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Cultivating Hope + Great News + Off to Grandmas

Cultivating Hope + Great News + Off to Grandmas

Good Morning from Snowy Warren Grove, Prince Edward Island
 
We prepared as a lot of Islanders do when a snowstorm is pending. We fill the bathtub, and several pots on the propane stove with water, line up the flashlights, candles, matches, firewood and storm chips; Miss Vickies is my weakness.
 

Here is a photo from 6 o’clock last night and the other at 8:30 am this morning—the difference a few hours can make.

 
I am aware heading into a new year this virus affects life in so many ways. It can be stress inducing. But I need to be remind myself to be grateful and stay positive. There have been many accomplishments made locally and globally.
 
Cultivating Hope
 
COVID-19 vaccines are the most successful global health initiative ever undertaken. Nine billion doses were administered across 184 countries, and almost 60% of the planet has received at least one dose. In less than two years, we came up with a way to overcome a new disease and rolled it out to more than half of humanity.
 
In environmental news, the only way to stop a runaway train is for us to jump on board and pump the brakes. Great news out of Europe.
 
A report shows that renewables overtook fossil fuels as the number one power source in the EU for the first time in 2020. Renewables generated 38% of electricity, compared to 37% for fossil fuels. To date, 9 EU Member States have phased out coal, 13 others have committed to a phase-out date, and four are considering possible timelines. Also, compared to 2019, EU27 greenhouse gas emissions in 2020 fell by almost 10%. An unprecedented drop in emissions due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
 
There is more positive news on the environmental front. Check out Corporate Knights, a voice for clean capitalism website
 
I recently purchased Ten Global Trends Every Smart Person Should Know by Ronald Bailey and Marian L. Tupy.
 
“Since journalism focuses on dramatic things and events that go wrong, the nature of news thus tends to mislead readers and viewers into thinking that the world is in worse shape than it really is.”
 
The authors’ liner notes above align with my thoughts about commercial media channels. The channels need to attract viewership to keep advertisers paying. And commercial media understands the human propensity for the negative; so they continue to feed it. Or at least until we stop falling for it one by one.
 
"A society with too few independent thinkers is vulnerable to control by disturbed and opportunistic leaders. A society which wants to create and maintain a free and democratic social system must create responsible independence of thought among its young." ~ John Dewey
 
+
 
It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought
without accepting it. Aristotle
 
Reading the chapter outlines of all 78 trends in the book is inspiring:
 
  1. The Great Enrichment — world economic growth on a steady upward trajectory. 
  2. The End of Poverty — only 8.6% — and falling — of humanity now live in poverty. 
  3. Are We Running Out of Resources? — spoiler alert; NO. They’re more abundant than ever. 
  4. Peak Population — world population growth is rapidly slowing and projected to peak this century. 
  5. The End of Famine — famines have virtually disappeared outside of war zones. 
  6. More Land for Nature — huge gains in the global tree canopy are offsetting declines in the tropics. 
  7. Planet City — 55% of humanity now live in cities with higher wealth and lower environmental impact. 
  8. Democracy on the March — democracies are increasing as autocracies decline 
  9. The Long Peace — war between countries has become a rare event 
  10. A Safer World — death by natural disaster has dropped 99% in the past 100 years 
People Trends
 
  • Life options are expanding
  • Global happiness is rising
  • Global income is rising
  • Global income inequality is falling
  • Slum living is declining
  • Empowering women
  • Choosing smaller families
  • Achieving universal literacy
  • More kids in school
  • More years in school
  • IQ scores rising massively
  • Decriminalizing LGBTQ
  • Global free press progress, with setbacks
  • Life expectancy is rising
 
Health Trends
 
  • The global death rate is falling
  • Vastly fewer children die young
  • Mothers are living longer
  • Vaccines are saving lives
  • Overcoming HIV/AIDS
  • Trouncing tuberculosis
  • Malaria retreats
  • Winning the war on cancer
  • Tobacco’s last stand
  • Accelerating vaccine discoveries
Violence Trends
  • The global murder rate is falling
  • Capital punishment plummets
  • Battle death rate is declining
  • Genocides are disappearing
  • The military spending ratio is falling
  • Armies shrink as a proportion of the population
  • Nuclear arsenals dwindle
Work Trends
  • Working less for more
  • Work grows safer
  • Children labour less 
  • Service sector work is rapidly increasing
  • The wage gap between men and women is narrowing
  • Universal emancipation
Natural Resources Trends
  • Peak farmland
  • Conserving more land and sea
  • Decarbonizing the economy
  • No peak oil
  • Rising natural gas reserves 
  • Using water more efficiently
  • Producing more with less
Farm Trends
  • Hunger retreats
  • Grain cornucopia
  • Yields increasing
  • Farming and eating more fish
  • Protein boom
Tech Trends
  • Increasing global access to electricity
  • Lighting costs near nothing now
  • Solar power ever-cheaper
  • More access to clean drinking water
  • Improving sanitation
  • Mobile phone revolution
  • Internet explosion
  • Vastly cheaper computation
  • Global tourism rises (pre-pandemic)
  • Tariffs are falling
 
U.S. Trends
 
  • Share of spending on household basics declines
  • Lower cost and higher adaption of new technologies
  • Violent crimes are falling steeply
  • Declining racist attitudes
  • Air pollution is falling steeply
  • Bigger and better housing
  • Raising vaccination and plunging infectious disease.
  • Air travel is getting cheaper
  • Cancer incidence and death rates at 26 year low
 
The authors write, “You can’t fix what is wrong in the world if you don’t know what’s actually happening…the dark view of the prospects for humanity and the natural world is, in large part, badly mistaken…of course, some global trends are negative…however, many of the global trends we describe are already helping redress such problems…the nature of news thus tends to mislead readers and viewers into thinking that the world is in worse shape than it really is…most of us attend far more to bad rather than to good news.”
 
"A lot of what is most beautiful about the world arises from struggle." ~ Malcolm Gladwell
 
On the community front, there were wins for Indigenous groups, too.
 
Indigenous people continued to face persecution in many parts of the world in 2021, but there were some signs of progress.
 
Canada and Australia pledged to pay reparations to Indigenous children who had been forcibly removed from their parents as children. Of course, the reparations won’t make up for what happened, but they mark a shift in tone.
 
Elsewhere, Indigenous politicians rose to prominent leadership roles. For example, Canada appointed its first indigenous governor-general (Mary Simon); and New Zealand (Dame Cindy Kiro). And Deb Haaland became the first indigenous US cabinet secretary.
 

Keep HOPE alive.

"Hope is sweet. Hope is illumining. Hope is fulfilling. Hope can be everlasting. Therefore, do not give up hope, even in the sunset of your life." ~ Sri Chinmoy 
 
Music I Enjoyed This Week:
 
Jazz: Sample Listen Here Street of Dreams by The Bill Charlap Trio
 
 
Classical: Sample Listen Here Paris by Hilary Hahn
 
Amazing Video...
 
I wish you a wonderful and safe weekend.
 
With love from Prince Edward Island,
 
Bruce + Millie
 
ps. Your Morning Smile.
 
My three-year-old son, Jack, was as excited as he could be to visit his grandma and grandpa in Florida, especially since it meant taking his first trip on an airplane.
 
We'd just boarded and got buckled in when Jack looked around the plane and frowned. "What is it?" I asked, wondering if he was nervous.
 
He then asked me, a bit worried, "Are ALL these people going to Grandma's house too?"
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Comments

Lynn - January 9, 2022

Happy New Year to you and your staff and your readers!

Thanks for this uplifting blog. It’s about time we heard some good news. Those of us in chilly Alberta, with -30C seeming every day, with wind yet, are sure wishing we all had a grandma in Florida we could visit!

Have a great weekend!
Lynn

Angela - January 8, 2022

Thank you for this article……..you made my day.

Janice - January 8, 2022

Thank you for this positive blog. Much needed and appreciated. Happy New Year!

althea - January 8, 2022

Hallo Allan Parker – did no one tell you Bruce graduated from Joke School kindergarten to primary school last autumn? (impish naughtiness is not cancelled.)

murdock morrison - January 8, 2022

What a great blog Bruce as the Global trends you outlined are those we should print off and put in a special place as a reminder of how the world is changing. Your review of renewables vs fossil fuel is really encouraging and this is a trend that we need to follow all of the time. Dewey’s quote struck me as so meaningful when we think of the former president of the US and how he almost destroyed democracy. Thanks – Murdock

Cathy Hammond - January 8, 2022

Such a wonderful positive blog. It sure made me feel good. Thank you.

suzanne - January 8, 2022

What a WONDERFUL positive note to start the New Year

Molly Devlin - January 8, 2022

Thank you for this blog. Reading it was an amazing way to begin the day as it seems sometimes that nothing is getting better, that there is no progress dealing with world problems. There surely is and I need to be reminded to have faith and hope.
There are many, many of very good folks out there doing such good work.

Allison - January 8, 2022

Thanks for the reminder that it’s not the situation we are in that affects us…it’s how we react to the situation. Maintaining a positive, forward thinking outlook along with a nutritious diet ( a little jam doesn’t hurt!) outdoor exercise, good music, some food for thought by way of excellent books, podcasts, movies etc and being kind to others. This is what helps to support our immune systems ( yes, we still need to get those jabs in!) It’s a lot more challenging these days then it looks. Oh yeah less screen time and going down the bad news rabbit hole…
Happy New Year!

Allison - January 8, 2022

Thanks for the reminder that it’s not the situation we are in that affects us…it’s how we react to the situation. Maintaining a positive, forward thinking outlook along with a nutritious diet ( a little jam doesn’t hurt!) outdoor exercise, good music, some food for thought by way of excellent books, podcasts, movies etc and being kind to others. This is what helps to support our immune systems ( yes, we still need to get those jabs in!) It’s a lot more challenging these days then it looks. Oh yeah less screen time and going down the bad news rabbit hole…
Happy New Year!

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