Happy holidays from the IMF!
Good to know that in these tough times of austerity and spending cuts, at least someone’s feeling jaunty as the festive period approaches…
Good to know that in these tough times of austerity and spending cuts, at least someone’s feeling jaunty as the festive period approaches…
This is Reuters photographer Jorge Silva being detained by UN security guards at the Cancun summit last week. He’d been covering the expulsion of a group of protestors from the summit when guards allegedly attempted to prevent photographers from covering it, during which Silva is said to have had his credentials seized before being bundled away as seen here. Journalistic community not altogether happy about all this…

Lest you haven’t heard this yet:
A man phones up Liberal Democrat headquarters.
He says, “I’d like to buy a copy of your manifesto, please.”
“I’m very sorry, sir, we’ve sold out.”
“Yes, I know, but I was calling to buy a copy of your manifesto.”
You might have thought that there would be a natural affinity between the peak oil crowd and climate activists, given that both basically want a plan for getting out of fossil fuels as fast as possible. But in fact, I’m constantly surprised by the distance that exists between the two – with the antipathy by and large on the peak oil side of the fence. Here’s an example courtesy of John Michael Greer:
Sharon Astyk, for example, has proposed aligning the peak oil movement with climate activism; in the abstract, this is a logical idea, but in the real world it’s an invitation to disaster. The climate change movement has science solidly on its side, to be sure, but it’s proven hopelessly inept in dealing with the decidedly unscientific worlds of public relations and politics; climate activists have time and again allowed their opponents to define the terms of the debate, and relied on the prestige of science to make their case at a time when that prestige, already at a low ebb, is continuing to wane. Their opponents have not exactly been slow to take advantage of these missteps.
At this point we’re thus probably going to have to wait for the first major climate catastrophe to hit the industrial world before any of the world’s major polluting nations will be willing to change their ways. Aligning peak oil with the failing climate activism movement won’t change that, but will make it easier for the political establishments of the world’s nations to ignore peak oil for another few years; worse still, it might teach peak oil activists the same bad habits that have scuppered what was once a formidable climate activism movement, and produce similar results a second time around.
Ouch. For what it’s worth, I think Greer’s downbeat assessment of the state of climate activism is pretty much spot on – as is his point that “we’re probably going to have to wait for the first major climate catastrophe to hit the industrial world before any of the world’s major polluting nations will be willing to change their ways” (I argued the same in my China Dialogue post last week). But I think he significantly overestimates the reach of the peak oil crowd.
Some foreign service officers, yesterday
A Wikileaked cable from the US Embassy in Riyadh has some home truths about what works and what doesn’t in public diplomacy:
11. (S) XXXXXXXXXXXX said the American programming on channels 4 and 5 were proving the most popular among Saudis. A look at the December 17 programming menu for MBC channel 4 reveals a 24-hour solid block of such programs as CBS and ABC Evening News, David Letterman, Desperate Housewives, Friends and similar fare, all uncensored and with Arabic subtitles. Channel 5 features US films of all categories, also with Arabic subtitles. XXXXXXXXXXXX told us that this programming is also very popular in remote, conservative corners of the country, where he said “you no longer see Bedouins, but kids in western dress” who are now interested in the outside world.
12. (S) Over coffee in a Jeddah Starbucks, XXXXXXXXXXXX, and XXXXXXXXXXXX elaborated on the changes in the Saudi media environment. “The government is pushing this new openness as a means of countering the extremists,” XXXXXXXXXXXX told Riyadh press officer. “It’s still all about the War of Ideas here, and the American programming on MBC and Rotana is winning over ordinary Saudis in a way that ‘Al Hurra’ and other US propaganda never could. Saudis are now very interested in the outside world, and everybody wants to study in the US if they can. They are fascinated by US culture in a way they never were before.”