15 April, 2010

Identity can be complicated

The are no "Israelis" in Israel. At least no official Israelis. The state of Israel maintains a distinction between "citizenship" and "nationality" that allows one to say that while all people can be citizens the state belongs to the "Jewish nation." In other words, Jews who have never visited Israel (roughly 7 million) have an official status denied to Arabs who have lived there all of their lives.

A group of Jews and Arabs are going to the Supreme Court of Israel to be recognized as "Israelis," but I wouldn't bet on their chances. A 1970 decision has already found against the plaintifs in a similar case. Meanwhile. it's one more sign of the tension built into the country. How can one be a democracy and a Jewish state simultaneously?

Not to mention the disagreements about what constitutes a Jew, or whether someone is just "Jewish."

If it wasn't so tragic in so many ways, it would still be fascinating.

14 April, 2010

Words of wisdom

How to Avoid Choking Under Pressure

SupraMap :: Home

SupraMap is a web-based system that follows the mutation and spread of viruses over time and around the world. Want to trace the progress of the swine flu? Here's a tool to do it.

08 April, 2010

Nothing I can add

psychic.jpg

Catch-22

From Stars and Stripes: Air Force Lt. Robin Chaurasiya wasn't asked, but she told: she is a lesbian, and she's in a civil union. Her commander could have discharged her. Instead, he ruled that she must remain in the Air Force because her admission was for the purpose of 'avoiding and terminating military service.'

Isn't it time to admit the whole damn "don't ask/don't tell" policy is foolish?

27 March, 2010

Where US foreign aid goes


Data for 2004-2008, reported by Chris Blattman.
This is Official Development Assistance (ODA) only, based on OECD numbers.  If military and other aid was included Israel would be on the graph, just behind Iraq.

aidmap.png

A high SAT score pays...

...if you are a college-age woman selling your eggs.  The Boston Globe reports on an analysis of ads in student newspapers that finds an increase of 100 points in a woman's score resulted in an average increase of $2,350 in offers to buy her eggs.

No word on what it does for sperm donors.

09 March, 2010

Bonuses in context

I'm as much in favor of rewarding excellence as the next guy, but numbers like these leave me a little ill.




17 February, 2010

Russia and China

STRATFOR has an interesting comparison of the immediate prospects for Russia and for China.  For Russia, the fact that the (nearly bankrupt) Greek government is going to them for help--after being rejected by the EU--is a blow to the eurozone and a boost for Russia's prestige.
This was an avenue that both Iceland and Serbia took during their economic crises, and each time the EU responded with financial aid of its own to counter Moscow’s rising influence. A Russian loan to Greece — no matter what the actual size of the aid package — would be a psychological blow to EU unity. An EU member state — a eurozone state no less — finding financial assistance in Russia rather than among its fellow euro users would lay bare the EU’s inefficiency, particularly in times of crisis management. Moscow would therefore send a powerful message to Central European states that see the EU as a counter to Russian spheres of influence on their borders.
China has the problem that it's stuck between saying no to helping Iran resist American sanctions--which would undermine its claim to counterbalance American power in the region--or try to block the sanctions--which it doesn't have the immediate infrastructure to do, and would encourage more Sino-US tensions.
While sanctions may not specifically target Iranian oil exports, Beijing reasonably fears they could create a chain reaction jeopardizing its oil supplies not only from Iran, but also from the rest of the Gulf, since these shipments pass through the Strait of Hormuz where Iran is most likely to aim any retaliation. While China’s economic growth rate is high, serious vulnerabilities exist in the banking, property and export sectors, all of which the government is attempting to address without triggering a destabilizing slowdown. Now would be an exceedingly bad time for a sudden energy shock.

Moreover, much of the credibility of China’s claims to rising international status rest on its ability to defend smaller states like Iran that are antagonistic to the United States. If China drops Iran at the first sign of American coercion, a host of other states — in Latin America, Africa and Southeast Asia — will rethink whether they can rely on China for support. In such a case, Chinese leaders would struggle to allay domestic outrage at yet another example of acquiescence to the United States, while much of the political capital they have painstakingly built up in recent years through speeches, state visits and investments across the world would be squandered.
From the Chinese perspective, it's one more reason to develop a much greater naval presence, or to work out some kind of arrangement that makes China's access to oil less dependent on the good will of the US Navy.

I wonder how the debt issue fit into this?  By some measures, the British economy is in even worse shape than the economy of Greece, and American problems are growing rapidly.  Can the Chinese find a way to use the debt as a lever?

"This report is republished with permission of STRATFOR"