Worth a Look: Space Storm Can Fry Power & Water

Worth A Look
Most Vulernable US Areas

On this power-grid map of the United States, the black-circled areas are regions especially vulnerable to collapse during an extreme geomagnetic storm. Inside those boundaries are more than 130 million people. Credit: National Academy of Sciences report on severe space weather.

A contemporary repetition of the Carrington Event would cause … extensive social and economic disruptions,” the report warns. Widespread failures could include telecommunications, GPS navigation, banking and finance, and transportation. The total economic impact in the first year alone could reach $2 trillion (some 20 times greater than the costs of Hurricane Katrina).

The problem begins with the electric power grid. Ground currents induced during an extreme geomagnetic storm can melt the copper windings of huge, multi-ton transformers at the heart of power distribution systems. Because modern power grids are interconnected, a cascade of failures could sweep across the country, rapidly cutting power to tens or even hundreds of millions of people. According to the report, this loss of electricity would have a ripple effect with “water distribution affected within several hours; perishable foods and medications lost in 12-24 hours; loss of heating/air conditioning, sewage disposal, phone service, fuel re-supply and so on.

Phi Beta Iota: Soviet electromagnetic emission deconfliction and protection standards have always been ten times tougher than US standards–they anticipated the problems US troops now suffer across Afghanistan.  Attentive readers will recall the five weeks it took a New Zealand city to restore power after a main power feed fried in place.

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Worth a Look: Systems Community of Inquiry

Worth A Look

The Systems Community of Inquiry is an open, worldwide network of individuals interested in systems thinking, the systems sciences and/or systems practice.

Inquiry is “an activity which produces knowledge” (Churchman, 1971).  We’re more than a community of interest, but less than a community of practice (Wenger, 1999).  Our interactions as a community will (i) foster interactions contributing knowledge and wisdom to the online world, and (ii) cultivate social relationships between systemicists.

Phi Beta Iota: With the publication of Reflexive Practice–Professional Thinking for a Turbulent World, Dr. Kent Myers has emerged as a trail-blazer reconnecting those active in this area with a larger body of thinkers focused on Collective Intelligence and Public Intelligence.  Their most recent intellectual forebearers are Russell Ackoff of Penn State University and John N. Warfield of George Mason University.  The latest post focuses on the role of negative feedback loops in creating social dysfunction.  Red light camaras, for example, have increased rear-end collisions at stop lights.

See Also:

Journal: Design Thinking for Government
Reference: Strategic Asymmetry–with Comment

Search: “the invention of peace” summary

Searches

Keep it simple for WordPress.  <invention for peace> without the triangles works, but remember WordPress shows in reverse chronological order so get all the way to the bottom of the shown hits.  We call it a review vice a summary, but we do write summative reviews, one reason this web site is a resource for serious people.

Review: The Invention of Peace–Reflections on War and International Order

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Worth a Look: Book Reviews on Peace

Journal: Facing prison for filming US police

07 Other Atrocities, 09 Justice, Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Law Enforcement, Peace Intelligence
Facing prison for filming US police
By Chris Arsenault

When police arrested Anthony Graber for speeding on his motorbike, the 25-year-old probably did not see himself as an advocate for police accountability in the age of new media.

But Graber, a sergeant with the Maryland Air National Guard, is now facing 16 years in prison, not for dangerous driving, but for a Youtube video he posted after receiving a speeding ticket.

FULL STORY at Al Jazeera Not in USA

Phi Beta Iota: A society with a sense of humor would establish a monthly “film the police” day.  Such lunacy.  When the law gets really stupid it is time to change the law, e.g. it used to be legal to abuse women and people of color.

Tip of the Hat to Steve Kirby at Facebook.

noble gold