2025now- The Economist 1984 : 2025 = last year sustainability

Japanthanks.com August 8, Olympics Closing Ceremony - Why Bach Can't lose by announcing suspension of summer olympics until covid slayed

Friday, December 16, 2022

 I am the sort of person who tells doctors- don't give me a drug unless you stake you reputation that's its essential. That said I would like to thank the science that delivered  moderna and pfizer- their vaccines still look as safe as any drug can be after 2 years of mass use. They very specifically minimise risk of covid killing you- they are not as far as i understand going to stop all chances of you getting covid, and even  covid with minimum syptoms may infect others

Also  

https://search.cdc.gov/search/?query=vaccine%20safety&siteLimit=coronavirus&dpage=1

To be clear I live near US National Institutes of health- i feel that the world was badly let down by nih (in gact ever since anthrax 21 years ao I feel that a lot politics goes on at NUH is terrifying or tragic) and  this has parallel lessons for all sorts of fake media and dismal politics but regarding the science of moderna that as good as human endeavor can get

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Wednesday, December 7, 2022

 

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What can AI do for health care?
Possibilities and pitfalls in an increasingly digital world
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During the webinar, the panelists will:
Outline the technologies comprising AI—including machine learning, natural language processing, and neural networks—and the role that each plays in making AI work
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Mark Sendak, M.D., M.P.P.
Duke Institute for Health Innovation
Durham, NC
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Xiaoxuan Liu, MBChB, Ph.D.
University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust and University of Birmngham
Birmingham, UK
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MBZUAI
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Monday, September 26, 2022

grreat ai health session during UNGa77

i will try and find transcript but also huge for understanding peopels personal netwporks - when it comes to can tech save millennials as the sdg generation , amandeep has become arguably guterres and the worlds number 1 connector out of un hq ny

until recently he had mainly been in geneva- so had helped co-found _-DAIR even though anti-nuclear was one of his main ares of work

in 2016 first year review of new sdgs, goal 4edu reviewed as hopeless without tech - so a digital cooperation mission from un ny to geneva was led -main health connector of this was world banks jim kim ; when guterres became un leader he soon started asking amandeep to edit a worldwide panels expert ideas on digital cooperation; this became 9 interacting pieces of transforming un -a fter report in 2020; various staff changes happened until june 2022 amandeep reappointed to lead 

 Thank you for registering to attend I-DAIR and partners' SSUNGA 77 interactive session on ’AI Researchhttps://www.un.org/techenvoy/ in Health: Tackling Global Challenges as One’ in person.

As a reminder, below are the event details and some additional information:

The event will take place tomorrow (Thursday 22nd September) at Conference Rooms 818 and 819, CUNY Central Offices, 205 East 42nd Street, New York City and begin promptly at 12:30pm (EDT).

The session agenda is as follows:
  • [from noon/12 pm] Check-in and Registration
  • [12:30 pm] Opening remarks (Dr. Christoph Benn)
  • [12:40 pm] Keynote speech (USG Amandeep Singh Gill)
  • [12:55 pm] Panel 1 – Promoting collaborative research in AI for health
  • [1:35 pm] Panel 2 – State of the art in AI for health
  • [2:15 pm] Closing remarks (Dr. Stefan Germann)
  • [2:30 – 3:30pm] Networking Reception
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 dear XXXL hope all's well with you in sinagpore- could I ask you 4 quick questions (4th connects with Dinesh's diabetes research in dundee)

1 have you heard of www.sdgmetaverseprize.org - its xprize and aifor good new thing -a  year round competition - any team can enter by end december- choose one SD goal, viralise story -expected 10000 entrants -that's probably at least 100 each per goal (many more popular goals like 3 health)


2 I am in hong kong next week mainly catching up with friend jeanne lim www.beingai.com- i believe her womens kinndness dao/ntf can be biggest of its kind- her history is ai curating un challenges with sophia robot when she was at hanson- now zbee is her anime version which can replicate anywhere - while sophia took 7 suitcases to appear anywhere


3 jeanne should be in singapore week afterwards 1e about 11th- should i intro you on linkedin just in case there are common interests?


4 next summer glasgow university hosts 265th adam smith moral markets summit - at the 250th in 2008 with dr yunus we launched nearly free nursing college providing scottish trainers to bangladesh- yunus got into political problems- i stand by idea of world being short of at least 30 million last mile health servants; tn 2023 we would like to bring a write up from at least 50 people who care about ai health or eg the lancet idea that teenage health is schools biggest missing curricula; we hope to publish short action cooperation statements for these 50+ people of what they are doing- liz do you have a short action statement and could there be shared interests between you and dinesh who if he has time will be one of the people coordinating the 50 declarations of health actions


dinesh -XXL can correct my old memory but i think inter alia she worked for microsoft in japan for over a decade - then mainly germany; at same time she had to do some ai health for a family member ; now returned to her home space singapore; we virtually met when xprize and un 2020 were hosting ai solutions to covid


XXL having diabetes 1 himself, dinesh in dundee is devoted to community deep data , perhaps biotech and wearable breakthroughs etc to improve lives of all with diabetes- collaborations to community health are probably near top of list of scots at least those I have worked with since 2008 including adam smith scholars- so i also transferred my dads main library from the economist to glasgow U- what with also loss of queen elizabeth - summer 2023 feels like best time scotland can contribute cooperations alumni in line with 2023 being un youth summit future and acceleration of UN2 egov library at https://www.un.org/techenvoy/ and https://datawithpurpose.org/


hong kong and singapore probably way ahead on much of this

all the best chris +1 240 316 8157

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Sunday, September 4, 2022

 Can nanomaterial end covid?

Posted by chris macrae at 6:19 AM No comments:
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Wednesday, August 24, 2022

 please make sure your kid has polio vaccination

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Sunday, July 31, 2022

egos of fauci and collins at nih

 if you talk to anybody:

 great barrington was correct , fauci and collins should be sent to elba 

see today's abc full measure attkinson expose of the evil 2 and ask how did gov propaganda come to hate we the peopels so much

The Great Barrington Declaration and Its Critics | AIER
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Great Barrington Declaration

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The Great Barrington Declaration was an open letter published in October 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdowns.
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as for fauci he still need to explain his involvement in sponsoring bat research - honi soit qui may y pense

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Thursday, April 28, 2022

problems with food

 https://www.who.int/publications/i/item/9789240046085 Spilt Milk

Attenborough climate programme explains over quarter of emissions caused by agriculture - 3 tips to rich countries; end wasting food; stop air freighting food ; reduce red meat (big on methane)

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Saturday, April 23, 2022

out of wash dc chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk writes: 

health is one of 4 most valuable collaboration goals humans will ever face - help us catalogue the most important case debates that 20s students can engage in - example 1 what do americans think of this? 

HumanityCorp from HC on Vimeo.

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Thursday, April 7, 2022

 Thursday, April 7

Boston, MA – A team led by the Zhu Family Center for Global Cancer Prevention at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and the Center for Cancer Equity and Engagement at the Dana-Farber/Harvard Cancer Center has launched Cancer FactFinder (https://cancerfactfinder.org/), a new website that provides accurate and reliable information about what does and does not cause cancer. For each topic on the website, the team, which includes scientific experts and community members, reviewed and summarized the best scientific, evidence-based information available. The team will continuously update website with new topics and additional information to existing topics.

For each of the more than 60 topics on the website, such as “Red Meat,” “Stress,” “Hormone Replacement Therapy,” or “Radon,”

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Sunday, February 27, 2022

Q&A on health services that value 8 billion humans

 q1 why and when did media alumni of von neumann's Q 100 times more tech prioritise apps to health service 

Shot answer look at this Economist survey in 1984 written by dad in parallel to our 1984 book 2025 report prioritising every exponential challenge of millennials as sustainability genmeration

longer answer:

Having survived his last days as a teen allied bomber command burma, my father did not want anyone kids to go through wars again-; he enjoyed 4 extraordinary journalism scoops 1945-1955:

At cambridge keynes explianed increasing futures are designed by the handful of economists who scribblings become legislation; dad went to wrk at the economist where editor Geoffrey Crowther (who had also edited the 9143 cenetenary autobio of The Economits0 explained the newspapers was founded round questioning 3 stories - how to end poverty; how to end hunger; what was next big change that needed to be massively innovated for good to prevent doing harm; the economist send dad to new yrok for a year 1951 where he heard of the next big chnage from von neumann : ask leaders what they'll do with 100 times more etch every decade 1955 to 2025. In 1955 dad was the only journalist at Messina birtj of Europena Union

Florenec Nightinglae was onloy the most memorable of many stories dad used to tell on how heatly societies inter-generate string economies not vice versa. The data has been proven and over where the elast developed nations increase life expectancy from 40s to 60s. Thing about how 20 yeras of extra productiuve life chnages how much a society is p0reopared to spend time on education

So if much more tech was to compound valuable purpose understanding how it made last mile health better coulld be make o9r break. There wre other mathematical reasons to- the maths of chaos theory explains the more worldwide conbnecetd we are the more we need ai of pandemic prevention. With von neumann's family we are currently piloting AI Hall of Fame- which tech geniii do which places most want their youth to linkin? Seraching for AI Hall of Fame Health is an absolute priority of all the families that have done bigraphies of von neumann or indeed of the scottish entereprenurial school of economist which started with Adam Smith and continued with anyone who has enjoyed The Economist's surveys of Entrepreneurial Revolution  . There is an awkward footnote- in year 17 of James Wilso dbeating with queen voictoria how to go beyond dismal empire she sent him to calcutta to charter a cank by and for the people sof india. There he dfied of diarrhea- it took another 110 years for vilage Asian women to discover diarrhea can be cured by mixing boiled water sugar and salt in exatct proprtions. From 1970 this life saving cure became the most important educational practice across a billion women- wherever vilage mothers across teh asian tropics knew of oral rehydration life exopectancy peapt forwards   


q2 why does usa spend over 3 times more of health than most people but have the worst performance on covid deaths?
loving fanily communities dont need to spend much on adversiting for good solutions to replicatr wherever people like mothers app oir network- i hope to see the day when men value last mile heatly collaboration as much as women but while women have a c;ser relations to mother nature than males it seems obvious that covid-era america will become a case study of the worst that advertising can do to health of all
over decades i have come across // questions- so in poland soon after the country freed itself from ussr i was asked where ere the bbc's lbraries that nurses can economically learn how to do operation from - young people couldnt beleive the the bc world service spent so much on enetrtaimn ment but so little on helping train nusres; ironically the same question rose at the bbc conberage of the london olympics - the opening ceremeony celebrate britain's 2 greatest invesntions nursing and learning versions of the worldwide web -after 1 hoiur covering that stiry the bbc didnt change its total blindness to  nursing and coding in spite of having just transmitted the message to bilions of people- its very peculaira because the bbc has had more invetsed in it by the peopel (not by government, not by comerce) than any broiadcasr=t media but it seemns to have been behind the curve on every area of sustainability braidcasting - even its voice is now quite loud on nature/climate it tooh far too long to encoureage its nature braidcasters - see david attenborough testimony on that

q3 how did the lowest cost last mile health service raise life expectancy by 25 years and what can be learnt next wherever younger half of world wants to sustain health and safety- have a look at economiswomen.com - it tooks us 12 yeras of visists to south asia to note half a cenbtury of advanaces on last mile vilage health care focus on maternal and infant services; interesting at MIT we met a nigerain female graduate who has innovated that country's first flying docctor service and nw she knows costs of both basic and hi-cost health delivery her reports on designing healkth services for Afdricans are as ggoid as we have seen (by the way the professor who designed enetrepeneur competitions across the whole of MIT also applauded Ola 

last mile health depends on the smilplest parctices being colaboratively shared nit costly media or ambulance chasing lawyers - my uncle QC David Kemp once got Britain's Lord Chancellor fired but misinforming the peoples on such costs 




M/div>
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help! with top 20 Economist challenges - eg why china is world leader to partner on all youth's sustainability goal www.economistchina.net

what's purpose of spending thousands times more on communications technologies than 1948 unless health and happiness for all 10 times more affordable

when you look at the proposed 12 supercities of sustainability, i wonder what use dc-baltimore unless if leads on health

  • The Economist Saturday, 28 April 1984.
  • Pages 23,24. Vol 291, issue 7339.

also published in 1984 2025 report by norman and chris macrae- timelined how as an integral system a global village world could only result in 2 opposite end games - our stories on positive ways forward clarified opposite risks -

most popular chapter 6
x chapter 1 chapter 2
chapter 3 part 1 chapter 3 part 2 chapter 4 chapter 5
chapter 6 chapter 7 chapter 8 chapter 9 chapter 10 chapter 11 part 1 chapter 11 part 2 chapter 12 chapter 13 chapter 14 chapter 15 chapter 16 chapter 17 chapter 18 chapter 19 chapter 21

chapter 20 will optimistic economics lead local-global space 1984-2024


i note bloomberg march 2020 refers to a half time 2004 report on doomsday scenario of communities not being prepared to e resilient to virus

Bloomberg
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For the prognosticators on the U.S. National Intelligence Council who sat down in 2004 to consider what the world might look like in 2020, the answer hinged heavily on one big question: What did the future of globalization look like?

Their answer: Not great.

By 2020, they predicted, globalization would face a political backlash in a world increasingly plagued by identity politics. Yet if anything was going to really derail economic integration, it would likely be the mass spread of a virulent new disease.

“Short of a major global conflict, which we regard as improbable, another large-scale development that we believe could stop globalization would be a pandemic,” the council warned in a report laying out the findings of its “Project 2020.” A death toll in the millions and a virus that “put a halt to global travel and trade during an extended period” would certainly leave globalization “endangered.”

Just a bit over two months into 2020 and it’s not hard to make the case for why that rings true.

There is an alternative view that holds globalization may actually be a lot more resilient today than it seemed in 2004, in the halcyon days before smartphones had taken over our lives.

But what would it take in the months ahead to get to Doomsday for globalization? It all hinges on the reaction from policy makers to the coronavirus crisis. So here are three things to watch for. If these happen, we should be ready for the shape-shifting in globalization we’ve seen in recent years to morph into a deep freeze.

  1. New barriers to exports. White House trade hawk Peter Navarro, in a recent Financial Times interview, criticized the export controls some countries have placed on medicines and medical supplies like face masks. His motivation may be pure. But Navarro tends to like anything that makes his argument for a shift away from globalization. So what if he used those export controls by others to argue for the U.S. to do the same? Navarro has said he wants to repatriate supply chains for national security reasons and advocated stricter controls on tech exports to China. What if he convinced President Donald Trump to ban exports of not just face masks or medicines but shipments of an eventual vaccine? And other countries followed suit? What if the controls shifted to food stockpiles?
  2. New import restrictions. Chinese trade data for January and February pointed to the damage so far from China’s industrial shutdown last month. Exports were down 17.2% in dollar terms. But what if the U.S. and other countries started limiting imports of goods coming by air and sea not just from China but from South Korea, Italy and other affected countries? And those countries retaliated and did the same? So far the focus on supply chain vulnerabilities has focused on China. But what if all trade was deemed contaminated?
  3. A collapse in global governance. The weekend emergence of a battle between Saudi Arabia and Russia over oil production caused crude prices to tumble dramatically on Monday. What if such discord spills to the G-7 or the G-20? What happens if, driven by fear of a virus, global economic policy makers can’t get on the same page? Or, worse, actively start working against each other in an area like, say, currencies?

Robert Hutchings, the former diplomat and Princeton academic who led the National Intelligence Council as it prepared its 2004 report, said in a recent email exchange that the point they were trying to make was “that globalization is a ubiquitous force that carries with it bad consequences as well as good.”

Ominously, he added: “We particularly wanted to argue that globalization is not irreversible.”

—Shawn Donnan in Washington


2013 has seen khanac labs spread from maths to coding to healthcare -please tell us the next billion jobs alumni app of khan labs

2014 sees first coursera of a social good summit- atlanta and 25000 youth have 22 months to work out how to turn its greatest ever youth celebration into an ongoing curriculum

help linkin Number 1 collaborations in Economics for Youth and millennium goal action networks

in 2013, The Economist celebrates its 170th anniversary as the world leading media of end hunger. Its end year xmas issue 2012 celebrated Free Education's comihg of Massive Open Online Curriculum.

Quiz - what need to be the top 10 MOOCS of 2013 to get youth back to work everywhere and so that the net generation can believe in collaboration around millennium goals?

entrepreneurialrevolution.avi

microeconomist

Transparency note: the last time The Economist carried as important a xmas issue contribution may have been 1976's Entrepreneurial Revolution (ER) by dad. The Economist. Saturday, 25 December 1976

ER's Ten green bottles

Breakthrough erroneous mindsets of macroeconomics before there is nothing left at all:

#1 Entrepreneurs-and good news media owners - are not political- they connect left right and centre dialogues

cm1.jpg

Verify Top 2 pro-youth economists: Norman Macrae 1923-2010 & the most exciting microeconomist of our epoch & net generation : Muhammad Yunus born 1940 ...


egs ECONOMIES OF HEALTH:
infant and maternal health services can be the world's most social and economical- benchmark bangladesh villages
wellbeing and infectious disease prevention markets ought to be worldwide and very affordable the more openly connected worldwide youth can map
markets that involve surgery are always going to be as expesnive as health gets; markets depending on global pharma need a total different coonstitutiuon if they are ever to be economical
markets specialising in elderly depend on how a plavce's communities and family valuing structures are designed

microeconomist

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About Me

chris macrae
chrismacrae.com youtube washington dc email chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk linkedin 9500 skype chrismacraedc co-author with The Economist's Norman Macrae 1984's 2025Report - 40 years to transform education and save our species
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