“Davos 2021” Postponed Due to COVID.

January is just around the corner, a few short weeks and we are into 2021, and 2020 is happily behind us. So if it is January, then, it must be time for Davos. Davos? The annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland;the most prestigious ge-together of the world’s elites.

Throw a stone and you will be sure to hit one of the top movers and shakers on our planet. The WEF is the brainchild of Professor Klaus Schwab, of the University of Geneva who came up with the idea for an international organization such as the WEF in 1971. The meeting has run continuously every January since then.

Business people, presidents, politicians, bankers, academics, and superstars of all types. Davos! Yes, thousands of important people getting together to discuss our present and future reality. CEOs of 1000 companies will be there, mostly men, of course, but that just reflect the business climate and the number of female CEOs heading important companies.

The theme for 2021 is “The Great Reset.” So, if you are lucky enough to have been invited and are looking forward to rubbing shoulders with the above-mentioned movers and shakers, then maybe now is a good time to book your ticket and make hotel reservations.

But wait!  Breaking news! For the first time since 1971 the venerable Davos meeting has been postponed! Yes, postponed till mid-year 2021 due to the COVID pandemic. No exact date has yet to be announced, but it looks like 2021 might be the first Davos without snow as a background. Davos will surely not end, it is simply too important an event, and although globalization has gotten a bad name during the Trump years, there is a good chance that it will be alive and flourishing at Davos 2021, snow or no snow.

Photo: MDIC gov.br via flickr

 

 

Person of Interest : US Vice President Mike Pence.

Who is Mike Pence? Well, he is the 48th Vice President of The United States, former member of congress and former governor of the sate of Indiana. But who is he? If you don’t know anything about VP Pence, don’t be surprised. The media generally doesn’t have much to say about him, instead focusing on his boss Donald Trump.

The Pence we see is usually two or three paces away from Trump, smiling and nodding at the appropriate time with his focus squarely on the president. But who is Mike Pence, beyond the loyal assistant to the man who would make America great again?

Mike Pence is the “real deal”–he is the true conservative that Donald Trump pretends to be. He is a social and political conservative, and by all reports he lives his conservative values. He is reported to have said that he is a Christian, a Conservative and a Republican, and in that order.

Pence was born June 7, 1959 to an Irish Catholic family in Columbus Indiana. He attended Hanover College where he abandoned his Catholicism for a more born-again version of Christianity and in the process “found Jesus.” He then went on to earn a law degree from Indiana University

After a failed attempt to win a congressional seat he became a conservative radio talk show host from 1990-1994. This gave him exposure and let him begin to build his own connections among conservatives. Finally in 2001 he was elected to the House of Representatives where he remained until 2013. In 2013 Mike Pence became the governor of Indiana where he remained until he joined Donald Trump on the Republican ticket in 2016.

When he was in office, Governor Pence enacted a clear Conservative agenda on such issues as:

  • Use of fossil fuels
  • 2nd Amendment rights (guns)
  • LGTB rights
  • Abortion

Governor Pence also vetoed the settling of Syrian refugees in Indiana to protect the people of Indiana.

It might be said, and has been said, that Donald Trump hijacked the Republican Party for his own nationalist agenda. His fights with America’s allies and his trade war with China are prime examples of this. But Trump is all about Trump. The people on the Right know this.

There is a good chance that the Republican Party will be in ashes in 2021, having been defeated across the board in the 2020 elections.

And who will step from the shadows to rally and rebuild? Why VP Mike Pence, of course. Who is Mike Pence? He is the man in waiting, and he believes his time will come. Soon.

Any thoughts on this? Log in and let us know.

Photo: Gage Skidmore via flickr

 

 

 

Turkey The New Regional Power?

                      by David Parmer / Tokyo

The face of Turkey today is the face of its leader and president, Recp Tayyip Erdogan. Mr. Erdogan is imposing his vision of the way things might be not just on his own country, but also on his region and indeed the world.

The once proud and powerful Ottoman Empire disappeared after WWI, but it seems to many that the president is determined to bring back the days of glory when the Ottoman Turks were both feared and respected. Mr. Erdogan, using a combination of soft power and military force, might just be the man to do it.

Under Mr. Erdogan Turkey has asserted and inserted itself around its region and beyond. In the not-too-distant past Turkey joined NATO as its only Islamic member and was looking toward possible EU membership. But then Turkey began to assert its own policy which while not anti-western was certainly pro-Turkey.

In home waters Turkey has had an ongoing dispute with the EU over drilling for energy resources off Cyprus. The dispute began in 2018 regarding the exclusive economic zone around Cyprus. Despite opposition and recommendations from the European Council in 2019 Turkey has continued with its exploration activities.

In 2016 the powerful Turkish military began an incursion into Syria to defeat the Islamic State (ISIS/ DAESH). A long and bloody conflict ensued which had its roots all the way back to 2011. During its involvement in the Syrian civil war Turkey has lost at least 300 personnel killed and had numerous aircraft and armored vehicles destroyed. Turkey conducted another major incursion into Syria in 2019 to protect its borders and remove pro-Kurdish forces.

In January 2020 Turkey entered the Libyan civil war on the side of the side of the GNA or Government of National Accord, the established government of Libya. Turkey has reportedly supplied intelligence support, air and naval support as well as introducing Syrian mercenary fighters in support of the government. Turkey’s support and the victory of its proxies would demonstrate to the region and o the world Turkey’s ability to project power and influence the outcome of regional conflicts. In 2020 Turkey has also backed Azerbaijan in its fight with Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

And it is not just its neighbors and the Europeans with whom Turkey is asserting itself, now it is the United States. In what seems to be a “no winner” contest Turkey and the US are embroiled in a very unfriendly discussion over Turkey’s decision to buy the Russian S-400 “Triumf” missile system, and incredibly lethal air defense weapon that far surpasses the US Patriot missile system.

Turkey was on board to buy the Patriot system but the US refused the technology transfer that would enable it to be copied and built. The Turks retaliated by turning to Russia for the S-400 system and the US retaliated by excluding Turkey (a NATO partner) from its F35 fighter jet program. As of later 2020, Turkey is going ahead with its S-400 acquisition (including test firing) and the US is talking sanctions.

It seems that Mr. Erdogan is determined to make Turkey a real regional power going forward. The Turkish economy is predicted to make a healthy rebound in 2021 despite some contraction. Given that and the president’s popularity among the voters, there is a good chance that modern Turkey just might become the new Ottoman Empire, at least in spirit.

Photo: Pavel Vanka via flickr

 

What is 5G Technology, and What Does it Mean to You?

5G is the fifth generation of wireless technology and it promises a host of benefits and opens up a whole new world. The two big benefits of 5G for consumers will be:

  • Speeds of up to 20Gbps 
  • Low latency, or almost no lag

Consumers (i.e. mobile phone users) will get much better broadband and a much better experience. Network capacity will also be increased and the reliability of mobile communications will be enhanced.

The real benefits of 5G may be its use in the Internet of Things  (IoT) in connecting all of our devices both personally and professionally.Startling new developments in various fields are expected to occur in such areas as:

  • Healthcare
  • Agriculture
  • Transportation
  • Supply Chains

Several countries around the world are rolling out 5G networks, and these are led by China and the United States. Analysts suggest that the 5G rollout will reach its first stage of completion by 2025.

Finally, there have been issues raised concerning the safety of 5G networks, and during the COVID-19 pandemic conspiracy theorists have tried to line 5G to the virus and in some cases committed acts of vandalism against cellphone towers. Manufacturers and providers have tried to assure the public of the safety of this latest advance in technology.

5G is not here yet, but it will be soon, and the changes to commerce and society will be significant. But don’t count on the advance stopping there. Some day we will start hearing about 6G and beyond. It is only a matter of time.

Photo: Karlis Dambrans via flickr

Person of Interest: Tony Blinken, Biden Foreign Policy Advisor.

To get an idea of former Vice President Joe Biden’s foreign policy when he becomes president, the best person to listen to is his top advisor, Tony Blinken.

Blinken, a graduate of Harvard College and Columbia University has been around politics and policy since 1994 when he was on Bill Clinton’s National Security Council staff. From 2002-2008 he was Democratic Staff Director for the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Mr. Blinken was Deputy Secretary of State from 2015-2017 and Deputy National Security Advisor. It is possible that he will be chosen to be National Security Advisor in a Biden administration.

In two interviews (links below) he outlines a possible direction for Biden foreign policy. It should come as no surprise that one of the first priorities will be mending relations with US allies who have been alienated by the substance and manner of Donald Trump’s policies toward allies, toward Europe and toward NATO.

The big question is relations with China. In the interviews Blinken suggests that the US is operating from a position of weakness regarding China and the first task is to reestablish good relations with US allies before dealing with China. He suggests that the US and China share many common interests internationally and that these are areas for cooperation. However, he stresses that the US must do this from a position of strength.

As for Iran, the US withdrawal from the JCPOA or “Iran Deal” did not force Iran back to the bargaining table as the Trump administration had planned, nor did the crippling sanctions create regime change in Teheran. It is possible that the US might even return to the JCPOA under a Biden administration. The Europeans have been keeping the deal on life support, and it might well get new life.

While it is possible that a Biden administration would have to look inward to repair the damage done to all areas of American politics and daily life brought about by 4 years of the Trump policies, the US would still have both its international commitments and interests, and those would be addressed by people of a like mind to Tony Blinken.

Dialogue on American Foreign Policy and World Affairs: A Conversation with Former Deputy Secretary of State Anthony Blinken (Hudson Institute)

Transcript: Joe Biden foreign policy adviser Anthony Blinken on COVID shortfalls, failures in Syria (CBS News)

Photo: US Department of State via flickr

Is Vertical Farming the Future of Our Food Supply?

                  by David Parmer / Tokyo

These days the mainstream media seems to have a few stories: the COVID-19 pandemic and US President Donald Trump, and Hong Kong. While these are important matters that concern us all, many more things are going on in our world that do not receive the attention that they might. These are often stories related to the sciences, and except for Information Technology, stories of a scientific nature are somewhat neglected.

 One such neglected story is the human outreach to the edges of space. Humans are returning to our moon, and from there to Mars. Several Mars missions are already on the way. Another story worth mentioning which gets scant mainstream media attention is vertical farming.

And what exactly is vertical farming? The easiest answer is plants being grown in stacked trays, meters, or stories high. We have all probably seen a photo of such indoor farming, but maybe couldn’t quite understand what is going on. What is going on is very exciting indeed.

Using Controlled Environmental Agriculture (CEA) scientists and entrepreneurs are using indoor farming techniques to grow crops all year long indoors. Techniques used include:

  • Hydroponics-the growing of plants in nutrient-rich solutions
  • Aquaponics-combning aquaculture or fish farming with hydroponics in a mutually-supporting system
  • Aeroponics-growing crops in an air or mist medium

The object of vertical farming is to aim for maximum crop output using limited space. Space used for vertical farming is also often under-utilized or non-utilized locations such as underground tunnels, warehouses, shipping containers etc. Space saving and high crop yields are not the only benefits of vertical farming. Vertical farms are not subject to weather fluctuations and are less disruptive to native habitat. Crops can also be grown without pesticides offering the benefit of both organic produces and the lack of chemical residue.

The downside of organic farming at present is a very high initial cost of setting up, particularly the cost of urban real estate. However, with the COVID-19 pandemic and its emphasis on teleworking, urban renters may have excess space on their hands that makes urban farming more affordable. Also there is, as a rule, an emphasis on using unused space for vertical farming, and this too might reduce setup costs.

The other big drawback to vertical farming at present is the constant need for energy. How this will be addressed in the future seems to be the key to the feasibility of the spread of vertical farming and its sustainability.

New technologies and new trends are taking place everywhere around the world and around the clock. It is up to us to keep our eyes and ears open and look and listen beyond what the mainstream media has to offer us.

Photo: Vertical Farm via Wiki

Biden-Harris Will Take on Trump-Pence in US Presidential Election 2020.

On August 11, 2020 Former Vice President Joe Biden announced that his running mate for the 2020 presidential election would be Senator Kamala Harris from California. The decision to tap Harris as his running mate put an end to a long period of speculation about who would be chosen. Biden’s short list was composed entirely of women, and most of them women of color. This selection was to acknowledge the changing face of America, and the changing reality of the demographics that make up the country.

Senator Harris herself was in the race for her party’s nomination this year but dropped out. She put on a good showing during the primaries, and this fact along probably kept her at the top of the list of “possibles.” In addition she brings experience in politics as well as experience in law to the table. Compared to Biden she is “young” and shows the energy of the next generation. Moreover, she has a record as a prosecutor and is seen as strong on “law and order” and taking on vested interets like the banks and the gun lobby. Many of the swing voters who will make an important part of the 2020 mix will find the “law and order” part reassuring. Harris is also tough and smart and will be able to conduct herself well in the cut and thrust of presidential politics, particularly in the coming 2020 election.

The Biden-Harris ticket is strong, and it has to be to deal with the phenomena that is Donald Trump. Trump is an anomaly and a wild card and will not be defeated easily. Trump-Pence has the advantage of being incumbents, but that is only an advantage, and not a mandate. Trump’s loyal 40% of the voters will likely not be moved by whatever he does or does not do in the electoral process leading up to November. They will vote for him. Period.

Already Donald Trump is setting the stage to claim voter fraud if he loses the election. He is casting doubt on the electoral process, particularly voting by mail. Trump claims massive fraud in various previous elections, but no facts supports his claims.

As of August 2020, Biden-Harris is in the lead by several points in a number of polls. While this is encouraging, it is not definitive. In politics things can and do change. There are many ways that Donald Trump could stay in power. Already he is doing nothing to empower the post office to deal with the massive influx of ballots sure to come in the time of pandemic. Also he could win several key states that have more votes in the Electoral College, thus losing the popular vote but winning the presidency. 

In the coming few months anything can and probably will happen.What are your thoughts on the 2020 US presidential election? Please let us know.

Photo: Facebook Joe Biden

China-Iran Agreement: A Work in Progress.

               by David Parmer / Tokyo

On the surface the agreement for a strategic partnership between the People’s Republic of China and the Islamic Republic of Iran makes sense. Both parties stand to gain from improving economic and political relations. Iran now bears the weight of crippling US sanctions. An economy that was struggling to recover from long-term sanctions looked like it was making progress after the signing of the 2015 “Iran Nuclear Deal” or JCPOA. The unilateral US withdrawal from the deal despite verification of Iran’s compliance and re-imposition of sanctions put Iran in a very precarious position. Add to this the advent of the COVID-19 pandemic, and things were looking grim.

In 2016 China’s President Xi Jinping made a state visit to Iran, and the idea of forming a long-term partnership was floated. In 2019 the agreement took shape in the form of the Chinese offer of $400 billion investment into Iran over a 25-year period.

Cooperation between the two countries would focus on:

  • Executive Cooperation
  • Human and cultural exchange
  • Judiciary Security and defense
  • Regional and international cooperation
  • Political matters

Chinese investment would focus on the banking and telecom sectors as well as transportation infrastructure such as ports and airports. There was also talk of a Chinese-built high-speed rail link between Tehran and Mashhad in the east. Recently a leaked copy of the draft agreement surfaced. China was strictly “no comment” on this, but the Iranians seemed optimistic.

Domestically, there are reservations if not opposition to the agreement with the Chinese. First, it seems that Iran will have to supply China with heavily discounted oil and gas for 25 years. Secondly, there is concern that Iran will be ceding its sovereignty to the Chinese. Rumors suggested turning over an Iranian island to the Chinese as well as admitting to the stationing of Chinese armed forces in the Islamic Republic. Iran’s foreign minister, Mohammad Javad Zarif that the details of the agreement would become public once finalized. 

Closer ties with China could also include closer tri-lateral ties with Syria. Syria’s leader, Bashar al-Assad, has his own “Belt and Road” vision which is called the “Four Seas Strategy” and might include Syria, Iran, Iraq, and Turkey. (The fours seas being the Mediterranean Sea, Caspian Sea, Black Sea and Persian Gulf.)

Just the China-Iran agreement alone could be seen as tipping the balance of power in the Persian Gulf and Middle East. With the addition of a local trading bloc with no long-term loyalty to the US or its policies, the balance would surely shift.

Critics of the proposed agreement argue that China is in no position to further worsen relations with the US by incurring more sanctions. And yet, maybe China has come to the point where it will do what it feels necessary, and its companies will be sanctioned in the US and worldwide. Maybe China senses weakness in the US position worldwide, and now is the time to move forward. Iran badly needs investment to kick-start its sanctions-damaged economy. A deal with the Chinese might create the reality and perception of better times ahead.

Politically, both China and Iran are “planting the flag” and serving notice to the US that there is a new game afoot. What action or actions the US will take remains to be seen. An America whose president has picked fights with old friends and allies may find it very hard to form any kind of coalition to push back on China and Iran. “America First” can also be seen as “America Alone” when push comes to shove.

(Compiled from Web sources.)

Photo: Embassy of China, USA

Canada’s PM Justin Trudeau–Still On The Job.

It’s been almost 5 years since Justin Trudeau took office as the second-youngest prime minister of Canada. It has not been a particularly smooth ride, but Mr.Trudeau has endured, and some might say triumphed.

Mr. Trudeau’s troubles have come in the area of domestic politics and international relations. In the era of “gotcha” politics Mr. Trudeau has made a couple of slips which his opponents have capitalized on. He has had to apologize for appearing at a party dressed in “blackface” in his younger days, and recently he has been involved in an incident with the WE Charity that his family is involved in and which got government support, suggesting a conflict of interest.

Voters seem to have accepted his apologies and explanations, however the 2019 election was close and he was forced to form a minority government, suggesting his popularity with the voters has slipped a bit over the firs 4 years.

Internationally, Mr. Trudeau has to deal with his neighbor to the south in the form of US President Donald Trump. Trump and Trudeau have an on-again, off-again relationship. In the 2019 London Summit of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Trump pushed Trudeau about Canada’s NATO spending which is still under 2% GDP. Trump presses everyone’s button about that, so it was not unusual, and Mr. Trudeau was reported to have said that Canada had, in fact, increased its defense spending. Later Mr. Trudeau was overheard joking with other leaders to which Mr. Trump took offense and referred to him as “two faced.” In July 2020 there was a formal signing of the new American trade agreement, USMCA, in the US. The Mexican president, Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, was able to attend, but Mr. Trudeau had other engagements and was not able to attend.

In early August 2020, President Trump announced the redisposition of tariffs on Canadian aluminum citing national security concerns. Canada quickly hit back with its own tariffs on US products. One might wonder why start a trade war with an ally and neighbor, but Mr. Trudeau and the rest of the world know that Mr. Trump is set to run in a very tight bid for reelection, and such protectionist measures play very well to his 30% hard-core “America first” base.

Good news for Mr. Trudeau is the approval from his countrymen that he has gotten for handling Canada’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Canada’s numbers are, relatively speaking, good and Mr. Trudeau and his government has gotten a lot of credit for this. Some of the shine for this achievement seems to have worn off temporarily over the We Charity incident.

Well, there are no term limits for Canada’s Prime Minister, so it is hard to say how long Mr. Trudeau will hold on to his job. But if conditions improve worldwide with the controlling of COVID-19, and a change of government brings a more globally-minded US government as his nearest neighbor, then who knows how long we will be seeing the face of Canada being the face of Justin Trudeau? It is hard to tell, but if he has led his country in the tough times, then maybe he and his party will be chosen to lead in more congenial times.

Photo: via wikipedia

 

 

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo–America’s Point Man on China Policy.

“President Reagan said that he dealt with the Soviet Union on the basis of ‘trust but verify.’When it comes to the CCP, I say we must distrust and verify.”

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo July 23, 2020 .

It has become abundantly clear that Donald Trump’s point man on China is Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. In his July 23, 2020 speech at the Nixon Library in Simi Valley California he left no doubt about that.

In the speech Mr. Pompeo outlined the Chinese threat (as seen by the US)  and called for a new alliance against China. He spoke of the United Nations and the G20 and others G7 and NATO standing with the US to deal with China.

The whole speech set out the treats from the Communist Party of China and from the Chinese nation itself. Such cold war rhetoric has not been heard for a long time, and the speech really did lay down the gauntlet.

Observers suggest that the rhetoric will continue and even intensify right up until the 2020 presidential election. One reason for the Trump administration’s belligerence toward China is to ensure the re-election of Donald Trump.

So who is Mike Pompeo anyway?  Mr. Pompeo was born in Orange County California. He attended the United States Military Academy at West Point graduating first in his class. After his military duty finished, he entered Harvard University Law School and graduated with a JD degree. After Harvard he entered private business where he teamed up with former classmates to form an aircraft parts business. In 2011 he was elected to the US congress as a Republican Representative for Kansas and where he served from 2011 to 2017. In 2017 he was appointed as Director of the Central Intelligence Agency held that job for a year before being nominated as Secretary of State under President Donald Trump.

Mr. Pompeo, in the Reagan Library speech on July 23, didn’t echo President Ronald Reagan’s words in 1983 calling the Soviet Union an “evil empire” by calling China an “evil empire”, but Pompeo’s meaning, was clear enough about what he considered the Chinese threat.

Worth noting is the fact that Mr. Pompeo in his July 23 speech did not offer any way forward regarding better relations between the US and China. No, China is a menace to world peace and to American democracy, and we must  (all) stand up to China. No more ” Mr. Nice Guy” American hoping for a liberal China to emerge. Time to stand firm.

So the face of the “new Cold War” and the pushback on China is US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo. One could argue that he is the right man for the job. A Democratic win in November would tone down a lot of the rhetoric toward China, but American actions under a Democratic president might not be so far different regarding China in many areas.

What do you think? Contact us and let us know your opinion.

Secretary Pompeo’s July 23rd Speech at the Nixon Library.

Photo: US Dept. of State via flickr