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	<title>kurtschemers &#187; United States</title>
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		<title>Forget U.S. Sovereignty? U.N.&#8217;s World Health Organization Eyeing Global Tax on Banking, Internet Activity</title>
		<link>http://www.kurtschemers.com/forget-u-s-sovereignty-u-n-s-world-health-organization-eying-global-tax</link>
		<comments>http://www.kurtschemers.com/forget-u-s-sovereignty-u-n-s-world-health-organization-eying-global-tax#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 16 Jan 2010 20:16:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Rivers</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.kurtschemers.com/?p=979</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[By George Russell The World Health Organization (WHO) is considering a plan to ask governments to impose a global consumer tax on such things as Internet activity or everyday financial transactions like paying bills online. Such a scheme could raise &#8220;tens of billions of dollars&#8221; on behalf of the United Nations&#8217; public health arm from [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>By George Russell</p>
<p><img class="alignleft size-medium wp-image-982" style="margin-left: 5px; margin-right: 5px;" title="who-logo" src="http://www.kurtschemers.com/wp-content/uploads/who-logo-300x255.jpg" alt="who-logo" width="240" height="204" />The World Health Organization (WHO) is considering a plan to ask governments to impose a global consumer tax on such things as Internet activity or everyday financial transactions like paying bills online.</p>
<p>Such a scheme could raise &#8220;tens of billions of dollars&#8221; on behalf of the United Nations&#8217; public health arm from a broad base of consumers, which would then be used to transfer drug-making research, development and manufacturing capabilities, among other things, to the developing world.</p>
<p>The multibillion-dollar &#8220;indirect consumer tax&#8221; is only one of a &#8220;suite of proposals&#8221; for financing the rapid transformation of the global medical industry that will go before WHO&#8217;s 34-member supervisory Executive Board at its biannual meeting in Geneva.</p>
<p>The idea is the most lucrative — and probably the most controversial — of a number of schemes proposed by a 25-member panel of medical experts, academics and health care bureaucrats who have been working for the past 14 months at WHO&#8217;s behest on &#8220;new and innovative sources of funding&#8221; to accomplish major shifts in the production of medical R&amp;D.</p>
<p>WHO&#8217;s so-called Expert Working Group has also suggested asking rich countries to set aside fixed portions of their gross domestic product to finance the shift in worldwide research and development, as well as asking cash-rich developing nations like China, India or Venezuela to pony up more of the money.</p>
<p>These would also add billions in additional funds to international health care for the future — as much as $7.4 billion yearly from rich countries, and as much as $12.1 billion from low- and middle-income nations.</p>
<p>But the taxation ideas draw the most interest. The expert panel cites a number of possible examples. Among them:</p>
<p>—a 10 per cent tax on the international arms trade, &#8220;which might net about $5 billion per annum&#8221;;</p>
<p>—a &#8220;digital tax or &#8216;hit&#8217; tax.&#8221; The report says the levy &#8220;could yield tens of billions of U.S. dollars from a broad base of users&#8221;;</p>
<p>—a financial transaction tax. The report approvingly cites a levy in Brazil that charged 0.38 percent on bills paid online and on unspecified &#8220;major withdrawals.&#8221; The report says the Brazilian tax was raising an estimated $20 billion per year until it was cancelled for unspecified reasons.</p>
<p>The panel concludes that &#8220;taxes would provide greater certainty once in place than voluntary contributions,&#8221; even as the report urges WHO&#8217;s executive board to promote all of the alternatives, and more, to support creation of a &#8220;global health research and innovation coordination and funding mechanism&#8221; for the planned revolution in medical research, development and distribution.</p>
<p>Click here to read the executive summary of the report.</p>
<p>The WHO scheme to transfer impressive amounts of money, technology, patents and manufacturing ability to the developing world in a global battle to conquer disease looks similar in many respects to the calls for huge transfers of wealth and technology that were at the heart of the just-failed U.N.-sponsored conference on lowering greenhouse gas emissions at Copenhagen.</p>
<p>Indeed, the volume of revenues that the experts foresee from their global indirect tax — if it should ever be approved by enough national governments — might well come close to the $30 billion annual wealth transfer that rich nations approved at Copenhagen to hand over to poor countries until 2012.</p>
<p>But a global health tax would go one big step further. And, as the experts point out, one trail-blazing version of their global consumer tax for medical research already exists: a germinating program known as UNITAID, which aims to battle against HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis.</p>
<p>UNITAID, which began in 2006 and is also hosted by WHO, is financed in part by a &#8220;solidarity contribution&#8221; levy of anywhere from $1.20 to $58 on airline tickets among a group of nations led by France, Brazil, Chile, Norway and Britain. According to the WHO experts report, it has raised around $1 billion since its inception, with 13 countries having already passed the airline tax legislation and &#8220;several&#8221; others in the process of doing so.</p>
<p>The idea, as with the &#8220;indirect&#8221; taxes that WHO is about to consider, is that a relatively small consumer levy, once implemented, is a low-profile and relatively painless way to create a global health-care tax system.</p>
<p>UNITAID&#8217;s board chairman, Philippe Douste-Blazy, a former French Cabinet Minister and currently special advisor to U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on &#8220;innovative financing for development,&#8221; is also a member of the WHO expert working group.</p>
<p>The global financial mechanism that the experts have been exploring is the keystone to WHO&#8217;s entire program for the transformation of the world&#8217;s health industry, which was endorsed as a &#8220;global strategy and plan of action&#8221; by the health organization&#8217;s World Assembly in May 2008.</p>
<p>The plan includes more than 100 specific actions across the areas of research and development, technology transfer and intellectual property rights, among others, according to an update that will also be presented to the executive board next week.</p>
<p>New regional and national networks for medical innovation and development are being planned in Asia, Latin America and Africa — where, for example, there will be &#8220;African-led product research and development innovation,&#8221; including delivery of drugs based on traditional medicines.</p>
<p>Another major effort is the transfer of technology to poorer countries to produce vaccines. One example: H1N1 flu vaccine, which is being manufactured in China, India and Thailand under licensing arrangements created under WHO auspices.</p>
<p>After WHO issued repeated warnings of a serious H1N1 influenza pandemic over the past two years, countries such as Britain and France ordered hundreds of millions of dollars worth of vaccine, only to decide that they were unnecessary, leading to mass cancellations of orders. WHO is reviewing how it handled the crisis.</p>
<p>According to the WHO update, the U.N. organization is already promoting transfers of new medical products for vaccines against rabies, even though that disease is now something of a rarity in the West.</p>
<p>A significant aim of the WHO effort is expanding production and distribution of remedies for what it calls &#8220;neglected diseases,&#8221; mainly meaning those that are more common in poor, underdeveloped countries than in richer ones. These include a variety of parasitic ailments, including trypanosomiasis, or sleeping sickness.</p>
<p>Behind all of the effort is the &#8220;persistent and growing concern,&#8221; as the expert&#8217;s paper puts it, that &#8220;the benefits of the advances in health technology are not reaching the poor,&#8221; which the paper calls &#8220;one of the more egregious manifestations of inequity.&#8221;</p>
<p>As with &#8220;climate change&#8221; at Copenhagen, the WHO&#8217;s experts see that health inequity as a malady that innovative and permanent forms of global taxation are just the right thing to help cure.</p>
<p><em>George Russell is executive editor of Fox News.</em></p>
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		<title>Climategate: the ailing &#8216;mainstream&#8217; media are committing suicide by ignoring the scoop of the century</title>
		<link>http://www.kurtschemers.com/climategate-ailing-mainstream</link>
		<comments>http://www.kurtschemers.com/climategate-ailing-mainstream#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 19 Dec 2009 01:22:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Alex Rivers</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Opinions & Blogs]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.kurtschemers.com/?p=867</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[By Gerald Warner UK Last updated: December 15th, 2009 Climategate is a global household name. No cat has ever emancipated itself more completely from the bag. It is a world-wide scandal – thanks to the internet. Yet, as its ramifications proliferate and dominoes continue to fall, the most repeatedly asked question online is: how can [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>
<p><span>By <a title="Posts by Gerald Warner" href="http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/author/geraldwarner/">Gerald Warner</a></span> <span> <a title="View all posts in UK" rel="category tag" href="http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/news/category/uk/">UK</a></span> <span>Last updated:  December 15th, 2009</span></div>
<div>
<p><img class="alignleft size-full wp-image-868" style="margin-left: 5px; margin-right: 5px;" title="climategate" src="http://www.kurtschemers.com/wp-content/uploads/climategate.jpg" alt="climategate" width="192" height="191" />Climategate is a global household name. No cat has ever emancipated itself more completely from the bag. It is a world-wide scandal – thanks to the internet. Yet, as its ramifications proliferate and dominoes continue to fall, the most repeatedly asked question online is: how can the mainstream media ignore this? Well, we know the answer to that: the MSM are in thrall to the leftist consensus. End of story. But let me pose a follow-up question that may be becoming more imminently relevant.</p>
<p>Are the mainstream media capable of surviving their sidelining of the number one global scoop? Are they finally committing suicide? Are they, in fact, any longer mainstream? Every historian knows that any significant trend in society will show warning symptoms over a long period; but the final catastrophe will usually be triggered by a single event. For the moribund MSM that decisive blunder may well be Climategate.</p>
<p>Another feature of any doomed institution is that it signals its imminent demise by behaving in a manner that is contrary to its nature and purpose. Every city in the developed world contains news rooms in which cringing journalists struggle to satisfy the imperative demands of editors for a scoop. Yet the obvious scoop – the BIG ONE of journalistic mythology – is consigned to the waste basket. This is the journalism of Isvestia and Pravda, with all the commercial viability that attached to that school of news reporting.</p>
<p>The dead-tree press is already on the critical list. In the United States, in the six months to 31 March this year, newspaper circulation slumped by 7 per cent, according to the US Audit Bureau of Circulations. This was a steeper decline than in the two previous recorded periods (you can reasonably attribute that to the vomit-inducing idolatry of Barack Obama that permeated the American press at that time). In the UK the comparable figure was 5 per cent. How many businesses do you know that record such declines, in an unreversed trend, and survive?</p>
<p>The BBC – or, to give the Corporation its proper name, British state television – is on a multi-billion pound life support system, thanks to the licence fee extortion racket by which it acts as gatekeeper to 200 other television channels by charging £142.50 a year to viewers, the majority of whom do not want to watch its programmes. The BBC’s own report to the Department of Culture, Media and Sport in 2005 revealed that, if the licence fee were abolished, 58 per cent of viewers (14 million households) would opt out of all BBC television, leaving the Corporation with a paltry £1.2bn in revenue.</p>
<p>That is the despised organisation that relentlessly inflicts climate alarmist propaganda, fairy tales, “bedtime stories” on the British public, in the style of Radio Moscow, circa 1954 (“Implement the resolutions of the 23rd Congress…” “We have 27 minutes to save the polar bears from melting…”). No intelligent or inquiring individual believes, respects or trusts the BBC. Ditto the print media that is similarly spewing out Al Gore’s trashy superstition.</p>
<p>So, instead of proving its worth, serving truth and debate, arresting the attention of the public by exposing our rulers’ lies, the MSM are rolling over to become a mouthpiece of the consensus, repelling readers and viewers as they go online, just as citizens in Iron Curtain countries once tuned in covertly to Western media. The internet is the new samizdat. All of this may still be a relatively gradual process while all citizens are being deprived of is information and debate. But when the bill is presented to sustain the phoney religion consecrated at Copenhagen, when taxes rocket, when we can barely see by the light of mercury bulbs, when every amenity of life is threatened – will people still be willing to pay money for newspapers and television channels that tell them to submit to this tyranny, when they could be exploding the myth and freeing society?</p>
<p>It seems less than likely. The Mainstream Media are hanging themselves – it is doubtful that they can any longer be described as mainstream. These are turkeys voting for Christmas.</p></div>
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