Can you help unacknowledged giant Norman Macrae with his last global media project

The Economist's audio on Unacknowledged Giant; son of Norman Macrae chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk washington dc (1) 301 881 1655; economics of youth labs

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2010.1 first yunus global assembly of most exciting decade to be microeconomist or job creation networker

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 dear futurist networks - can we have a meeting so we can then debrief others as well as build on my new york meeting last weekend with jonathan (leader of 6000 entrepreneurs through 50 hubs)


 lot has has happened since july 4' global assembly of scottish youth and yunus partners from 10 countries:

1 due to zasheem's hard work there is a good chance yunus will come to glasgow whenever he wants to discuss economics or collaboration (eg 10 times more productivity than zero-sum gamesmanship) or job creation in NW capitals as well as actioning core research practices like health; 

2 glasgow university will help build on such global assemblies and revision of course content as being very adam smith and very relevant to what worldwide youth choose to do with hi-tech and hi-trust; 

3 editing yunus journal out of glasgow will help (more news on that in a week);

4 my immediate brand networking challenge is how to position norman macrae open futures foundation (through sponsorship of small essay prizes anywhere (eg emerging student social business clubs)  a group wants to debate  forbidden social business economics questions and the occasional engagement of a capitals top media & metrics brass by micro entrepreneurial revolutionaries through parties and labs

4.1 I think the economics of youth and sustainability's exponential crisis goals matches the theme of 2010s most exciting decade - see eg slides which doubtless need simplifying

4.2 things to know to maximise storytelling round slides and norman macrae paradox smashing - between 1843 and 1920s media was the main way the scots and the french social actioned the english into ending top down empire (ending the hunger caused by corn laws; ending the waste of youth lives caused by capital punishment of any lad grown up wrong); 
two particularly relevant media were The Economist born as  social action in 1843 and the BBC in the 1920s

4.3 then hitler came along and used radio and the invention of the tape recorder to propagate world war, and ever since meidia has been taken out of the hands of the people/communities by big gov or big corporate http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R2IW77eQpm0&feature=related

4.4 since media and metrics condition every other system and creative or professional act humans try to do.  the time is now for microeconomists and entrepreneurial revolutionaries across glasgow-paris-dhaka to reform the economics of youth (something that elder generation in the west have stopped investing in when globalisation and personal computers started to spin the least numerate age of management ever 

-4.5 All of this supports the reasoning that we need to bluntly ask universities where will their future business or social  rankings be if they do not collaborate round missing curriculum of SMBA now; scotland is the only country with 2 yunus universities so why not race to make all of its universities yunus universities s  tribute to adam and to YUnUS

4.6.1 some deadlines in getting these stories out across hubs and any networks we link into eg http://www.grameenjapan.tv/ 

4.6.2 300 dc youth late august followed by scottish and other university freshers weeks in  september

4.6.3 top 40 media and economic barons in london - 7 december

4.6.4 help needed to map more around the world - eg I will see if italian entrepremneurial revolutionary 1976 Romano Prodi is still up for supporting future of youth

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Norman Macrae believed that media and economics can help progress the human lot. The project he was famous for helping to assemble during his lifetime was The Economist which rose from 3rd ranked national weekly newspaper in 1949 to a one of a kind global medium after 4 decades of Norman's support.  His dream to be realised project by and for the net generation will appear round this web particularly if you can bring like-minded microeconomists to help us celebrate the economics of youth and navigate the 2010s as most exciting inter-generation and cross-cultural decade.  To explore maps of why collaboration partnering is the 2010s game that can be played to go between 9 and 99 times above zero sum economics you might click to http://erworld.tv/  
 
1984 Future History of the Net Generation Will youthful peoples beyond nations collaborate humanly enough to enjoy the new internetworking medium - uniting humans in multiplying life critical knowledge and ending poverty? "Eventually books, files, television programmes, computer information and telecommunications will merge. We'll have this portable object which is a television screen with first a typewriter, later a voice activator attached. Afterwards it will be miniaturised so that your personal access instrument can be carried in your buttonhole, but there will be these cheap terminals around everywhere, more widely than telephones of 1984." ...  "The terminals will be used to access databases anywhere in the globe, and will become the brainworker's mobile place of work. Brainworkers, which will increasingly mean all workers, will be able to live in Tahiti if they want to and telecommute daily to the New York or Tokyo or Hamburg office through which they work. In the satellite age costs of transmission will not depend mainly on distance. And knowledge once digitalised can be replicated for use anywhere almost instantly1960s Golden Oldie- NM: A HUGE thing is happening in Europe. In a star-shaped modern building called the Berlaymont in Brussels, a group of founding fathers is hammering out — a bit uncertainly, a bit clumsily, but with rising conviction — what is likely to be the constitution of the coming United States of Europe. There are sober grounds for supposing that this may have as great an effect on the future history of the world as did the creation of the United States of America by those other founding fathers one hundred and ninety years ago. As with all really great events, most of the participants themselves only dimly realize what is occurring. The mood in Europe as we enter the last three decades of this tumultuous twentieth century is not euphoric, but it is again confident. In the first sixty years of this century many of the countries of Western Europe were losing an empire. Now they are rediscovering a role in their own continent. There is every reason for supposing that in these next thirty years the United States of Europe will be achieving a very large increase in material prosperity: that it will quickly follow the United States of America in attaining the most productive use of industrial resources ever secured by man. It remains to be seen whether Europe will repeat some of America's mistakes for the pattern of life in an affluent society. The kernel of a West European confederation already exists in the six countries now joined in the European Economic Community: the 190 million people of Germany, France, Italy, Belgium, the Netherlands, and Luxembourg. In the Treaty of Rome, signed in March, 1957, these countries declared their intention of moving during the nineteen sixties to a "common market" in which they would levy no tariffs against each other's goods. They achieved this objective slightly ahead of schedule, and ,now their objective for the nineteen seventies and nineteen eighties is to move toward a full economic and monetary union. Once this union is achieved, member countries will have a common currency, a common tax system (with some separate national taxes, like the separate state taxes in the USA), pooled foreign exchange reserves, and free movement of capital and labor across their diminishing frontier posts. The free movement of labor — and, indeed, of all inhabitants of the new European Community — is likely to be the clinching point for full political union. Once it becomes the ordinary thing for people in Germany and Britain to move to the Mediterranean when they retire — and for people leaving school or university in France or Italy to consider equally job offers from Paris or Amsterdam or Glasgow or Milan — then some sort of central government will have to be set up for Western Europe. The big question for the next two decades may be whether it is going to be a central government with the right powers. People at present seek three main things through and partly from their governmental systems: peace, prosperity, and what may be called a more cohesively gracious form of living together. There now seems little doubt that the move toward European unity will advance the causes of peace and prosperity. That, indeed, is why the European Economic Community is almost certain to have considerably more than its present six members by the early nineteen eighties.
Some will call my dad just a writer. Look again and in most of his articles you may see a call for action. Norman would engage you in a funny and furious debate of a system he had just discovered to be at a  future crossroads between sustaining growth, or bubbling crash trapping humanity in history or a big boss's folie grandeur , and invite you -if you agreed - to join in communally changing it.
Obit The Sunday Times 27 June 2010

Norman Macrae, who has died aged 86, was a former deputy editor of The Economist and columnist for The Sunday Times. He had a reputation as a fiercely intelligent journalist and as a remarkably prescient soothsayer. In 1984, he predicted: “Eventually books, files, television programmes, computer information and telecommunications will merge. We’ll have this portable object which is a television screen with first a typewriter, later a voice activator attached. Afterwards it will be miniaturised ... will be used to access databases anywhere in the globe, and will become the brainworker’s mobile place of work.”

There was hardly an aspect of life that was off-limits for him; through his writing he changed many minds and opened even more; most of his ideas were ahead of their time. The ability to foresee the internet and the smartphone did not automatically make him a household name, however. This was easily explained. In 1949 he joined The Economist, then as now a publication without bylines, and he did not leave it until he retired in 1988.

Despite its anonymity, The Economist was the perfect pulpit for Macrae. It allowed him to roam, geographically as well as intellectually. Several influences had helped to form him. As a boy, he had witnessed Stalin’s purges first-hand in Moscow, where his father was the British consul from 1936 to 1938. In the second world war, he had been in the RAF, which he described as a “public-sector job, with public-sector productivity”. And, having read economics at post-war Cambridge, he derided the university’s intellectual atmosphere as “sub-polytechnic Marxism”.

Although easy to pigeon-hole as a prophet of the new right — one former colleague described him as “a Thatcherite before she was” — in truth his politics were more complicated. He was an advocate of market capitalism only in so far as it advanced individual freedom. He objected to big business as much as big government; and he was as harsh a critic of religious conservatism under Reaganism as he was of the flabby post-war consensus in Britain.

He wasn’t always entirely right. In retirement in 1989 he was hired by Andrew Neil, to whom he had been a mentor at The Economist, to write a column for The Sunday Times.

In the first, 10 months before the Berlin Wall fell, he thought communist eastern Europe would “take the Latin American road to horrid inflations, and through them back to worse military dictatorships, with the added nuisance that any Soviet Galtieri would still have intercontinental missiles and several thousand hydrogen bombs”.

And in his last, in 1996, he hoped, as he had throughout his career, for a united Ireland that would become a magnet for investment by making politics irrelevant.

 His boundless optimism believed in investing in youth, family , community  - healthy societies generate strong economies not vice versa. In this belief he interpreted what Scots (eg Adam Smith, James Wilson) and French (eg JB Say) had intended to compound over time by free market economics and entrepreneurship. His writings on Entrepreneurial Revolution since 1970 made it clear that the key assumptions of Adam's free market framework had been destroyed by mass tv's advertising spots; and for those who falsely called themselves entrepreneurs he would query - do they know that "between take" refers to "having cut off the heads of royalty monoploising productive assets, will the peoples' transfer of assets be system  designed productively and demandingly to wholly live up to valuing fraternite, egalite and liberte?
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Baroness Sarah Hogg writes: He was an inspiration as well as a generous mentor and friend. He launched The Economist on the most important stage of its development, when its reputation for perception and integrity took it above the run of competitor magazines into a class of its own - a gap it was then able to widen in terms of coverage, reputation and readership in a way that may seem obvious now but certainly wasn't in the 1960s. That must and will be recognised

The Economist's Obit 
Few journalists have had as great an influence—or been proved right so often—as the man who, for 23 years, was the deputy editor of The Economist Jun 17th 2010 WHEN Norman Macrae died on June 11th, aged 89, no major British newspaper published an obituary of him. You could blame The Economist’s tradition of anonymity; you could blame the extraordinary modesty of the man himself who, if you tried to take his photo, would duck down and giggle, convinced that no one could possibly be interested in him...Norman was the first journalist to “discover” Japan. In 1962 he wrote a survey predicting that a country most Westerners regarded as synonymous with knick-knacks and knock-offs would become an industrial power-house. He was also the first journalist to “discover” the internet. In 1984 he wrote another survey arguing that life was about to be transformed by “terminals” which would give users access to giant databases

From 1984's 2024 Report: "Eventually books, files, television programmes, computer information and telecommunications will merge. We'll have this portable object which is a television screen with first a typewriter, later a voice activator attached. Afterwards it will be miniaturised so that your personal access instrument can be carried in your buttonhole, but there will be these cheap terminals around everywhere, more widely than telephones of 1984.". "The terminals will be used to access databases anywhere in the globe, and will become the brainworker's mobile place of work. Brainworkers, which will increasingly mean all workers, will be able to live in Tahiti if they want to and telecommute daily to the New York or Tokyo or Hamburg office through which they work. In the satellite age costs of transmission will not depend mainly on distance. And knowledge once digitalised can be replicated for use anywhere almost instantly."

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Saturday, June 26, 2010

time to question the euro that isnt working for europe ; and the eu agricultural policy that isnt working for the world
I think "FARM" has something closely to do with Grameen Credit Agricole but my French has never been good enough to follow all the webs on this;  undoing the vicious impacts on Africa of the common Agricultural policy is I assume embedded in all this ... we quickly go to specialty areas way beyond my ken but with Danone-Veolia networks of Milk&Water scientists France (Danone Communities - you all) are superbly placed for mobilising agriculture's microenrepreneurial revolution  

I know that mobilisation of microbanking is also strong in supporting such methods in both china and columbia - need someone other than me to become editorial centre of these connections

chris

Date: Friday, 25 June, 2010, 15:08

Bonjour 

Je vous invite à lire sur mon blog mon article de ce jour :Impressions du Mali : ça bouge mais il faut aller plus loin
http://www.fondation-farm.org/bernardbachelier 

Bonne lecture ! 

Bernard Bachelier, Directeur de la Fondation FARM

8:47 am edt 


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Family and friends of Norman Macrae (1923-2010 1 2 3) are delighted to be a main sponsor of  Yunus- Glasgow Interdependence weekend July 3-5- latest headlines from Scotland & Dr Yunus 70th birthday wishmaking:    Scottish Government: Financial Services Advisory Board Publishes ...eGov monitor - 3 days agoWe welcome the proposal to set up Grameen Bank in Glasgow and will be involved with the planning day led by Muhammad Yunus on July 5. ... Lords debate Social PolicyDeHavilland (press release) (subscription) - Jun 17, 2010 ..
... Muhammad Yunus, to Scotland, to work with him on his ideas about microfinancing, establishing a community bank-a Grameen bank-and offering small loans ...In 1810, a Scottish minister helped to revolutionise people's ...Herald Scotland - Michael Moss - Jun 5, 2010
On Wednesday, the Church of Scotland and Edinburgh University host a .... Throughout the world, institutions like the Bangladesh-based Grameen Bank often ...UN taps 'superheroes' to spur anti-poverty driveBusinessWorld Online - 2 days ago
Others in the group include Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus of Bangladesh, ... Scotland in 2005, citing figures by the Paris-based Organization for Economic ...
  
 For 3 years now I have heard dr yunus invite students to 
1 form social action clubs - typically a year long team of 3 that sustain teamwork on an action and shares diary of such experience with other social action groups - what use is facebook if not this

2 social business clubs - sometimes this is the new name for 1 ; in other cases this is like a microcredit student club but on social business generally

3 prizes for students who strengthen the culture for 1 and 2

4 building of the belief that the purpose of any university with a future for up to half of all participants is to be their own job creation space as microentrepreneurs in the 21st C where formal jobs wont be waiting for most young people 

5 understanding that this is the last decade where youth and sustainable societies take back all the new technology to create more jobs than old powers use new tech to destroy jobs 

(with the possible exception of paris, I know of no NW capital where supporting structure for this exists)

I believe it is absolutely essential that glasgow sets up a panel by early august which students 2010/11 can refer to when they hear bout the above ideas but need some "do-next" structure, cases examples or  moral support of practical kind; if glasgow has an example friends and I have  one off opportunity to get DC to do likewise; I think friends in paris have  one off opportunity to do so too which is important since the paris-glasgow axis is histrorically where microeconomics and free markets were born. If we can get these 3 city panels out there as known to exist we have chances of other cities including london, joburg-nairobi, san francisco, a spanish city doing likewise in time for 010/011 student waves

who should be in such a  panel: my guess is a member of staff from any university in that city whose principal is interested in social business; one or 2 senior students if there are any that have already hosted  microcredit or other relevant clubs;representatives of  social business prctitioners or opinion leaders if the city has any; any issue leadership the city is strong in - eg health in glasgow; energy in london what with ashden awards ofr Lord sainsbury's eldest daughter 

zasheem do you see glasgow as being able to mobilise this by early august?
 Glasgow University announces http://www.gla.ac.uk/news/headline_152205_en.html

Glasgow welcomes Nobel Laureate Professor Muhammad Yunus

Issued: Wed, 16 Jun 2010 16:07:00 BST

World-renowned Bangladeshi economist and Nobel Peace Laureate, Professor Muhammad Yunus, founder of the Grameen Bank will be visiting the University of Glasgow on Sunday 4 July.

Professor Yunus will be delivering the keynote lecture entitled: 'Tackling Poverty for a Fairer World' at a conference organised by The Centre for Development and the University of Glasgow.

Pioneering the concept of microfinance through his Grameen 'Village' Projects, which offer small loans at low interest rates to entrepreneurs too poor to qualify for traditional bank loans, Professor Yunus has helped to transform the lives of millions of people not only in Bangladesh but in 40 other countries around the world.

As well as giving the keynote address Professor Yunus will participate in the following conference sessions:

• Fairer Banking and Credit: Search for Sustainable Community Banking for Scotland
• Community Initiatives to Tackle Poverty and Income Inequality in Scotland
• Diverse Experiences and Challenges Facing Grameen-Type Poverty Alleviation Programmes Worldwide
• Bottom-up approach – Microfinance and Social Business – furthering multiplier effect as new dimension of economic development

The conference will be held from 1pm - 5.30pm on 4 July in the Sir Charles Wilson Lecture Theatre.

 
chris www.globalassembly.tv washington DC landline 1 : 301 881 1655 skype isabellawm family foundations

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