Are Things Getting Better?



 I don't know whether if was a suggestion, rumor or something that actually happened, but when I was studying political theory at Berkeley in the 1960s, a philosophy TA mused that Karl Popper came to campus and proposed a semester long course on the topic: "Are Things Getting Better?'

That's always struck me as a great topic for inquiry -- puzzling, wide open, full of possibilities.  What kinds of evidence and argument could be marshaled to provide an answer?  How would one weight the positive, negative and neutral trends for humanity and the planet?  How could one begin to compare the changes about which many people are sanguine -- the presence of the Internet, for example -- against ones whose  presence tends to cast a shadow over any reasonable expectations about the future (global warming, the end of cheap energy, growing economic inequality...)?

It turns out that on the occasion of the Rio+20 summit, The Guardian has prepared a brief set of categories including population, life expectancy, child mortality, ecological footprint, poverty, hunger, food production, GDP, social change, life satisfaction, battle deaths and biodiversity, along with a slice of the available evidence to prompt us to ponder such questions.

Here's the link that asks for your views and compares them to others who've taken the survey.  (I'm still undecided.)

Rio+20 interactive: is the world getting better or worse?


Tens of thousands of Norwegians sing a song the killer hates




In a plaza in Oslo today some 40,000 Norwegians gathered in to sing a song, "Barn av Regnbuen," Children of the Rainbow.  The song celebrates the tolerant, multicultural society that most people in the country revere.  It's also the kind of society that Anders Behring Breivik, now on trial for killing 77 people last July, openly hates, a sentiment that apparently motivated his murderous rampage.  

Here are the words to the song with my translation:

En himmel full av stjerner.
Blått hav så langt du ser.
En jord der blomster gror.
Kan du ønske mer ?
Sammen skal vi leve
hver søster og hver bror.
Små barn av regnbuen
og en frodig jord.

A sky full of stars.
Blue sea as far as you can see.
A land where flowers grow.
Can you wish for more?
Together we will live
each sister and each brother.
Small children of the rainbow
and a fertile soil.


The song is an adaptation of Pete Seeger's classic "Rainbow Race" (1917), embraced by Norwegians as a national favorite.  Here's Pete's original version on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XxXzD0eQQBg 

Twenty years ago I lived with my family for a year in Norway and came to love the place and its people.  I applaud them for joining together in the face of great tragedy to raise their voices in song, affirming the simple truth that unites them.

Ha de bra, my friends.

Lonely Climate Flower


Today I noticed one pink azalea in front of my home in Chatham, New York.  Usually, at this time of year, hundreds of flowers sprout from the two thirty-year-old plants that grace our front porch.  But in the middle of March there was a spike of very warm weather that encouraged the plants to begin to blossom about a month early.  Just as the flowers were beginning to emerge, a freeze stuck the region, killing all the azaleas, or so I thought.  Today this one little survivor announced its presence.

This is small testament to much a much larger pattern: destruction of Earth's climate, bringing increasingly capricious weather that now assaults both nature and civilization.