Saturday, August 27, 2016
Making Decisions Much Much Faster Than Ten Years Ago?
Tuesday, August 23, 2016
Knowledge Needs to Flow to the Poor
Chinese Student Commencement Speech
Coincidence or synchronicity, the main point of that speech was along the same line as the first idea I listed in my last Blog --
Global Wealth Disparity Came from Concentration of Power
1) Knowledge needs to flow to the poor (long term by education/learning; short term by Internet)
This is heartening to me because the speaker is of the next generation and in particular, he is from China and educated in the US. His main point, as my take from his speech, is that everyone of us should do something to help spread scientific knowledge to the poor people in the underdeveloped countries, so as to help them.
As a motivational speech, he did a good job. He pinpointed the need for us to look inside ourselves. Again, it is good to see that it is also my first point in the post on
What Has Happened to this World in Barely Eight Years?
1) The problem is inside each one of us.
Both are good ideas, of course. But, they are already practiced. Motivating more people to make use of existing channels of education at best will increase the speed of education equalization slightly. To be more effective, we need greater motivation and more effective and new channels or infrastructures to increase the flow of knowledge to the poor, globally.
How do we generate stronger motivation?
A crazy idea is to scientifically influence our temperament towards philanthropy. Is that possible? Probably yes, when science reaches a level of advancement and humanity can agree on a safe and acceptable way to use that technology. But we need to solve the problem now.
A mundane way is to provide greater incentives for people to benefit themselves when they engage in philanthropy. I had dreamed in the past to award people financially and reputation-wise by tracking their philanthropic actions. With the Internet of Things (IoT) and Big Data being on us already, making such tracking of people (if voluntary) can be done. Credit score is already a widely applied measure. Location information on individuals is already widely accepted when fear of privacy is overcome by the benefits of convenience. I imagine that Big Brother is imminently on us and we may voluntarily accept more and more of it. Therefore, an international and NGO-controlled monitoring of our philanthropic activities may be a way for people to intensify their motivation to do good to others, Money reward as well as reputation could make a difference in people's motivation.
What new channels or infrastructures to increase the flow of knowledge?
Ideas that are already being used, which came to my mind, include the websites which provide free online Internet learning, from universities and volunteers. What is missing in the poor countries is the communication infrastructure for the poor people to connect to the Internet. Efforts by Facebook and Google to deploy free Internet communication to remote countries are highly laudable! The world needs more of these large enterprises to do similar things and to donate low-cost smartphones and laptops, etc. to the poor people. If free wifi can be made available to these countries, it will save them a lot of capital to build up data communication infrastructures for fixed line phones, cellular phones, cable TV, or DSL and leapfrog into wireless communication. That will really speed up their economic development and reduce their capital requirements.
Monday, August 22, 2016
Global Wealth Disparity Came from Concentration of Power
To narrow the global wealth disparity, there is no question that the most effective measure would be to lift the poor in the poor countries out of poverty, in a sustained way. This is seldom seen or heard in the popular topics or discussions in the richer countries. The "Occupy" movements five years ago which protested against wealth disparity have fizzled out. What happened?
Have we become more insensitive to the needs of the poor? Out of sight, out of mind? Or are we distracted by the noises of dissension, separation, zero-sum (If you win, then I lose), you and we are different, to succeed one must be selfish, etc.?
Yes, these are all causes, but I think a fundamental cause is the increasing concentration of power among the top 1%. Most of these people firmly believe in their value system. There are exceptions, of course, as many of these people are philanthropists, in their second personality, However, their primary personality is still driven to succeed in their businesses.
Along with the concentration of power with the top 1%, they also have mastery over new and developing technologies, and new ways of building more business.They have completely asymmetrical power compared to ordinary people and the poor, to increase their wealth at exponential growth. This concentration of power will drive the wealth gap even bigger.
A question I have to myself is this. Can any international institution or international agreement bring about a narrowing of the wealth gap in a sustainable way, within the current economic and political world order? Or is a complete collapse of the current world order necessary in order to have a rebirth of a new world with reasonable global wealth distribution?
Before I become entirely pessimistic, I would try to envision a sustainable international agreement which can reverse the wealth gap without a complete collapse first.
1) Knowledge needs to flow to the poor (long term by education/learning; short term by Internet)
2) Investment capital needs to flow to the poor.
3) Transportation infrastructure needs to connect the poor.
4) An international commitment from the richer countries to distribute part of its wealth to the poor countries on a sustained manner.
Need to think more ..... for sure!
Wednesday, August 17, 2016
What Has Happened to this World in Barely Eight Years?
When I started using this Blog, it was 2005. The last time when I wrote with serious thoughts was in 2008 and 2009. Now, in 2016, eight years later, I am asking myself "What Has Happened to this World?"
Idealism in the form of kindness, generosity, tolerance, celebrating diversity and striving for greater common good seems to have vanished. In their places, we are bombarded every day by news and sentiments which provoke enmity, selfishness, intolerance, suppressing diversity and demanding the best for self, nation, religion, and race. Where are the voices of unity in diversity?
Ironically, the European Union, whose motto is Unity In Diversity, is facing BREXIT and internal strives on the continent.
Perhaps it is time to examine what went wrong and how to fix it, before the world descends into chaos.
Finding faults with political leaders is not productive, because they always have their reasons for their decisions. "It is always someone else's fault which causes my counter measure."
In asking myself what went wrong, my thoughts led me to two things, spontaneously:
1) The problem is inside each one of us.
2) The problem is that information technologies compel us into making decisions much much faster than we had to ten years ago.
As a firm believer of free wills, I would maintain that most people, when given sufficient time and a conducive environment to be calm, will make a choice based on their value system, formed and modified through their life-long experiences. A personal value system provides stability and rationality in the behavior of a person. When agitated and pressed for time to react, a person may more likely respond with choices that are prone to be by reflex, by habit, according to conventional wisdom, prompted by peer pressure, or dictated by fear or other emotions, etc. When feeling threatened, a person could also resort to instincts of self protection and would regard whoever poses the threat to be an enemy. These animal instincts are in all of us and may get loosened when we lose control of our free wills.
The frequency and intensity of information hitting us in the face has become astronomical. It can only be limited if we make a conscious and difficult effort to not fall prey to the temptation of constantly staying in touch, through the smart phones and computers. In comparing our daily lives today with ten years ago, the biggest difference is the ubiquitous reliance on the smart phones for almost all forms of communication. Fixed line phones, faxes, television with antenna and cable subscriptions have disappeared or practically so. Even computers are now being used much less frequently. Instead of getting news from delayed coverage from "trusted" news channels, established media or newscasters, we get instant coverage, instant comments and instant responses from practically the whole world, including personal blogs and twitters, etc.
With the sources of information gone up exponentially, news are being quoted and republished before proper checking. Quick responses from people more often become the results of reflex, habit, emotion, etc., as I pointed out, instead of the consequences of carefully weighed and considered comments consistent with that person's value system. Accusations and counter-accusations become more frequent and they are magnified by news channels picking them up and magnifying them by rebroadcasts.
Not all people fall into that mode of receiving and sending information, without careful consideration, of course. At least, none of us automatically would agree that we are one of them. But perhaps, we have become more like that ourselves, due to the new environment of modern information technology, without our fully realizing it. In other words, we ourselves are part of the world's problem.
Even now, typing this blog is slower than ten years ago. Why? It is because I have become so used to just writing short quips in Chat Apps or text messages, postings or comments in Facebook, etc. My grammar and my English writing have definitely deteriorated.
When will we realize that mankind has not risen to the challenge of truly "mastering" our technologies? Have we become slaves of our own inventions?
Food for thought?