We must understand that through an always better democratic 
			environment we have to reconcile our individual greed with our 
			overall welfare, our short term pleasure with our long term 
			happiness, and as an ultimate objective we must struggle for peace 
			rather than wage wars to make peace. I just want to provide this 
			background of social democracy so that we are better able to 
			understand our social and economic predicament and be better 
			prepared to make decisions rather than follow the dogmatic social 
			and economic policies of our politicians and neo-classical 
			economists.
			
			 There 
			are politicians and economists in Canada who do not support the 
			ratification of the Kyoto’s agreement to reduce pollution gases into 
			the atmosphere. These politicians and economists discount the 
			related danger of pollution and global warming and they claim that 
			our economy would suffer by some $40 billion and that our standard 
			of living would decline. I must say that the $40 billion cost is the 
			result of the regressive linear analysis of our correlation 
			economists who are copycatting the fraudulent studies of 
			statistician Bjorn Lomborg. And as our standard of living is 
			concerned it has been declining for many years. 
			In my last article I debunked the brainwashing perception of ever 
			greater GDP and Productivity numbers. Yes, in the short run greater 
			GDP and Productivity numbers could make sense as goods and services 
			stay the same, but in the long run we cannot support ever greater 
			GDP and Productivity numbers. In the long run our welfare is not 
			measured by the GDP. In the long run our welfare is measured by a 
			better democracy, by our peace with our neighbours, by our 
			education, by our continuous learning, by our health. In the long 
			run the Productivity numbers don’t make sense at all; and in fact 
			what is the purpose to compare labour productivity in the sixties 
			and labour productivity in the nineties when we realize that the 
			Information Technology sector is a present economic phenomenon? In 
			the long run our goods and services are different and as a 
			consequence there is no point in keeping track of the so called 
			Productivity increases.  
			For all those people who are opposed to the ratification of the 
			Kyoto’s agreement I want to remind them that  
			
				"the most fundamental modes of behaviour are exponential 
				growth, goal seeking, and oscillation."  
			 
			The exponential growth cannot be sustained and therefore this 
			exponential growth is followed by an eventual collapse. We remember 
			the recent two year US $8 trillion loss of the American stock market 
			with the related loss of pension money for the common people and 
			with the related stealing of our rich and famous people. And we 
			remember the exponential growth and collapse of the Argentina’s 
			economy, and we are faced now with the exponential growth of 
			Brazil’s foreign debt as well. 
			The oscillation behaviour of our economy is mostly due to a 
			disconnection between the provision of goods/services and the 
			related needs/wants of people. And when there is an understanding 
			that our present economic stagnation is due to our over capacity to 
			produce goods/services then I feel sick as I think that this over 
			capacity to produce identifies the problem of a regressive 
			democracy. And I am developing the understanding that President 
			George Bush wants to offset the American over capacity to produce by 
			going to war against Iraq rather than by implementing domestic 
			social reform in health care and education. 
			We can maintain and better our social and economic predicament by 
			seeking socially rewarding goals. And these goals cannot be the 
			pursuing of ever greater GDP and Productivity numbers as these goals 
			are not sustainable. Therefore, we are left with our social and 
			economic goals of peace, better education, continuous learning, and 
			better health. 
			
			References  
			
			Pertinent articles published in Ensign
			Kyoto could cost Canada up to $40 billion, study shows. Alberta 
			economy could stand to lose up to $5.5 billion annually Government 
			of Alberta News Release, February 21, 2002 http://www.gov.ab.ca/acn/200202/11952.html
			 
			The Big Lie of the Free Market is Against the Environment: 
			Environmentalist Dana Meadows versus Statistician Bjorn Lomborg by 
			Mario deSantis, December 13, 2001 http://www.ftlcomm.com/ensign/desantisArticles/2001_500/desantis510/biglie.html
			 
			The Environmentalists Are Wrong By BJORN LOMBORG, August 26, 2002 
			The New York Times http://www.nytimes.com/2002/08/26/opinion/26LOMB.html?todaysheadlines
			 
			Breaking down the brainwashed perception of GDP and Productivity 
			by Mario deSantis, August 30, 2002 http://www.ftlcomm.com/ensign/desantisArticles/2002_600/desantis687/perception.html
			 
			Business Dynamics. System Thinking and Modeling for a Complex 
			World by John D. Sterman. Irwin McGraw-Hill, 2000. The excerpt "the 
			most fundamental modes of behaviour are exponential growth, goal 
			seeking, and oscillation" is found on page 108. http://www.mhhe.com/business/opsci/sterman/index.mhtml
			 
			Brazil Pays So the Banks Don't Have To By Mark Weisbrot, 
			September 1, 2002 The Washington Post http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A19276-2002Aug31.html
			 
			Too Much Supply, Too Little Demand By Steven Pearlstein, 
			Washington Post Staff Writer, August 25, 2002; Page A01 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A58181-2002Aug24.html   |