Saturday, 3 November 2012

Welcome Humans , Emoclew snamuh



Welcome humans , Emoclew snamuh.. Sewa.. So it Goes.

--=== Welcome Emoclew Sewa ===--
 WELCOME HUMANS - YOUR Deci-Centennial REPORT CARD
 REPORT ON SOL - The News Seen From Sirius by the Dogon People
Updated: 11:23 AM 03/11/2012
SunSmall.JPG

I have decided to adopt a new company which Paul M0th can be the
prescient of, called Emoclew industries.
I was looking for a company which would get free advertizing on a
worldwide basis and I found it in McDonalds, Burger King and Bi-Way ,
which have already adopted free advertizing for emocleW.
Note that there are several spellings of the company name.. The
official name.. Emoclew, the McDonalds and others often use "emocleW"





From time to time we have received messages from the Star Sirius on
behalf of the Dogon people who send us an update before each Solar
maxima on the state of the world, and it seems appropriate to release
this latest communication with this important announcement of the
initiation of a new company. Sewa.

Your star which you call "Sun" or "Sol" has been continuing to supply you with
a wonderful source of energy for at least a couple of Millenia now.
This year has been a particularly active one for Sol and the number of
"sunspots" is very close to its 11 year solar maximum. Increases in long
distance radio transmissions , and aurarorae have been noticed this year.

We could be in for a huge firework display again in 2012. The Sun will
be approaching the peak of its 11-year cycle, called
“solar maximum”, so we can expect a lot of solar activity.
Some predictions put the solar maximum of Solar Cycle 24 even more
energetic than the last solar maximum in 2002-2003

For the first time in human history in 2001 aurorae were viewed from space
at both poles of the planet Terra. Today in 2011 this is pretty much a
non-event, so Sol has no real problems.
The contributions of Sol over billions of years are however being consumed at
an ever increasing rate , with one nation in particular consuming more than
25% of the total energy. This can not go on for long.

This welcome message comes to you from the planet Sirius , home to the gods of the Dogon People. The Dogon are strongly oriented toward harmony, which is reflected in many of their rituals. For instance, in one of their most
important rituals, the women praise the men, the men thank the women, the young express appreciation for the old, and the old recognize the contributions of the young. Another example is the custom of elaborate greetings whenever one Dogon meets another. This custom is repeated over and over, throughout a Dogon village, all day. During a greeting ritual, the person who has entered the
contact answers a series of questions about his or her whole family, from the
person who was already there. Invariably, the answer is sewa, which means that
everything is fine. Then the Dogon who has entered the contact repeats the
ritual, asking the resident how his or her whole family is. Because the word
sewa is so commonly repeated throughout a Dogon village, neighboring peoples have dubbed the Dogon the sewa people.


REPORT ON TERRA: POPULATION GROWING

Did you know that world population reached 6 billion on October 12,
1999, and 7 billion by November 2011, and will probably reach 9.3
billion by 2050?


Human population today is :
According to the International Programs Center,
U.S. Bureau of the Census, the total
http://www.census.gov/population/popclockworld.html
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the total population of the World, projected to 09/29/12 at 15:14 UTC (EST+5) is

7,042,467,304

http://www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html

In the United States alone:
According to the U.S. Bureau of the Census, the resident
POPULATION OF THE UNITED STATES,

12/16/2001  285,734,940

Ten years later, 06/11/2011 it is.. 312,563,344

today Sep 29, 2012  314,480,602  

component settings [2001]
One birth every.................................. 8 seconds
One death every.................................. 13 seconds
One international migrant (net) every............ 44 seconds
One Federal U.S. citizen (net) returning every...3202 seconds
Net gain of one person every..................... 14 seconds

COMPONENT SETTINGS FOR SEPTEMBER [2012]
One birth every    7 seconds
One death every   13 seconds
One international migrant (net) every   44 seconds
Net gain of one person every   12 seconds
http://www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html

HUMANS ARE HAVING A GREAT YEAR!

Humans are now living longer than ever and the population of humans is
continuing to increase at its ongoing exponential rate.
Year Population    %incr Gain for year
1950 2,555,078,074 1.47 37,783,610
1951 2,592,861,684 1.61 42,057,724
1952 2,634,919,408 1.71 45,334,288
1953 2,680,253,696 1.77 47,968,370
1954 2,728,222,066 1.87 51,447,715
1955 2,779,669,781 1.89 52,953,889
1956 2,832,623,670 1.95 55,820,377
1957 2,888,444,047 1.94 56,498,740
1958 2,944,942,787 1.76 52,326,211
1959 2,997,268,998 1.39 42,063,403
1960 3,039,332,401 1.33 40,781,960
1961 3,080,114,361 1.80 56,083,390
1962 3,136,197,751 2.19 69,508,948
1963 3,205,706,699 2.19 71,110,065
1964 3,276,816,764 2.08 69,021,089
1965 3,345,837,853 2.08 70,227,393
1966 3,416,065,246 2.02 69,742,104
1967 3,485,807,350 2.04 71,868,340
1968 3,557,675,690 2.08 74,665,661
1969 3,632,341,351 2.05 75,268,761
1970 3,707,610,112 2.07 77,580,647
1971 3,785,190,759 2.01 77,006,527
1972 3,862,197,286 1.96 76,511,302
1973 3,938,708,588 1.91 75,889,828
1974 4,014,598,416 1.82 73,625,631
1975 4,088,224,047 1.75 72,167,756
1976 4,160,391,803 1.73 72,536,792
1977 4,232,928,595 1.70 72,474,692
1978 4,305,403,287 1.74 75,373,540
1979 4,380,776,827 1.72 75,928,390
1980 4,456,705,217 1.70 76,259,715
1981 4,532,964,932 1.76 80,436,954
1982 4,613,401,886 1.73 80,530,264
1983 4,693,932,150 1.68 79,634,655
1984 4,773,566,805 1.68 81,036,085
1985 4,854,602,890 1.70 83,004,818
1986 4,937,607,708 1.73 85,962,468
1987 5,023,570,176 1.71 86,583,085
1988 5,110,153,261 1.67 86,179,948
1989 5,196,333,209 1.67 87,422,136
1990 5,283,755,345 1.56 83,182,744
1991 5,366,938,089 1.53 82,725,730
1992 5,449,663,819 1.48 81,337,993
1993 5,531,001,812 1.44 79,976,536
1994 5,610,978,348 1.41 79,887,428
1995 5,690,865,776 1.36 77,746,508
1996 5,768,612,284 1.35 78,192,518
1997 5,846,804,802 1.32 77,770,099
1998 5,924,574,901 1.31 77,934,526
1999 6,002,509,427 1.29 77,632,256
2000 6,080,141,683 1.26 77,258,877
2001 6,157,400,560 1.24 76,849,827
2002 6,234,250,387 1.22 76,299,210
2003 6,310,549,597 1.19 75,477,418
2004 6,386,027,015 1.16 74,526,549
2005 6,460,553,564 1.14 73,759,794
2006 6,534,313,358 1.12 73,307,780
2007 6,607,621,138 1.10 72,774,552
2008 6,680,395,690 1.07 72,012,218
2009 6,752,407,908 1.05 71,226,645
2010 6,823,634,553 1.03 70,770,206
2011 6,894,404,759 1.02 70,638,751
2012 6,965,043,510 1.01 70,466,862
2013 7,035,510,372 0.99 70,232,623
2014 7,105,742,995 0.98 69,932,071
2015 7,175,675,066 0.97 69,613,925
2016 7,245,288,991 0.95 69,172,133
2017 7,314,461,124 0.93 68,537,288
2018 7,382,998,412 0.92 67,877,546
2019 7,450,875,958 0.90 67,134,642
2020 7,518,010,600 0.88 66,371,114

THE GOOD NEWS

In 1900-1910 while the population of Terra was 1.606 B (billion)
the death rate was near 27.1/1000.
Today during the 5 year period ending 1995, with a world population hovering
at the time around 5.863 B, the death rate was lowered to around 8.6/1000.
This has been mostly the contribution of greater public access to clean water
and medicines. Deaths in childhood have decreased significantly in 100 years.
There has been no major outbreak of disease such as the Influenza outbreaks of 1918-1919 which claimed between 20 and 30 million people.
This was enough to set back the population growth on Terra by about a full
year.
The Tobacco addiction of humans has however had a more serious effect than any diseases , claiming about 71 million since 1930. However this is only about a million a year and is certainly not as devastating as the sudden loss of the millions who died in the Influenza epidemic.
Even AIDS has not had the effect of Tobacco Addiction , claiming about 11.7
million deaths between 1981 and 1998. for an average of about .688 million per year.
With a present rate of increase of over 76 million a year, these things seem
like small problems.

THE NOT-SO-GOOD NEWS - Democide

People on Terra Continue to be Killed by Their Own Governments

At least 170 million people - and perhaps as many as 360 million - have
been murdered by their own governments in this century. This is more than four
times the 42 million deaths from civil and international wars. When a state
murders some of the general population, it is called democide;
when it murders minorities, the term is genocide. Thus genocide is
one type of democide.
Democide is employed to intimidate, demoralize or subjugate and to maintain
power. Democracies have not entirely eschewed democide, but they have usually
inflicted it on colonial populations.
Communist regimes have killed the most people in this century, followed
by Nazi Germany, which killed more than 16 million people between 1933 and
1945.
The Soviet Union killed 54.7 million between 1917 and 1987
China killed 35.6 million between 1949 and 1987.
The Khmer Rouge killed a much larger percentage of its nation's people,
liquidating about a third of all Cambodians between 1975 and 1979.

POWER KILLS , ABSOLUTE POWER KILLS ABSOLUTELY

The more productive people are, the more governments can tax and confiscate.
So the more productive people are, the more costly it is for governments to
kill them. Evidence indicates that governments respond to this economic
incentive. Other things being equal, a 1 percent increase in per capita real
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) leads to about a 1.4 percent decline in killing.
The increased value of a human life in the Soviet Union and China from
increased output per capita may have done more to slow the pace of state
murder in those countries than changes in policy after the deaths of Stalin
and Mao Tse-tung:
During the Stalin era (1929-53), about 42.7 million people were killed
in the Soviet Union, while 8.1 million were killed in the following 34 years.
In China, 34.4 million people were killed during the reign of Mao Tse-tung
(1949-76), and 874,000 were killed in the following decade.
Countries that kill their own people are poorer and grow more slowly
than countries that do not. A comparison of 33 less-developed countries
that have not practiced state-sponsored killing with 23 that have shows
the average annual real GDP of the murderous states to be about 20 percent
less than it might have been. Among the nations that have paid the highest
price:
Killing by the state in :
Rwanda during the years 1962-90 reduced annual GDP by 27 percent.
Burundi during 1965-90 reduced GDP by 54.8 percent.
Angola from 1975-89 reduced output by 61.6 percent.
Over several centuries, governments have tended to murder a smaller percentage
of their people. However, the killing of massive numbers by Communist
countries in the 20th century reversed that trend.
http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/atrox.htm
http://users.erols.com/mwhite28/warstat8.htm
Estimated totals of deaths for the entire 20th century.
http://www.hawaii.edu/powerkills/DBG.CHAP1.HTM
http://www.historyguy.com/new_and_recent_conflicts.html


AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL

Amnesty International's 50th anniversary year. Since 1961, Amnesty
International members have campaigned to defend prisoners of conscience and
other victims of human rights violations including torture, "disappearances",
political killings and executions. Amnesty International activists have worked
on more than 45,000 cases, and have responded to more than 16,600 urgent
appeals on behalf of men, women and children in immediate danger.
Many of these appeals were on behalf of people at risk of torture. Indeed, in
the majority of countries surveyed in this report, there were credible
allegations of torture or ill-treatment during 2000. Amnesty International's
aim, however, is not only to describe the shocking prevalence of these abuses
but also to devise a strategy to eradicate them. In October 2000 Amnesty
International launched a new campaign to mobilize people around the world in a
collective effort to combat torture.
As this report shows, the powers ranged against the human rights movement are
formidable. However, so are the forces marshaled in support of human rights.
The international human rights movement, of which Amnesty International is
proud to be a part, is growing, diversifying and gaining strength.

The outrage at injustice that led to the founding of Amnesty International 50
years ago continues to inspire and motivate millions of people determined to
build abetter world.
http://amnesty.org/en/50
http://www.amnesty.org/


27 MAJOR INTERNATIONAL CONFLICTS:

http://www.sipri.org/yearbook/2008/02/02A
http://www.sipri.org/yearbook/2008/files/SIPRIYB0802A.pdf

27 major International Conflicts:
In 1999 there were 27 major armed conflicts in 25 countries throughout the
world. Only two of the conflicts were interstate. There was no change from the
previous year in the number of conflicts, but the number of countries with a
major armed conflict decreased by one. More than 1000 people died in 14 of the
conflicts in 1999: 7 in Africa , 1 in South America, 4 in Asia and 2 in
Europe. These conflicts were Afghanistan, Algeria, Angola, Colombia, the
Democratic Republic of Congo, the Republic of Congo, Eritrea–Ethiopia, India
(Kashmiri separatists), India–Pakistan, Russia (Chechnya), Sierra Leone, Sri
Lanka, Sudan and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Kosovo). Only twice in
the past decade, in 1992 and 1993, was there such a high incidence of
intensive conflict.

Current status remains basically unchanged 2011:

Only 4 of the major armed conflicts in 2010 were over territory, with
11 being fought over government. Except for the year 2007, conflicts
over government outnumbered those over territory in every year of the
period 2001–10.

For the seventh year running, no major interstate conflict was active
in 2010. Over the decade 2001–10, only 2 of the total of 29 major
armed conflicts have been interstate.

http://www.sipri.org/yearbook/2011/02/YB11_02A_fig2.jpg/image_preview


RISE IN MILITARY EXPENDITURE:

World military expenditure is on the increase again after a 10-year period of
post-cold war reductions. The rise began in 1999 and continued in 2000.
According to provisional figures for 2000 world military expenditure amounted
to $798 billion (in current US dollars). This was an increase of 3 per cent in
real terms over 1999 and an increase of 5 per cent over 1998. The amount of
economic resources devoted to military activities is staggering when set in a
global perspective. The overall level of world military spending in 2000
corresponds to a world average of 130 dollars per capita and 2.5 per cent of
the world gross domestic product.
Military expenditure increased in all regions between 1998 and 2000—Africa,
the Americas, Asia and Oceania, Europe and the Middle East. The regions with
the largest volume increases were North America and Europe, the result
primarily of increases in the military expenditure of the United States and
the Russian Federation respectively. During this period US military
expenditure rose by 2.3 per cent in real terms, an increase of c. $6 billion
(at constant 1998 prices). Provisional figures for Russian military
expenditure in 2000 showed an increase of 44 per cent in real terms over 1998.
The increase amounted to $13 billion (at constant 1998 prices). However, the
level of Russian military expenditure is only one-sixth of that of the United
States.
The region with the steepest rise was Africa, where military expenditure
increased by over one-third (37 per cent) in real terms between 1998 and 2000.
This is the result of large increases in the military budgets of countries
involved in wars and in those contiguous to conflict countries. In South Asia
military expenditure continues to rise as a result of the India–Pakistan
conflict in Kashmir. The increase in 1998–2000 was 23 per cent in real terms.
The year 1998 is likely to remain the low point in post-cold war military
expenditure, at least for the near future, because several of the major
spenders have adopted or announced defence plans that include future growth.
The commitments by NATO member countries to improve their military
capabilities for power projection, mobility and increased interoperability, as
provided for within the NATO Defence Capabilities Initiative, will require
significant additional expenditures, if implemented. NATO data show that the
group of European NATO countries have already increased their expenditures for military equipment by 11 per cent in real terms since 1995. US spending on
military equipment continued to decline through 2000 but is expected to rise
again when increased authorizations for arms procurement in 1999 and 2000
will translate into actual expenditures. Other major spenders, such as China, Japan and Russia, have also adopted procurement plans which will require increased military expenditure in the future.

A decade after the end of the cold war the decline in world military spending
is changing into growth. It is a paradox that, in spite of an improved
security environment in large parts of the world, since 1998 military
expenditure has been rising in all regions.

NUCLEAR WEAPONS CLUB IN 2012

Today, at least five of the world’s nine nuclear weapons states have, or are
developing, what appears to meet the definition of a nonstrategic nuclear
weapon. Combined, we estimate that these five countries have approximately
2,800 nuclear warheads for delivery by nonstrategic nuclear-capable delivery
vehicles.

The number of nuclear warheads in stockpile has reduced significantly.
For example USA has only 2150 active warheads left of over 70 000 produced.
While the Soviet Union, Britain, France and China have about 4,500 active
warheads left of over 58 000 produced.

ICBM development by these countries began in 1959 and continues today.
More than 2000 nuclear tests have been completed since 1945 , but none have been discovered since 1967.
All of the countries named above have tested in the air, underground , and in the waters of the oceans between 1954 & 1996.
Between 1955 and 1974 , all of the countries in the nuclear club developed nuclear submarines armed with warheads.

Although the United States and Russia have reduced their nonstrategic
stockpiles, significant inventories remain. And other nuclear weapons states
appear to have nonstrategic nuclear weapons as well. Today, at least five of the
world’s nine nuclear weapons states have, or are developing, what appears to
meet the definition of a nonstrategic nuclear weapon: Russia, the United States,
France, Pakistan, and China.
http://bos.sagepub.com/content/68/5/96.full
http://bos.sagepub.com/content/66/6/77.full
The United States is the only nuclear weapon state to deploy its nuclear
weapons on foreign soil, with approximately 200 nuclear bombs at six air bases
in five NATO countries—Belgium, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and Turkey.

HUMAN RIGHTS IN TROUBLE ON TERRA

The scope of today's global human rights problems far exceeds the capacity of
global institutions to address them. The problem is most acute in the global
economy, where a disturbing institutional void frequently leaves human rights
standards unenforced.
But the problem also arises as the world struggles to stop mass atrocities,
protect the victims of these crimes, rebuild their countries, and bring their
persecutors to justice. In each case, a more interconnected and seemingly
smaller world rightfully feels a greater responsibility to respond. Yet the
capacity to meet these demands has not kept up with the challenges.

A reinforced global architecture is needed. This introduction to Human Rights
Watch's annual World Report describes this weakness in the institutional
capacity to address the global human rights challenges of our time. It
highlights the enforcement gap for issues of human rights in the global
economy. It discusses the inadequate resources given to the United Nations to
assume its assigned tasks of keeping the peace and assisting war-torn nations
with national reconstruction. And it describes the recent strides taken toward
a new institutional justice system for the world's worst human rights criminals
but laments the U.S. government's persistent refusal to countenance U.S.
nationals being held to the same standards as the rest of the world.

http://www.hrw.org/wr2k1/
http://www.hrw.org/node/75134
Human Rights Watch:
http://www.hrw.org/reports/2012/01/22/world-report-2012


RICH AND POOR:

The divide between wages of the rich and poor is growing in nearly all of the
world’s leading economies, according to the Organisation for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD).

Researchers examined 22 countries and found that inequality grew in 17 of them between the 1980s and the financial crisis of 2008.

In a report entitled -‘Divided We Stand: Why Inequality Keeps Rising’, which
was conducted by the OECD, found that the average income of the richest 10% is now about nine times that of the poorest 10 %  across the world.

The income gap has risen even in traditionally egalitarian countries, such as
Germany, Denmark and Sweden, from five to one in the 1980s to six to one today.  The gap is 10 to one in Italy, Japan, Korea and the United Kingdom, and higher still, at 14 to one in Israel, Turkey and the United States.

In Chile and Mexico, the incomes of the richest are still more than 25 times
those of the poorest, the highest in the OECD, but have finally started
dropping. Income inequality is much higher in some major emerging economies outside the OECD area. At 50 to one, Brazil’s income gap remains much higher than in many other countries, although it has been falling significantly over the past decade.

http://www.africaundisguised.com/newsportal/story/global-wage-inequality-growing-oecd


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