Remembering the World Trade Center

Friday, September 11th, 2009

World Trade Center [Originally posted to polis] In memory of September 11th, 2001, I’d like to ask three questions. What stands out most as you look back? Did it alter the path you’ve taken in life? And does its meaning for you change with time?

The chilling suddenness, the heroism, the remaining scars all come to mind. The initial terror was replaced by a constant feeling of impending crisis. I began listening to the news constantly.

I think it changed my path. At the time I believed world trade would bring peace and prosperity. The Seattle protests of 1999 seemed narrow-sighted. September 11th didn’t change my thinking on this, but I no longer saw business as the answer.

It wasn’t that I blamed the attacks on global capital. Instead, they reminded me that other pursuits were more important when life could be taken so unexpectedly. There were problems to address directly. September 11th nullified assumptions that these problems would subside as more people took part in the world economy.

Still, the World Trade Center is more than a symbol of globalization and its discontents. It means different things to different people and at different times. It is inspiration and excess, monotony and simplicity, power, vulnerability, and cooperation. Its meanings contradict themselves, like another legendary resident of the city.

We often hear that September 11th changed the world. It has also changed us individually, and we change it. Somewhere in our minds, the World Trade Center is still a marriage site and workplace. It is where our parents took us on first visits to New York, dizzying pillars to the sky from below, windswept lookouts on the city from above.

I hope you’ll also share your memories. Let’s be sure to never lose them.

Credits: Photo from quadrantpixel.com.

Economy and Ecology in Cuba

Wednesday, December 26th, 2007

Photo of the Bay of Pigs in CubaA recent article in the International Herald Tribune titled ‘As Cuba’s economy withers, its ecology thrives’ highlights conflicts between economic and ecological interests in Cuba. It would be useful to find synergies between the two. Partha Dasgupta, an economist at Cambridge, has written influential articles on this subject, including ‘Economic Pathways to Ecological Sustainability: Challenges for the New Millennium’.

Quoted from the International Herald Tribune: In a report last year, the World Wildlife Fund said that “in dramatic contrast” to its island neighbors, Cuba’s beaches, mangroves, reefs, seagrass beds and other habitats were relatively well preserved. Their biggest threat, the report said, was “the prospect of sudden and massive growth in mass tourism when the U.S. embargo lifts.”

Banker to the Poor: Micro-Lending and the Battle Against World Poverty by Muhammad Yunus

Saturday, July 21st, 2007

Photo: Loan disbursement at Shashiddhi, Sri Nagar in BangladeshMuhammad Yunus details his experience developing practical solutions to extreme poverty in Bangladesh and throughout the world. A very inspiring book.

Photo appears on Muhammad Yunus’s Banker to the Poor website.

New Ventures

Friday, June 22nd, 2007

Photo from newventures.orgNew Ventures (newventures.org) assists sustainable small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) in developing countries with strategic planning and attaining capital for growth. The program is administered by the World Resources Institute’s Enterprise and Innovation Group.

Quoted: The New Ventures program of the World Resources Institute supports sustainable enterprise creation in emerging economies by accelerating the transfer of venture capital to outstanding investment opportunities that incorporate social and environmental benefits.