#315 – EDUCATION INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX: THE HAMMER WE HAVE – HOWARD WIENER

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In a recent NY Times feature article, Noam Scheiber provided a pretty thorough picture of the mid-to-longer term economic challenges we’re facing and some of the alternative policies that the Biden administration may pursue to address them.  The most important forces driving things boil down to a few:

  • Manufacturing that has a high labor component is almost universally cheaper to do outside of the US, where the workforce is paid less (and where worker protections may not be as comprehensive.)
  • Automation is increasingly being applied to wring manufacturing jobs out of the economy. For companies, this brings improvements in unit costs, throughput, output and quality.
  • Globalization (mostly outsourcing the fabrication of components or finished items) reduces costs to US companies and to US consumers.
  • While the US is still leading in invention and Intellectual Property generation, other countries, such as China, realize a lot of the value when they manufacture or assemble goods based on our IP. When the US relies on other countries to manufacture and assemble high-tech products, it loses valuable exposure and on-the-ground experience which should inform ongoing innovation.  Scheiber cites research presented in

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#315 – MY ADVENTURE GETTING A COVID VACCINATION – ALLEN TAYLOR

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World health authorities are heavily emphasizing the need for practically everybody in the world to get a Covid-19 vaccination. Multiple vendors, such as Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson are working around the clock to produce as much vaccine as they can, and to ship it to vaccination sites around the world. You would think that, with the full weight of authority of national governments around the world, and the technical expertise of the pharmaceutical giants that are doing the production, that getting a vaccination when it is your turn to get one, would be a smooth process. Continue reading

#314 – THE FEAR-RISK CONNECTION TO DECISION BIAS – JIM TONEY

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Fight or flight?  Surely, we have all heard this at some time in our lives.  Psychological reactions to stress, hazards, threats, danger, and the ever-present crises broadcast and amplified through various media channels, induce fear, often followed by panic.  Make no mistake, you can be manipulated by fear which triggers emotions.  Continue reading

#314 – BOB LEONARD & DAVID ROSS: FUTURE OF WORK – SUSTAINABILITY – INTERVIEWED BY JAMES KLINE PH.D.

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Bob Leonard

Bob Leonard has a Bachelor of Science degree from Boston University and a Master of Science degree in Technology Marketing from Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. He has a Futures Foresight Scenario Planning certification from the Futures School and a Climate Risk Management certification from the Global Association of Risk Professionals. He is currently completing the Applied Foresight Activator program at the Futures School. Continue reading

#314 – WORLD ECONOMIC 2021 FORUM GLOBAL RISK REPORT – JAMES KLINE PH.D.

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The World Economic Forum has conducted a Global Risk Survey since 2006. This is the fifteenth survey. The responses are from 650 members of the World Economic Forum. In the preface to the 2021 Global Risk Report it is noted that: “In 2006, the Global Risks Report sounded the alarm on pandemics and other health-related risks.” (1) With this context in mind, the 2021 risk analysis “centers on the risks and consequences of widening inequalities and societal fragmentation. In some cases, disparities in health outcomes, technology, or workforce opportunities are the direct result of the dynamics the pandemic created.” (2) Continue reading