Sunday, January 27, 2008

2007猪肉路线(大事记)

http://www.my1510.cn/article.php?bc6a778a4d57642c

我国是猪肉消费大国,2006年国内猪肉总产量为5197万吨,占世界猪肉产量的一半。民间有猪年节节旺之说,没想到2007年这个金猪果然旺了,自年初“肉市”价格就一路走高。5月成为一个转折点、一个多事之月,当月股市疯涨,创下历史新高;猪价飙升,也创下历史新高。在那个春夏交替之际,猪肉一跃成为继股市之后最热的关键词。
虽说导致此轮席卷全国肉价上涨的因素很多,但一般而言,5、6月份本该是猪肉的消费淡季,如此反常的大幅上涨,必然引发全民的关注。随着猪肉价格的飙升,其它与猪肉相关的产品价格如牛羊肉类、鸡蛋、水产品和其他食品的价格也略有上涨。5月份全国牛羊肉的均价上浮了1元左右,鸡蛋、食用油等终端消费品的价格都受到了影响,市民的消费压力逐步加剧。
5月26日,国务院总理温家宝专程到陕西对生猪生产进行实地调研,指出:“解决13亿人的吃肉问题还得靠农民。肉价涨一些有利于调动农民的养猪积极性,但涨到一定程度后要保持平稳,通过市场调节的办法,让农民养猪能挣钱,城里人特别是低收入家庭又吃得起肉。”并针对如何遏制肉价过快上涨提出了7条意见:
一、要切实抓好生猪生产,对饲养母猪给予适当补贴,保护母猪生产能力;
二、要组织好猪肉和其它副食品的市场供应,做好采购工作,增加市场投放,切实做到不断档、不脱销;
三、要严格控制玉米深加工的盲目发展,确保国内市场饲料供应;
四、要加强市场质量和价格监管,维护市场秩序,搞好检验检疫,严肃查处哄抬价格等违法行为;
五、要加强猪肉等副食品生产需求和价格的监测,完善应急预案;
六、要关心困难群体的生活,根据猪肉价格上涨情况,适当提高低保标准;
七、要加强舆论引导,全面准确报道市场供应和物价情况,反映各地区各部门采取的措施,维护社会稳定。
5月27日,国务院办公厅根据温家宝总理提出的7条意见所发布的红头文件中,基本对涉及整条养殖产业链上的分管部委都做了工作指导,包括最基础的“抓好生猪生产”;为加强对市场中间环节治理的“组织猪肉市场供应”和“严格价格监管”;“确保饲料供应”是对猪肉上游原料的控制;“适当提高低保标准”是为了提高低收入人群对市场风险的抵御能力;“完善价格检测”、“加强舆论引导”是剔除阻塞价格信息流通的壁垒,理顺供求关系,有利于“削峰填谷”,抑制猪肉价格进一步上涨。
5月29日,国务院办公厅就做好猪肉等副食品生产供应保持市场稳定工作发出通知。通知指出,今年4月份以来,各地区生猪及猪肉价格出现不同程度上涨,其中一些大中城市价格涨幅较大、上涨过快。这次猪肉价格上涨的主要原因,一是受生猪生产周期性波动影响;二是受去年疫病影响,年末母猪饲养量和生猪存栏量下降,导致供给减少;三是玉米价格上涨导致饲养成本增加。生猪及猪肉价格适度上涨,有利于增加农民收入,调动农民积极性,促进生猪生产,但上涨过快将带动其他肉类及禽蛋等副食品价格和餐饮业价格上涨,影响低收入居民的生活。通知要求,各地区、各有关部门要高度重视,切实做好工作,保持市场稳定。一要认真落实“菜篮子”市长负责制,及时解决猪肉等副食品生产、供应、价格和市场管理方面的问题,确保市场供应和价格的基本稳定。二要切实抓好生猪生产。
5月30日,商务部市场运行调节司的监测数据显示,仅5月份的前20天,全国36个大中城市每公斤猪肉的平均批发价格已经达到14.5元,较去年同期上涨了40%以上,几乎创下了大部分城市肉价的历史新高,也是十年间的最高水平。与此同时,商务部、农业部、国家发改委、交通部等在内的10多个国家部委局都陆续出台了各种紧急应对措施,联手要为正在飙升的肉价进行快速“降温”。据相关资料显示,5月25日,陕西、黑龙江、吉林、河北、辽宁等地区,猪肉批发价(均价)已由16.3元/公斤的顶峰价回落至14.6元/公斤。
5月31日,国务院发展研究中心一位研究员在接受媒体采访时表示:日益火爆的资本市场彰显了过剩资本的巨大流动性——从虚拟资产的暴涨到资产价格的暴涨,再到消费品价格的暴涨——通货膨胀的趋势非常明显,而作为终端消费品的猪肉价格的反季节暴涨,正是通货膨胀由原材料链条传递到消费品环节的某个特征。“对猪肉价格的控制只是一个开始,中央政府和各个国家部委要面临的将是越来越多的各种各样的‘疯狂的猪肉’。”
有分析师认为:在国际粮食价格持续上涨压力不减的情况下,即便有国家部委的强力调控,国内的食品价格仍然有可能会在短期平稳之后持续上涨。而且,在国内经济需求持续强劲的情况下,价格上涨的形势从食品转向其他商品价格共同上涨的可能性也在增加。
7月3日,一位叫“公民证”的网友在奥一网发帖,称为抵制高肉价,无论在家还是在饭店,自己将三个月不吃肉、不买肉,并号召市民和网友加入他的行列,希望通过集体不吃猪肉来缓解供求矛盾,同时表达自己对近期猪肉持续涨价的抗议。在接受记者采访时他说,听妻子抱怨最近肉价一直在涨,自己到超市看了一下,发现肉价确实比半年前涨了近一倍。“房子可以暂时不买,租房子住,肉可没地方租。”连他这个白领都感觉到了肉价上涨的压力,普通工人和农民的负担就更不用说了。
7月18日,全国36个大中城市猪肉价格再次平均上涨10.5%,猪肉价格的一路上扬,让许多老百姓“望猪兴叹”。陕西省自5月27日起,对肉禽蛋、水产品的价格实行每日监测报告。对猪肉价格加强分析预测,加大了对猪肉等副食品生产、供应、销售环节价格的调查。陕西省商务厅厅长李雪梅表示,西安市民不必为猪肉的供应问题造成恐慌,陕西是猪肉产地,货源相对比较充足。因此猪肉价格不会有太大变化。当日,华润万家猪肉零售价为:精瘦肉10.2元/市斤,猪排8元/市斤,猪后腿7.98元/市斤
8月7日,《人民日报》以《正确看待当前的价格形势》为题,刊登了发改委负责人就当前价格形势的采访问答。发改委负责人称,正确看待当前的价格形势,我们首先要分析价格上涨的原因。价格总水平上涨主要是由于食品和居住类价格上涨引起的。总体上看,这一轮农产品涨价仍属恢复性上涨。生猪供求的失衡导致猪肉价格上涨。去年猪价过低,影响了农民养猪积极性。去年下半年以来,发生在南方部分地区的猪蓝耳病疫情,造成母猪流产和仔猪大量死亡。受去年猪价过低和疫病的双重打击,生猪出栏大幅度下降,猪肉供应偏紧,这是近三个月来猪肉价格两次大幅度上涨的直接原因。
8月23日,农业部畜牧业司司长王智才在发布会上表示,从8月9日以来,生猪和猪肉的价格已经呈现高位下降的趋势,应该说生猪生产现在已经处于一个恢复起步的阶段。随着气温的逐步转凉,生猪销售将逐步进入旺季,农业部将按照国务院的要求和农业部的部署,和各级畜牧兽医部门一起保证这些措施的落实,保证生猪生产进一步恢复和发展,从而扶持生猪生产、促进生猪生产,保护生猪生产,确保在生猪生产环节能够有盈利、不亏本、少波动。农业部发言人薛亮在会上表示:猪肉价格上升符合当前经济规律,解决这个问题关键是要发展生产。他还说,通过一系列综合措施,高致病性猪蓝耳病防控工作取得积极成效,全国疫情已得到初步遏制。截至8月22日,全国共有发病省份26个,共有病猪25.7万头,病死6.8万头,扑杀17.5万头。
9月4日,国新办举行新闻发布会,国家发改委副主任毕井泉就最近猪肉价格、副食品、成品油的价格及供需情况与媒体展开交流。毕井泉同时指出:1—7月份的平均居民消费价格总水平比上年同期上涨3.5%,其中有2.9个百分点是食品价格上涨推动的。在上述拉动食品价格的因素中,肉类价格的力量尤为突出。8月31日,36个大中城市猪肉(精瘦肉)价格每斤13.6元,比4月底上涨50.8%,比去年同期上涨70.3%。其价格上涨对居民生活影响较大,并推动了物价总水平持续上涨。猪肉价格上涨,还带动了牛羊肉和禽蛋等副食品价格以及部分食品制成品和餐饮业价格的上涨。随着国庆节、中秋节的临近,消费者对猪肉的需求量会有所增加,因此,他认为在今后短期内,猪肉市场的波动是不可避免的,但长时间内猪肉价格大幅度上涨的可能性不大。
10月23日,商务部发布的最新市场监测显示,上周(10月15日至21日)肉类价格高位运行。其中,鲜猪肉批发价格比前一周上涨0.7%,鲜牛肉和鲜羊肉批发价格分别上涨1%和0.4%。国庆节后,鲜猪肉批发价格已是第二周小幅上涨。10月15日,作为养猪大省的河南省,生猪收购价在国庆长假后已明显反弹,生猪收购价已涨到6﹒6元/斤,受其影响,猪肉批发价也跟着上涨。截至10月30日全国大部分地区生猪价格明显上涨,北方较明显,整体平均上涨幅度在0.4元/公斤。
11月6日,商务部发布的市场监测显示,10月29日至11月4日,肉类价格稳中有涨。其中,猪肉批发价格连续四周小幅上涨。监测表明,受生猪收购价格上涨、养殖运输成本增加等因素影响,上周猪肉批发价格比前一周上涨1.9%,精瘦肉零售价格止跌回升,上涨0.3%;牛肉和羊肉批发价格分别上涨0.7%和0.3%。8月初,全国猪肉批发价在经过长达两个月的上涨后达到历史高位,随后又连续9周小幅回落,每周平均降幅1.8%。国庆假期之后,猪肉批发价格止跌回升,连续四周小幅上涨,涨幅分别为0.2%、0.7%、1.1%和1.9%,呈逐渐加快的态势。
12月5日,国家发改委有关负责人表示,今后一段时间价格总水平的上涨压力仍然较大。原因之一是今年的食品价格上涨主要在下半年,对明年的滞后影响较大。8、9、10三个月CPI(居民消费价格指数)涨幅均超过6%,情势的严峻引起了中央经济工作会议的高度重视。目前价格上涨的压力正在加大,要采取有力措施抑制价格总水平过快上涨,加强粮食、食用植物油、肉类等基本生活必需品和其他紧缺商品的生产,同时提高价格调控预见性,加强价格监测。
发改委还强调,当前的价格上涨是结构性上涨,并不是价格全面上涨的严重通货膨胀。这位负责人表示,按10月份CPI上升幅度匡算,价格上涨影响城镇居民每人每月增支44.2元,农村居民每人每月增支16.7元,总体上城乡居民收入增幅仍高于物价涨幅。我国粮食连续4年丰收,今年粮食产量预计超过1万亿斤,小麦、稻谷、玉米国内供需基本平衡。总体上看,明年粮价可以保持基本稳定。但值得一提的是,发改委已开始考虑到了另外一个极端,正会同有关部门研究制定防止生猪价格过度下跌的调控预案,防止再次出现猪贱伤农的情况,促进生猪生产平稳发展。
12月11日,国家统计局网站披露,11月份,居民消费价格总水平同比上涨6.9%,其中食品价格涨幅最大,达到18.2%。在食品价格中,猪肉涨幅名列第一,达到56.0%。粮食价格上涨6.6%,油脂价格上涨35.0%,肉禽及其制品价格上涨38.8%,鲜蛋价格上涨10.0%,水产品价格上涨6.8%,鲜菜价格上涨28.6%。日前,国家统计局总经济师姚景源在中国人民大学举办的中国宏观经济论坛(2007-2008)上指出,中国保持经济较快增长的同时,经济效益有比较大幅度的提高。他说,应全面认识物价上涨,当前物价上涨是结构性上涨。如何看结构性价格调整,特别是这次猪肉价格的上涨?前一段媒体报道,8月全国19个省猪肉上涨80%。这种状况下,怎么来看猪肉价格?看你站在谁的立场上。如果要站在农民的立场上,这次猪肉价格上涨是好事,农民增收。农民增收问题,历来是党和政府工作的重中之重,现在物价涨了,农民增收了,重中之重有一个好转,有什么不好?
12月13日,国家发改委价格司司长曹长庆在接受中国政府网访谈时透露,国务院采取的一系列扶持生猪生产的政策措施基本落实,政府对饲养母猪的补贴已经发放到位,各项生猪的防疫措施普遍落实,母猪保险工作全面启动,猪场建设资金全面下达,标准化、规模化养猪场扶持资金已经安排到位,对生猪调出大县的奖励资金也已按时兑现。现在生猪生产正逐渐恢复。农业部的调查数据显示,今年6月以来,全国生猪生产,包括母猪存栏、仔猪存栏不断攀升。到11月底,母猪存栏比10月底增长了8.5%。
12月25日,大连商品交易所生猪期货合约和制度设计基本就绪,大商所和市场各方目前已在合约质量标准及制度完善中形成了四大共识。一是以活体为交易标的物;二是以背膘厚度和体重为主要质量指标;三是在全国主要产区和销区设库交割,充分满足市场交割需要;四是将采取养殖厂、屠宰场、现货批发市场“三场一体”的交割方式,为交割提供便利条件。1966年,美国为了稳定生猪生产、保护生产者利益,在芝加哥商业交易所上市了生猪期货。有专家指出,生猪期货的推出,有利于形成公开、透明的价格信息,能及早反映供求关系,指导生产,避免价格大起大落,给生猪养殖、贸易、加工企业提供了很好的避险工具,此外还能够促进生猪养殖标准化水平的提高。
2008年1月15日,农业部数据显示,2007年12月份全国城乡批发市场“菜篮子”产品价格与上年同期相比,猪、牛、羊肉价格明显高于去年,涨幅分别为57.7%、48.0%和44.5%;水产品、蔬菜和水果价格涨幅相对较小;鸡蛋价格基本持平。其中猪肉批发均价为每公斤20.95元,比上月上涨1.7元,涨幅为8.9 %。12月全国猪肉均价最高为22.01元,最低为20.48元,与上月相比上涨趋势比较明显,终结了9月份以来的单月环比下降趋势,同时本月也是2007年全年价格最高的一个月,农产品批发价12月份转降为升 猪肉价格涨势更强。
2008年1月16日,国家发改委公布了《关于对部分重要商品及服务实行临时价格干预措施的实施办法》,这是责任政府的一种表现。《办法》规定,在价格显著上涨或者有可能显著上涨的情况下,决定采取临时性干预措施。此次启动的临时价格干预措施主要是提价申报和调价备案。提价申报和(或)调价备案的品种范围主要是成品粮及粮食制品、食用植物油、猪肉和牛羊肉及其制品、牛奶、鸡蛋、液化石油气等重要商品。对达到一定规模的生产经营企业实行提价申报。有关企业须在提价前10个工作日向政府价格主管部门提出调整价格的申请。同时将对达到一定规模的批发、零售企业实行调价备案等。对未按规定履行申报和备案程序、未在规定的时间内申报或者备案、经营者申报后提前提价、不执行价格主管部门作出的不予提价、降低提价幅度或者标准等决定、不按照规定说明理由或者虚构理由和提供虚假资料、不执行限定差价率或者利润率,以及违反价格干预措施的其他行为,价格主管部门将责令经营者改正,并依法予以处罚。
稍后,国家发改委有关负责人表示,实行临时价格干预并不改变企业自主定价的性质,不是冻结价格,不会影响企业的正常经营。临时价格干预措施是在特殊情况下,国家依法控制价格不合理上涨的临时性行政手段,要正确认识,合理适度。希望社会充分明了此次调控的合法性、合理性和临时性和辅助性。(徐敏采集整理)

对于千岛湖事件的再认识

http://www.my1510.cn/article.php?426766ce03fcd704

刚看了bonnae的文章<两岸对谈录:台独是不是罪恶?>,感觉内地不少知识分子对千岛湖事件的认识还很模糊,或者说,对这个事件对于台湾民情的影响,还缺乏足够的认识.在这里我转一篇台湾学者管仁健的文章,对这个事件有一个很好的分析.
台湾统独消长的转折点:千岛湖事件(作者: 管仁健)
1856年9月10日,有艘悬挂英旗的华人商船「亚罗号」,停泊在广州黄埔。12名华籍船员与5名印度籍船员上岸后,与村民发生斗殴,造成一村民死亡。
两广总督叶名琛见民情激愤,受理该案后就令「亚罗号」交出一名水手来抵命,英国船长当然不理会这种奇怪的「中国法」。叶名琛就令广东水师官兵登船搜查「鸦片与盗匪」,拔去英旗,并拘捕了船上的12名华籍船员。英国驻广州领事巴夏礼闻讯,要求将被捕诸人送回原船,并赔偿该船损失,叶名琛拒绝了。
12日,叶名琛迫于压力,同意释放其中9名水手,但巴夏礼拒绝。他要求送回全部水手,交还该船,向英国道歉,并保证不再发生此类事件。16日,叶名琛拒绝巴夏礼的要求。18日,英国全权特使兼香港总督包令,也致函警告叶名琛。
22日,巴夏礼到香港会晤包令后,次日即向叶名琛提出「限24小时内送回水手,赔礼道歉,否则攻城」。24日,叶名琛迫于英国领事的压力,将所捕12名水手全部送到英国领事馆,但仍不愿道歉,巴夏礼于是拒绝接受。
25日,英国海军司令西马米葛里攻进广州,叶名琛「不战、不降、不避、不谈」。粤民为泄愤,竟纵火焚烧美法英商馆,殃及十三行皆成灰烬,入城的英军也焚烧洋行附近住家报仇,饱掠之后撤退,接着叶名琛又以「大捷」上奏清廷。巴夏礼以衅端已开,就回报英国请速派大军来中国「保护侨民」,也联络美法诸国共同行动。
亚罗船事件传到伦敦后,英国首相巴麦尊趁机鼓动对华战争,但国会中却有不少议员认为没有必要开战,结果上议院通过的对华用兵军费案,竟被下议院否决,巴麦尊遂解散下议院,召集新国会,始得多数票通过,改派额尔金为特使,率海陆军东来,于隔年七月到达香港,「英法联军」之役就此展开。
从历史来看,「领事裁判权」实在是中国对外不平等条约中,最令国人难以接受的耻辱。但我们回过头来看,中国这种「特有」的司法制度,和一些匪夷所思的官僚行径,却很少被国人所知。这些历史留下来的「特色」,至今也依旧存在。
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很多网友不解,中国政府对台湾人民的「友善」,让大陆人民都感到「吃味」。为了名义上的「统一」,中国政府「一国两制」的优惠越放越宽。但台湾政客为了选举,要故意挑动两岸关系的紧张来火中取粟,这还可以理解;然而为何两岸越交流,台湾民意测验中「统消独长」的趋势,却越来越明显。
理论上台湾人民都是移民后裔,比起大陆上土生土长的人民,应该更不会有特定的意识型态。何况两岸大多都是汉族,「统消独长」的趋势究竟从何而起?小瓜呆就不得不提到一次最关键的转折点:千岛湖事件。
1987年蒋经国死前,同意台湾同胞赴大陆「探亲」,而且对「探亲」的限制很宽,让本省人也得以挂「探亲」羊头,卖「观光」狗肉。两岸一时之间,水乳交融的极为密切,也可以解释为何千岛湖事件中罹难的24名台湾旅客,都是「无亲可探」,纯粹「观光」的本省人。
老实说,千岛湖事件之前,中国政府对台湾同胞的「优待」,实在令台湾人感动;所以是1989年之后,各国观光客都却步不前,唯有台湾同胞前仆后继的涌入大陆。
90年代初期,几名台湾观光客在山西,相继遭到扒窃集团「干洗」,当地政府竟将成员逮捕后,不分首从,一律枪毙。显然法院这样的量刑太重,连原本遭窃的台湾人都看不下去,后悔自己不该报案。
但中国政府不愿背负「欺负台湾人」的心态,在这案例中也是充分流露。小瓜呆认为:指责中国官员草菅台湾人命是言过其实,相反的,为了「统战」,草菅大陆小偷的人命才是事实。
当时两岸之间关系的密切,确实是与时俱增;连坚持台独的基本教义派,也都知道台独只是一种立场的表达,但在台湾永远是少数的。然而中国政府一切的善意,竟然就由一个原本单纯的刑事案件,成为浙江省政府官员口中坚称的「意外」,最后竟成了两岸统独消长的转折点。
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千岛湖事件(1994年3月31日)爆发前,2月底台湾民意测验中,认为「自己是台湾人」29.1%;认为「自己是中国人」24.2%;认为「自己既是台湾人又是中国人」43.2%;其余是不知道或拒答。
但在千岛湖事件发生后不久的4月底,同样的民意测验,认为「自己是台湾人」增加为36.9%;认为「自己是中国人」减少为12.7%;认为「自己既是台湾人又是中国人」45.4%;其余是不知道或拒答。
同样的民意测验里,千岛湖事件爆发前的2月底,「支持独立」12.3%;「支持统一」27.4%;「维持现状」44.5%;其余是不知道或拒答。
千岛湖事件发生后不久的4月底,「支持独立」增加为15.5%;「支持统一」减少为17.3%;「维持现状」54.5%;其余是不知道或拒答。
千岛湖事件对台湾人的自我认知与统独趋势,影响之大实在是历史之最。当年台湾赴大陆的人数,从1,541,628,遽降到1,152,084人次。后来几年虽然人数又开始增加,但统消独长的趋势却仍然难以逆转了。
杀害观光客的刑事案件,即使上了国际新闻,最多也只是一天的时间。至于会演变成像千岛湖事件这样「歹戏拖棚」,那就像一百多年前的「亚罗号」事件一样,没有中国这种「特有」的司法制度,和一些匪夷所思的官僚行径,根本不可能会出现这种种亲痛仇快的悲剧。
2004年,台湾女学生萧任乔,在日本富士山被渡边高裕奸杀;1990年,日本女学生井口真理子,在台湾台南被刘学强奸杀。但台日双方人民都没有因此迁怒对方国人,富士山与台南居民,还都自动募捐给受害者家属慰问金,表达对伤心家属的歉意。
很多大陆网友可能无法理解,为什么台湾与日本的人民,不会因这种「伤天害理」的案件而相互抱怨,却对千岛湖事件耿耿于怀。这就要从千岛湖事件发生后,浙江省政府一连串「令人费解」的动作开始说起。
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1994年3月31日,24位台湾旅客乘坐「海瑞号」在千岛湖观光时,与6名大陆船员及2名大陆导游,共32人在船舱内被烧死。浙江公安当局坚称,这是「意外事故」。
4月2日,罹难者家属赶赴现场后,浙江省政府除禁止媒体采访外,更以四至五倍的人力监视台湾家属,严禁台湾旅行业代表到现场勘察及摄影拍照,引起台湾方面的怀疑。
根据浙江省政府对家属的演示文稿,罹难者全体横尸于三层船舱的底层,上半身已烧焦炭化,下半身却几乎都没有损伤,以火灾来说不但不自然,而且包括船员无人逃脱,更加深了家属们的怀疑。
4月5日,台籍罹难者家属要求运尸回台,也希望登上海瑞号检视船身,但都遭拒绝。浙江省副省长刘锡荣原本代表中国官方「安慰」家属,却在电视镜头前,仅仅因台湾家属希望看死难的亲人最后一眼,刘副省长竟然觉得蒙羞受辱,愤然退会。临走前还板起面孔,打着官腔:「没办法再和你们这些家属谈下去了」。
刘副省长的冷血高傲,不准千里迢迢来的台湾亲属探视亲人遗体,而罹难者的行李等遗物又全部失踪,并且船壳弹孔累累,家属更加怀疑「内情」不单纯,确定浙江当局蓄意隐瞒事实。
随后浙江当局在未经家属的同意下解剖遗体,也不准家属阅读验尸报告;于是家属串连静坐抗议,而浙江当局索性将家属全部软禁在旅馆中,并切断所有对外联系管道,还要求「一定要同意政府代为将尸体火化」。一星期后,罹难者家属同意尸体火化,才被允许带着骨灰离开浙江。
4月6日,罹难者遗体被运到桐庐火化。同一天,台湾立法院的各党派立委,纷纷要求删除两岸交流的预算和中止两岸谈判,并要求宣布大陆是「高度危险旅游地区」。行政院大陆委员会认为大陆当局处理的态度是:「于法不合,于理有亏,于情何忍」。
4月8日,罹难者家属代表在向媒体指出,大陆公布的「千岛湖惨案」内情太不合理。浙江当局的做法引起两岸关系紧张,各地华人谴责中国「野蛮」的声音越来越大,《华尔街日报》则干脆明说:「许多台湾人相信中共当局正粗劣的掩盖一场集体谋杀。」
4月9日,悲痛的家属带着骨灰,搭乘中国东方航空公司B-2172飞机自杭州飞香港转机回台,下机后在中正机场立刻发表声明,表示死者的善后处理方式,他们是在非自由意愿下被迫选择的。但浙江省报纸、电台还是一致报导:「台胞对善后处理表示『满意』。」
4月12日,台湾的陆委会主委黄昆辉,向国际媒体提出「千岛湖事件12项疑点」。新闻局也对对外籍记者公布「千岛湖事件始末及舆论看法」说帖。另外又向国际法庭提出集体诉讼,协请国际刑警组织共同办案,并向世界各国递交事件分析和声明。进而全面停止组团到大陆旅游,暂时冻结两岸文教交流和投资经贸活动。
尽管台湾同胞(包括海外华人与许多良心未泯的大陆人)都对浙江当局不合情理的做法赶到愤慨时,中国的报纸与对台官员,仍然一口咬定是「意外火灾事故」,一连十几天,在种种质疑下毫不松口。从《人民日报》海外版来看:
(1)新华社杭州4月7日电:海瑞号游船「火灾事故」遇难台胞亲属来到现场......
(2)新华社杭州4月9日电:淳安县海瑞号游船发生「起火燃烧事故」......
(3)新华社杭州4月12日电:唐树备今天下午接受记者采访时说,发生千岛湖「火灾事件」......
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4月17日,惨案发生后18天,也就是罹难者尸体(刑案中最重要的证物)被浙江省政府「依法火化」11天后,浙江省公安机关又忽然宣布:「千岛湖海瑞号游船失事,系一起『特大抢劫纵火杀人案』。」
4月18日,国务院总理李鹏在出国前记者会上宣布:「千岛湖事件现已破案。凶犯已缉拿归案。这是一重大刑事案件。我们将按『司法程序』严肃处理。」
4月21日,台湾海基会收到大陆海协会来函:「浙江省检察机关已于本月19日批准,依法逮捕在千岛湖海瑞号游船上抢劫纵火杀人的案犯吴黎宏、胡志瀚、余爱军。」
中国的中央政府,在事件发生后第22天,终于有了「迟来的响应」。外交部发言人吴建民说:「千岛湖事件是在海峡两岸交流中,发生的一个『突发刑事案件』。这是我们大家都不愿看到的。不应因这一事件而人为地阻碍两岸关系的发展。」
吴建民对「千岛湖事件」所做的发言,其实是非常中肯与正面的。两岸与世界各地有理性的人,应该也都能接受这样的说法。可惜这个声明足足晚了三个星期,台湾同胞与各地华人,都被浙江省政府一连串的「谎言」与野蛮的「焚尸」给吓着了。
尤其副省长刘锡荣那句「没办法再和你们这些家属谈下去了」的经典名言,配上他那高傲狰狞的官僚脸孔,转头而去的霸王身段,虽然事过境迁十年,台湾人依旧永志不忘。
6月12日,浙江省杭州市中级人民法院将吴黎宏、胡志瀚、余爱军三名「嫌犯」,依照《中华人民共和国刑法》第150条、第132条、第53条第一款、第22条第一款、第64条、第60条的规定,判处死刑,剥夺政治权利终身。
6月17日,浙江省高级人民法院复核通过。6月19日执行枪决。这案件在中国官员与媒体认知里是「结案」了。6月20日《人民日报》在「千岛湖事件始末」,终于也坦承:「在处理千岛湖事件时,『当然也有不尽人意的地方』。」至于「不尽人意」的究竟是什么?《人民日报》不敢说,那就由小瓜呆这「小人民」来说吧!
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根据6月20日《人民日报》的「千岛湖事件始末」一文可知,早在惨案发生的一开始,浙江省政府就很清楚,根本不是什么「火灾事故」。因为报导中说:
4月2日,杭州公安局抽调14名法医,对所有遗体进行了认真的检验:遇难者进入底轮前并未死亡,死亡系「窒息烧烤」所致;省防专家确认有「汽油助燃」;船舶专家「排除了因船和设备引起火灾」的可能;痕迹专家发现「出入底舱的铁梯缺失」,底舱口上方钢板有「猎枪散弹发出所致圆形状凹陷」;刑侦专家分析认为船上人员极可能「受暴力胁迫进入底舱,而后被焚烧致死」;公安机关确定这是一起「有预谋、有准备的特大图财害命案」。
从《人民日报》的报导中可以证实,浙江省政府早就已确定:千岛湖事件是一起特大刑事案。但4月5日刘锡荣还能昧着良心,对台胞罹难者亲属摆「官架子」,4 月6日又将罹难者尸体(刑案中最重要的证物)「依法火化」。试问这种湮灭「犯罪证据」的背后,究竟要隐瞒什么?凶手究竟是不是这3人?是不是只有3人?一切就随「凶手」被枪决、罹难者尸体被火化而就此「结案」了。
《人民日报》的评论其实很有道理:「刑事犯罪在每个国家和地区的旅游活动中,都是可能发生的。」但台湾同胞不解的是:大陆媒体比台湾媒体更早知道,千岛湖事件是一起特大刑事案。而大陆媒体却在4月18日当局宣布「破案」前,不报导有「刑案」的可能也就罢了。可是明明台湾家属不满浙江省政府的「焚尸」,他们却口径一致的说「台胞对善后处理表示『满意』。」
千岛湖发生「杀人劫财」案,并不是什么丢人现眼的事。承认这是一件刑事案件,也不算给中国人丢脸。哪个社会没有一些坏人,干出谋财害命的勾当呢?台湾的犯罪率之高,犯罪手段之凶残,可能还有过之而无不及。
台湾人不会也不能因千岛湖事件中有台湾观光客罹难,就仇视或轻看其它大陆同胞。别忘记!死者中也有8个大陆人,他们也是人生父母养的,他们也应受到尊严的对待。台湾人在对待大陆渔工与大陆新娘的这些事上,丢人现眼的案例更多。
但在千岛湖事件里,让我们中国人丢脸丢到全世界的是以下六点:
(1)浙江省政府「大事化小」的心态与「焚尸」的野蛮手段。(这叫「吃案」)
(2)刘锡荣昧着良心对台胞罹难者亲属所摆的「官架子」。(这叫「官僚」)
(3)北京当局对浙江省政府胡作非为的迟钝反应。(这叫「麻木」)
(4)大陆媒体「丧事当喜事办」一味对官员歌功颂德的作风(这叫「无耻」)
(5)李登辉暗指该案有大陆军警涉嫌却始终不提证据。(这叫「栽赃」)
(6)李登辉用这悲剧挑拨台湾与大陆的紧张关系来助选。(这叫「自私」)
。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。。
千岛湖事件爆发至今已经十年,32位罹难者的尸骨已惨遭浙江省政府「依法火化」。世界各国侦办刑案,对有他杀之嫌的,都是命令家属「依法不得火化」,惟独在中国浙江省有此「特色」。浙江省政府在破案后,只是一味夸赞自己的破案功劳,却至今未对强迫火化尸体一事,向罹难者家属道歉。
刘锡荣这位台湾同胞人人「化成灰都认识」的大官,非但没有因千岛湖事件造成的两岸关系大倒退而受到惩戒,反而仕途亨通。在1997年中共十五大上,成为中纪委常委,2002年还被选为中纪委副书记。这样的官员成了中国官员「纪律」的代表,难怪台湾为何有这么高比例的人不愿与中国统一?这不是李扁两人可以单独搞起来的。
1998年7月27日,台湾的民进党籍高雄市议员林滴娟,在辽宁省海城市遇害。由于她是民进党籍公职人员,还是台湾南部地区地下电台的「名嘴」,影响力非同小可,具有高度的政治敏感性,也引来大批台湾记者前往采访。
但辽宁省政府以开放、务实的态度,使台湾记者没有任何不满,发回的报导也都较为客观准确。虽然罹难者是台独运动中的明星,而且凶手至今也尚未抓到,但在台湾却波澜不起,两岸关系也没有任何波动。证明台湾同胞也不至于那么不理性。
中国政府其实无须对台湾人民,提出什么让自己人民都感到「吃味」的条件。中国要统一,就必须尽快建立「法制」:让司法的公正性与公开性,得到自己人民的信服;让冷血「吃案」的官员得到应有的惩戒,这样的国家会有「分裂」的可能吗?
凶案的发生是偶然,但司法的公正与公开一定要是必然。被人民厌恶的官僚是偶然,被人民厌恶的官僚不能一直升官就一定要是必然。

Sunday, January 20, 2008

真相与意志的分界-从汪精卫聊起

真相与意志的分界

这个题目,看起来似乎是非常枯燥的,但是,引发我给出这个题目的,是一件非常有意思的事情,也肯定是会让大多数人都觉得有意思的事情,就是,曾经不怕牺牲去刺杀清摄政王载沣的汪精卫,为何会在后来成立汉奸政权?


然,这个事情连带好玩的是,张爱玲爱上一个汪精卫政府里面的汉奸之情事;而连带最好玩的,就是《色戒》里面,爱国学生们在香港摩拳擦掌准备暗杀汪伪汉奸易
先生的时候,邝裕民激昂地说:“引刀成一快,不负少年头,杀几个汪伪汉奸又算什么!”李安可能忘记了这么一个故事:汪精卫因剌杀清摄政王载沣而被捕,判终
身监禁。汪精卫因此作绝笔诗一首:“慷慨歌燕市,从容作楚囚。引刀成一快,不负少年头。”

言归正传,汪精卫为何要去领头做汉奸?

汪精卫的一切汉奸行为,都来自一个基本的判断:中国在当时没有可能抗战胜利,中国继续抗战下去的结局多半就是彻底亡国,至少,会是在战败前提下更严重的丧权辱国。

我们都想象一下,在1938年的时候,中国政府已经撤退到了重庆,半个中国都已沦陷,全部出海口都已丧失,唯一的可以获得外援的云南至缅甸的公路也已被封
锁。然后,假设你作为当时仅次于蒋介石的国家领导人汪精卫,还知道中国的军队、军工的更为具体的实力数据,等等等。。。然后,你来做一个基本的判断:中国
还有战胜外敌的机会吗?
实际上,这个判断可以说是一个纯粹客观的问题,但,又是一个需要高度历史洞察力的问题。

正是在这个问题上,真相与意志的边界变得模糊,甚至两者交融起来。

面对同样这个问题,每个人都会有其具体的认知与意志。我们不妨来了解一些典型。

促使汪精卫的决定,有一个比较大的契机,就是1937年
11月德国大使陶德曼在中日间做调解,日方给出了停战条件。对于那些条件,国民政府的国防会议常务委员会议进行了讨论,大部分人倾向于接受日方条件,蒋介
石也裁定可以之为基础,进一步谈判。但由于中方忽略了日方条件里面所定的答复期限,而致使日方以中方不同意那些条件为由,启动了下一步的侵略计划。
本来,这只是一个技术性错误,汪精卫,还有其他一些人,也都强化了这个印象:这么一个技术性错误,如果大部分人都倾向于接受日方条件的话,就不应该让该错误继承下去,导致更为严重的后果。或者说,不该因为这么一个技术性错误,诱发日方更为肆意的侵略。

以,汪精卫决定以那些条件为基础,单独跳出来,继续与日方周旋。正是这样一个心理,我们就可以理解,汪精卫在私下离开重庆之前,给蒋介石留下的道别信件里
面,最后写道:“今后兄为其易,弟为其难。”意思就是,以后你来坚持抗战,于情于理于大众,都是直接合理的行为;我则为了防备万一中国战败的情况下,给国
家预备一些稍微好一点的战败条件,去走一条更为艰难的路。

然后,我们再来看当时共产党人的认知与意志:抗战是毫无疑义的唯一路。毛泽东当时发表了大量的文章,来表达其对于抗战前景的分析与判断。

当然,我们现在是事后诸葛亮,不能简单的以后来的历史事实来评判当时境况里面的每个人。但是,从这整个的历史里面,我们可以领悟到一些客观的现象:一个可以令很多人共同认可的关于历史发展的真相,是不存在的,因为对于历史的未来,我们的意志本身,就是一个强大的角色。

而汪精卫,正是没有懂得此点:他没有看到自己的意志,人民大众的意志,可以在历史的未来发展里面,充当一个什么样的角色。

对于历史发展的真相,参与政治的人的意志,本身是一个明确的参与历史的角色。
那么对于我们每一个个人呢?同样的命题也是成立的。
对于自我,对于个人命运,客观的发展真相,与我们自己的意志,是交融的,是不存在一个确定边界的。

至此,我们的论题似乎得花开两枝,分做两个方面来讨论:
1,在社会的历史发展中,我们的主观意志可以是一个什么样的角色;
2,在个人的发展历程中,我们的主观意志可以是一个什么样的角色。

但,实际上,这两个方面是息息相通的。

继续来看汪精卫的例子。
在很多的记录里面,汪精卫最初离开重庆,抵达越南,发表了自己的主张:接受日本停战条件,先和平了再说。然后,他及其随从人员,是打算去法国,对国事做壁上观的。而重庆的政府也派人送来了护照和汪一行人的旅费。但1939年3月21日,突发的一件事打断了汪的这个计划。
当日午夜,一个精心准备多日的杀手,执机关枪突入汪一行人的住宅,杀死了汪的情同儿子的助手曾仲鸣,而其目的本来是汪本人。
这件事马上令汪改变了计划,他决定自己站出来担当“收拾残局”的责任,遂行其和平计划。
这,就是典型的个人不当意志,促成改变其对历史的意志,并产生实际的历史后果的一个典型例子。

样一个暗杀事件,若出自重庆政府,也并非不可理解,因为蒋介石本人或其手下,一贯有这个政治风格,这样一个行为,完全只是历史的技术性细节,并不足以构成
重要的环节。而就是这样一个技术性细节,导致汪走出实质性的一步,把其所谓和平计划付诸行动,那就是汪自己犯下的个人错误了。
这个错误很简单:一定要严守历史规则与个人规则的分际,不能因为个人情感的偏重,影响与干扰对社会历史的评估与作为。

所以,汪精卫之所以走上一个可耻的位置,就是从这每一个错误走过来的:先是错误地理解了历史里面意志的重要性,然后,又以个人的私我意志,掺入自己对历史的判断与行为,如此大错,也就不得不以被控为汉奸,作为惩罚了。

插入一个关于“理解”的问题。
这里,我拿汪精卫去做理解,理解其行为的心理动机,似乎,就会给人一个印象:如此被分析后的汪精卫,相比单纯指控他为大汉奸,是不是显得过于温和,甚而同情?
不然。
不妨看一下这篇典型的汉奸指控类文章,那个认识张爱玲的作家沈寂写的回忆张的文章
显然,这篇文章是鲜明的敌视汉奸的角度。实际上,汉奸这个词,就是典型的反映主观立场的标签。
如果,我们经过分析了解了汪精卫的心理过程,那么我们还可以站在主观立场对他表示痛恨吗?
当然可以,因为这是两码事。
客观的分析,只涉及到历史的评估;而主观的评估呢,则是必须要有的,因为无法要求大众一致地对历史有客观层面的理解。那么,就只有给予一个黑白分明的图像,能够表达历史主要原则的图像,作为大众认知和大众意志的基础。

这是另一个复杂的关于理解的问题,这里先不展开了。

more@kosmos.cn

和菜头这老鬼果然厉害。这两个网站都不错,大家看看。
http://memedia.cn/
http://danwei.org/
这两个在国内都是被封禁的。当然了,本博客在国内也是被封禁的哈哈

With friends like these ...

http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2008/jan/14/facebook

Tom Hodgkinson
The Guardian,
Monday January 14 2008
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This article appeared in the Guardian on Monday January 14 2008 on p6 of the G2 comment & features section. It was last updated at 15:17 on January 18 2008.
The following correction was printed in the Guardian's Corrections and clarifications column, Wednesday January 16 2008
The US intelligence community's enthusiasm for hi-tech innovation after 9/11 and the creation of In-Q-Tel, its venture capital fund, in 1999 were anachronistically linked in the article below. Since 9/11 happened in 2001 it could not have led to the setting up of In-Q-Tel two years earlier.

I despise Facebook. This enormously successful American business describes itself as "a social utility that connects you with the people around you". But hang on. Why on God's earth would I need a computer to connect with the people around me? Why should my relationships be mediated through the imagination of a bunch of supergeeks in California? What was wrong with the pub?
And does Facebook really connect people? Doesn't it rather disconnect us, since instead of doing something enjoyable such as talking and eating and dancing and drinking with my friends, I am merely sending them little ungrammatical notes and amusing photos in cyberspace, while chained to my desk? A friend of mine recently told me that he had spent a Saturday night at home alone on Facebook, drinking at his desk. What a gloomy image. Far from connecting us, Facebook actually isolates us at our workstations.
Facebook appeals to a kind of vanity and self-importance in us, too. If I put up a flattering picture of myself with a list of my favourite things, I can construct an artificial representation of who I am in order to get sex or approval. ("I like Facebook," said another friend. "I got a shag out of it.") It also encourages a disturbing competitivness around friendship: it seems that with friends today, quality counts for nothing and quantity is king. The more friends you have, the better you are. You are "popular", in the sense much loved in American high schools. Witness the cover line on Dennis Publishing's new Facebook magazine: "How To Double Your Friends List."
It seems, though, that I am very much alone in my hostility. At the time of writing Facebook claims 59 million active users, including 7 million in the UK, Facebook's third-biggest customer after the US and Canada. That's 59 million suckers, all of whom have volunteered their ID card information and consumer preferences to an American business they know nothing about. Right now, 2 million new people join each week. At the present rate of growth, Facebook will have more than 200 million active users by this time next year. And I would predict that, if anything, its rate of growth will accelerate over the coming months. As its spokesman Chris Hughes says: "It's embedded itself to an extent where it's hard to get rid of."
All of the above would have been enough to make me reject Facebook for ever. But there are more reasons to hate it. Many more.

Facebook is a well-funded project, and the people behind the funding, a group of Silicon Valley venture capitalists, have a clearly thought out ideology that they are hoping to spread around the world. Facebook is one manifestation of this ideology. Like PayPal before it, it is a social experiment, an expression of a particular kind of neoconservative libertarianism. On Facebook, you can be free to be who you want to be, as long as you don't mind being bombarded by adverts for the world's biggest brands. As with PayPal, national boundaries are a thing of the past.
Although the project was initially conceived by media cover star Mark Zuckerberg, the real face behind Facebook is the 40-year-old Silicon Valley venture capitalist and futurist philosopher Peter Thiel. There are only three board members on Facebook, and they are Thiel, Zuckerberg and a third investor called Jim Breyer from a venture capital firm called Accel Partners (more on him later). Thiel invested $500,000 in Facebook when Harvard students Zuckerberg, Chris Hughes and Dustin Moskowitz went to meet him in San Francisco in June 2004, soon after they had launched the site. Thiel now reportedly owns 7% of Facebook, which, at Facebook's current valuation of $15bn, would be worth more than $1bn. There is much debate on who exactly were the original co-founders of Facebook, but whoever they were, Zuckerberg is the only one left on the board, although Hughes and Moskowitz still work for the company.
Thiel is widely regarded in Silicon Valley and in the US venture capital scene as a libertarian genius. He is the co-founder and CEO of the virtual banking system PayPal, which he sold to Ebay for $1.5bn, taking $55m for himself. He also runs a £3bn hedge fund called Clarium Capital Management and a venture capital fund called Founders Fund. Bloomberg Markets magazine recently called him "one of the most successful hedge fund managers in the country". He has made money by betting on rising oil prices and by correctly predicting that the dollar would weaken. He and his absurdly wealthy Silicon Valley mates have recently been labelled "The PayPal Mafia" by Fortune magazine, whose reporter also observed that Thiel has a uniformed butler and a $500,000 McLaren supercar. Thiel is also a chess master and intensely competitive. He has been known to sweep the chessmen off the table in a fury when losing. And he does not apologise for this hyper-competitveness, saying: "Show me a good loser and I'll show you a loser."

But Thiel is more than just a clever and avaricious capitalist. He is a futurist philosopher and neocon activist. A philosophy graduate from Stanford, in 1998 he co-wrote a book called The Diversity Myth, which is a detailed attack on liberalism and the multiculturalist ideology that dominated Stanford. He claimed that the "multiculture" led to a lessening of individual freedoms. While a student at Stanford, Thiel founded a rightwing journal, still up and running, called The Stanford Review - motto: Fiat Lux ("Let there be light"). Thiel is a member of TheVanguard.Org, an internet-based neoconservative pressure group that was set up to attack MoveOn.org, a liberal pressure group that works on the web. Thiel calls himself "way libertarian".
TheVanguard is run by one Rod D Martin, a philosopher-capitalist whom Thiel greatly admires. On the site, Thiel says: "Rod is one of our nation's leading minds in the creation of new and needed ideas for public policy. He possesses a more complete understanding of America than most executives have of their own businesses."
This little taster from their website will give you an idea of their vision for the world: "TheVanguard.Org is an online community of Americans who believe in conservative values, the free market and limited government as the best means to bring hope and ever-increasing opportunity to everyone, especially the poorest among us." Their aim is to promote policies that will "reshape America and the globe". TheVanguard describes its politics as "Reaganite/Thatcherite". The chairman's message says: "Today we'll teach MoveOn [the liberal website], Hillary and the leftwing media some lessons they never imagined."
So, Thiel's politics are not in doubt. What about his philosophy? I listened to a podcast of an address Thiel gave about his ideas for the future. His philosophy, briefly, is this: since the 17th century, certain enlightened thinkers have been taking the world away from the old-fashioned nature-bound life, and here he quotes Thomas Hobbes' famous characterisation of life as "nasty, brutish and short", and towards a new virtual world where we have conquered nature. Value now exists in imaginary things. Thiel says that PayPal was motivated by this belief: that you can find value not in real manufactured objects, but in the relations between human beings. PayPal was a way of moving money around the world with no restriction. Bloomberg Markets puts it like this: "For Thiel, PayPal was all about freedom: it would enable people to skirt currency controls and move money around the globe."
Clearly, Facebook is another uber-capitalist experiment: can you make money out of friendship? Can you create communities free of national boundaries - and then sell Coca-Cola to them? Facebook is profoundly uncreative. It makes nothing at all. It simply mediates in relationships that were happening anyway.
Photo: Tim Boyle/Getty
Thiel's philosophical mentor is one René Girard of Stanford University, proponent of a theory of human behaviour called mimetic desire. Girard reckons that people are essentially sheep-like and will copy one another without much reflection. The theory would also seem to be proved correct in the case of Thiel's virtual worlds: the desired object is irrelevant; all you need to know is that human beings will tend to move in flocks. Hence financial bubbles. Hence the enormous popularity of Facebook. Girard is a regular at Thiel's intellectual soirees. What you don't hear about in Thiel's philosophy, by the way, are old-fashioned real-world concepts such as art, beauty, love, pleasure and truth.
The internet is immensely appealing to neocons such as Thiel because it promises a certain sort of freedom in human relations and in business, freedom from pesky national laws, national boundaries and suchlike. The internet opens up a world of free trade and laissez-faire expansion. Thiel also seems to approve of offshore tax havens, and claims that 40% of the world's wealth resides in places such as Vanuatu, the Cayman Islands, Monaco and Barbados. I think it's fair to say that Thiel, like Rupert Murdoch, is against tax. He also likes the globalisation of digital culture because it makes the banking overlords hard to attack: "You can't have a workers' revolution to take over a bank if the bank is in Vanuatu," he says.
If life in the past was nasty, brutish and short, then in the future Thiel wants to make it much longer, and to this end he has also invested in a firm that is exploring life-extension technologies. He has pledged £3.5m to a Cambridge-based gerontologist called Aubrey de Grey, who is searching for the key to immortality. Thiel is also on the board of advisers of something called the Singularity Institute for Artificial Intelligence. From its fantastical website, the following: "The Singularity is the technological creation of smarter-than-human intelligence. There are several technologies ... heading in this direction ... Artificial Intelligence ... direct brain-computer interfaces ... genetic engineering ... different technologies which, if they reached a threshold level of sophistication, would enable the creation of smarter-than-human intelligence."
So by his own admission, Thiel is trying to destroy the real world, which he also calls "nature", and install a virtual world in its place, and it is in this context that we must view the rise of Facebook. Facebook is a deliberate experiment in global manipulation, and Thiel is a bright young thing in the neoconservative pantheon, with a penchant for far-out techno-utopian fantasies. Not someone I want to help get any richer.
The third board member of Facebook is Jim Breyer. He is a partner in the venture capital firm Accel Partners, who put $12.7m into Facebook in April 2005. On the board of such US giants as Wal-Mart and Marvel Entertainment, he is also a former chairman of the National Venture Capital Association (NVCA). Now these are the people who are really making things happen in America, because they invest in the new young talent, the Zuckerbergs and the like. Facebook's most recent round of funding was led by a company called Greylock Venture Capital, who put in the sum of $27.5m. One of Greylock's senior partners is called Howard Cox, another former chairman of the NVCA, who is also on the board of In-Q-Tel. What's In-Q-Tel? Well, believe it or not (and check out their website), this is the venture-capital wing of the CIA. After 9/11, the US intelligence community became so excited by the possibilities of new technology and the innovations being made in the private sector, that in 1999 they set up their own venture capital fund, In-Q-Tel, which "identifies and partners with companies developing cutting-edge technologies to help deliver these solutions to the Central Intelligence Agency and the broader US Intelligence Community (IC) to further their missions".
The US defence department and the CIA love technology because it makes spying easier. "We need to find new ways to deter new adversaries," defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld said in 2003. "We need to make the leap into the information age, which is the critical foundation of our transformation efforts." In-Q-Tel's first chairman was Gilman Louie, who served on the board of the NVCA with Breyer. Another key figure in the In-Q-Tel team is Anita K Jones, former director of defence research and engineering for the US department of defence, and - with Breyer - board member of BBN Technologies. When she left the US department of defence, Senator Chuck Robb paid her the following tribute: "She brought the technology and operational military communities together to design detailed plans to sustain US dominance on the battlefield into the next century."

Now even if you don't buy the idea that Facebook is some kind of extension of the American imperialist programme crossed with a massive information-gathering tool, there is no way of denying that as a business, it is pure mega-genius. Some net nerds have suggsted that its $15bn valuation is excessive, but I would argue that if anything that is too modest. Its scale really is dizzying, and the potential for growth is virtually limitless. "We want everyone to be able to use Facebook," says the impersonal voice of Big Brother on the website. I'll bet they do. It is Facebook's enormous potential that led Microsoft to buy 1.6% for $240m. A recent rumour says that Asian investor Lee Ka-Shing, said to be the ninth richest man in the world, has bought 0.4% of Facebook for $60m.
The creators of the site need do very little bar fiddle with the programme. In the main, they simply sit back and watch as millions of Facebook addicts voluntarily upload their ID details, photographs and lists of their favourite consumer objects. Once in receipt of this vast database of human beings, Facebook then simply has to sell the information back to advertisers, or, as Zuckerberg puts it in a recent blog post, "to try to help people share information with their friends about things they do on the web". And indeed, this is precisely what's happening. On November 6 last year, Facebook announced that 12 global brands had climbed on board. They included Coca-Cola, Blockbuster, Verizon, Sony Pictures and Condé Nast. All trained in marketing bullshit of the highest order, their representatives made excited comments along the following lines:
"With Facebook Ads, our brands can become a part of the way users communicate and interact on Facebook," said Carol Kruse, vice president, global interactive marketing, the Coca-Cola Company.
"We view this as an innovative way to cultivate relationships with millions of Facebook users by enabling them to interact with Blockbuster in convenient, relevant and entertaining ways," said Jim Keyes, Blockbuster chairman and CEO. "This is beyond creating advertising impressions. This is about Blockbuster participating in the community of the consumer so that, in return, consumers feel motivated to share the benefits of our brand with their friends."
"Share" is Facebookspeak for "advertise". Sign up to Facebook and you become a free walking, talking advert for Blockbuster or Coke, extolling the virtues of these brands to your friends. We are seeing the commodification of human relationships, the extraction of capitalistic value from friendships.
Now, by comparision with Facebook, newspapers, for example, begin to look hopelessly outdated as a business model. A newspaper sells advertising space to businesses looking to sell stuff to their readers. But the system is far less sophisticated than Facebook for two reasons. One is that newspapers have to put up with the irksome expense of paying journalists to provide the content. Facebook gets its content for free. The other is that Facebook can target advertising with far greater precision than a newspaper. Admit on Facebook that your favourite film is This Is Spinal Tap, and when a Spinal Tap-esque movie comes out, you can be sure that they'll be sending ads your way.
Facebook founder Mark Zuckerman (Photo: Paul Sakuma/AP)
It's true that Facebook recently got into hot water with its Beacon advertising programme. Users were notified that one of their friends had made a purchase at certain online shops; 46,000 users felt that this level of advertising was intrusive, and signed a petition called "Facebook! Stop invading my privacy!" to say so. Zuckerberg apologised on his company blog. He has written that they have now changed the system from "opt-out" to "opt-in". But I suspect that this little rebellion about being so ruthlessly commodified will soon be forgotten: after all, there was a national outcry by the civil liberties movement when the idea of a police force was mooted in the UK in the mid 19th century.
Futhermore, have you Facebook users ever actually read the privacy policy? It tells you that you don't have much privacy. Facebook pretends to be about freedom, but isn't it really more like an ideologically motivated virtual totalitarian regime with a population that will very soon exceed the UK's? Thiel and the rest have created their own country, a country of consumers.
Now, you may, like Thiel and the other new masters of the cyberverse, find this social experiment tremendously exciting. Here at last is the Enlightenment state longed for since the Puritans of the 17th century sailed away to North America, a world where everyone is free to express themselves as they please, according to who is watching. National boundaries are a thing of the past and everyone cavorts together in freewheeling virtual space. Nature has been conquered through man's boundless ingenuity. Yes, and you may decide to send genius investor Thiel all your money, and certainly you'll be waiting impatiently for the public flotation of the unstoppable Facebook.
Or you might reflect that you don't really want to be part of this heavily-funded programme to create an arid global virtual republic, where your own self and your relationships with your friends are converted into commodites on sale to giant global brands. You may decide that you don't want to be part of this takeover bid for the world.
For my own part, I am going to retreat from the whole thing, remain as unplugged as possible, and spend the time I save by not going on Facebook doing something useful, such as reading books. Why would I want to waste my time on Facebook when I still haven't read Keats' Endymion? And when there are seeds to be sown in my own back yard? I don't want to retreat from nature, I want to reconnect with it. Damn air-conditioning! And if I want to connect with the people around me, I will revert to an old piece of technology. It's free, it's easy and it delivers a uniquely individual experience in sharing information: it's called talking.
Facebook's privacy policy
Just for fun, try substituting the words 'Big Brother' whenever you read the word 'Facebook'
1 We will advertise at you
"When you use Facebook, you may set up your personal profile, form relationships, send messages, perform searches and queries, form groups, set up events, add applications, and transmit information through various channels. We collect this information so that we can provide you the service and offer personalised features."
2 You can't delete anything
"When you update information, we usually keep a backup copy of the prior version for a reasonable period of time to enable reversion to the prior version of that information."
3 Anyone can glance at your intimate confessions
"... we cannot and do not guarantee that user content you post on the site will not be viewed by unauthorised persons. We are not responsible for circumvention of any privacy settings or security measures contained on the site. You understand and acknowledge that, even after removal, copies of user content may remain viewable in cached and archived pages or if other users have copied or stored your user content."
4 Our marketing profile of you will be unbeatable
"Facebook may also collect information about you from other sources, such as newspapers, blogs, instant messaging services, and other users of the Facebook service through the operation of the service (eg, photo tags) in order to provide you with more useful information and a more personalised experience."
5 Opting out doesn't mean opting out
"Facebook reserves the right to send you notices about your account even if you opt out of all voluntary email notifications."
6 The CIA may look at the stuff when they feel like it
"By using Facebook, you are consenting to have your personal data transferred to and processed in the United States ... We may be required to disclose user information pursuant to lawful requests, such as subpoenas or court orders, or in compliance with applicable laws. We do not reveal information until we have a good faith belief that an information request by law enforcement or private litigants meets applicable legal standards. Additionally, we may share account or other information when we believe it is necessary to comply with law, to protect our interests or property, to prevent fraud or other illegal activity perpetrated through the Facebook service or using the Facebook name, or to prevent imminent bodily harm. This may include sharing information with other companies, lawyers, agents or government agencies."

Saturday, January 19, 2008

Change or Die

Change or Die

All leadership comes down to this: changing people's behavior. Why is that so damn hard? Science offers some surprising new answers -- and ways to do better.

By: Alan Deutschman | Illustrations by: David Pohl

What if you were given that choice? For real. What if it weren't just the hyperbolic rhetoric that conflates corporate performance with life and death? Not the overblown exhortations of a rabid boss, or a slick motivational speaker, or a self-dramatizing CEO. We're talking actual life or death now. Your own life or death. What if a well-informed, trusted authority figure said you had to make difficult and enduring changes in the way you think and act? If you didn't, your time would end soon -- a lot sooner than it had to. Could you change when change really mattered? When it mattered most?

Yes, you say?

Try again.

Yes?

You're probably deluding yourself.

You wouldn't change.

Don't believe it? You want odds? Here are the odds, the scientifically studied odds: nine to one. That's nine to one against you. How do you like those odds?

This revelation unnerved many people in the audience last November at IBM's "Global Innovation Outlook" conference. The company's top executives had invited the most farsighted thinkers they knew from around the world to come together in New York and propose solutions to some really big problems. They started with the crisis in health care, an industry that consumes an astonishing $1.8 trillion a year in the United States alone, or 15% of gross domestic product. A dream team of experts took the stage, and you might have expected them to proclaim that breathtaking advances in science and technology -- mapping the human genome and all that -- held the long-awaited answers. That's not what they said. They said that the root cause of the health crisis hasn't changed for decades, and the medical establishment still couldn't figure out what to do about it.

Dr. Raphael "Ray" Levey, founder of the Global Medical Forum, an annual summit meeting of leaders from every constituency in the health system, told the audience, "A relatively small percentage of the population consumes the vast majority of the health-care budget for diseases that are very well known and by and large behavioral." That is, they're sick because of how they choose to live their lives, not because of environmental or genetic factors beyond their control. Continued Levey: "Even as far back as when I was in medical school" -- he enrolled at Harvard in 1955 -- "many articles demonstrated that 80% of the health-care budget was consumed by five behavioral issues." Levey didn't bother to name them, but you don't need an MD to guess what he was talking about: too much smoking, drinking, eating, and stress, and not enough exercise.

Then the knockout blow was delivered by Dr. Edward Miller, the dean of the medical school and CEO of the hospital at Johns Hopkins University. He turned the discussion to patients whose heart disease is so severe that they undergo bypass surgery, a traumatic and expensive procedure that can cost more than $100,000 if complications arise. About 600,000 people have bypasses every year in the United States, and 1.3 million heart patients have angioplasties -- all at a total cost of around $30 billion. The procedures temporarily relieve chest pains but rarely prevent heart attacks or prolong lives. Around half of the time, the bypass grafts clog up in a few years; the angioplasties, in a few months. The causes of this so-called restenosis are complex. It's sometimes a reaction to the trauma of the surgery itself. But many patients could avoid the return of pain and the need to repeat the surgery -- not to mention arrest the course of their disease before it kills them -- by switching to healthier lifestyles. Yet very few do. "If you look at people after coronary-artery bypass grafting two years later, 90% of them have not changed their lifestyle," Miller said. "And that's been studied over and over and over again. And so we're missing some link in there. Even though they know they have a very bad disease and they know they should change their lifestyle, for whatever reason, they can't."

Changing the behavior of people isn't just the biggest challenge in health care. It's the most important challenge for businesses trying to compete in a turbulent world, says John Kotter, a Harvard Business School professor who has studied dozens of organizations in the midst of upheaval: "The central issue is never strategy, structure, culture, or systems. The core of the matter is always about changing the behavior of people." Those people may be called upon to respond to profound upheavals in marketplace dynamics -- the rise of a new global competitor, say, or a shift from a regulated to a deregulated environment -- or to a corporate reorganization, merger, or entry into a new business. And as individuals, we may want to change our own styles of work -- how we mentor subordinates, for example, or how we react to criticism. Yet more often than not, we can't.

CEOs are supposedly the prime change agents for their companies, but they're often as resistant to change as anyone -- and as prone to backsliding. The most notorious recent example is Michael Eisner. After he nearly died from heart problems, Eisner finally heeded his wife's plea and brought in a high-profile number-two exec, Michael Ovitz, to alleviate the stress of running Disney. But Eisner proved incapable of seeing through the idea, essentially refusing to share any real power with Ovitz from the start.

The conventional wisdom says that crisis is a powerful motivator for change. But severe heart disease is among the most serious of personal crises, and it doesn't motivate -- at least not nearly enough. Nor does giving people accurate analyses and factual information about their situations. What works? Why, in general, is change so incredibly difficult for people? What is it about how our brains are wired that resists change so tenaciously? Why do we fight even what we know to be in our own vital interests?

Kotter has hit on a crucial insight. "Behavior change happens mostly by speaking to people's feelings," he says. "This is true even in organizations that are very focused on analysis and quantitative measurement, even among people who think of themselves as smart in an MBA sense. In highly successful change efforts, people find ways to help others see the problems or solutions in ways that influence emotions, not just thought."

Unfortunately, that kind of emotional persuasion isn't taught in business schools, and it doesn't come naturally to the technocrats who run things -- the engineers, scientists, lawyers, doctors, accountants, and managers who pride themselves on disciplined, analytical thinking. There's compelling science behind the psychology of change -- it draws on discoveries from emerging fields such as cognitive science, linguistics, and neuroscience -- but its insights and techniques often seem paradoxical or irrational.

Look again at the case of heart patients. The best minds at Johns Hopkins and the Global Medical Forum might not know how to get them to change, but someone does: Dr. Dean Ornish, a professor of medicine at the University of California at San Francisco and founder of the Preventative Medicine Research Institute, in Sausalito, California. Ornish, like Kotter, realizes the importance of going beyond the facts. "Providing health information is important but not always sufficient," he says. "We also need to bring in the psychological, emotional, and spiritual dimensions that are so often ignored." Ornish published studies in leading peer-reviewed scientific journals, showing that his holistic program, focused around a vegetarian diet with less than 10% of the calories from fat, can actually reverse heart disease without surgery or drugs. Still, the medical establishment remained skeptical that people could sustain the lifestyle changes. In 1993, Ornish persuaded Mutual of Omaha to pay for a trial. Researchers took 333 patients with severely clogged arteries. They helped them quit smoking and go on Ornish's diet. The patients attended twice-weekly group support sessions led by a psychologist and took instruction in meditation, relaxation, yoga, and aerobic exercise. The program lasted for only a year. But after three years, the study found, 77% of the patients had stuck with their lifestyle changes -- and safely avoided the bypass or angioplasty surgeries that they were eligible for under their insurance coverage. And Mutual of Omaha saved around $30,000 per patient.

Framing Change

Why does the Ornish program succeed while the conventional approach has failed? For starters, Ornish recasts the reasons for change. Doctors had been trying to motivate patients mainly with the fear of death, he says, and that simply wasn't working. For a few weeks after a heart attack, patients were scared enough to do whatever their doctors said. But death was just too frightening to think about, so their denial would return, and they'd go back to their old ways.

The patients lived the way they did as a day-to-day strategy for coping with their emotional troubles. "Telling people who are lonely and depressed that they're going to live longer if they quit smoking or change their diet and lifestyle is not that motivating," Ornish says. "Who wants to live longer when you're in chronic emotional pain?"

So instead of trying to motivate them with the "fear of dying," Ornish reframes the issue. He inspires a new vision of the "joy of living" -- convincing them they can feel better, not just live longer. That means enjoying the things that make daily life pleasurable, like making love or even taking long walks without the pain caused by their disease. "Joy is a more powerful motivator than fear," he says.

Pioneering research in cognitive science and linguistics has pointed to the paramount importance of framing. George Lakoff, a professor of those two disciplines at the University of California at Berkeley, defines frames as the "mental structures that shape the way we see the world." Lakoff says that frames are part of the "cognitive unconscious," but the way we know what our frames are, or evoke new ones, springs from language. For example, we typically think of a company as being like an army -- everyone has a rank and a codified role in a hierarchical chain of command with orders coming down from high to low. Of course, that's only one way of organizing a group effort. If we had the frame of the company as a family or a commune, people would know very different ways of working together.

The big challenge in trying to change how people think is that their minds rely on frames, not facts. "Neuroscience tells us that each of the concepts we have -- the long-term concepts that structure how we think -- is instantiated in the synapses of the brain," Lakoff says. "Concepts are not things that can be changed just by someone telling us a fact. We may be presented with facts, but for us to make sense of them, they have to fit what is already in the synapses of the brain. Otherwise, facts go in and then they go right back out. They are not heard, or they are not accepted as facts, or they mystify us: Why would anyone have said that? Then we label the fact as irrational, crazy, or stupid." Lakoff says that's one reason why political conservatives and liberals each think that the other side is nuts. They don't understand each other because their brains are working within different frames.

The frame that dominates our thinking about how work should be organized -- the military chain-of-command model -- is extremely hard to break. When new employees start at W.L. Gore & Associates, the maker of Gore-Tex fabrics, they often refuse to believe that the company doesn't have a hierarchy with job titles and bosses. It just doesn't fit their frame. They can't accept it. It usually takes at least several months for new hires to begin to understand Gore's reframed notion of the workplace, which relies on self-directed employees making their own choices about joining one another in egalitarian small teams.

Getting people to exchange one frame for another is tough even when you're working one-on-one, but it's especially hard to do for large groups of people. Howard Gardner, a cognitive scientist, MacArthur Fellow "genius" award winner, and professor at Harvard's Graduate School of Education, has looked at what works most effectively for heads of state and corporate CEOs. "When one is addressing a diverse or heterogeneous audience," he says, "the story must be simple, easy to identify with, emotionally resonant, and evocative of positive experiences."

In Louis V. Gerstner Jr.'s successful turnaround of IBM in the 1990s, he learned the surprising importance of this kind of emotional persuasion. When he took over as CEO, Gerstner was fixated on what had worked for him throughout his career as a McKinsey & Co. consultant: coolheaded analysis and strategy. He thought he could revive the company through maneuvers such as selling assets and cutting costs. He quickly found that those tools weren't nearly enough. He needed to transform the entrenched corporate culture, which had become hidebound and overly bureaucratic. That meant changing the attitudes and behaviors of hundreds of thousands of employees. In his memoir, Gerstner writes that he realized he needed to make a powerful emotional appeal to them, to "shake them out of their depressed stupor, remind them of who they were -- you're IBM, damn it!" Rather than sitting in a corner office negotiating deals and analyzing spreadsheets, he needed to convey passion through thousands of hours of personal appearances. Gerstner, who's often brittle and imperious in private, nonetheless responded admirably to the challenge. He proved to be an engaging and emotional public speaker when he took his campaign to his huge workforce.

Steve Jobs's turnaround at Apple shows the impact of reframing and telling a new narrative that's simple, positive, and emotional. When he returned to the company after a long exile, he recast its image among employees and customers alike from a marginalized player vanquished in the battle for market share to the home of a small but enviable elite: the creative innovators who dared to "Think different."

When leaders are addressing a small group of people who have a similar mind-set and shared values, the reframed message can be more nuanced and complex, Harvard's Gardner says. But it still needs to be positive, inspiring, and emotionally resonant. A good example is how chairman and publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr. rescued The New York Times from crisis. Former editor Howell Raines had alienated much of the newsroom's staff, undermining its communal spirit with a new culture of favoritism. Raines fell when a star reporter he had shielded from criticism was exposed for fabricating news stories. The scandal threatened the famed paper's credibility. Gardner says that Sulzberger successfully reframed the narrative this way: We are a great newspaper. We temporarily went astray and risked sacrificing the community spirit that made this an outstanding place to work. We can retain our excellence and regain our sense of community by admitting our errors, making sure that they don't happen again, and being a more transparent and self-reflecting organization. To achieve these goals, Sulzberger replaced Raines with a new top editor, Bill Keller -- a respected veteran who reflected the lost communal culture -- and he appointed a "public editor" to critique the paper in an unedited column. Now, Gardner says, "the Times is a much happier place and the news coverage and journalistic empire are in reasonable shape."

Radical Change

Reframing alone isn't enough, of course. That's where Dr. Ornish's other astonishing insight comes in. Paradoxically, he found that radical, sweeping, comprehensive changes are often easier for people than small, incremental ones. For example, he says that people who make moderate changes in their diets get the worst of both worlds: They feel deprived and hungry because they aren't eating everything they want, but they aren't making big enough changes to quickly see an improvement in how they feel, or in measurements such as weight, blood pressure, and cholesterol. But the heart patients who went on Ornish's tough, radical program saw quick, dramatic results, reporting a 91% decrease in frequency of chest pain in the first month. "These rapid improvements are a powerful motivator," he says. "When people who have had so much chest pain that they can't work, or make love, or even walk across the street without intense suffering find that they are able to do all of those things without pain in only a few weeks, then they often say, 'These are choices worth making.' "

While it's astonishing that most patients in Ornish's demanding program stick with it, studies show that two-thirds of patients who are prescribed statin drugs (which are highly effective at cutting cholesterol) stop taking them within one year. What could possibly be a smaller or easier lifestyle change than popping a pill every day? But Ornish says patients stop taking the drug because it doesn't actually make them feel any better. It doesn't deal with causes of high cholesterol, such as obesity, that make people feel unhealthy. The paradox holds that big changes are easier than small ones.

Research shows that this idea applies to the business realm as well. Bain & Co., the management consulting firm, studied 21 recent corporate transformations and found that most were "substantially completed" in only two years or less while none took more than three years. The means were drastic: In almost every case, the CEOs fired most of the top management. Almost always, the companies enjoyed quick, tangible results, and their stock prices rose 250% a year on average as they revived.

IBM's turnaround hinged on a radical shift in focus from selling computer hardware to providing "services," which meant helping customers build and run their information-technology operations. This required a momentous cultural switch -- IBMers would have to recommend that a client buy from competitors such as Hewlett-Packard and Microsoft when it was in the client's interest. But the radical shift worked: Services have grown into IBM's core business and the key to its success.

Of course, radical change often isn't possible in business situations. Still, it's always important to identify, achieve, and celebrate some quick, positive results for the vital emotional lifts that they provide. Harvard's Kotter believes in the importance of "short-term wins" for companies, meaning "victories that nourish faith in the change effort, emotionally reward the hard workers, keep the critics at bay, and build momentum. Without sufficient wins that are visible, timely, unambiguous, and meaningful to others, change efforts invariably run into serious problems."

Supporting Change

Even when leaders have reframed the issues brilliantly, it's still vital to give people the multifaceted support they need. That's a big reason why 90% of heart patients can't change their lifestyles but 77% of Ornish's patients could -- because he buttressed them with weekly support groups with other patients, as well as attention from dieticians, psychologists, nurses, and yoga and meditation instructors.

Xerox's executives learned this lesson well. Four years ago, when the company was in crisis, they came up with a new vision that required salespeople to change the way they had always worked. "Their whole careers, salespeople had done one thing," says James Firestone, president of Xerox North America, who leads a sales force of 5,400. "They would knock on doors, look for copiers, see how old they were, and sell a refresh. They knew how to do that." The salespeople had such predictable routines that they could plan their days, weeks, even years. It was comforting. But it just wasn't succeeding any longer.

Under the new strategy, the salespeople were supposed to really engage with customers so they could understand the complexities of how their offices operated and find opportunities to sell other products, such as scanners and printers. Maybe they would find that the customer actually needed fewer machines that could do more than the old ones had. Learning about the client's needs meant that the sales reps had to take a lot more time and talk to more people about broader issues. It undermined the cozy predictability of their routines. The reps became anxious, Firestone recalls. "They'd say, 'I know how to sell and make a living the old way, but not the new way.' "

Their anxiety was compounded by the fact that Xerox lagged in giving them the support they needed. It often took a couple of months before the salespeople received their scheduled training in the new approach. And it took two years before the company changed its incentive pay system to fit better with the new model, in which the reps had to invest a lot more time and effort before they signed deals. Eventually, though, the change effort, by expanding the sales focus to a larger range of products, helped Xerox avoid bankruptcy and return to profitability. "People need a sense of confidence that the processes will be aligned internally," Firestone says. "For large companies, this is where change usually fails." Even if change starts at the top, it can easily die somewhere in the middle. That's why Xerox now holds "alignment workshops" that ask middle managers -- the people who make processes work -- to outline the ways its systems could inhibit its agendas for change.

This Is Your Brain on Change

Are most of us like the fearful copier salespeople who dread disruption to their routines? Neuroscience, a field that has exploded with insight, has a lot more to say about changing people's behavior -- and its findings are guardedly optimistic. Scientists used to believe that the brain became "hardwired" early in life and couldn't change later on. Now researchers such as Dr. Michael Merzenich, a professor at the University of California at San Francisco, say that the brain's ability to change -- its "plasticity" -- is lifelong. If we can change, then why don't we? Merzenich has perspective on the issue since he's not only a leading neuroscientist but also an entrepreneur, the founder of two Bay Area startups. Both use PC software to train people to overcome mental disabilities or diseases: Scientific Learning Corp. focuses on children who have trouble learning to read, and Posit Science Corp. is working on ways to prevent, stop, or reverse cognitive decline in older adults.

Merzenich starts by talking about rats. You can train a rat to have a new skill. The rat solves a puzzle, and you give it a food reward. After 100 times, the rat can solve the puzzle flawlessly. After 200 times, it can remember how to solve it for nearly its lifetime. The rat has developed a habit. It can perform the task automatically because its brain has changed. Similarly, a person has thousands of habits -- such as how to use a pen -- that drive lasting changes in the brain. For highly trained specialists, such as professional musicians, the changes actually show up on MRI scans. Flute players, for instance, have especially large representations in their brains in the areas that control the fingers, tongue, and lips, Merzenich says. "They've distorted their brains."

Businesspeople, like flutists, are highly trained specialists, and they've distorted their brains, too. An older executive "has powers that a young person walking in the door doesn't have," says Merzenich. He has lots of specialized skills and abilities. A specialist is a hard thing to create, and is valuable for a corporation, obviously, but specialization also instills an inherent "rigidity." The cumulative weight of experience makes it harder to change.

How, then, to overcome these factors? Merzenich says the key is keeping up the brain's machinery for learning. "When you're young, almost everything you do is behavior-based learning -- it's an incredibly powerful, plastic period," he says. "What happens that becomes stultifying is you stop learning and you stop the machinery, so it starts dying." Unless you work on it, brain fitness often begins declining at around age 30 for men, a bit later for women. "People mistake being active for continuous learning," Merzenich says. "The machinery is only activated by learning. People think they're leading an interesting life when they haven't learned anything in 20 or 30 years. My suggestion is learn Spanish or the oboe."

Meanwhile, the leaders of a company need "a business strategy for continuous mental rejuvenation and new learning," he says. Posit Science has a "fifth-day strategy," meaning that everyone spends one day a week working in a different discipline. Software engineers try their hand at marketing. Designers get involved in business functions. "Everyone needs a new project instead of always being in a bin," Merzenich says. "A fifth-day strategy doesn't sacrifice your core ability but keeps you rejuvenated. In a company, you have to worry about rejuvenation at every level. So ideally you deliberately construct new challenges. For every individual, you need complex new learning. Innovation comes about when people are enabled to use their full brains and intelligence instead of being put in boxes and controlled."

What happens if you don't work at mental rejuvenation? Merzenich says that people who live to 85 have a 50-50 chance of being senile. While the issue for heart patients is "change or die," the issue for everyone is "change or lose your mind." Mastering the ability to change isn't just a crucial strategy for business. It's a necessity for health. And it's possibly the one thing that's most worth learning.

这是之前看到的一篇文章,今天还看到一篇有意思的文章,太长了,只把链接放在这里吧Do Cholesterol Drugs Do Any Good?

Thursday, January 17, 2008

悲剧精神者的自我宣言

你并不因为悲观而投向虚无主义,而是直面苦难与荒谬,穿透绝望与虚无,积极地建构生活的意义、建构个体生命的价值,无论遇到什么样的障碍,你都不愿放弃你对意义与价值的建构与持守。虽然你无力改变苦难,虽然失败与灭亡是你无可逃脱的宿命,但你依然决意要用你所建构的意义,光光明明地照耀荒谬与虚无,照耀冷硬与荒寒。至于你建构出什么样的自我和意义,你所建构的自我有没有足够的依据,有没有自足的意义,这些东西都无关紧要,也是无需论证的。你的建构完全取决于你内在的感悟、体验与愿望。这是一个从内到外的灵魂运动,是你的自由意志的生长与实现。你感悟到了什么样的自我,就会建构出什么样的自我,体验到了什么样的意义,就会建构出什么样的意义,你愿望着什么样的自由,就会信守着什么样的自由。你所建构的自我和意义,终于成为超越于生活现实之上的另一种现实,超越于存在之上的另一种存在。
来自摩罗——论中国文学的悲剧缺失

Wednesday, January 9, 2008

China woman in legal first over abortion case

By Richard Spencer in Beijing
Last Updated: 1:29am GMT 07/01/2008
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/01/07/wchina107.xml

A Chinese woman who was forced to have an abortion despite being nine months pregnant is suing the authorities for their actions.
Jin Yani's waters had already broken when China's abortion police came for her. They took her to a nearby abortion centre, injected her unborn baby girl and removed the body two days later.
Mrs Jin's crime was to have become pregnant by her fiance five months before she married him at the age of 20, the legal minimum.
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Pregnancy outside marriage is illegal. But forced abortions are now supposed to be illegal in China.
In a blow against the state's brutally imposed one-child policy, she and her husband are claiming danmages against the authorities, saying that officials acted unlawfully.
China's higher courts have agreed to hear the plea - the first time this has happened in a case of this kind.
Yang Zhongchen, her husband, tried to prevent the abortion by wining and dining officials in Hebei province. He also agreed to pay a fine of £650, but none of this prevented Changli county family planning officials arriving on Sept 7, 2000.
Mrs Jin said: "I got on my knees and begged them after they took me to the clinic and said I wanted to give birth to my daughter. I had already named her Yang Yin."
In the clinic, she was injected with a large syringe. Her husband arrived in time to witness the removal of the dead foetus with forceps two days later.
Mrs Jin lost blood, and was hospitalised for 44 days. Her husband was charged for the medicine she needed. He said that his wife is now infertile as a result of the abortion.
Mr Yang has demanded £85,000 to cover medical expenses, psychological distress and Mrs Jin's inability to conceive.
At first the case got nowhere, but the regional people's court agreed to hear the couple's appeal in October. At that point, Mr Yang said that officials made contact offering him a job and free hospital treatment for his wife. But that is not enough, he said.
"They have made no mention of damages," he said while on a visit to Beijing to meet his lawyer. "We can get a job anywhere."
But the couple say they can never truly be compensated.
"Our baby will never come back," Mrs Jin said. "We just hope this kind of thing will never happen again."

Saturday, January 5, 2008

Most Bookmarked TechCrunch Posts of 2007

Okay, final list for 2007. Here are the top-25 bookmarked or shared posts from the year, as determined by people who used the “Add This” bookmark button at the bottom of each post (see also our other year-end lists: Popular, Headlines, Launches, Deals, Deadpool):
1

The Secret Strategies Behind Many “Viral” Videos
2

Forget YouTube: Go To These Sites If You Want Hard Core Copyright Infringing Content
3

Eventbee: AdSense for Events Has Busy Plans
4

Details Revealed: Google OpenSocial To Launch Thursday
5

If You Don’t Use Del.icio.us, You Will Now
6

Google To “Out Open” Facebook On November 5
7

The New Portals: It’s the Bread, Not the Peanut Butter
8

Google Earth’s Easter Egg: A Flight Simulator
9

Google Tops Feed Reader and Social Bookmark Rankings
10

9 Ways to Build Your Own Social Network
11

34 More Ways to Build Your Own Social Network
12

Google Launches Free 411 Service
13

Could Facebook Become The Next Microsoft?
14

I Want This In Photoshop Immediately
15

Google’s Response to Facebook: Maka-Maka
16

Facebook Source Code Leaked
17

Digg Surrenders to Mob
18

AOL One Step Behind Again: New Home Page Identical To Yahoo
19

MySpace v. Facebook: Its Not A Decision. Its an IQ Test
20

Adobe Open Sources Parts Of Flex Platform
21

Fotowoosh Will Turn Any Picture Into 3D Image
22

Kaltura Wins Spot as 40th Company at TechCrunch40
23

Breaking: Google Spends $3.1 Billion For DoubleClick
24

$100 Million Payday For Feedburner - This Deal Is Confirmed
25

Bubble 2.0: The Video
Crunch Network: MobileCrunch Mobile Gadgets and Applications, Delivered Daily.

China To Crack Down On Video Hosting Sites

China has moved to censor and control online video websites under new measures that could block YouTube and other services in China.
Under the new regulations that will be in place starting January 31, sites that provide video programming or allow users to upload video must have a permit and be either state-owned or state-controlled. Permits for video hosting sites will be subject to renewal every three years and operators who commit violations may be banned for up to 5 years.
Chinafilm.com, a site run by the state-run China Film Group said that the majority of online video providers in China are currently privately owned.
To be forbidden specifically under the new regulations (although most are banned already) are videos that involve national secrets, hurt the reputation of China, disrupts social stability or promote pornography. Providers will be required to delete such content if it is uploaded and to report each incident to the State.
A spokesman for YouTube told the Sydney Morning Herald that the new regulations “could be a cause for concern, depending on the interpretation.”