Climate Change: Expectations for the New Protocol

In the first part we pointed the issues concerning the new Copenhagen protocol -- to replace Kyoto -- once it will expire in 2012. Regarding the new negotiating text in the Danish capital, however, the question is: Will be the results of the Copenhagen meeting next December as much impact as expected?

A Pound of Cure

Technology Review, published by MIT, has an interesting article on the use of information technology in health care. As the article points out, the administration's economic stimulus package includes $19 billion for health-care IT spending. But it isn't clear that cost is the major obstacle to getting this done: The truth is that these folks could have digitized the whole industry ages ago.

In Detroit, the Student Becomes the Teacher

Criminal behavior aside, City Councilwoman Monica Conyers, the wife of esteemed Congressman and House Judiciary Chair John Conyers may be one of the most disrespectful, egotistical, and inappropriately behaved elected officials we've seen around here in a long time and that's really saying something.

The Cost of Free Trade: Toxic Chinese Drywall

Since 2006 the US has imported 550 million pounds of drywall. It makes you stop and scratch your head and wonder why. Wallboard is cheap to purchase as a building material; it is easy to work with and easy to finish. I could understand importing products that are expensive, but drywall? Since the beginning there have been complaints of headaches and nosebleeds. Already there are 360 law suits consolidated into ten class action lawsuits involving drywall from China. There are also sixty cases outside of the class action suits that indicate that this just might be the tip of the iceberg.

Tweet Could Land Guatemalan in Jail

Freedom of expression is one of the hallmark of a modern and free society. Rule of law is another. In Guatemala, both of the core tenets of democracy are heading for a collision course if the socialist government insists on prosecuting Jean Anleu for a tweet. The crime? Undermining the public trust in the country's banking system.

Progress on Auctioning TARP Warrants

Ten major banks repaid almost $70 billion to TARP in recent weeks. But they aren't free from TARP just yet: Treasury still owns warrants to purchase their common stock.

The Subsidies in TARP

How much is TARP costing American taxpayers? We know that Congress originally authorized up to $700 billion in TARP investments. And we know that $439 billion has been committed to various programs. But how much of that money are taxpayers likely to see again? And to what extent will they be compensated for making those investments?

Beyond Celebrity Obsession

"Great minds discuss ideas. Average minds discuss events. Small minds discuss people." " Eleanor Roosevelt. I wish to discuss an idea here. It's an idea about celebrity, and it follows an event that has become a black hole in nearly all media: the death of Michael Jackson.

Iran: It’s the Counting That Counts

"In some elections, it's not the voting that counts, it's the counting that counts." -- Anon. Unless you have spent the last week or so in a cave, or marooned on an island, you have heard of the protests and controversy surrounding the recent election in Iran. Although as a matter of policy I don't post intentionally political comments here, I was interested to see two reports from people that have tried to analyze the reported results, using purely statistical methods, to see what, if anything, can be discovered.

Is Charlie Crist the Real Leader of the Republican Party?

As an Art teacher embroiled in the worst budget crisis of my 25 year career, Charlie Crist gave a speech that was sweet music to my ears. "I urge you to pass legislation requiring school districts to spend 70 percent of their budgets in the classroom for our students and teachers, and to instill transparency by requiring school districts to provide dollar-by-dollar details online. Floridians deserve to know how their hard-earned dollars are being spent, and parents have a right to demand accountability. And I ask you to consider, as I have proposed, increasing per-student funding -- Florida's children deserve it."