Smart Links -- 04 June 2011
Paul Summerville • June 4, 2011
Tags: China, Drugs, Education, Global Economy, Japan, No, United Kingdom, United States, Voices, World, World, Yes
Charlie Fell – Think Emerging Market Debt
Independent – Ninety-Nine Gaffes in Ninety Years
New York Times -- As China’s Workers Get a Raise, Companies Fret
book about love and sex in Japan
Financial Times – We Should End our Disastrous War On Drugs
Globe and Mail – Why the Courts Must Decriminalise Prostitution
New York Times – A Way to Pay for College, With Dividends
Project Syndicate – When Will China’s Economy Overtake America’s?
Guardian – The Day of the Jackal – The Hit We Nearly Missed
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Twin Virtues: Inequality of Outcomes & Equality of Opportunity©
LimeSpot: Own Your Experience.
Leveraging Social Networks for Profit.
Marrying the product portfolio of brand name firms with the personal profile information on Facebook.
The LimeSpot enabled revolutionary new sales channel.
Ultimately, the most successful societies find the balance between the twin virtues of inequality of outcomes and equality of opportunity.
The new politics must marry the twin virtues of unequal outcomes and equality of opportunity.
When too few get too much everybody ends up with less.
Can it be that striving for equality of opportunity however imperfect the process not only benefits the individual but also creates benefits for the society as a whole that are unintended but wonderful?
Economics must be a 'moral enterprise' as much as politics claims to be. Economic outcomes need to be framed in terms of right and wrong not just efficiency if only because these often align in surprising ways.
My vision of Canada is that any Canadian child from a family of limited circumstance can expect to have a chance at lifetime of unlimited opportunities.
Tax policy should be founded on the principle of generating steady tax revenues sufficient to maximise environmentally sustainable economic growth in order to fund fair government.
Public policy should be designed to decrease inequality before the law and increase equality of opportunity.
Capitalism is not the problem; the problem is what we do with capitalism.
Content is always more difficult to argue than conspiracy.
Let the state regulate and the market operate (most things).
Welfare strategies are best designed as a hand up not as a hand out.
Political debate should not be fact free fighting.
Explanation lasts longer than eloquence.
Always favour empowerment over dependency.
The most enduring public figures are embraced for the causes they fought for and not the concept of themselves they hoped others would remember them by.
Find your voice and don't be the echo of somebody else.





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