Author: Jeremiah

  • The Beauty of Mathematics

    1 x 8 + 1 = 9
    12 x 8 + 2 = 98
    123 x 8 + 3 = 987
    1234 x 8 + 4 = 9876
    12345 x 8 + 5 = 98765
    123456 x 8 + 6 = 987654
    1234567 x 8 + 7 = 9876543
    12345678 x 8 + 8 = 98765432
    123456789 x 8 + 9 = 987654321

    1 x 9 + 2 = 11
    12 x 9 + 3 = 111
    123 x 9 + 4 = 1111
    1234 x 9 + 5 = 11111
    12345 x 9 + 6 = 111111
    123456 x 9 + 7 = 1111111
    1234567 x 9 + 8 = 11111111
    12345678 x 9 + 9 = 111111111
    123456789 x 9 +10= 1111111111

    9 x 9 + 7 = 88
    98 x 9 + 6 = 888
    987 x 9 + 5 = 8888
    9876 x 9 + 4 = 88888
    98765 x 9 + 3 = 888888
    987654 x 9 + 2 = 8888888
    9876543 x 9 + 1 = 88888888
    98765432 x 9 + 0 = 888888888

    Brilliant, isn’t it?

    And look at this symmetry:

    1 x 1 = 1
    11 x 11 = 121
    111 x 111 = 12321
    1111 x 1111 = 1234321
    11111 x 11111 = 123454321
    111111 x 111111 = 12345654321
    1111111 x 1111111 = 1234567654321
    11111111 x 11111111 = 123456787654321
    111111111 x 111111111 = 12345678987654321

     Now, take a look at this…

    101%

    From a strictly mathematical viewpoint:

    What Equals 100%?
    What does it mean to give MORE than 100%?

    Ever wonder about those people who say they are giving more than 100%?

    We have all been in situations where someone wants you to
    GIVE OVER 100%.

    How about ACHIEVING 101%?

    What equals 100% in life?

    Here’s a little mathematical formula that might help
    answer these questions:

    If:

    A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

    Is represented as:

    1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26.

    If:

    H-A-R-D-W-O- R- K

    8+1+18+4+23+ 15+18+11 = 98%

    And:

    K-N-O-W-L-E- D-G-E

    11+14+15+23+ 12+5+4+7+ 5 = 96%

    But:

    A-T-T-I-T-U- D-E

    1+20+20+9+20+ 21+4+5 = 100%

    THEN, look how far the love of God will take you:

    L-O-V-E-O-F- G-O-D

    12+15+22+5+15+ 6+7+15+4 = 101%

    Therefore, one can conclude with mathematical certainty that:

    While Hard Work and Knowledge will get you close, and Attitude will
    get you there, It’s the Love of God that will put you over the top!

     

    Now just remember, God is a verb

    ;o)

    Jeremiah Josey

  • The Little Earth Book – Introduction to Second Edition

    I’ve decided to retype this introduction here because it makes a lot of sense.  The balance between yin and yang – ancient Chinese descriptions for two distinct energetic states – is shifting.  It is through books like this, disseminated via the Internet, that will change the path of our civilisation, bringin balace and harmony where before there was none.

    Since The Little Earth Book was first published in October 2000 the damage being inflicted on the planet by humanity has become more apparent.

    Britain has been subjected to widespread flooding and government policies have led to an orgy of animal slaughter.  President Bush has relaxed restraints on the emission of greenhouse gas.  The World Trade Organisation has to hold its meetings outside democratic countries.  In the South there has been a widespread collapse of commodity process leading to an epidemic of suicides among farmers.  The obscene level of inequality within and between countries has continued to rise.  And now the stated policy of the US military is ‘full spectrum dominance’- which includes space.

    Yet and interesting decade-long social study in America gives some hope.  It finds that their society falls into three main categories.  The US, like Britain and most countries, is still dominated by the ‘moderns’ – those that believe in growth, competition, control, confrontation and all the male yang qualities. A second small category is the ‘traditionals’, those who would like to turn the clock back.  But a third category is emerging: it represents the concerned, caring, co-operative, holistic, female yin qualities.  The study refers to these as çultural creatives’.  They are not a recognisable demographic group, but they now represent 26% of the US adult population.  Let us hope that the planet gives us time to redress the yin-yang balance, allowing world affairs to move towards sanity.

    In this edition we add chapters at the end to show some positive developments.  We have also updated Free Trade and some of the marginal comments.

    James Bruges 2001

    Jeremiah Josey

  • The Little Earth Book – Introduction to First Edition

    This is the introduction to “The Little Earth Book“, first Edition, written by James Bruges in 2000.

    The content in these 167 tiny – only 145 x 135 mm – pages is clear concise.  Recommended reading to understand WHAT CAN BE DONE beyond the disturbing and  circular discussion on what has happening.

    Juts before this book went to the printers, at the end of August 2000, the editorial of the New Scientist commenced: “Levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere are well on the way to those found in the Eocene period when the world was ice-free and England a steaming mangrove forest

    Such news makes some of us deeply anxious.  Others will ask what they can do.  This Little Earth Book will, by shedding light on complex issues, help us to respond both constructively and creatively – rather than throw up our hands and leave responsibilities to ‘the experts’.

    The book is about new attitudes and a change of direction, not doom and gloom.  And if we say some apparently dramatic things, remember that scientists – in many cases the majority of them – are saying dramatic things too.  They are beseeching us to look at the evidence and DO something.

    This year, 2000, the Royal commission on Environmental Pollution advised the [UK] Government that: “The world is now faced with a radical challenge of a totally new kind, which requires an urgent response.  The concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is already higher than at any time for millions of years.  There is no precedent to help us understand precisely what consequences will follow. The environmental consequences are potentially catastrophic.

    This follows consistent warnings from the scientific community.  Even back in 1992 1,670 scientists, including 110 of the 138 living winners of Nobel prizes in the sciences, issued the famous “World Scientists” Warning to Humanity”. It included these comments:

    “We are fast approaching many of the Earth’s limits.  Current economic practices which damage the environment cannot continue.  Our massive tampering could trigger unpredictable collapse of critical biological systems which are only partly understood.  A great change in our stewardship of the Earth and the life on it is required if vast human misery is to be avoided and our global home on this planet is not to be irretrievably mutilated.

    In 1999 the chief meteorologists of Britain and the US issued a joint letter to national newspapers in both countries, including: “Ignoring climate change will surely be the most costly of all possible choices, for us and our children.

    But politicians, vulnerable as they are to lobby groups, are – crucially – still dragging their heels.  Lawrence Summers, Secretary to the US Treasury and hugely influential in the World Bank, has said: “There are no limits to the carrying capacity of the Earth that could bind any time in the foreseeable future.  The idea that we should put limits on growth because of some natural limit is a profound error.

    [Another organisation of scientists, the U.S.-based Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), prepared a lengthy report in 2006 showing that ExxonMobil has funnelled nearly $16 million between 1998 and 2005 to a network of 43 advocacy organisations that seek to confuse the public on global warming science”.

    “ExxonMobil has manufactured uncertainty about the human causes of global warming just as tobacco companies denied their products caused lung cancer,” said Alden Meyer, UCS director of strategy and policy.  “A modest but effective investment has allowed the oil giant to fuel doubt about global warming to delay government action just as big tobacco did for over forty years.”

    Two United States senators, Republican Olympis Snowe from Maine and Democrat Jay Rockefeller from West Virginia, also joined in the growing effort to persuade ExxonMobil to behave ethically.  The two senators said that ExxonMobil’s brazen and outrageous effort to spread ignorance and confusion about the climate crisis “has damaged the United States’ reputation.”  saying that ExxonMobil’s ongoing misrepresentation of the science is not honest, they protected “ExxonMobil’s extensive funding of an ‘echo chamber’ of non-peer-reviewed pseudoscience.”

    ExxonMobil’s motive for engaging in this extraordinary and ongoing effort at mass deception is certainly not mysterious. In early 2007, the company announced the largest annual profit for the preceding year, 206, of any corporation in U.S. history.

    Excerpt from The Assault on Reason, by Al Gore, pages 201 and 202

    The report can be read here: ExxonMobil Report 2007 by UCS]

    Throughout this book you will find reference to the World Bank, for it is a giant player on the world stage.  In November 1999 its Chief Economist stunned the world by resigning.  He had been consistently overrules.  “It is not just the creation of a market economy that matters“, he said, “but the establishment of the foundations of sustainable, equitable and democratic institutions.

    So, the scientific community is saying that we are exceeding the earth’s carrying capacity, and is being heeded by the United Nations.  Th World Bank, the IMF and the World Trade Organisation, on the other hand, are still acting as if the world’s health will improve if we all consume more.

    WHO IS RIGHT? Surely we should take scientists seriously when they are almost one voice.  We also have, all of us, the evidence of our own senses.  We smell the increase in pollution, see the countryside being overwhelmed by concrete, listen in vain for the song of once-familiar birds, are aware through our travels of growing inequalities, and know the futility of wealth creation for it’s own sake.

    If the scientists are right, we face human misery on an unprecedented scale, much of it caused by the policies of the World Bank and the I.M.F. and the frenzied, headlong rush towards a globalised economy which seeks to make us all into consumers, customers and competitors.  Future generations will see us as guilty of the ultimate crime against humanity: allowing our Earth’s support systems to die while we enjoyed the temporary benefits of an unsustainable lifestyle.

    We are NOT just consumers, customers, competitors.  We are, first and last, human beings.  And each one of us has enormous potential to change things.  This book has stirring examples of individuals thinking, acting and dreaming up new ideas.  Some may sound unrealistic but, if the scale of remedial action fails to match the scale of the crises, the crises will overwhelm us.  This book is a clarion call to each of us.  It shows us that there is hope.

    Jeremiah Josey

  • Australian Personal Income Taxation Rates

    I am often asked what are the tax rates in Australia.

    Here they are in graphical format:

    Yes, they are high.

    The calculations come from here: Australian Tax Rates

    Jeremiah Josey

  • The Modern Curse that Divides Us from Nature

    My views on architecture, the environment and society are underpinned by one unifying idea – the vital need for harmony

    The Prince of Wales

    We live in an age when technological ease has become so much a part of the accustomed way of life that it seems “natural” to some, even their right. But what does our dependence upon such technology do to our connection with Nature? Does our increasing dependence upon technology make us believe that we, too, and the world about us, are merely part of some enormous mechanical process?

    These questions have concerned me for many years, because there is now a worrying imbalance in how we are persuaded to see the world. Our perception of Nature, in particular, has become dangerously limited.

    When I have spoken of these things I have been shot at from all sides – the natural consequence, I suppose, of having the temerity to challenge the status quo of scientific Modernist rationalism. But undeterred by the barrage of invective, I would like to explain what lies at the heart of my concern.

    A question from a newspaper correspondent in the 1930s drew from Mahatma Gandhi one of his pithiest responses. Asked, during his visit to Britain, what he thought of Western civilisation, he replied: “It would be a very good idea.”

    Gandhi realised that humanity has a natural tendency to consume and that, if there are no limits on that tendency, we can become obsessed simply with satisfying our desires. The desire grows ever more potent as we consume ever more, even though we achieve very little of the satisfaction we desire. Is this not so in the Western world today? We hear so many people admitting to feeling deeply dissatisfied. It reminds me of that wise observation about gross national product by Robert Kennedy 40 years ago, that it “measures everything except that which makes life worthwhile”.

    I’m sure that many people know it is wrong to plunder the Earth’s treasures as recklessly as we do, but the comprehensive world view persuades us that such destruction is justified because of the freedom it brings us, not to say the profits. Our tendency to consume is legitimised by a world view that puts humanity at the centre of things, with an absolute right over Nature. And that makes it a very dangerous view.

    This approach has been adopted in such a wholesale fashion that I feel many do not even realise we have lost something precious – what I might describe as an intuitive sense of our interconnectedness with Nature.

    The movement responsible for the imbalance – it is often called “Modernism” – rose to dominance at the start of the 20th century. Now, this movement must not be confused with the great social, economic and political advances of the earlier “modern” age, the many benefits of which endure to this day.

    The “Modernism” to which I refer offered us an unrelenting emphasis upon a material and mechanistic view of the world. To quote from the Victoria and Albert Museum’s foreword to its recent exhibition on Modernism: “Modernists had a Utopian desire to create a better world. They believed in technology as the key means to achieve social improvement and in the machine as a symbol of that aspiration.”

    Thus the ground was laid for the arrival of those straight, efficient lines of Modernism with the aim of simplifying and standardising the world, making things as efficient and as convenient as possible. This is why the curved streets of towns became straight matrices and why we have so many buildings grouped into single- use zones, including those for living – most noxious of all, those high- rise blocks of flats that, throughout the 1960s and 70s, became the living quarters for thousands of people in every city across Europe and the US.

    Removed from their communities, people were accommodated in brand- new, convenient, concrete cul-de-sacs in the sky, and when their newness faded, those areas all decayed into violent, soul-destroying ghettos with no capacity to nurture community. Guess what is happening now in the new cities springing up in China and India? As they doggedly follow the Western pattern of 40 years ago people are again compelled to leave their farms to live like factory-farmed chickens in mechanical boxes. Thus are millions more condemned to the same toxic future.

    The imposition of that simplistic geometry drastically reduces the richness of complexity. Those who drove this 20th-century ideology did not understand (or simply ignored) what biology and microbiology declare loud and clear – that complexity is key to life. The diversity that made up this complexity was bulldozed in the pursuit of simplicity and convenience, creating an appeal that continues to fuel the conspicuous consumption and throwaway societies we see everywhere. Just what Gandhi most feared and predicted…

    How has this come to be? I would suggest it is the net result of two seismic shifts in our perception.

    Modernism fuelled a fundamental disconnection from Nature – from the organic order of things that Nature discloses; from the structure and cyclical process of Nature and from its laws that impose those natural limits which Gandhi was at such pains for us to recognise.

    As a result, our perception of what we are and where we fit within the scheme of things is fractured. This is why I consider our problems today not just to be an environmental crisis, nor just a financial crisis. They all stem from this fundamental crisis in our perception. By positioning ourselves outside Nature, we have abstracted life altogether to the extent that our urbanised mentality is out of tune with the key principles underpinning the health of any economy and of all life on Earth. And those principles make up what is known as “Harmony”.

    Biology shows that in all living things there is a natural tendency towards Harmony. Organisms organise themselves into an order that is remarkably similar at every level, from the molecules in your little finger to vast eco-systems such as the rainforests. Life seeks balance. Every organism works together to produce a harmonic whole. When it is in balance, when there is harmony, the organism is healthy.

    This is why I have been so outspoken about how industrialised agriculture sees Nature simply as a mechanical process. When you consider that in one pinch of soil there are more microbes than there are people on the planet, you have to ask what irreversible damage do we do to that delicate ecosystem – the six inches of top soil that sustains all life on Earth? The soil’s health is our health. Yet we have eroded it and poisoned it and failed to replace lost nutrients to such a degree that a recent UN survey found that in just 50 years we have lost a third of the world’s farmable soil. That is hardly a sustainable rate of exploitation.

    Also implicit in “Modernism” was the notion that we could somehow disconnect ourselves from our inner nature; from the accumulated wisdom of the ages. Thus spiritual practice is denigrated by many: seen to be nothing more than outdated superstition. But “super-stition” means something much more profound if you see it as two words that point to a heightened sense of something within. But what? Could it be that animating source of the harmony inherent in all life? Could it be that intuitive element in our human constitution; that “sixth sense”, perhaps?

    Each of the great civilisations back to ancient times depicted what might be called the “grammar of harmony” in their mythology and the symbolism of their art and architecture, from the ancient Hindu temples of India to the great Gothic cathedrals of these islands. In cutting ourselves off from Nature we cut ourselves off from what we are; from our inner selves.

    You may believe that I have some reactionary obsession with returning to a kind of mock medieval, forelock- tugging past. All I am saying is that we simply cannot contend with the global environmental crises we face by relying on clever technological “fixes” on their own.

    The denial of our real relationship with Nature has engendered a dangerous alienation. In denying the invisible “grammar of harmony” we create cacophony and dissonance. If we hope to restore the balance, we must reintegrate the best parts of this ancient understanding of Harmony with the best modern technology and science, not least by developing innovative and more benign forms of technology that work with the grain of Nature rather than against it.

    This is an edited version of a speech to the Foreign Press Association. The full version can be read here

    Jeremiah Josey

  • The Advantages of the Middle East

    The Middle Eastern culture has more or less been continuous for close to three thousand years (from roughly 9th century BC). Islam, adopted by the Arabs from the early 7th century AD is a comparative new addition to their rich culture. Islam has never-the-less had a significant impact today across around 400 million people. A high quality of life and comfort has always been a keen interest for the Arab culture. With wealth brought with oil and gas in the Middle East, this has emphasised the appreciation for the finer things in life.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arab

    So, what does this suggest?  It suggests a diverse and rich culture emphatically focused on maintain dignity and solace.

    Simple understanding between people is the answer.

    Jeremiah Josey

  • Understanding the Current Situation in the Middle East

    I’m working my way through a great book right now. It’s called “The Assault on Reason”, written by Al Gore. Al does a wonderful job following on his “An Inconvenient Truth”, where in common language he helps us to understand the critical and devastating impact that we are having on our planet due to global warming.

    This latest treatise, published in 2007, I purchased during a recent trip for Dubai – capitalist center of the Middle East. I was hooked when I read a small section:

    We know that Cheney himself [Vice President under Bush], while heading Halliburton, did a considerable amount of business with Iraq – even though it was under UN sanctions at the time. And we know that Cheney stated in a public speech to the Institute of Petroleum in London in 1999, more than a year before becoming vice president, that over the coming decade the world would need, in his opinion, fifty million additional barrels of oil each day.

    Where is it going to come from? Cheney asked, and then, answering his own questions, he said: “The Middle East, with two-thirds of the world’s oil and the lowest cost, is still where the prize ultimately lies”.

    Then, in the spring of 2001, when vice President Cheney issued the administration’s national energy plan, the one that had been devised in secret by corporations and lobbyists that he still refuses to name, the report included this declaration: “The Persian Gulf will be a primary focus of U.S. international energy policy.”

    So with that I have been reading – and learning – about a whole series of interrelated events that do a very good job in explaining exactly what is happening in the region right now.  It really is amazing stuff.

    Jeremiah Josey

  • Quotes by Ronald Regan

    ‘Here’s my strategy on the Cold War: We win, they lose.’

    ‘The most terrifying words in the English language are: I’m from the government and I’m here to help.’

    ‘The trouble with our liberal friends is not that they’re ignorant; it’s just that they know so much that isn’t so.’

    ‘Of the four wars in my lifetime, none came about because the U.S. was too strong.’

    ‘I have wondered at times about what the Ten Commandments would have looked like if Moses had run them through the U.S. Congress.’

    ‘The taxpayer: That’s someone who works for the federal government but doesn’t have to take the civil service examination.’

    ‘Government is like a baby: An alimentary canal with a big appetite at one end a nd no sense of responsibility at the other.’

    ‘It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first.’

    ‘Government’s view of the economy could be summed up in a few short phrases: If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it.’

    ‘No arsenal, or no weapon in the arsenals of the world, is as formidable as the will and moral courage of free men and women.’

    ‘If we ever forget that we’re one nation under God, then we will be a nation gone under.’

    More Quotes

    Jeremiah Josey

  • You know you’ve been in the Middle East far too long when…

    You’re not surprised to see a goat in the passenger seat
    You think the uncut version of ‘Little House on the Prairie’ is provocative
    You think every one’s first name is Al
    You need a sweater when it’s 40 degrees celsius
    You expect everyone to own a mobile phone
    Your idea of housework is leaving a list for the houseboy
    You believe that speed limits are only advisory
    You expect all police to drive BMWs or Merc’s
    You know whether you are within missile range of Iran
    You believe that the definition of a nanosecond is the time interval between the time the light turns green and the time that the guy behind you begins to blow his horn
    You can’t buy anything without asking for a discount
    You expect all stores to stay open till midnight
    You understand that ‘wadi bashing’ isn’t a criminal act
    You make left turns from the far right lane
    You send friends a map instead of your address
    You understand why huge 4x4s must slow down to a snail’s pace whilst crossing a speed bump yet hurtle through a wadi at 100kph
    You think that ‘Howareyou’ is one word. So is ‘Mamsir’
    You think it perfectly normal to have a picnic in the middle of a round-about at 11pm
    You know exactly how much alcohol allowance you have left for the month
    You have a moon phase predictor on your computer
    You never say Saturday instead of Friday or Sunday instead of Saturday anymore
    You accept that there is no point in asking why you are not allowed to do something
    You expect queues to be 1 person deep and 40 people wide
    You realise that the black and white stripes in the road are not a zebra crossing, just bait to get tourists into the firing line
    Seeing guys welcome each other with a kiss and hold hands while walking no longer distracts you
    You carry 12 passport size photos around with you just in case
    You can tell the time by listening to the local mosque
    You think its a good night if there are fewer than 10 men for every woman in a bar
    Phrases like ‘potato peeler’, ‘dish washer’, ‘coffee maker’ and ‘fly swatter’ are no longer household items but are actually job titles
    You start to say ‘Insha’allah’ when you actually mean ‘Never!’
    Habibi isn’t just the ex-president of Indonesia
    You overtake a police car at 130KM/HRA
    Problem with your car AC or horn is more serious to you than a problem with the brakes

    Jeremiah Josey

  • So when does it start?

    Remember when you were a kid and you would draw a house?

    How many stories and how many windows did you draw? A door? Two windows either side? A bent chimney???

    I’m was judging a childrens’ drawing competition today.  The chilrdren range from ages 3 to 14.

    I’m looking at a house here: 6 stories high, 21 windows…  (At the top is written “My House”)

    The trees in the garden are full of ripe fruit.

    Another one – 6 stories, 18 windows, a jet and full apple tree…

    Programming is all done by the time you are 5 years old…

    Bet you can’t guess where I live?

    Jeremiah Josey

Jeremiah Josey