $153 billion. During that time period, the annualized rate of return was 5.7 per cent.

    Raymond said the fund needs to earn a 4.0 per cent rate of return above inflation to make the whole plan sustainable.

    But Raymond readily admits you can’t earn that kind of return “without taking some investment risk.” (He says as a comparison, the yield of a 10-year bond in Canada is two per cent, but with inflation at two per cent, the real yield is zero.)

    When looking for assets, the board tries to find those that will outperform the stocks and bonds already in the portfolio.

    “We go and buy a significant chunk of the 407. We have to decide which of those stocks and bonds that we would otherwise own that we’re now going to sell in order to buy that part of the 407,” Raymond said. “If the 407 outperforms over a long period of time those stocks and bonds that we’ve sold, then we’ve added value relative to the reference portfolio.”

    In 2006, the fund’s board decided to become “active managers,” Raymond said, meaning the board would choose individual stocks, bonds, buildings and infrastructure assets they thought would outperform the global portfolio that consists of of 65 per cent stocks and 35 per cent bonds.

    “By definition, diversification, you expect some investments to perform well and some investments not to perform well. The more diversified you are, the more likely that will happen.”

    Not every year has seen growth. In 2009, during the global financial crisis, the fund, like many, took a big hit, plummeting 18.6 per cent and losing $24 billion.

    ‘It’s more difficult to change the CPP investment board act than it is to change the Canadian Constitution.’—Don Raymond, CPPIB

    This sparked a backlash from some critics who complained the top executives of the board received $7 million in bonuses despite the losses.

    The fund has also been criticized for some of its holdings, which include oil companies like Haliburton, tobacco companies like Imperial Tobacco and Philip Morris and munitions manufacturers like Lockheed Martin and BAE Systems.

    But the fund has a strict “investment only” mandate and, by law, cannot take political or moral considerations into account when choosing investments.

    “We have essentially said we will invest in anything that would be legal or a business that would be legal if carried on in Canada,” Raymond said.

    Changing that mandate would require the federal government and two-thirds of the provinces representing two-thirds of the population to agree.

    “It’s more difficult to change the CPP investment board act than it is to change the Canadian constitution,” Raymond said.

    Bigger deals ‘can come back to haunt you’

    Leo Kolivakis, publisher of the Pension Plus blog and a former senior investment analyst at the Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec and the Public Sector Pension Investment Board, offered praise for the board, saying it has one of the best governance structures in the world.

    “I think they’re doing a great job. They’re very good at what they do,” he said, adding that the 5.7 per cent rate of return over 10 years is “decent.”

    But Kolivakis said he does have some concerns.

    “My biggest concern with any fund of that size is that economies of scale catch up to them, meaning once you’re managing assets they’re managing, you become too big, too lethargic.”

    Kolivakis said the size of the fund forces the board to invest in bigger and bigger deals.

    “That works well when the economy is doing well and the markets are doing well, but it can come back to haunt you,” he said.

    “What I ‘m afraid of is because of their size they’re going to be forced to deploy their capital and possibly make investments that have a lot more risk. But I don’t want to overemphasize that point, because right now they are able to manage their size.”

    Apr 182012
     

    Lockheed Martin on campus tomorrow, Wed Apr 18th

    CONTENTS

    1. LOCKHEED MARTIN’S COLLABORATION TOPICS (CT’s)
    2. INVITATION TO FACULTY MEMBERS
    3. LOCKHEED MARTIN’S “PLANNING DOCUMENT”
    4. EMAIL TO FACULTY MEMBERS: IT IS WRONG TO COLLABORATE WITH LOCKHEED MARTIN

    (RELATED:  2010-11-01  Saskatchewan Aviation Learning Centre (Saskatoon Airport) Grand Opening.  Lockheed Martin’s “products” not itemized (UAVs (Drones), cluster munitions, DU (Depleted Uranium) weapons, land mines).)

     

    Gotta give them credit.  See below.  They don’t beat around the bush.  They are about war.

    The University of Saskatchewan now has a debt-load of $95 million, has maxed out its borrowing capacity, and has a $10 million shortfall in its operating budget.  ….. It has made itself extremely vulnerable to anyone who comes with money.  The Government has helped create the situation.

    (The short story:  Lockheed Martin played a significant role in the decision by the Americans to drop bombs on Iraq in an illegal war of aggression.  They reaped huge profits.  Weapons they manufacture are illegal under International Law (land mines, cluster munitions and now most likely Unmanned  Aerial Vehicles (drones)).  They have a long string of court convictions.  They have a lengthy record of ripping off the public purse.)

    = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

    1.   Lockheed Martin  – Collaboration Topics (CT’s) for Post-Secondary Institution Discussions

    1.    Advanced Active & Passive Sensing: System and host platform hardware and software with lower sensor costs, increased signal-to-noise ratio, and lower sense-to-information latency to turn the sensed environment into information about the target (e.g., target recognition, speed, intent, etc. via Ladar, Radar, EO, and acoustic methods)

    2.   Complex Software & Systems: Methods for improved software performance and reliability, including advanced software architectures, integration, agents, languages, processor tailoring and production and VV&T (e.g., Model-Based Software Development)

    3.  Autonomous and Robotic Systems: Hardware, software, and architectures to enable uninhabited intelligent deployments of ground, sea, air or space capabilities with improved cost, weight, performance or risk characteristics (e.g., swarms)

    4.   Biometrics: Architectures for detectors and associated hardware and software for personnel identification in a broad range of applications (e.g., authentication, surveillance, tracking)

    5.   Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear and High-Yield explosives (CBRNE) Defense and Response:   Detectors and associated hardware and software for detection and characterization of chemical and biological threats, to include methods to facilitate timely response (e.g., explosive vapor, biological agents)

    6.   Decision Support Systems: Hardware & software for enhancement of decision and action efficiency in complex and/or stressing  data/timeline mission environments (e.g., fusion, pattern recognition, data mining, knowledge management)

    7.   Directed Energy: High energy laser and particle beam device, beam control, ancillary component and integration hardware and software for target negation or disruption (e.g., airborne lasers, ground based defense)

    8.   Distributed ISR & Attack: Component and system hardware and software for ISR and attack systems employing large numbers of integrated collection and response (force application) nodes (e.g., unattended in-situ sensors, local response yet integrated defense systems)

    9.   Energy& Climate Change:   Hardware and software to improve performance across a broad range of applications (e.g., grid power, portable power, energy storage and pulsed power, for military and civil users)

    10.   Human Terrain: Represents the aggregate of socio-cultural traits present at a specific temporal, geo-spatial [or cyberspace] location.

    11.   Trust and Assurance: Methods and implementation software and hardware for protection of networks and electronic data against intrusion  or data loss, and associated threat capability assessment

    12.   Advanced Materials: Modeling, development, fabrication and characterization of materials/structures at the atomic/molecular scale and  understanding of associated applications (e.g., mechanical, sensor, communications, and medical applications)

    13.   Predictive & Response Logistics: Hardware and software affording improved inventory, tagging, tracking, distribution, security and prognostic health monitoring of large and/or complex product sets (e.g., end-to-end global asset logistic optimization)

    14.   Signatures & Phenomenology:  Modeling and testing of interactions between radiation or matter and targets and the corresponding  response of sensors, to include methods for response control

    15.  Systems Biology and Bioinformatics: Encompasses bio-medical technologies, bio-informatics, and biomimetics (bio-inspired
    technologies)

    = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =  ==  = = = = = = = ==

    2.   INVITATION TO FACULTY MEMBERS

    ——– Original Message ——–

    Subject: Lockheed Martin Planned Visit on April 18-2012

    Date:  Fri, 23 Mar 2012 13:39:19 +0000

    From:   Verma, Brij brij.verma@usask.ca

    To:   Granrude, Marjorie mlg544@mail.usask.ca, Virgl, Joan joan.virgl@usask.ca, Margarita Santos margarita@math.usask.ca, Duke, Ronda
    ronda.duke@usask.ca,  Howe, Michelle michelle.howe@usask.ca, heather@cs.usask.ca heather@cs.usask.ca

    CC: Neufeld, Eric emn075@campus.usask.ca, Raj Srinivasan raj@math.usask.ca,  Gray, Jack jack.gray@usask.ca, Merriam, James jim.merriam@usask.ca, Rangacharyulu, Chary chary.r@usask.ca, Palmer, David drp979@mail.usask.ca, Bonham-Smith, Peta peta.bonhams@usask.ca

    Good Morning,

    Kindly forward to faculty:

    Representatives from Lockheed Martin are planning to come to the U of S, seeking collaborative opportunities. Please have a look at the attached word document that lists areas that Lockheed would like to collaborate on. If your interests lie in the listed areas, and you would like to collaborate with Lockheed Martin researchers, please let me know. A brief of research will need to be prepared and sent to Lockheed Martin for review.

    All the best,

    Brij

    Phone: 306-966-852    Mobile: 306-241-6092

    = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

    3.   LOCKHEED MARTIN’S “PLANNING DOCUMENT”

    (This planning document is posted at http://sandrafinley.ca/?p=5099)

    Planning Document Subject: Lockheed Martin Visit to Your Institution

    Institution:                 University of Saskatchewan

    Date of Visit:           April 18th, 2012

    Location:                    U of Saskatchewan CampusLockheed Martin Visitors:

    The Lockheed Martin Industrial Regional Benefits (IRB) Team, supported by senior members of the Lockheed Martin Technical Staff of the Corporate Engineering and Technology (CE&T) and the Mission Systems and Sensors (MS2) groups will be visiting your facility in the near future.

    Purpose:

    This visit is intended to gain a better understanding of the strengths and capabilities of your Institution and the alignment with Lockheed Martin Collaboration Topics, and future opportunities for possible collaboration.  The form of collaboration will be determined on a case by case basis and the variations will be discussed during the initial Lockheed Martin briefings.  The Lockheed Martin Team looks forward to visiting with members your Institution and gaining a better insight of your full capabilities.

    Proposed Agenda Items and Details:

    (timing of each presentation may vary, LM is flexible)

    Timing:   Lockheed Martin Plans to Arrive at 8:30 and Depart on or about 5:00

    Please schedule accordingly

    Welcome and Overview (by the Institution)

    •Introductions, etc.

    •Lockheed Martin Business/IRB Overview  (schedule 15 minutes)

    •Lockheed Martin Technical Overview  (schedule 15 minutes)
    ◦Review, Lockheed Martin Collaboration Topics (CT’s) (attached)

    ◦Request for Presentations by the Institution  ( 2 to 3 presentations maximum)

    ◦Presentations should be limited based on the time allotted for this visit

    ■Presentation, dialogue during / after, and perhaps a lab visit.

    ■All presentations should be as closely aligned with the CT’s as possible

    ■Closing Comments, Action Items, Follow-Up

    ■Soft copies of the presentations and projects are requested on (CD) only please.

    Lockheed Martin  –  Collaboration Topics (CT’s) for Post-Secondary Institution Discussions

    Advanced Active& Passive Sensing:    System and host platform hardware and software with lower sensor costs, . . . (as at top of page)

    = = = = = = = = = = =

    4.  EMAIL TO FACULTY MEMBERS: IT IS WRONG TO COLLABORATE WITH LOCKHEED MARTIN

    This link has information valuable for anyone who has  Lockheed Martin under consideration.  Lockheed Martin, War Economy

    I can forward it to more people at the University.

    It is wrong to collaborate with Lockheed Martin.  The unfortunate financial situation at the University is not justification.

    Please call if you have suggestions or questions.

    Many thanks and best wishes,

    Sandra Finley

    Apr 172012
     

    Planning Document

    Institution:                    University of Saskatchewan

    Date of Visit:               April 18th, 2012

    Location:                     U of Saskatchewan Campus

    Lockheed Martin Visitors:

    The Lockheed Martin Industrial Regional Benefits (IRB) Team, supported by senior members of the Lockheed Martin Technical Staff of the Corporate Engineering and Technology (CE&T) and the Mission Systems and Sensors (MS2) groups will be visiting your facility in the near future.

    Purpose:

    This visit is intended to gain a better understanding of the strengths and capabilities of your Institution and the alignment with Lockheed Martin Collaboration Topics, and future opportunities for possible collaboration.  The form of collaboration will be determined on a case by case basis and the variations will be discussed during the initial Lockheed Martin briefings.  The Lockheed Martin Team looks forward to visiting with members your Institution and gaining a better insight of your full capabilities.

    Proposed Agenda Items and Details:

    (timing of each presentation may vary, LM is flexible)

    • Timing:
      • Lockheed Martin Plans to Arrive at 8:30 and Depart on or about 5:00
      • Please schedule accordingly
      • Welcome and Overview  (by the Institution) Introductions, etc.
        • Lockheed Martin Business/IRB Overview  (schedule 15 minutes)
        • Lockheed Martin Technical Overview  (schedule 15 minutes)
          • Review, Lockheed Martin Collaboration Topics (CT’s) (attached)
          • Request for Presentations by the Institution  ( 2 to 3 presentations maximum)
          • Presentations should be limited based on the time allotted for this visit
            • Presentation, dialogue during / after, and perhaps a lab visit.
            • All presentations should be as closely aligned with the CT’s as possible
            • Closing Comments, Action Items, Follow-Up
            • Soft copies of the presentations and projects are requested on (CD) only please.

    Lockheed Martin  – Collaboration Topics (CT’s) for Post-Secondary Institution Discussions

    1. Advanced Active& Passive Sensing:

    System and host platform hardware and software with lower sensor costs, increased signal-to-noise ratio, and lower sense-to-information latency to turn the sensed environment into information about the target (e.g., target recognition, speed, intent, etc. via Ladar, Radar, EO, and acoustic methods)

      2. Complex Software & Systems:

    Methods for improved software performance and reliability, including advanced software architectures, integration, agents, languages, processor tailoring and production and VV&T (e.g., Model-Based Software Development)

      3. Autonomous and Robotic Systems:

    Hardware, software, and architectures to enable uninhabited intelligent deployments of ground, sea, air or space capabilities with improved cost, weight, performance or risk characteristics (e.g., swarms)

      4. Biometrics:

    Architectures for detectors and associated hardware and software for personnel identification in a broad range of applications (e.g., authentication, surveillance, tracking)

      5. Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear and High-Yield explosives (CBRNE) Defense and Response:

    Detectors and associated hardware and software for detection and characterization of chemical and biological threats, to include methods to facilitate timely response (e.g., explosive vapor, biological agents)

      6. Decision Support Systems:

    Hardware & software for enhancement of decision and action efficiency in complex and/or stressing data/timeline mission environments (e.g., fusion, pattern recognition, data mining, knowledge management)

      7. Directed Energy:

    High energy laser and particle beam device, beam control, ancillary component and integration hardware and software for target negation or disruption (e.g., airborne lasers, ground based defense)

      8. Distributed ISR & Attack:

    Component and system hardware and software for ISR and attack systems employing large numbers of integrated collection and response (force application) nodes (e.g., unattended in-situ sensors, local response yet integrated defense systems)

      9. Energy& Climate Change:

    Hardware and software to improve performance across a broad range of applications (e.g., grid power, portable power, energy storage and pulsed power, for military and civil users)

      10. Human Terrain:

    Represents the aggregate of socio-cultural traits present at a specific temporal, geo-spatial [or cyberspace] location.

      11. Trust and Assurance:

    Methods and implementation software and hardware for protection of networks and electronic data against intrusion or data loss, and associated threat capability assessment

    12. Advanced Materials:

    Modeling, development, fabrication and characterization of materials/structures at the atomic/molecular scale and understanding of associated applications (e.g., mechanical, sensor, communications, and medical applications)

      13. Predictive & Response Logistics:

    Hardware and software affording improved inventory, tagging, tracking, distribution, security and prognostic health monitoring of large and/or complex product sets (e.g., end-to-end global asset logistic optimization)

      14. Signatures & Phenomenology:

    Modeling and testing of interactions between radiation or matter and targets and the corresponding response of sensors, to include methods for response control

      15. Systems Biology and Bioinformatics:

    Encompasses bio-medical technologies, bio-informatics, and biomimetics (bio-inspired technologies)

    Apr 162012
     

    There’s information in D’Arcy’s letter to officials, at http://sandrafinley.ca/?p=5163.

    The official website:  http://www.unep.org/hazardoussubstances/Mercury/Negotiations/tabid/3320/Default.aspx

    [You are here: Mercury > Negotiations]


    The Negotiating Process

    In February 2009, the Governing Council of UNEP agreed on the need to develop a global legally binding instrument on mercury.

    The work to prepare this instrument is undertaken by an intergovernmental negotiating committee supported by the Chemicals Branch of the UNEP Division of Technology, Industry and Economics as secretariat.  The goal is to complete the negotiations before the twenty-seventh regular session of the Governing Council/Global Ministerial Environment Forum in 2013.

    Participation in the intergovernmental negotiating committee (INC) is open to all Governments. Intergovernmental organizations and representatives from the civil society may also take part as observers.

    The committee operates under the rules of procedure adopted at its first session. As its first act the committee elected Mr. Fernando Lugris (Uruguay) Chair of the committee, as well as nine vice-chairs that together form the Bureau of the INC.

    It is planned that the work of the intergovernmental negotiating committee will be carried out over five sessions:

    Following the conclusion of the negotiations, the text will be open for signature at a diplomatic conference (Conference of Plenipotentiaries), which will be held in 2013 in Japan.

    Regional meetings are being organized to assist Governments in their preparations for the negotiating sessions.

    Extra budgetary resources are needed to fund the negotiations process. A “Mercury Club” has been established to recognize support received from Governments and others.

    A representative from civil society has presented a sculpture to the intergovernmental negotiating committee symbolizing the irreversible consequences of mercury contamination and the important responsibility that Governments have in reaching an effective agreement to reduce and eliminate mercury emissions in the environment.  The sculpture, entitled “Pez-Peste”, was specially created and donated by the Argentine artist Nicolas Garcia Uriburu. The sculpture will be used as a symbol for the ongoing negotiations and will follow the committee throughout the negotiations process.

    Apr 162012
     

    With special thanks to Michael Bender at Mercury Policy.

     

    Mount the steeds!   If we don’t,  Canada might miss the battle altogether!  . . .  Seriously.

    Spread the word to as many as you can.  Here’s what’s happening on the Mercury Fillings Front:

    • TODAY:  the launch in the U.S. of a new study.
    • At the last-minute, it was thought to involve Canadians;  our network was called upon!  I accepted on your behalf!!
    • It’s part of an international effort to rid the world of mercury (“silver”) fillings.
    • You will see in the  Press release:  Your teeth may be poisoning fish you eat!,  the emphasis is on the Environment and the economics of mercury fillings, not on Health.  The shift in emphasis is understandable.
    • I sent individual invitations by email to the Minister (Don McMorris) and Deputy Minister (Dan Florizone) Provincial Dept Health,  and to the Dental, Toxicology and Medical Faculties of the University to attend the “Mercury Jamboree”.  None of them came.  The presenters are experts.
    • The people working on mercury poisoning for a very long time have faced stone walls when trying to work through Health-related bodies.
    • International Negotiations:  Canadians are largely in the dark.  The 4th round of negotiations is in Uruguay at the end of June; the final round is Feb in Switzerland.  The sense is that we might just be successful if we can all push hard enough.  It’s mainly a matter of people realizing that the slow off-gasing of mercury in their mouth takes its toll over the years.  Its effects are at the cellular level which means that there are inter-generational effects.  And, of course, we are poisoning the rest of creation with what goes down the drain and into the air.  Click on  New study.  On a full-cost basis amalgam is significantly more costly than composite.
    • See “(2007)  Cremation costs to rise as tooth fillings poison the living“.   People who are cremated and have mercury fillings pay a higher fee because of the scrubbers that some countries now require at crematoriums.
    • One of the worries in western countries: most of the baby boomers have mercury fillings, more people are being cremated, air-borne sources of mercury are going to substantially increase.
    • The thing I like about working with this international effort – –  if successful, it won’t be like asbestos where we save ourselves – – but ship the poison accompanied by a pile of propaganda to poor and naive people.   They are as naive as we have been about mercury fillings (deceptively labeled “dental amalgam” or “silver” fillings).
    • Things are coming down.  There’s this launch today of yet more information.   It’s not too difficult to predict that there will be court action as a consequence of the intransigence of the dental and medical professions, and Health Canada’s role in protecting the industry instead of fulfilling its responsibility to Canadian citizens.   There is no excuse for “we didn’t know” in today’s world.

    It is incomprehensible to me that they don’t comprehend:  people are pretty angry when they discover that ‘silver” isn’t silver, and that their ill health is the consequence of slow poisoning by mercury, which almost all allopathic doctors fail to diagnose.  It is especially galling when you know for how long it has been known that mercury fillings offgas .. slowly, continuously, 24 hours a day,  7 days a week,  since they were installed in the mouth.  You would be appalled by how much disease is nothing more than mercury poisoning, an overdose.  In some cases, long, slow, suffering and then death.  It’s not only disease, it’s also developmental and other problems.

    • You are absolutely wrong if you think that mercury fillings are no longer in use.  One of the people who came to the Mercury Jamboree had been at the College of Dentistry clinic the previous week.  Students, under the supervision of professors, put mercury fillings in his mouth.

    OKAY!  Fire off those emails to everyone you can think of.   We have the power through our networking to stop the use of mercury fillings.

    NOTE:  Some people are agreeing to a phased-in ban.   I don’t.

    • If there is “tainted beef”, it is pulled off store shelves immediately.  Because the causal link can’t be ducked.
    • At least one country, Norway, imposed an immediate ban with no phase-in.
    • IF Dental Colleges had the will, they could re-train existing dentists immediately.   I don’t know who would NOT want to be re-trained, not if you know the longterm health consequences of mercury fillings.  And not when you know the trend-lines for  disease and developmental problems.   (Cancer rates have gone from 1 in 1000, to 1 in 500,  to 1 in 50, to 1 in 10, to 1 in 3.  Next comes 1 in 2.  Whatever the medicare system is doing, it is a complete failure in terms of arresting and reversing disease trend lines.  Cancer is just one example.)  When you KNOW what mercury fillings do, how could anyone in good conscience put them in the mouth of anyone?
    • The best way to get an immediate cessation is to pass this along to every person and organization you can think of.   Including your dentist and doctor.
    • For links to videos of the off-gasing, of the shrivelling up of neurons exposed to mercury, etc.  the file of information is under “Categories” in the righthand sidebar.  You’ll find it under  “Health”.

    Cheers!

     

    Apr 162012
     
    (Sorry!  The formatting won’t hold. I’ve tried all I know to fix it, without success.)
    For Immediate Release
    More Information:
    (1) Sandra Finley   306-373-8078  Saskatoon SK    Email:  sabest1  AT  sasktel.net
    (2) Michael Bender: 802.223.9000    802.917.4579   Vermont    Email:  mercurypolicy AT  aol.com
    YOUR TEETH MAY BE POISONING FISH YOU EAT
    “Earth Day” Report Shows Real Cost of Dental Mercury Fillings
    WASHINGTON April 16 – Dental mercury fillings pollute the environment, contaminate fish and are far more costly for taxpayers than the alternative tooth-colored material, according to a new study released today by a broad coalition of health, consumer and environmental groups.[i]
    “The report’s findings confirm that amalgam is not the least expensive when the so-called ‘external costs’ are factored in,” said Michael Bender, Director of the Mercury Policy Project.  “And use is still prevalent.  Using data from the American Dental Association, the report found that 32 tons of dental mercury is used annually in the U.S., twice that of current estimates.[ii]
    The study was prepared by Brussels-based Concorde East/West Sprl, an international consulting firm that provides research to the UN and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), among others and confirms that mercury-free alternatives are in around the world.
    “Amalgam has already been nearly phased out in many countries, including the Nordic countries, Germany, Italy, Japan and even Mongolia and Vietnam,” said Dr. Nestor Shapka, a biologically focused mercury-free dentist at Lake Centre Dental Clinic in Alberta, and president of the  International Academy of Oral Medicine & Toxicology, with members in 14 countries.  “People living in these countries recognize that mercury-free dental fillings are readily available, affordable and effective.”
    The report details how society pays for dental mercury through additional pollution control costs, deterioration of public resources, and the health effects associated with mercury contamination.
    “The best way to keep mercury out of our water and out of the fish we eat is to stop it from getting there in the first place,” says Cyndi Luppi, New England Director for Clean Water Action. “That’s just common sense. This study shows the economics are on our side, too.”
    The report shows that when the real cost to taxpayersand the environment is considered, amalgam is significantly more costly than composite as a filling material, by at least $41 more per filling.
    “It is taxpayers who foot the bill for dental mercury in the environment, which goes uncontrolled into our water, air and land,” said Charlie Brown, National Counsel, Consumers for Dental Choice.  “Dental mercury contaminates fish, which in turn presents a neurological exposure risk to pregnant women and children, in particular.”
    In 2010, EPA announced plans to propose a dental mercury pollution control rule, stating that:
    “…approximately 50 percent of mercury entering local waste treatment plants comes from dental amalgam waste.  Once deposited, certain microorganisms can change elemental mercury into methylmercury, a highly toxic form that builds up in fish, shellfish and animals that eat  fish.”[iii]
    The groups note that EPA has yet to propose its rule, however.
    The Concorde East/West report contributes to current global talks to reduce dental mercury use, including a World Health Organization report,[iv] an EU draft report to phase out amalgam by 2018.[v]
    In summary, the environmental concerns and indirect health risks from dental mercury releases all show the need for an amalgam phase out. Yet now another clear reason is provided:  amalgam is far from being a bargain and is in fact significantly more costly than mercury-free fillings.
    ###
    Access report on Real Cost of Dental Mercury at:  www.mercurypolicy.org and www.iaomt.org
    For more information, see:  www.cleanwater.org, www.toxicteeth.orgwww.zeromercury.org
    ENDNOTES
    Medicine & Toxicology is a network of dental, medical and research professionals who seek to raise the standards of scientific biocompatibility in the dental practice with information from the latest interdisciplinary research.  The European Environmental Bureau’s Zero Mercury Campaign project’s ultimate objective is ‘Zero’ emissions, demand and supply of mercury, from all sources we can control, in view of reducing to a minimum, mercury in the environment at EU level and globally.
    [1] Interstate Mercury Education and Reduction Clearinghouse website:  ww.newmoa.org/prevention/mercury/imerc/factsheets/dental_amalgam.pdf.   IMERC members include CT, LA, ME, MA, NH, NY, RI, and VT.

    [i]Coalition includes:  Clean Water Action, a national group with 1 million members, protects water and health, from watershed to water tap, and has been active on mercury pollution prevention for more than 25 years. Consumers for Dental Choice was founded in 1996 and its goal is to phase out the use of amalgam, a 50% mercury product. The Mercury Policy Project works to promote policies to eliminate mercury uses,
    reduce releases, export and exposures of mercury at the local, national, and international levels. The International Academy of Oral Medicine & Toxicology is a network of dental, medical and research professionals who seek to raise the standards of scientific biocompatibility in the dental practice with information from the latest interdisciplinary research.  The European Environmental Bureau’s Zero Mercury Campaign project’s ultimate objective is ‘Zero’ emissions, demand and supply of mercury, from all sources we can control, in view of reducing to a minimum, mercury in the environment at EU level and globally.
    [ii] Interstate Mercury Education and Reduction Clearinghouse website:
    www.newmoa.org/prevention/mercury/imerc/factsheets/dental_amalgam.pdf.   IMERC members include CT, LA, ME, MA, NH, NY, RI, and VT.