write letters loving (celebrating) each others countries, youth's SDG livelihoods, & education revolution

write letters loving (celebrating) each others countries, youth's SDG livelihoods, & education revolution

As astronaut Ron Garan asks here, and gurus as old as Einstein 1 2 have implored humans let's try economics and education cooperation around young people-special thanks to

  • Xi Jinping for hosting 13 world trade investors and culturally inspiring maps of sustainability Belt Road 2 summit Beijing April 2019,
  • Guterres for demanding digital's most humanly brilliant intelligences issue DigitalCooperation 1 2 report March 2019 -jack ma and melinda gates are 2 contributors to the report being coordinated by those whose experience includes how fast artificial intelligence is moving in
  • Jack Ma for returning full time to education september 2019- and world's number 1 educator, and sponsoring a year of Japan leading the world in celebrations of human spirit
  • The world's most inspiring educator: sir fazle abed for 46 years of empowering girls to renew sustainability of communities.

Why Now- well the world has changed since 1946- as TheEconomist mediators of Entrepreneuruial Revolution since 1960s have timelined we now have 1000 times moore communications tech than 1946 to collaborate/app vital solutions diversely fitting every community most urgent sustainability demands. Have a look at some of these surveys going all the way back to 1962- when Japan started to redesign world trade routes between east and west which start to roll bank the zero sum consequences of the English Empires colonisation of Asia's South and East

LETTER OF MONTH OF NOV 2018- To Friends in Beijing

dear Beijing friends cc friends of DC

I will be in Haidian region of Bejing between nov 21 and 28

would it be possible to meet for half an hour? i would happily meet any students as well 

i am trying to finish book on why sustainability depends urgently on cooperation between 5 main leaders networks and helping all students to be alumni of these networks wherever they dream of being the sustainability generation- 

1 the people who help UN antonio guterres (eg in geneva, beijing and at UNHQ) the most in the deepest challenges linking both www.digitalcooperation.org and deep challenges such as those found among refugees at border

2 the people who change youth livelihoods and markets value chains around the 4e's of small-medium enterprise role in every community  e-  exponential  economist  entrepreneur (since the moon race my family has mediated e- to mean the period 2030 versus 1946 of over 4000 times "moore" comsTECH - Entrepreneurial Revolution's most exciting time to be alive www.erworld.tv 

those who change girl empowerment in the places with the least by both living and learning in those communities and timing when leapfrogging partnerships are possible- with special reference to the half of the people who live through connecting south or east asian coastal belts and have since 1946 needed to transform all the conflicts and trade routs dominated by over 4 centuries of mercantile colonisation mainly caused by British Empire

4 joining in april Beijing 2019's remapping World Trade Routes of 13 Belt Roads (eg Arctic Belt Road) by 100 national leaders and massive open online cooperation with public servant universities like Tsinghua

5 beyond classroom - celebrating top 50 people who are prepared to totally change education in practical ways whether or not the education system currently recognises them as teachers - many of these linkin through 21st c wise nov 2016 haidian for the simple reason that china has half a billion youth's livelihoods to value which is more youth than all the other top 10 economies combined- moreover the majority of families depend on their smartest 20-30 year old due to relative little formal security nets and the history of the one child policy just as we are entering the final decade of the exponential of 4000 times moore comsTECH than 1946

edutech 2019-20 humanity's last tango with sustainability- the lakes th...

yours sincerely

chris macrae www.valuetrue.com - see Economist story of consequences in 1843 of Truth Media meetup between Queen Victoria and Scot James Wilson.. ps if these dates are not possible i come over to beijing every other month and would happily land on any date you choose

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LAP 1 examples of letter writing aimed at slaying fake media men and bossy politicians whose ability to truly serve the public let alone women born in gun-ridden communities is of zero value to any family loving society or livelihoods learning network

Our ref BR1 (0.2) #TheEconomist: from 2018 to leading professor in S. Korea

  • thank you for following me- my first visit to Korea was Jeju summit of asian infrastructure investment bank 2017- i am a huge fan of the research linkedin to the Jin family: the president of AIIB and his daughter: economist at London School of Economics. Jeju started lots of new questions in my mind and i was also privileged to see Moon Jae-In make his first public speech to an international audience- nothing matters more in the next 2 years in the way i map the world than china japan and Korea coming together to unify the Koreas. The Japan Olympics needs to help youth and superstars see ways of celebrating such progress. If you or student teams are interested in this i would always love to hear from you [email protected] www.EconomistDiary.com my father's life work at The Economist tried to mediate exponential growth in technology to design win-win trades between East and West as well as to end cultural and other accidents of centuries of colonisation and emdiation www.normanmacrae.net

letter 1984 from future president of Russia to future president of USA our reference #BR3 (0.1) & #BR6 (0.1) #TheEconomist

1989 Borovsky Letter -this letter is from 1984/5 books on sustainability innovations expoenentially timelined through the era of 4000+ times "Moore" tech (ie 2030 versus 1946) which you can download for free at Most Exciting Times to Be Alive

during the 1960s as the race to the moon became possible my father started annual surveys in The Economist loving each others countries - below are some of them which we try to archive/mediate with young journalists for humanity at www.normanmacrae.net - if you read one and have new questions about tech revolutions in education, finance or how markets and trade are designed to sustain our children please feel free to tell us any time [email protected]

.1962 Consider Japan: 1967 Japan Rising part 2.1 -our ref #BR1 0,1 at the time the idea that western countries would gain from seeking inward investment from Japan's extraordinary leaps in engineering (electronic, civil eg bullet trains , trading eg containerisation of world shipping Belts was controversial) fortunately for Wales Prince Charles was one of the first leaders to ask (diary meeting during Tokyo Olympics 1964 British Embassy in Tokyo) - we would love to hear of any parallel letter writing up to and including www.MAOlympics.com Tokyo summer 2020 (or indeed the serial celebrations of friends/alumni of Jack Ma's optimistic valuation of youth and education beyond the classroom- #BR1 (0.2) Olympics Korea 2018, #BR1 (0.3) Japan 2020, #BR0 (0.2) Beijing 2020, #BR5 (0.2) Paris 2024 ... #BR6 (0.2) LA 2028

LAP 2 TALES OF 100 CAPITALS 2 MEDIA ECONOMISTS FROM OBITUARIES

The Economist was founded by a Dispora Scot in 1843 when first century and half of colonisation of Scotland by London had required more than half of Scots to emigrate to sustain their families. James Wilson 17 year dialogue with Queen Victoria changed her view of ruling Britannia- his son-in-law walter bagehot as 2nd editor helped her transform version 1 of the English constitution- (James had died of diarrhea 9-months into starting tis ;project in Calcutta); by 1906 Mahatma Gandhi was calling for version 2 - this required not juts legal and economic system redesign but totally new education with eg maria montessorri starting this extraordinary challenge); version 2a was the 2 world wars- by 1946 four fifty years of the era of mercantile colonisation was finished with but the reconciliations needed across old and new world's were being done in real time- yet one which compared with 2030 can be seen to have over 4000 times less communication tech relevant to sustaining bottom-up community designs cooperatively the way nature expects. Into this chaotic world here are 2 English speaking journalists who survived their last days as teenagers serving in world war 2 including navigating planes over modernday myanmar-bangladesh- if you can vote for parallel correspondents in a different lingua franca that would improve are mapping of the education revolution that the artificial intelligences need to mediate between young minds and old teachers - [email protected]


BRIAN BEEDHAM , foreign editor of The Economist for a quarter of a century, died in 2016, aged 87 For nearly all the 25 years leading up to the collapse of communism in 1989, two intellects dominated the pages of The Econ omist. They were Norman Macrae, as dep- uty editor, and Brian Beedham, as foreign editor. Their marks were influential, endur-ing-and quite different. Norman, who died in 2010, relished iconoclasm, and orig-inal ideas sprang like a fountain from his effervescent mind. Brian, bearded, tweed- jacketed and pipe-smoking (or pipe-poking), held ideas that were more considered. It was he who provided the paper’s atti-tude to the post-war world. In that world, nothing was as important as seeing off communism, which in turn could be achieved only by the unyielding exercise of American strength. This view was not in itself unusual. What made it remarkable, and formidable, were the clarity, elegance and intellectual power with which it was propounded. No issue demanded the exercise of these qualities more than the Vietnam war, and probably none caused Brian more an-guish. A man of great kindness, and without a hint of vanity or pretension, he was far from being either a heartless ideologue or a primitive anti-communist (though he never visited either Russia or Vietnam to put his opinions to the test). But his unwavering defence of American policy drew criticism from both colleagues and readers. Why did he persist in pounding such a lonely trail, even after it had become clear that the American venture in South-East Asia was doomed? The short answer was conviction. His anti-communism was born of a love affair with America. As a young man, at Leeds Grammar School and Oxford, his politics had been leftish. They might have stayed that way. But in 1955 ambition bore him from the Yorkshire Post to The Economist where, after a few months, he won a Commonwealth Fund fellowship and with it a year study ing local politics in the South and the West of the United States. In America Brian dis covered a national ideology based on indi-vidualism, bottom-up democracy and an active belief in liberty that meant problems could be solved at home and na-tions could be freed abroad. This was exactly in tune with his own emerging ideas. The dispassionate romantic coming from drab, class-ridden, 1950s Britain, Brian might have stayed. But he felt in-dubitably British. The Suez crisis was beginning just as he left for America in August 1956; he so strongly backed the invasion of Egypt that he volunteered his service to the British military attache in Washington, ready even to give up his new American adventure to fight for this hopeless cause. And though he later became enthusiastic about direct democracy (an enthusiasm, like that for homeopathic pills, which was fostered by his links with Switzerland through Barbara, his wife), he was a monarchist to the end. Suspicious of intellectuals, Brian relished exposing the soft, less-than-rigorously-thought-out (he was fond of hyphens) orthodoxies of the liberal left. As foreign editor, he liked to draw unsparing comparisons between the Soviet Union and the Nationalist regime in South Africa: to deny freedom on the basis of ideological convictions, he argued, was no less objectionable than denying it on the basis of colour. It was no doubt Brian’s command of words that helped to make him our Washington correspondent in 1958 and then, in 1963, foreign editor. In this role he wrote leaders on all manner of topics, often argu-ing a difficult case: for nuclear weapons, say; for supporting Israel (another of his unshakable causes) when sentiment was running otherwise; or indeed for the domino theory itself, which was never so ringingly defended. Brian was equally skilled as a sub-editor. Articles that arrived on his desk with no clear beginning, end or theme were turned, apparently effortlessly, into something perfectly sharp and coherent. More annoyingly for authors, articles that were perfectly coherent were sometimes turned with a few tweaks, deft as a paw-dab from one of his beloved cats, into pieces that said something quite different from what had been intended. A statement of fact might be qualified by “it is said” or the American invasion of Cambodia would become a “counter-attack”. These intrusions could be difficult to square with The Economist's tradition of open-mindedness; especially as Brian’s own mind was more contradictory than it seemed. His favourite conversation-part-ners were men like Henry “Scoop” Jackson and Richard Perle, hawkish intervention-ists; but he also had an acquaintance, almost friendship, with at least one kgb man at the Soviet embassy in the 1980s. Away from work, the world he was analysing weekly was kept at bay. He did not own a television set, and found the best use of computers was to listen to American civil-war songs. Some of his pieces were pounded out on an ancient Olivetti in a turret of Barbara’s family castle in the Alps, surrounded by peaks and clouds. Deep down he was a romantic, capable of great human feeling, whose head constantly seemed to remind him to keep a rein on his heart. He wrote sympathetically and perceptively about Islam, and movingly about refugees-especially boat people, and especially if they were Vietnamese. They were making his point for him.

Obituaries to Economist Norman Macrae 2010

  • by.British Ambassador to Tokyochanged the trade & investment links between Britain and Japan
  • by Times of London: Norman Macrae died aged 86, 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.” He went on: "The terminals will be used to access databases anywhere in the globe, and will become the brainworker's mobile place of work. Brainworkers will increasingly mean all workers...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" -ed note as man race to moon in 1960s norman started questioning an innovation curriculum named "Entrepreneuruial Revolution": what would happen to humans' world that doubled comsTECH every 7 years between 1946 and 2030 - on Norman's exponential scale of over 4000 times moore his 1984 book was written at time of 40 times moore"the new vikings" was updated at , a swedish version of the book at about 70 times Moore -- what amttered to any teacher or student was being around to connnect human purposes of 2015 to 2030 ietimes of 1000 to 4000 times moore: the most exciting times to be alive, ones that determined extinction or celebration of human being and mother earth mediated by artificial intelligence -see the UN's official web on digital cooperation for the class of 2018-2019 and youth's informal one
  • more bios norman macrae

LAP 3 WHOSE GOALS CAN PREVENT EXINCTION OF OUR SPECIES

If, like me, you cant remember all 17 Sustainability Development Goals, please help EconomistRefugee.com co-blog their consequences for valuing refugees in ways that might cheer up Antonio Guterres or one of UN pro-youth envoys especially those who dare to explore innovations in oriental womens empowerment with reformed oil business CEOs - eg Sir Fazle Abed (now the world largest livelihoods education NGO partnership: bridging the pre-electricity world of villages, the early leapfroging partnerships of village phones and microsolar, this years partnership between bkash.com, gates foundation, jack ma's efinance business and charitable foundations, in mapping cooperation opportunities of linking in the world's largest cashless banking system to be owned in trust of the poorest women livelihood-career network

LAP 4 examples of more personal letters to our clans, family and friends- ultimately education beyond the classroom, thriving communities the world over must-needs: micro entrepreneurial revolution family trees to be the system dynamic that all economic models dares to trust and transparently cooperate round

eg to Macrae's in Australia - hello chris macrae here (son of norman of the economist and janet) - these days my 22 year old daughter Isabella and I live in washington DC - we would always be happy to see eg email or whatsapp +1 240 316 8157 from any macrae or have a cup of coffee with anyone travelling through DC- these seem to me to be unprecedented times for clans to take back human sustainability through sharing whatever practice skills we can- i dont have dads brain for doing that but always enjoy linking in- most of all when I can i help youth make livelihood friends especially with chinese peers - the changes to education my dad always hoped for are happening at a scale of entrepreneurial and community joy in china and around their envoys to the UN. eg Jack ma  www.alibabauni.com , like nowhere else i have ever tried to map https://www.dhirubhai.net/in/unwomens/ [email protected]

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