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Tuesday 30 July 2013

Brazilian car crash

The news has been full of appalling train and bus crashes in Europe, but my eye was drawn once more to a Brazilian car crash: the revelation that former squillionnaire Eike Batista is now almost wiped out because of his massive debts. Only a year or so ago Batista had claimed to be within a whisker of becoming the world's richest man. His conglomerate was supposed to exemplify the new BRIC powerhouse that was Brazil.

Tuesday 23 July 2013

Out of the mouths of babes - part 2

The "Arab spring", so-called, has failed to live up to expectations because there was no real infrastructure for democratic discourse in that part of the world. The region continues to gyrate between various forms of secular and religious dictatorships.

And yet there are some truly magical sparks of light floating around in the gloom. First, the Egyptian boy (see post before last) and now this beautiful, intelligent and brave little girl in Yemen. Thanks to the internet's magic carpet, both wise young owls have had their desperately important messages transported around the world. If they are in any way representative of a new generation of Arabs, there is much cause for optimism. May these and other children teach their elders what it means to live in a decent, compassionate, free society !

Tuesday 16 July 2013

Visual dissonance, Brazilian-style

After the bizarre sight of a barely pubescent Egyptian boy showing infinitely more maturity than his political elders, now we have an attractive young Brazilian woman smashing stereotypes and decrying her country's economic recklessness, as exemplified by the upcoming 2014 World Cup.

Monday 8 July 2013

Out of the mouths of babes

It's a surreal experience watching this 12-year-old Egyptian boy speak truth to power. I say vote him for President, since he clearly has an older and wiser head on his shoulders than 99.99% of all existing Egyptian politicians !

Saturday 6 July 2013

Freedom needs "capitalism" more than "democracy"

Last week Brazil, this week Egypt, and both just the tip of a global iceberg. This article talks about deep-rooted problems in the Arab world and says the West is wrong to obsess about "democracy". What Arabs want - as do the "little people" everywhere - is simply the right to go about their business without being crushed by corruption and bureaucracy (too often the same thing).