Reference: Cost of US Force Projection to Middle East

10 Security, Articles & Chapters, Budgets & Funding, Military, Peace Intelligence
PDF 10 Pages Online

This reference strives to demonstrate that the “true cost of oil” to the USA between 1976 and 2007 should include the cost of the aircraft carriers and related forces to the Middle East.  The author has two major flaws in his argument, stating that each forward-deployed carrier requires eight others (vice two more, one down, one training up), and that Army and Air Force units are virtually never deployed without supporting carriers.  We draw three take-aways from this:

1.  The US Government is going to have to start doing strategic holistic “true cost” analysis or it will be bombarded with this kind of analysis in the future that is both flawed and constructive–we do need to know the “true cost” of everything and the military costs borne by the taxpayer are a part of that.

2.  Academics such as this author are well-intentioned but deprived of robust access to military analysts and budget specialists.  The war colleges could play a very constructive role in bringing various parties together, both to improve government development of “true cost” models, and to improve academic understanding of how military power projection is structured.

3.  The time has come for the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to get back into the Management side, and particularly to begin evaluating Return on Investment (RoI) across the board.  This should lead to a substantial increase in the budget for diplomacy & development, while requiring some meaningful realignments within both the military and the secret intelligence worlds.

Reference: Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2011(fed gov’s best-selling reference book)

04 Education, 11 Society, Civil Society, Fact Sheets, Geospatial, Government, References, Research resources
go directly to the publication

Did you know that Raleigh, N.C. had the highest rate of population growth in the last decade of any large metropolitan area?

Metropolitan population growth is just one of more than a thousand topics addressed in the U.S. Census Bureau's Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2011. The Abstract is perennially the federal government's best-selling reference book. When it was first published in 1878, the nation had only 38 states, people usually got around using a horse and buggy, Miami and Las Vegas did not yet exist, and Franklin D. Roosevelt had yet to be born. The Abstract has been published nearly every year since then.

Contained in the 130th edition are 1,407 tables of social, political and economic facts that collectively describe the state of our nation and the world. Included this year are 65 new tables, covering topics such as insufficient rest or sleep, nursing home occupancy, homeschooling, earthquakes, U.S. Border Patrol apprehensions, organic farmland, honey bee colonies, crashes involving distracted drivers and cities with the highest transit savings.

The statistics come not only from the Census Bureau but also from other governmental agencies and private organizations. The data generally represent the most recent year or period available by summer 2010. Most are national-level data, but some tables present state- and even city- and metropolitan-level data as well.

Source:  U.S. Census Bureau

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Reference: Digital Lost & Found

Blog Wisdom, Cultural Intelligence
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Seth Godin Home

Lost in a digital world

Allison Miller, aged 14, sends and receives 27,000 text messages a month. Hey, that's only about sixty an hour, every hour she's awake.  Some say that the problem of our age is that continuous partial attention, this never ending non-stop distraction, addles the brain and prevents us from being productive. Not quite.

The danger is not distraction, the danger is the ability to hide.  Constant inputs and unlimited potential distractions allow us to avoid the lizard, they give the resistance a perfect tool. Everywhere to run, everywhere to hide. The advantage of being cornered with nowhere to turn is that it leaves you face to face with the lizard brain, unable to stall or avoid the real work.

I've become a big fan of tools like Freedom, which effortlessly permit you to turn off the noise. An hour after you haven't kept up with the world, you may or may not have work product to show as a result. If you don't, you've just called your bluff, haven't you? And if you do, then you've discovered how powerful confronting the fear (by turning off the noise) can be.

Ten years ago, no one was lost in this world. You had to play dungeons and dragons in a storm pipe to do that. Now there are millions and millions of us busy polishing our connections, reaching out, reacting, responding and hiding. What happens to your productivity (and your fear) when you turn it off for a while?

Jon Lebkowsky Bio

2010 Social Media Infographic

Mindjumpers created this graphic showing various social media happenings last year – interesting choices. You can go to their site to let ‘em know what they left out.

Phi Beta Iota: Click on the image to give it it's own page, then click again to enlarge to full viewing size.  They left out GroupOn, among others, but seeing this list, in combination with Seth's Godin's blog, reminds us that digital crack is alive and well and consuming our youngsters.

This is the 21st Century digital equivalent of 24-hour cable television as discussed by Bill McKibben in Missing Information.

This is the OPPOSITE of Clay Shirky's Cognitive Surplus.

Reference: Genocide of Bees From Failure of Government

01 Agriculture, 03 Economy, 03 Environmental Degradation, 06 Family, 07 Health, 10 Security, 11 Society, Articles & Chapters, InfoOps (IO), Intelligence (government)

Leaked Memo Sheds Light on Mysterious Bee Die-Offs and Who's to Blame

The culprit may be a pesticide that the EPA has allowed on the market despite the fact that the company which makes the pesticide has failed to prove it is safe.

AlterNet / By Jill Richardson

December 10, 2010

Read long detailed and compelling story….

Phi Beta Iota: This is the part that the President, the Director of the Office of Management, and the Director of National Intelligence simply do not compute.  As presented in the M4IS2 briefing in Chile, in today's complex era security is everything about everything always.  Intelligence must mature.  We have wasted 19 years going on 25.  Creating a Smart Nation and a Smart Government starts with evidence-based policy-making–intelligence is where that comes from, and public intelligence is how we nurture integrity within the government.

See Also:

Sense-Making Summit: Public Health (October 2011)

2010 INTELLIGENCE FOR EARTH: Clarity, Diversity, Integrity, & Sustainability

Graphic: Intelligence Maturity Scale

Journal: Army Shines with Bee Deaths But Case Still Open

Journal: Bees’ tiny brains beat computers

Journal: Electromagnetics, Bees, & Agriculture

Worth a Look: Book Reviews on Intelligence (Lack Of)

Pesticides: Germany bans chemicals linked to honeybee devastation (2008)

Journal: Bees’ tiny brains beat computers