Arquivo anual: 2012

Piauí: chantagem eleitoral para entregar água (Outras Mídias)

30 DE AGOSTO DE 2012

Chefes políticos aproveitam-se da seca e condicionam chegada de caminhões-pipa a eleição de seus candidatos

Por Tânia Martins, no Piauí Sempre Verde

[Título original: “No interior do Piauí só tem água quem vota no político que está no poder”]

Neste momento em que cerca de um milhão de pessoas do semiárido do Piauí, estão atravessando uma das mais longas secas já vista por essas bandas, denúncias apontam que políticos das regiões atingidas estão aproveitando a dor das famílias para se beneficiarem através da troca de água por voto. Os exemplos são muitos e ocorrem desde a área da Chapada do Araripe, próximo a divisa com o Ceará, na região de Picos e de São Raimundo Nonato, no Sudeste do Estado.

No município de Simões, a 470 quilometros de Teresina as entidades Cáritas Brasileira e Movimento dos Pequenos Agricultores do Estado-MPA. Garantem que cabos eleitorais conseguem manipular a distribuição da água, entregando a metade do tanque do carro-pipa deixando a outra metade para distribuir em troca de voto ou vendendo a preços exorbitantes.

As denúncias assim também ocorrem no Sul e Sudeste, onde milhares de famílias estão sem água a pelos menos dez meses. Segundo o coordenador da Cárita no Piauí, Carlos Humberto, na zona rural dos municípios da região de São Raimundo Nonato, trabalhadores rurais denunciaram que famílias que não apoiam políticos que estão no comando, ficam sem água. Segundo ele, embora o sertanejo tema denunciar os chefes políticos, alguns relataram o crime para o Correio Brasiliense, que esteve na região e publicou a denúncia. “A publicação da reportagem foi o que motivou a Cárita lançar a campanha “Não Toque Seu Voto Por Água”, em todo o semiárido nordestino.

Carlos Humberto lembra que o Comitê Estadual de Combate a Seca não tem representantes da sociedade civil, apenas instituições governamentais. Já Afonso Galvão, representante do MPA sustenta que a troca de voto por água está ocorrendo na região de Picos, porém, os trabalhadores preferem não denunciar pois temem não receberem o pouco de água que têm direito. “Existem comunidades que ficam distantes da água mais de 30 quilometros, se não for o carro-pipa, elas morrem de sede, como vem acontecendo com os animais., essas pessoas nunca que vão querer denunciar os políticos”, diz.

Ele conta que o Exército tem conhecimento da troca e venda, porém, como vem ocorrendo em muitos municípios não tem como dar conta. Já na Seção Operação Pipa no 25° Batalhão, em Teresina, a informação é que o controle de distribuição é rigoroso. Segundo um dos militares envolvido no trabalho, o comandante responsável, coronel Humberto Silva Marques, encontra-se em viagem para as regiões, apurando denúncias como as relatadas nas áreas atingidas.

Ele adianta que nos 70 municípios onde o Exercíto atua no Piauí, chefes políticos não têm acesso a fichas que dão direito a água sendo as mesmas entregues direto em mãos dos beneficiários. Na região de Simões e Socorro do Piauí, que, segunda as entidades estão vendendo água do carro-pipa por R$ 250, o trabalho é coordenado pelo o Batalhão de Cratéus-CE e que vai passar para o controle do 25° em data posterior. Os demais municípios, mais de 80, ficam sob a responsabilidade da Defesa Civil do Estado.

A Defesa da Defesa Civil também nega que esteja havendo manipulação da água. Segundo o Diretor de Unidade da Defesa Civil do Estado, Jerry Hebert, a instituição é dotada de dez fiscais que estão regularmente em campo fiscalizando a operação e até o momento não há registro de desvio de água por políticos. “Sabemos que não existe sistema seguro totalmente, mas, na medida do possível estamos trabalhando para evitar que ocorra”, assegura e diz que as Comissões da Defesa Civil dos Municípios, também fiscalizam a distribuição.
Lançamento da Campanha

No próximo dia 5, a Articulação no Semi-Árido (ASA) vai lançar a campanha Não Troque Seu Voto por Água. O objetivo é alertar, fiscalizar e denunciar os abusos no uso eleitoreiro da água, conforme denúncias de trabalhadores rurais. O evento será na Praça Rio Branco, na oportunidade será lançado também o Grito dos Excluídos.

Tânia Martins é Jornalista Ambiental

Climate Science as Culture War (Stanford Social Innovation Review)

ENVIRONMENT

The public debate around climate change is no longer about science—it’s about values, culture, and ideology.

By Andrew J. Hoffman | 18 | Fall 2012

earth_first_members_environmentSouth Florida Earth First members protest outside the Platts Coal Properties and Investment Conference in West Palm Beach. (Photo by Bruce R. Bennett/Zum Press/Newscom)

In May 2009, a development officer at the University of Michigan asked me to meet with a potential donor—a former football player and now successful businessman who had an interest in environmental issues and business, my interdisciplinary area of expertise. The meeting began at 7 a.m., and while I was still nursing my first cup of coffee, the potential donor began the conversation with “I think the scientific review process is corrupt.” I asked what he thought of a university based on that system, and he said that he thought that the university was then corrupt, too. He went on to describe the science of climate change as a hoax, using all the familiar lines of attack—sunspots and solar flares, the unscientific and politically flawed consensus model, and the environmental benefits of carbon dioxide.

As we debated each point, he turned his attack on me, asking why I hated capitalism and why I wanted to destroy the economy by teaching environmental issues in a business school. Eventually, he asked if I knew why Earth Day was on April 22. I sighed as he explained, “Because it is Karl Marx’s birthday.” (I suspect he meant to say Vladimir Lenin, whose birthday is April 22, also Earth Day. This linkage has been made by some on the far right who believe that Earth Day is a communist plot, even though Lenin never promoted environmentalism and communism does not have a strong environmental legacy.)

I turned to the development officer and asked, “What’s our agenda here this morning?” The donor interrupted to say that he wanted to buy me a ticket to the Heartland Institute’s Fourth Annual Conference on Climate Change, the leading climate skeptics conference. I checked my calendar and, citing prior commitments, politely declined. The meeting soon ended.

I spent the morning trying to make sense of the encounter. At first, all I could see was a bait and switch; the donor had no interest in funding research in business and the environment, but instead wanted to criticize the effort. I dismissed him as an irrational zealot, but the meeting lingered in my mind. The more I thought about it, the more I began to see that he was speaking from a coherent and consistent worldview—one I did not agree with, but which was a coherent viewpoint nonetheless. Plus, he had come to evangelize me. The more I thought about it, the more I became eager to learn about where he was coming from, where I was coming from, and why our two worldviews clashed so strongly in the present social debate over climate science. Ironically, in his desire to challenge my research, he stimulated a new research stream, one that fit perfectly with my broader research agenda on social, institutional, and cultural change.

Scientific vs. Social Consensus

Today, there is no doubt that a scientific consensus exists on the issue of climate change. Scientists have documented that anthropogenic sources of greenhouse gases are leading to a buildup in the atmosphere, which leads to a general warming of the global climate and an alteration in the statistical distribution of localized weather patterns over long periods of time. This assessment is endorsed by a large body of scientific agencies—including every one of the national scientific agencies of the G8 + 5 countries—and by the vast majority of climatologists. The majority of research articles published in refereed scientific journals also support this scientific assessment. Both the US National Academy of Sciences and the American Association for the Advancement of Science use the word “consensus” when describing the state of climate science.

And yet a social consensus on climate change does not exist. Surveys show that the American public’s belief in the science of climate change has mostly declined over the past five years, with large percentages of the population remaining skeptical of the science. Belief declined from 71 percent to 57 percent between April 2008 and October 2009, according to an October 2009 Pew Research Center poll; more recently, belief rose to 62 percent, according to a February 2012 report by the National Survey of American Public Opinion on Climate Change. Such a significant number of dissenters tells us that we do not have a set of socially accepted beliefs on climate change—beliefs that emerge, not from individual preferences, but from societal norms; beliefs that represent those on the political left, right, and center as well as those whose cultural identifications are urban, rural, religious, agnostic, young, old, ethnic, or racial.

Why is this so? Why do such large numbers of Americans reject the consensus of the scientific community? With upwards of two-thirds of Americans not clearly understanding science or the scientific process and fewer able to pass even a basic scientific literacy test, according to a 2009 California Academy of Sciences survey, we are left to wonder: How do people interpret and validate the opinions of the scientific community? The answers to this question can be found, not from the physical sciences, but from the social science disciplines of psychology, sociology, anthropology, and others.

To understand the processes by which a social consensus can emerge on climate change, we must understand that people’s opinions on this and other complex scientific issues are based on their prior ideological preferences, personal experience, and values—all of which are heavily influenced by their referent groups and their individual psychology. Physical scientists may set the parameters for understanding the technical aspects of the climate debate, but they do not have the final word on whether society accepts or even understands their conclusions. The constituency that is relevant in the social debate goes beyond scientific experts. And the processes by which this constituency understands and assesses the science of climate change go far beyond its technical merits. We must acknowledge that the debate over climate change, like almost all environmental issues, is a debate over culture, worldviews, and ideology.

This fact can be seen most vividly in the growing partisan divide over the issue. Political affiliation is one of the strongest correlates with individual uncertainty about climate change, not scientific knowledge.1 The percentage of conservatives and Republicans who believe that the effects of global warming have already begun declined from roughly 50 percent in 2001 to about 30 percent in 2010, while the corresponding percentage for liberals and Democrats increased from roughly 60 percent in 2001 to about 70 percent in 2010.2 (See “The Growing Partisan Divide over Climate Change,” below.)

 

Climate change has become enmeshed in the so-called culture wars. Acceptance of the scientific consensus is now seen as an alignment with liberal views consistent with other “cultural” issues that divide the country (abortion, gun control, health care, and evolution). This partisan divide on climate change was not the case in the 1990s. It is a recent phenomenon, following in the wake of the 1997 Kyoto Treaty that threatened the material interests of powerful economic and political interests, particularly members of the fossil fuel industry.3 The great danger of a protracted partisan divide is that the debate will take the form of what I call a “logic schism,” a breakdown in debate in which opposing sides are talking about completely different cultural issues.4

This article seeks to delve into the climate change debate through the lens of the social sciences. I take this approach not because the physical sciences have become less relevant, but because we need to understand the social and psychological processes by which people receive and understand the science of global warming. I explain the cultural dimensions of the climate debate as it is currently configured, outline three possible paths by which the debate can progress, and describe specific techniques that can drive that debate toward broader consensus. This goal is imperative, for without a broader consensus on climate change in the United States, Americans and people around the globe will be unable to formulate effective social, political, and economic solutions to the changing circumstances of our planet.

Cultural Processing of Climate Science

When analyzing complex scientific information, people are “boundedly rational,” to use Nobel Memorial Prize economist Herbert Simon’s phrase; we are “cognitive misers,” according to UCLA psychologist Susan Fiske and Princeton University psychologist Shelley Taylor, with limited cognitive ability to fully investigate every issue we face. People everywhere employ ideological filters that reflect their identity, worldview, and belief systems. These filters are strongly influenced by group values, and we generally endorse the position that most directly reinforces the connection we have with others in our referent group—what Yale Law School professor Dan Kahan refers to as “cultural cognition.” In so doing, we cement our connection with our cultural groups and strengthen our definition of self. This tendency is driven by an innate desire to maintain a consistency in beliefs by giving greater weight to evidence and arguments that support preexisting beliefs, and by expending disproportionate energy trying to refute views or arguments that are contrary to those beliefs. Instead of investigating a complex issue, we often simply learn what our referent group believes and seek to integrate those beliefs with our own views.

Over time, these ideological filters become increasingly stable and resistant to change through multiple reinforcing mechanisms. First, we’ll consider evidence when it is accepted or, ideally, presented by a knowledgeable source from our cultural community; and we’ll dismiss information that is advocated by sources that represent groups whose values we reject. Second, we will selectively choose information sources that support our ideological position. For example, frequent viewers of Fox News are more likely to say that the Earth’s temperature has not been rising, that any temperature increase is not due to human activities, and that addressing climate change would have deleterious effects on the economy.5 One might expect the converse to be true of National Public Radio listeners. The result of this cultural processing and group cohesion dynamics leads to two overriding conclusions about the climate change debate.

First, climate change is not a “pollution” issue. Although the US Supreme Court decided in 2007 that greenhouse gases were legally an air pollutant, in a cultural sense, they are something far different. The reduction of greenhouse gases is not the same as the reduction of sulfur oxides, nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, or particulates. These forms of pollution are man-made, they are harmful, and they are the unintended waste products of industrial production. Ideally, we would like to eliminate their production through the mobilization of economic and technical resources. But the chief greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide, is both man-made and natural. It is not inherently harmful; it is a natural part of the natural systems; and we do not desire to eliminate its production. It is not a toxic waste or a strictly technical problem to be solved. Rather, it is an endemic part of our society and who we are. To a large degree, it is a highly desirable output, as it correlates with our standard of living. Greenhouse gas emissions rise with a rise in a nation’s wealth, something all people want. To reduce carbon dioxide requires an alteration in nearly every facet of the economy, and therefore nearly every facet of our culture. To recognize greenhouse gases as a problem requires us to change a great deal about how we view the world and ourselves within it. And that leads to the second distinction.

Climate change is an existential challenge to our contemporary worldviews. The cultural challenge of climate change is enormous and threefold, each facet leading to the next. The first facet is that we have to think of a formerly benign, even beneficial, material in a new way—as a relative, not absolute, hazard. Only in an imbalanced concentration does it become problematic. But to understand and accept this, we need to conceive of the global ecosystem in a new way.

This challenge leads us to the second facet: Not only do we have to change our view of the ecosystem, but we also have to change our view of our place within it. Have we as a species grown to such numbers, and has our technology grown to such power, that we can alter and manage the ecosystem on a planetary scale? This is an enormous cultural question that alters our worldviews. As a result, some see the question and subsequent answer as intellectual and spiritual hubris, but others see it as self-evident.

If we answer this question in the affirmative, the third facet challenges us to consider new and perhaps unprecedented forms of global ethics and governance to address it. Climate change is the ultimate “commons problem,” as ecologist Garrett Hardin defined it, where every individual has an incentive to emit greenhouse gases to improve her standard of living, but the costs of this activity are borne by all. Unfortunately, the distribution of costs in this global issue is asymmetrical, with vulnerable populations in poor countries bearing the larger burden. So we need to rethink our ethics to keep pace with our technological abilities. Does mowing the lawn or driving a fuel-inefficient car in Ann Arbor, Mich., have ethical implications for the people living in low-lying areas of Bangladesh? If you accept anthropogenic climate change, then the answer to this question is yes, and we must develop global institutions to reflect that recognition. This is an issue of global ethics and governance on a scale that we have never seen, affecting virtually every economic activity on the globe and requiring the most complicated and intrusive global agreement ever negotiated.

Taken together, these three facets of our existential challenge illustrate the magnitude of the cultural debate that climate change provokes. Climate change challenges us to examine previously unexamined beliefs and worldviews. It acts as a flash point (albeit a massive one) for deeper cultural and ideological conflicts that lie at the root of many of our environmental problems, and it includes differing conceptions of science, economics, religion, psychology, media, development, and governance. It is a proxy for “deeper conflicts over alternative visions of the future and competing centers of authority in society,” as University of East Anglia climatologist Mike Hulme underscores in Why We Disagree About Climate Change. And, as such, it provokes a violent debate among cultural communities on one side who perceive their values to be threatened by change, and cultural communities on the other side who perceive their values to be threatened by the status quo.

Three Ways Forward

If the public debate over climate change is no longer about greenhouse gases and climate models, but about values, worldviews, and ideology, what form will this clash of ideologies take? I see three possible forms.

The Optimistic Form is where people do not have to change their values at all. In other words, the easiest way to eliminate the common problems of climate change is to develop technological solutions that do not require major alterations to our values, worldviews, or behavior: carbon-free renewable energy, carbon capture and sequestration technologies, geo-engineering, and others. Some see this as an unrealistic future. Others see it as the only way forward, because people become attached to their level of prosperity, feel entitled to keep it, and will not accept restraints or support government efforts to impose restraints.6Government-led investment in alternative energy sources, therefore, becomes more acceptable than the enactment of regulations and taxes to reduce fossil fuel use.

The Pessimistic Form is where people fight to protect their values. This most dire outcome results in a logic schism, where opposing sides debate different issues, seek only information that supports their position and disconfirms the others’, and even go so far as to demonize the other. University of Colorado, Boulder, environmental scientist Roger Pielke in The Honest Broker: Making Sense of Science in Policy and Politics describes the extreme of such schisms as “abortion politics,” where the two sides are debating completely different issues and “no amount of scientific information … can reconcile the different values.” Consider, for example, the recent decision by the Heartland Institute to post a billboard in Chicago comparing those who believe in climate change with the Unabomber. In reply, climate activist groups posted billboards attacking Heartland and its financial supporters. This attack-counterattack strategy is symptomatic of a broken public discourse over climate change.

The Consensus-Based Form involves a reasoned societal debate, focused on the full scope of technical and social dimensions of the problem and the feasibility and desirability of multiple solutions. It is this form to which scientists have the most to offer, playing the role of what Pielke calls the “honest broker”—a person who can “integrate scientific knowledge with stakeholder concerns to explore alternative possible courses of action.” Here, resolution is found through a focus on its underlying elements, moving away from positions (for example, climate change is or is not happening), and toward the underlying interests and values at play. How do we get there? Research in negotiation and dispute resolution can offer techniques for moving forward.

Techniques for a Consensus-Based Discussion

In seeking a social consensus on climate change, discussion must move beyond a strict focus on the technical aspects of the science to include its cultural underpinnings. Below are eight techniques for overcoming the ideological filters that underpin the social debate about climate change.

Know your audience | Any message on climate change must be framed in a way that fits with the cultural norms of the target audience. The 2011 study Climate Change in the American Mind segments the American public into six groups based on their views on climate change science. (See “Six Americas,” below.) On the two extremes are the climate change “alarmed” and “dismissive.” Consensus-based discussion is not likely open to these groups, as they are already employing logic schism tactics that are closed to debate or engagement. The polarity of these groups is well known: On the one side, climate change is a hoax, humans have no impact on the climate, and nothing is happening; on the other side, climate change is an imminent crisis that will devastate the Earth, and human activity explains all climate changes.

climate_change_chart_six_americas 

The challenge is to move the debate away from the loud minorities at the extremes and to engage the majority in the middle—the “concerned,” the “cautious,” the “disengaged,” and the “doubtful.” People in these groups are more open to consensus-based debate, and through direct engagement can be separated from the ideological extremes of their cultural community.

Ask the right scientific questions | For a consensus-based discussion, climate change science should be presented not as a binary yes or no question,7 but as a series of six questions. Some are scientific in nature, with associated levels of uncertainty and probability; others are matters of scientific judgment.

  • Are greenhouse gas concentrations increasing in the atmosphere? Yes. This is a scientific question, based on rigorous data and measurements of atmospheric chemistry and science.
  • Does this increase lead to a general warming of the planet? Yes. This is also a scientific question; the chemical mechanics of the greenhouse effect and “negative radiative forcing” are well established.
  • Has climate changed over the past century? Yes. Global temperature increases have been rigorously measured through multiple techniques and strongly supported by multiple scientific analyses.In fact, as Yale University economist William Nordhaus wrote in the March 12, 2012, New York Times, “The finding that global temperatures are rising over the last century-plus is one of the most robust findings in climate science and statistics.”
  • Are humans partially responsible for this increase? The answer to this question is a matter of scientific judgment. Increases in global mean temperatures have a very strong correlation with increases in man-made greenhouse gases since the Industrial Revolution. Although science cannot confirm causation, fingerprint analysis of multiple possible causes has been examined, and the only plausible explanation is that of human-induced temperature changes. Until a plausible alternative hypothesis is presented, this explanation prevails for the scientific community.
  • Will the climate continue to change over the next century? Again, this question is a matter of scientific judgment. But given the answers to the previous four questions, it is reasonable to believe that continued increases in greenhouse gases will lead to continued changes in the climate.
  • What will be the environmental and social impact of such change? This is the scientific question with the greatest uncertainty. The answer comprises a bell curve of possible outcomes and varying associated probabilities, from low to extreme impact. Uncertainty in this variation is due to limited current data on the Earth’s climate system, imperfect modeling of these physical processes, and the unpredictability of human actions that can both exasperate or moderate the climate shifts. These uncertainties make predictions difficult and are an area in which much debate can take place. And yet the physical impacts of climate change are already becoming visible in ways that are consistent with scientific modeling, particularly in Greenland, the Arctic, the Antarctic, and low-lying islands.

In asking these questions, a central consideration is whether people recognize the level of scientific consensus associated with each one. In fact, studies have shown that people’s support for climate policies and action are linked to their perceptions about scientific agreement. Still, the belief that “most scientists think global warming is happening” declined from 47 percent to 39 percent among Americans between 2008 and 2011.8

Move beyond data and models | Climate skepticism is not a knowledge deficit issue. Michigan State University sociologist Aaron McCright and Oklahoma State University sociologist Riley Dunlap have observed that increased education and self-reported understanding of climate science have been shown to correlate with lower concern among conservatives and Republicans and greater concern among liberals and Democrats. Research also has found that once people have made up their minds on the science of the climate issue, providing continued scientific evidence actually makes them more resolute in resisting conclusions that are at variance with their cultural beliefs.9 One needs to recognize that reasoning is suffused with emotion and people often use reasoning to reach a predetermined end that fits their cultural worldviews. When people hear about climate change, they may, for example, hear an implicit criticism that their lifestyle is the cause of the issue or that they are morally deficient for not recognizing it. But emotion can be a useful ally; it can create the abiding commitments needed to sustain action on the difficult issue of climate change. To do this, people must be convinced that something can be done to address it; that the challenge is not too great nor are its impacts preordained. The key to engaging people in a consensus-driven debate about climate change is to confront the emotionality of the issue and then address the deeper ideological values that may be threatened to create this emotionality.

Focus on broker frames | People interpret information by fitting it to preexisting narratives or issue categories that mesh with their worldview. Therefore information must be presented in a form that fits those templates, using carefully researched metaphors, allusions, and examples that trigger a new way of thinking about the personal relevance of climate change. To be effective, climate communicators must use the language of the cultural community they are engaging. For a business audience, for example, one must use business terminology, such as net present value, return on investment, increased consumer demand, and rising raw material costs.

More generally, one can seek possible broker frames that move away from a pessimistic appeal to fear and instead focus on optimistic appeals that trigger the emotionality of a desired future. In addressing climate change, we are asking who we strive to be as a people, and what kind of world we want to leave our children. To gain buy-in, one can stress American know-how and our capacity to innovate, focusing on activities already under way by cities, citizens, and businesses.10

This approach frames climate change mitigation as a gain rather than a loss to specific cultural groups. Research has shown that climate skepticism can be caused by a motivational tendency to defend the status quo based on the prior assumption that any change will be painful. But by encouraging people to regard pro-environmental change as patriotic and consistent with protecting the status quo, it can be framed as a continuation rather than a departure from the past.

Specific broker frames can be used that engage the interests of both sides of the debate. For example, when US Secretary of Energy Steven Chu referred in November 2010 to advances in renewable energy technology in China as the United States’ “Sputnik moment,” he was framing climate change as a common threat to US scientific and economic competitiveness. When Pope Benedict XVI linked the threat of climate change with threats to life and dignity on New Year’s Day 2010, he was painting it as an issue of religious morality. When CNA’s Military Advisory Board, a group of elite retired US military officers, called climate change a “threat multiplier” in its 2006 report, it was using a national security frame. When the Lancet Commission pronounced climate change to be the biggest global health threat of the 21st century in a 2009 article, the organization was using a quality of life frame. And when the Center for American Progress, a progressive Washington, D.C., think tank, connected climate change to the conservation ideals of Presidents Theodore Roosevelt and Richard Nixon, they were framing the issue as consistent with Republican values.

One broker frame that deserves particular attention is the replacement of uncertainty or probability of climate change with the risk of climate change.11 People understand low probability, high consequence events and the need to address them. For example, they buy fire insurance for their homes even though the probability of a fire is low, because they understand that the financial consequence is too great. In the same way, climate change for some may be perceived as a low risk, high consequence event, so the prudent course of action is to obtain insurance in the form of both behavioral and technological change.

Recognize the power of language and terminology | Words have multiple meanings in different communities, and terms can trigger unintended reactions in a target audience. For example, one study has shown that Republicans were less likely to think that the phenomenon is real when it is referred to as “global warming” (44 percent) rather than “climate change” (60 percent), but Democrats were unaffected by the term (87 percent vs. 86 percent). So language matters: The partisan divide dropped from 43 percent under a “global warming” frame to 26 percent under a “climate change” frame.12

Other terms with multiple meanings include “climate denier,” which some use to refer to those who are not open to discussion on the issue, and others see as a thinly veiled and highly insulting reference to “Holocaust denier”; “uncertainty,” which is a scientific concept to convey variance or deviation from a specific value, but is interpreted by a lay audience to mean that scientists do not know the answer; and “consensus,” which is the process by which the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) forms its position, but leads some in the public to believe that climate science is a matter of “opinion” rather than data and modeling.

Overall, the challenge becomes one of framing complex scientific issues in a language that a lay and highly politicized audience can hear. This becomes increasingly challenging when we address some inherently nonintuitive and complex aspects of climate modeling that are hard to explain, such as the importance of feedback loops, time delays, accumulations, and nonlinearities in dynamic systems.13 Unless scientists can accurately convey the nature of climate modeling, others in the social debate will alter their claims to fit their cultural or cognitive perceptions or satisfy their political interests.

Employ climate brokers | People are more likely to feel open to consider evidence when a recognized member of their cultural community presents it.14 Certainly, statements by former Vice President Al Gore and Sen. James Inhofe evoke visceral responses from individuals on either side of the partisan divide. But individuals with credibility on both sides of the debate can act as what I call climate brokers. Because a majority of Republicans do not believe the science of climate change, whereas a majority of Democrats do, the most effective broker would come from the political right. Climate brokers can include representatives from business, the religious community, the entertainment industry, the military, talk show hosts, and politicians who can frame climate change in language that will engage the audience to whom they most directly connect. When people hear about the need to address climate change from their church, synagogue, mosque, or temple, for example, they w ill connect the issue to their moral values. When they hear it from their business leaders and investment managers, they will connect it to their economic interests. And when they hear it from their military leaders, they will connect it to their interest in a safe and secure nation.

Recognize multiple referent groups | The presentation of information can be designed in a fashion that recognizes that individuals are members of multiple referent groups. The underlying frames employed in one cultural community may be at variance with the values dominant within the communities engaged in climate change debate. For example, although some may reject the science of climate change by perceiving the scientific review process to be corrupt as part of one cultural community, they also may recognize the legitimacy of the scientific process as members of other cultural communities (such as users of the modern health care system). Although someone may see the costs of fossil fuel reductions as too great and potentially damaging to the economy as members of one community, they also may see the value in reducing dependence on foreign oil as members of another community who value strong national defense. This frame incongruence emerged in the 2011 US Republican primary as candidate Jon Huntsman warned that Republicans risk becoming the “antiscience party” if they continue to reject the science on climate change. What Huntsman alluded to is that most Americans actually do trust the scientific process, even if they don’t fully understand it. (A 2004 National Science Foundation report found that two thirds of Americans do not clearly understand the scientific process.)

Employ events as leverage for change | Studies have found that most Americans believe that climate change will affect geographically and temporally distant people and places. But studies also have shown that people are more likely to believe in the science when they have an experience with extreme weather phenomena. This has led climate communicators to link climate change to major events, such as Hurricane Katrina, or to more recent floods in the American Midwest and Asia, as well as to droughts in Texas and Africa, to hurricanes along the East Coast and Gulf of Mexico, and to snowstorms in Western states and New England. The cumulative body of weather evidence, reported by media outlets and linked to climate change, will increase the number of people who are concerned about the issue, see it as less uncertain, and feel more confident that we must take actions to mitigate its effects. For example, in explaining the recent increase in belief in climate change among Americans, the 2012 National Survey of American Public Opinion on Climate Change noted that “about half of Americans now point to observations of temperature changes and weather as the main reasons they believe global warming is taking place.”15

Ending Climate Science Wars

Will we see a social consensus on climate change? If beliefs about the existence of global warming are becoming more ideologically entrenched and gaps between conservatives and liberals are widening, the solution space for resolving the issue will collapse and the debate will be based on power and coercion. In such a scenario, domination by the science-based forces looks less likely than domination by the forces of skepticism, because the former has to “prove” its case while the latter merely needs to cast doubt. But such a polarized outcome is not a predetermined outcome. And if it were to form, it can be reversed.

Is there a reason to be hopeful? When looking for reasons to be hopeful about a social consensus on climate change, I look to public opinion changes around cigarette smoking and cancer. For years, the scientific community recognized that the preponderance of epidemiological and mechanistic data pointed to a link between the habit and the disease. And for years, the public rejected that conclusion. But through a process of political, economic, social, and legal debate over values and beliefs, a social consensus emerged. The general public now accepts that cigarettes cause cancer and governments have set policy to address this. Interestingly, two powerful forces that many see as obstacles to a comparable social consensus on climate change were overcome in the cigarette debate.

The first obstacle is the powerful lobby of industrial forces that can resist a social and political consensus. In the case of the cigarette debate, powerful economic interests mounted a campaign to obfuscate the scientific evidence and to block a social and political consensus. Tobacco companies created their own pro-tobacco science, but eventually the public health community overcame pro-tobacco scientists.

The second obstacle to convincing a skeptical public is the lack of a definitive statement by the scientific community about the future implications of climate change. The 2007 IPCC report states that “Human activities … are modifying the concentration of atmospheric constituents … that absorb or scatter radiant energy. … [M]ost of the observed warming over the last 50 years is very likely to have been due to the increase in greenhouse gas emissions.” Some point to the word “likely” to argue that scientists still don’t know and action in unwarranted. But science is not designed to provide a definitive smoking gun. Remember that the 1964 surgeon general’s report about the dangers of smoking was equally conditional. And even today, we cannot state with scientific certainty that smoking causes lung cancer. Like the global climate, the human body is too complex a system for absolute certainty. We can explain epidemiologically why a person could get cancer from cigarette smoking and statistically how that person will likely get cancer, but, as the surgeon general report explains, “statistical methods cannot establish proof of a causal relationship in an association [between cigarette smoking and lung cancer]. The causal significance of an association is a matter of judgment, which goes beyond any statement of statistical probability.” Yet the general public now accepts this causal linkage.

What will get us there? Although climate brokers are needed from all areas of society—from business, religion, military, and politics—one field in particular needs to become more engaged: the academic scientist and particularly the social scientist. Too much of the debate is dominated by the physical sciences in defining the problem and by economics in defining the solutions. Both fields focus heavily on the rational and quantitative treatments of the issue and fail to capture the behavioral and cultural aspects that explain why people accept or reject scientific evidence, analysis, and conclusions. But science is never socially or politically inert, and scientists have a duty to recognize its effect on society and to communicate that effect to society. Social scientists can help in this endeavor.

But the relative absence of the social sciences in the climate debate is driven by specific structural and institutional controls that channel research work away from empirical relevance. Social scientists limit involvement in such “outside” activities, because the underlying norms of what is considered legitimate and valuable research, as well as the overt incentives and reward structures within the academy, lead away from such endeavors. Tenure and promotion are based primarily on the publication of top-tier academic journal articles. This is the signal of merit and success. Any effort on any other endeavor is decidedly discouraged.

The role of the public intellectual has become an arcane and elusive option in today’s social sciences. Moreover, it is a difficult role to play. The academic rules are not clear and the public backlash can be uncomfortable; many of my colleagues and I are regular recipients of hostile e-mail messages and web-based attacks. But the lack of academic scientists in the public debate harms society by leaving out critical voices for informing and resolving the climate debate. There are signs, however, that this model of scholarly isolation is changing. Some leaders within the field have begun to call for more engagement within the public arena as a way to invigorate the discipline and underscore its investment in the defense of civil society. As members of society, all scientists have a responsibility to bring their expertise to the decision-making process. It is time for social scientists to accept this responsibility.

Notes

1 Wouter Poortinga et al., “Uncertain Climate: An Investigation into Public Skepticism
About Anthropogenic Climate Change
,” Global Environmental Change, August 2011.
2 Aaron McCright and Riley Dunlap, “The Politicization of Climate Change and Polarization
in the American Public’s Views of Global Warming, 2001-2010
,” The Sociological
Quarterly
 52, 2011.
3 Clive Hamilton, “Why We Resist the Truth About Climate Change,” paper presented
to the Climate Controversies: Science and Politics conference, Brussels, Oct. 28, 2010.
4 Andrew Hoffman, “Talking Past Each Other? Cultural Framing of Skeptical and Convinced
Logics in the Climate Change Debate
,” Organization & Environment 24(1), 2011.
5 Jon Krosnick and Bo MacInnis, “Frequent Viewers of Fox News Are Less Likely to
Accept Scientists’ Views of Global Warming
,” Woods Institute for the Environment,
Stanford University, 2010.
6 Jeffrey Rachlinski, “The Psychology of Global Climate Change,” University of Illinois
Law Review
 1, 2000.
7 Max Boykoff, “The Real Swindle,” Nature Climate Change, February 2008.
8 Ding Ding et al., “Support for Climate Policy and Societal Action Are Linked to Perceptions
About Scientific Agreement
,” Nature Climate Change 1, 2011.
9 Matthew Feinberg and Robb Willer, “Apocalypse Soon? Dire Messages Reduce Belief in
Global Warming by Contradicting Just-World Beliefs
,” Psychological Science 22(1), 2011.
10 Thomas Vargish, “Why the Person Sitting Next to You Hates Limits to Growth,”
Technological Forecasting and Social Change 16, 1980.
11 Nick Mabey, Jay Gulledge, Bernard Finel, and Katherine Silverthorne, Degrees of Risk:
Defining a Risk Management Framework for Climate Security
, Third Generation Environmentalism,
2011.
12 Jonathan Schuldt, Sara H. Konrath, and Norbert Schwarz, “‘Global Warming’ or
‘Climate Change’? Whether the Planet Is Warming Depends on Question Wording
,”
Public Opinion Quarterly 75(1), 2011.
13 John Sterman, “Communicating Climate Change Risks in a Skeptical World,” Climatic
Change
, 2011.
14 Dan Kahan, Hank Jenkins-Smith, and Donald Braman, “Cultural Cognition of Scientific
Consensus
,” Journal of Risk Research 14, 2010.
15 Christopher Borick and Barry Rabe, “Fall 2011 National Survey of American Public
Opinion on Climate Change
,” Brookings Institution, Issues in Governance Studies,
Report No. 45, Feb. 2012.

Language and China’s ‘Practical Creativity’ (N.Y.Times)

 

AUGUST 22, 2012

By DIDI KIRSTEN TATLOW

Every language presents challenges — English pronunciation can be idiosyncratic and Russian grammar is fairly complex, for example — but non-alphabetic writing systems like Chinese pose special challenges.

There is the well-known issue that Chinese characters don’t systematically map to sounds, making both learning and remembering difficult, a point I examine in my latest column. If you don’t know a character, you can’t even say it.

Nor does Chinese group individual characters into bigger “words,” even when a character is part of a compound, or multi-character, word. That makes meanings ambiguous, a rich source of humor for Chinese people.

Consider this example from Wu Wenchao, a former interpreter for the United Nations based in Hong Kong. On his blog he has a picture of mobile phones’ being held under a hand dryer. Huh?

The joke is that the Chinese word for hand dryer is composed of three characters, “hong shou ji” (I am using pinyin, a system of Romanization used in China, to “write” the characters in the English alphabet.)

Group them as “hongshou ji” and it means “hand dryer.” Group them as “hong shouji” and it means “dry the mobile phone.” (A shouji is a mobile phone.)

Good fodder for serious linguists and amateur language lovers alike. But does a character script also exert deeper effects on the mind?

William C. Hannas is one of the most provocative writers on this today. He believes character writing systems inhibit a type of deep creativity — but that its effects are not irreversible.

He is at pains to point out that his analysis is not race-based, that people raised in a character-based writing system have a different type of creativity, and that they may flourish when they enter a culture that supports deep creativity, like Western science laboratories.

Still, “The rote learning needed to master Chinese writing breeds a conformist attitude and a focus on means instead of ends. Process rules substance. You spend more time fidgeting with the script than thinking about content,” Mr. Hannas wrote to me in an e-mail.

But Mr. Hannas’s argument is indeed controversial — that learning Chinese lessens deep creativity by furthering practical, but not abstract, thinking, as he wrote in “The Writing on the Wall: How Asian Orthography Curbs Creativity,” published in 2003 and reviewed by The New York Times.

It’s a touchy topic that some academics reject outright and others acknowledge, but are reluctant to discuss, as Emily Eakin wrote in the review.

How does it work?

“Alphabets used in the West foster early skills in analysis and abstract thinking,” wrote Mr. Hannas, emphasizing the views were personal and not those of his employer, the U.S. government.

They do this by making readers do two things: breaking syllables into sound segments and clustering these segments into bigger, abstract, flexible sound units.

Chinese characters don’t do that. “The symbols map to syllables — natural concrete units. No analysis is needed and not much abstraction is involved,” Mr. Hannas wrote.

But radical, “type 2” creativity — deep creativity — depends on being able to match abstract patterns from one domain to another, essentially mapping the skills that alphabets nurture, he continued. “There is nothing comparable in the Sinitic tradition,” he wrote.

Will this inhibit China’s long-term development? Does it mean China won’t “take over the world,” as some are wondering? Not necessarily, Mr. Hannas said.

“You don’t need to be creative to succeed. Success goes to the early adapter and this is where China excels, for two reasons,” he wrote. First, Chinese are good at improving existing models, a different, more practical type of creativity, he wrote, adding that this practicality was noted by the British historian of Chinese science, Joseph Needham.

Yet there is a further step to this argument, and this is where Mr. Hannas’s ideas become explosive.

Partly as a result of these cultural constraints, China has built an “absolutely mind-boggling infrastructure” to get hold of cutting-edge foreign technology — by any means necessary, including large-scale, apparently government-backed, computer hacking, he wrote.

For more on that, see a hard-hitting Bloomberg report, “Hackers Linked to China’s Army seen from E.U to D.C.”

Non-Chinese R.&D. gets “outsourced” from its place of origin, “while China reaps the gain,” Mr. Hannas wrote, adding that many people believed this was “normal business practice.”

“In fact, it’s far from normal. The director of a U.S. intelligence agency has described China’s informal technology acquisition as ‘the greatest transfer of wealth in history,’ which I regard as a polite understatement,” he said.

Mr. Hannas has co-authored a book on this, to appear in the spring. It promises to shake things up. Watch this space.

Signs of divine intervention for Republicans? (Washington Post)

By , Published: August 21, 2012

Has God forsaken the Republican Party?

Well, sit in judgment of what’s happened in the past few days:

●A report comes out that a couple dozen House Republicans engaged in an alcohol-induced frolic, in one case nude, in the Sea of Galilee, where Jesus is believed to have walked on water, calmed the storm and, nearby, turned water into wine and performed the miracle of the loaves and fishes.

●Rep. Todd Akin, Missouri’s Republican nominee for Senate, suggests there is such a thing as “legitimate rape” and purports that women’s bodies have mysterious ways to repel the seed of rapists. He spends the next 48 hours rejecting GOP leaders’ demands that he quit the race.

●Weather forecasts show that a storm, likely to grow into Hurricane Isaac, may be chugging toward . . . Tampa, where Republicans will open their quadrennial nominating convention on Monday.

Coincidence? Or part of some Intelligent Design?

By their own logic, Republicans and their conservative allies should be concerned that Isaac is a form of divine retribution. Last year, Rep. Michele Bachmann, then a Republican presidential candidate, said that the East Coast earthquake and Hurricane Irene — another “I” storm, but not an Old Testament one — were attempts by God “to get the attention of the politicians.” In remarks later termed a “joke,” she said: “It’s time for an act of God and we’re getting it.”

The influential conservative broadcaster Glenn Beck said last year that the Japanese earthquake and tsunami were God’s “message being sent” to that country. A year earlier, Christian broadcaster and former GOP presidential candidate Pat Robertson tied the Haitian earthquake to that country’s“pact to the devil.”

Previously, Robertson had argued that Hurricane Katrina was God’s punishment for abortion, while the Rev. John Hagee said the storm was God’s way of punishing homosexuality. The late Jerry Falwellthought that God allowed the Sept. 11 attacks as retribution for feminists and the ACLU.

Even if you don’t believe God uses meteorological phenomena to express His will, it’s difficult for mere mortals to explain what is happening to the GOP just now.

By most earthly measures, President Obama has no business being reelected. No president since World War II has won reelection with the unemployment rate north of 7.4 percent. Of the presidents during that time who were returned to office, GDP growth averaged 4.7 percent during the first nine months of the election year — more than double the current rate.

But instead of being swept into office by the worst economic recovery since the Great Depression, Republicans are in danger of losing an election that is theirs to lose. Mitt Romney, often tone-deaf, has allowed Obama to change the subject to Romney’s tax havens and tax returns. And congressional Republicans are providing all kinds of reasons for Americans to doubt their readiness to assume power.

The Politico report Sunday about drunken skinny-dipping in the Sea of Galilee gave House Republicans an unwanted image of debauchery — a faint echo of the Capitol page scandal that, breaking in September 2006, cemented Republicans’ fate in that November’s elections. The 30 Republican lawmakers on the “fact-finding” mission to Israel last summer earned a rebuke from Majority Leader Eric Cantor and attracted the attention of the FBI. The naked congressman, Rep. Kevin Yoder (R-Kan.), admitted in a statement: “[R]egrettably I jumped into the water without a swimsuit.”

A boozy frolic at a Christian holy site might have been a considerable embarrassment for the party, but it was eclipsed by a bigger one: Akin’s preposterous claim on a St. Louis TV program that pregnancy is rare after a “legitimate rape” because “the female body has ways to try to shut that whole thing down.”

Republican leaders spent the next 48 hours trying to shut Akin’s whole thing down, but after a period of panic (a no-show on Piers Morgan’s show led the CNN host to show his empty chair and call him a “gutless little twerp”), Akin told radio host Mike Huckabee on Tuesday that he would fight the “big party people” and stay in the race.

The big party people had a further complication: In Tampa on Tuesday, those drafting theGOP platform agreed to retain a plank calling for a constitutional amendment banning abortion without specifying exceptions for cases of rape. In other words, the Akin position.

For a party that should be sailing toward victory, there were all the makings of a perfect storm. And, sure enough: Tuesday afternoon, the National Weather Service forecast that “Tropical Depression Nine” would strengthen into a hurricane, taking a northwesterly track over Cuba on Sunday morning — just as Republicans are arriving in Florida.

What happens next? God only knows.

O poder das mulheres nas famílias (O Globo)

São 22 milhões que assumiram a responsabilidade em 38,7% dos lares

CÁSSIA ALMEIDA e LETÍCIA LINS

Publicado:27/08/12 – 23h06 / Atualizado:28/08/12 – 11h58

<br /><br /> Maria Pamposa de Lima, 47 comanda sua casa há 17 anos e criou 5 filhos sozinha, na foto os filhos Fabiane de Lima, 27, Fabio Lins Lima da Silva, 22 e o neto David Venicius, 7.<br /><br /> Foto: Hans von Manteuffel / Hans von ManteuffelMaria Pamposa de Lima, 47 comanda sua casa há 17 anos e criou 5 filhos sozinha, na foto os filhos Fabiane de Lima, 27, Fabio Lins Lima da Silva, 22 e o neto David Venicius, 7.HANS VON MANTEUFFEL / HANS VON MANTEUFFEL

RECIFE E RIO – No Nordeste é cada vez mais comum domicílios comandados por mulheres, tanto na capital quanto no interior. E ocorre em duas condições: quando a mulher mora só com os filhos, ou quando tem companheiro, mas é ela quem manda nas finanças e se considera chefe da família. Nas estatísticas, as mulheres são as responsáveis em 38,7% dos domicílios, o que representa 22 milhões de unidades, de acordo com o último censo demográfico do IBGE, de 2010. No levantamento anterior, em 2000, essa chefia feminina estava em 24,9% dos lares.

O casamento ruim não prende mais as mulheres. É o caso de Maria Pamposa de Lima, de 48 anos que, desde os 31 anos, luta sozinha para criar os cinco filhos. Já trabalhou em reciclagem quando morava em um barraco de lona e pedaços de madeira. Hoje está no mercado formal de trabalho atuando como servente em um bar no bairro de Casa Forte, na zona norte da capital pernambucana. Ela deixou marido porque ele bebia muito, exigia dinheiro para alimentar o vício e terminou morrendo de cirrose hepática.

Ela ganha um salário mínimo e complementa a renda familiar juntando as latas de cerveja do restaurante. Dos cinco filhos, quatro moram com ela, dois trabalham e só uma chegou à universidade, Fabiana. A jovem trabalha na prefeitura de Moreno, onde entrou por concurso, e estuda pedagogia. Afirma que a mãe é pobre, que viveu e vive em muita dificuldade, mas que criou a família baseada nos princípios da ética, da moral, da honestidade e de amor ao próximo.

— Moramos muito tempo em casa de invasão (hoje substituída por uma de alvenaria) e nossa vida foi muito sofrida. Mas ninguém na família se envolveu com drogas — diz Fabiana.

Além das latinhas para reforçar o orçamento, Maria transformou um dos quartos da casa em uma lojinha que lhe rende um pequeno aluguel.

‘Cuido de tudo: do negócio ao dinheiro’

Vizinha de Pamposa, Maria Jocelma da Silva, de 37 anos, tem uma história diferente. Ela vive com o companheiro, Ademilton Bispo de Melo, de 47 anos, mas se considera a chefe da família. Jocelma montou um pequeno restaurante em uma sala da residência e o marido trabalho como cozinheiro.

—Aqui a chefe sou eu. Cuido de tudo, do negócio, das compras, das finanças. O dinheiro espicha na minha mão. Se eu deixar com ele acaba logo, justifica.

Ademiltom afirma que apesar do machismo nordestino, não dá importância à situação:

—Não ligo não. Vivemos em união e é tudo com ela, a casa, o negócio, o dinheiro. Hoje a mulher faz tudo, é engenheira, é peão de obra, é cobradora no ônibus e é até presidente.

VEJA TAMBÉM

Leia mais sobre esse assunto em http://oglobo.globo.com/economia/o-poder-das-mulheres-nas-familias-5918850#ixzz252DcZoN0 © 1996 – 2012. Todos direitos reservados a Infoglobo Comunicação e Participações S.A. Este material não pode ser publicado, transmitido por broadcast, reescrito ou redistribuído sem autorização. 

George Will, Doomsday, and the Straw-Man Sighting (steadystate.org)

by Brian Czech

A funny thing happened on the way to this column. Right when I was ready to accuseWashington Post columnist George Will of building another straw man to tear apart, one of Will’s straw men appeared! It’s as if Will himself cued it up, as I’ll describe in a bit.

Meanwhile don’t get me wrong. Will isn’t right about a lot. He has long been loose with the facts on environmental issues, denying the causes and effects of resource scarcity, pollution, and climate change. His vision of perpetual economic growth is neoclassical naiveté. He displayed it again with “Calls for doomsday remain unheeded.”

Will stubbornly remains a fawning fan of the late perpetual growther Julian Simon. No one likes to criticize the deceased, and Will counts on this and other social conventions to protect himself from critique. (Recently he hid behind society’s respect for Native American tribes to shoot at federal government clean-air efforts.) But it’s not a fair tactic, I’m not falling for it, and Simon was no saint anyway. Simon’s culminating book (The Ultimate Resource 2) was the shoddiest semblance of “scholarship” I’ve ever seen, as I described at length in Shoveling Fuel for a Runaway Train. For Will to stick with Simon after all this time is a red flag over the teeny terrain of his scientific credentials.

Will has even been sucked into the junk-science vortex of Bjorn Lomborg, Simon’s disciple and darling of pro-growth propagandists like the Competitive Enterprise Institute. Will thinks “potential U.S. gas resources have doubled in the last six years,” as if even potential (not just economic) gas resources change with technology! No stranger to bad facts, Will says, “One of [Paul] Ehrlich’s advisers, John Holdren, is President Barack Obama’s science adviser.” In reality it was the other way around: Ehrlich was Holdren’s adviser. In other words Will uses a mistaken claim to unleash a twice-removed, guilt-by-association attack, all in one sentence!

Despite the fact that Will has the combined credibility of Barry Bonds and BP Oil on environmental and sustainability affairs, there are reasons for empathizing with him at times. In fact, one reason plopped in my inbox this morning! The sender, a sustainability activist, first quoted from a website of the Center for the Advancement of the Steady State Economy, “The CASSE position calls for a desirable solution — a steady state economy with stabilized population and consumption — beginning in the wealthiest nations and not with extremist tactics.” Then he went on to complain:

“Unfortunately, there is no ‘desirable solution’ — I wish there were… Industrialism is by its very nature a temporary phenomenon; in the process of perpetuating it we consume the natural resources — primarily finite, non-replenishing, and increasingly scarce NNRs — that enable it. Unfortunately the chickens are coming home to roost now — instead of 1,000 years from now — and there’s nothing that we as a species can or will do about it, except suffer the inevitable consequences.”

So when George Will talks pejoratively about “calls for doomsday,” he’s got that one legitimate point, at least. For someone (a sustainability activist no less) to claim there is no desirable solution to the problem of uneconomic growth is defeatist at best, and patently false besides. Just because a solution — such as a steady state economy running at optimal size — is difficult to achieve does not mean it is out of the question or undesirable. What we should all agree on is that perpetual growth is out of the question, and then strive for the best alternative, handling the growing pains (or in this case, the de-growing pains) along the way.

Next, to paint “industrialism” with such a broad brush that it cannot be sustained, period, is another target on the straw man’s back. We should expect Mr. Will to hit that bulls-eye every time. First of all, de-industrializing is no panacea; it’s easy to envision an unsustainable, non-industrial economy hell-bent on growth. More to the point, who is to say we cannot sustain some industrial capital and production, especially with the use of renewable resources (picture a sawmill running on hydropower), for such a very long time that no one would consider it unsustainable. The problem is perpetual growth — always expanding the capital base and trying to produce more — regardless of the mechanical means by which that growth occurs.

And then, to top it off with, “there’s nothing that we as a species can or will do about it, except suffer the inevitable consequences,” almost makes me wonder who is farther from the truth: Will or the sustainability activist. After all, the activist is either not doing anything “about it” after all, or considers himself too exceptional to be part of the human species. But I don’t, and CASSE doesn’t. We are trying to do something about it. That is, we’re advancing the steady state economy — a desirable solution — instead of sitting on our doomed derrières while lamenting the forces of “industrialism.”

I never thought I’d agree with George Will on a matter of sustainability, but I’ll admit one thing: The caricatures he constructs are not always comprised of straw. Doomsday straw does exist but, unfortunately, some sustainability activists wear it too well.

Calls for doomsday remain unheeded (Washington Post)

By George Will

11:15 PM, Aug 20, 2012

WASHINGTON — Sometimes the news is that something was not newsworthy. The United Nation’s Rio+20 conference — 50,000 participants from 188 nations — occurred in June, without consequences. A generation has passed since the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio, which begat other conferences and protocols (e.g., Kyoto). And, by now, apocalypse fatigue — boredom from being repeatedly told the end is nigh.

This began two generations ago, in 1972, when we were warned (by computer models developed at MIT) that we were doomed. We were supposed to be pretty much extinct by now, or at least miserable. We are neither. So, what when wrong?

That year begat “The Limits to Growth,” a book from the Club of Rome, which called itself “a project on the predicament of mankind.” It sold 12 million copies, staggered The New York Times (“one of the most important documents of our age”) and argued that economic growth was doomed by intractable scarcities. Bjorn Lomborg, the Danish academic and “skeptical environmentalist,” writing in Foreign Affairs, says it “helped send the world down a path of worrying obsessively about misguided remedies for minor problems while ignoring much greater concerns,” such as poverty, which only economic growth can ameliorate.

MIT’s models foresaw the collapse of civilization because of “nonrenewable resource depletion” and population growth. “In an age more innocent of and reverential toward computers,” Lomborg writes, “the reams of cool printouts gave the book’s argument an air of scientific authority and inevitability” that “seemed to banish any possibility of disagreement.” Then — as now, regarding climate change — respect for science was said to require reverential suspension of skepticism about scientific hypotheses. Time magazine’s story about “The Limits to Growth” exemplified the media’s frisson of hysteria:

“The furnaces of Pittsburgh are cold; the assembly lines of Detroit are still. In Los Angeles, a few gaunt survivors of a plague desperately till freeway center strips … Fantastic? No, only grim inevitability if society continues its present dedication to growth and ‘progress.’”

The modelers examined 19 commodities and said 12 would be gone long before now — aluminum, copper, gold, lead, mercury, molybdenum, natural gas, oil, silver, tin, tungsten and zinc. Lomborg says:

Technological innovations have replaced mercury in batteries, dental fillings and thermometers, mercury consumption is down 98 percent and its price was down 90 percent by 2000. Since 1970, when gold reserves were estimated at 10,980 tons, 81,410 tons have been mined and estimated reserves are 51,000 tons. Since 1970, when known reserves of copper were 280 million tons, about 400 million tons have been produced globally and reserves are estimated at almost 700 million tons. Aluminum consumption has increased 16-fold since 1950, the world has consumed four times the 1950 known reserves, and known reserves could sustain current consumption for 177 years. Potential U.S. gas resources have doubled in the last six years. And so on.

The modelers missed something — human ingenuity in discovering, extracting and innovating. Which did not just appear after 1972.

Aluminum, Lomborg writes, is one of earth’s most common metals. But until the 1886 invention of the Hall-Heroult process, it was so difficult and expensive to extract that “Napoleon III had bars of aluminum exhibited alongside the French crown jewels, and he gave his honored guests aluminum forks and spoons while lesser visitors had to make do with gold utensils.”

Forty years after “The Limits to Growth” imparted momentum to environmentalism, that impulse now is often reduced to children indoctrinated to “reduce, reuse, and recycle.” Lomborg calls recycling “a feel-good gesture that provides little environmental benefit at a significant cost.” He says “we pay tribute to the pagan god of token environmentalism by spending countless hours sorting, storing and collecting used paper, which, when combined with government subsidies, yields slightly lower-quality paper in order to secure a resource” — forests — “that was never threatened in the first place.”

In 1980, economist Julian Simon made a wager in the form of a complex futures contract. He bet Paul Ehrlich (whose 1968 book “The Population Bomb” predicted “hundreds of millions of people” would starve to death in the 1970s as population growth swamped agricultural production) that by 1990 the price of any five commodities Ehrlich and his advisers picked would be lower than in 1980. Ehrlich’s group picked five metals. All were cheaper in 1990.

The bet cost Ehrlich $576.07. But that year he was awarded a $345,000 MacArthur Foundation “genius” grant and half of the $240,000 Crafoord Prize for ecological virtue. One of Ehrlich’s advisers, John Holdren, is President Barack Obama’s science adviser.

George F. Will writes about foreign and domestic politics and policy for the Washington Post Writers Group. Email:georgewill@washpost.com.

Media Violence Consumption Increases the Relative Risk of Aggression, Analysis Shows (Science Daily)

ScienceDaily (Aug. 27, 2012) — As president of the International Society for Research on Aggression (IRSA) and with consent of the organization’s elected council, Craig Anderson appointed an international Media Violence Commission last December to prepare a public statement on the known effects of media violence exposure, based on the current state of scientific knowledge.

The Iowa State University Distinguished Professor of psychology appointed 12 IRSA researchers to the commission, including Douglas Gentile, an ISU associate professor of psychology.

The Media Violence Commission’s research-based report concludes that the research clearly shows that media violence consumption increases the relative risk of aggression, defined as intentional harm to another person that could be verbal, relational, or physical. The report is published in the September/October issue of the journal Aggressive Behavior.

“Basically, the commission looked at, ‘What does the research literature say?'” Anderson said. “In addition, we asked them to make some recommendations, if they chose to do so, about public policy. It really was kind of an open-ended charge.”

Members took a fair and balanced look at the research

A well-known researcher on the effects of media on children, Gentile says commission members took a fair and balanced look at all of the existing research to see if they could achieve consensus, and then summarized what they found.

In their report, the commission wrote that aside from being sources of imitation, violent images — such as scenes in movies, games or pictures in comic books — act as triggers for activating aggressive thoughts and feelings already stored in memory. If these aggressive thoughts and feelings are activated over and over again because of repeated exposure to media violence, they become chronically accessible, and thus more likely to influence behavior.

“One may also become more vigilant for hostility and aggression in the world, and therefore, begin to feel some ambiguous actions by others (such as being bumped in a crowded room) are deliberate acts of provocation,” the commission wrote in the report.

The commission recommends that parents know what media their children and adolescents are using. Rating systems often provide too little detail about media content to be helpful, and in any case, are not substitutes for parents’ watching, playing, or listening to the media their children use.

“Parents can also set limits on screen use (The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends no screen time for children under 2 and no more than one to two hours total screen time per day for children/youth 3-18), and should discuss media content with their children to promote critical thinking when viewing,” the researchers wrote. “Schools may help parents by teaching students from an early age to be critical consumers of the media and that, just like food, the ‘you are what you eat’ principle applies to healthy media consumption.”

The commission recommends improving media ratings

While most public policy has focused on restricting children’s access to violent media, the commission found that approach to have significant political and legal challenges in many countries. For that reason, it recommends putting efforts into improving media ratings, classifications, and public education about the effects of media on children.

“Improving media ratings really has two pieces. One is that the media ratings themselves need to be done by an independent entity — meaning, not by an industry-influenced or controlled system,” said Anderson, himself a leading researcher of the effects of violent media on children. “They need to be ratings that have some scientific validity to them.

“But the other piece is education, and if parents aren’t educated — not just about what the ratings system does, but also about why it’s important for them to take control of their child’s media diet — then it doesn’t matter how good the ratings system is, because they’re going to ignore it anyway,” he added.

Anderson hopes the final report will have value to child advocacy groups.

“Having such a clear statement by an unbiased, international scientific group should be very helpful to a number of child advocacy groups — such as parenting groups — in their efforts to improve the lives of children,” he said.

Journal Reference:

  1. Media Violence Commission, International Society for Research on Aggression (ISRA). Report of the Media Violence CommissionAggressive Behavior, Volume 38, Issue 5, September/October 2012, Pages: 335%u2013341 DOI: 10.1002/ab.21443

The Role of Genes in Political Behavior (Science Daily)

ScienceDaily (Aug. 27, 2012) — Politics and genetics have traditionally been considered non-overlapping fields, but over the past decade it has become clear that genes can influence political behavior, according to a review published online August 27th in Trends in Genetics. This paradigm shift has led to novel insights into why people vary in their political preferences and could have important implications for public policy.

“We’re seeing an awakening in the social sciences, and the wall that divided politics and genetics is really starting to fall apart,” says review author Peter Hatemi of the University of Sydney. “This is a big advance, because the two fields could inform each other to answer some very complex questions about individual differences in political views.”

In the past, social scientists had assumed that political preferences were shaped by social learning and environmental factors, but recent studies suggest that genes also strongly influence political traits. Twin studies show that genes have some influence on why people differ on political issues such as the death penalty, unemployment and abortion. Because this field of research is relatively new, only a handful of genes have been implicated in political ideology and partisanship, voter turnout, and political violence.

Future research, including gene-expression and sequencing studies, may lead to deeper insights into genetic influences on political views and have a greater impact on public policy. “Making the public aware of how their mind works and affects their political behavior is critically important,” Hatemi says. “This has real implications for the reduction of discrimination, foreign policy, public health, attitude change and many other political issues.”

Journal Reference:

  1. Peter K Hatemi and Rose McDermott. The Genetics of Politics: Discovery, Challenges and ProgressTrends in Genetics, August 27, 2012 DOI: 10.1016/j.tig.2012.07.004

The Effects of Discrimination Could Last a Lifetime (Science Daily)

ScienceDaily (Aug. 27, 2012) — Increased levels of depression as a result of discrimination could contribute to low birth weight babies.

Given the well-documented relationship between low birth weight and the increased risk of health problems throughout one’s lifespan, it is vital to reduce any potential contributors to low birth weight.  A new study by Valerie Earnshaw and her colleagues from Yale University sheds light on one possible causal factor.  Their findings, published online in Springer’s journal, theAnnals of Behavioral Medicine, suggest that chronic, everyday instances of discrimination against pregnant, urban women of color may play a significant role in contributing to low birth weight babies.

Twice as many black women give birth to low birth weight babies than white or Latina women in the U.S.  Reasons for this disparity are, as yet, unclear. But initial evidence suggests a link may exist between discrimination experienced while pregnant and the incidence of low birth weight.  In addition, experiences of discrimination have also been linked to depression, which causes physiological changes that can have a negative effect on a pregnancy.

Earnshaw and her colleagues interviewed 420, 14- to 21-year-old black and Latina women at 14 community health centers and hospitals in New York, during the second and third trimesters of their pregnancies, and at six and 12 months after their babies had been born.  They measured their reported experiences of discrimination.  They also measured their depressive symptoms, pregnancy distress and pregnancy symptoms.

Levels of everyday discrimination reported were generally low.  However, the impact of discrimination was the same in all the participants regardless of age, ethnicity or type of discrimination reported.  Women reporting greater levels of discrimination were more prone to depressive symptoms, and ultimately went on to have babies with lower birth weights than those reporting lower levels of discrimination.  This has implications for healthcare providers who work with pregnant teens and young women during the pre-natal period, while they have the opportunity to try and reduce the potential impacts discrimination on the pregnancy.

The authors conclude that “Given the associations between birth weight and health across the life span, it is critical to reduce discrimination directed at urban youth of color so that all children are able to begin life with greater promise for health.  In doing so, we have the possibility to eliminate disparities not only in birth weight, but in health outcomes across the lifespan.”

Data for this study came from the Centering Pregnancy Plus project, funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, and conducted in collaboration with Clinical Directors’ Network and the Centering Healthcare Institute.

Journal Reference:

  1. Valerie A. Earnshaw, Lisa Rosenthal, Jessica B. Lewis, Emily C. Stasko, Jonathan N. Tobin, Tené T. Lewis, Allecia E. Reid, Jeannette R. Ickovics. Maternal Experiences with Everyday Discrimination and Infant Birth Weight: A Test of Mediators and Moderators Among Young, Urban Women of ColorAnnals of Behavioral Medicine, 2012; DOI: 10.1007/s12160-012-9404-3

Frankenstein Programmers Test a Cybersecurity Monster (Science Daily)

ScienceDaily (Aug. 27, 2012) — In order to catch a thief, you have to think like one.

UT Dallas computer scientists are trying to stay one step ahead of cyber attackers by creating their own monster. Their monster can cloak itself as it steals and reconfigures information in a computer program.

In part because of the potentially destructive nature of their technology, creators have named this software system Frankenstein, after the monster-creating scientist in author Mary Shelley’s novel,Frankenstein; or The Modern Prometheus.

“Shelley’s story is an example of a horror that can result from science, and similarly, we intend our creation as a warning that we need better detections for these types of intrusions,” said Dr. Kevin Hamlen, associate professor of computer science at UT Dallas who created the software, along with his doctoral student Vishwath Mohan. “Criminals may already know how to create this kind of software, so we examined the science behind the danger this represents, in hopes of creating counter measures.”

Frankenstein is not a computer virus, which is a program that can multiply and take over other machines. But, it could be used in cyber warfare to provide cover for a virus or another type of malware, or malicious software.

In order to avoid antivirus software, malware typically mutates every time it copies itself onto another machine. Antivirus software figures out the pattern of change and continues to scan for sequences of code that are known to be suspicious.

Frankenstein evades this scanning mechanism. It takes code from programs already on a computer and repurposes it, stringing it together to accomplish the malware’s malicious task with new instructions.

“We wanted to build something that learns as it propagates,” Hamlen said. “Frankenstein takes from what is already there and reinvents itself.”

“Just as Shelley’s monster was stitched from body parts, our Frankenstein also stitches software from original program parts, so no red flags are raised,” he said. “It looks completely different, but its code is consistent with something normal.”

Hamlen said Frankenstein could be used to aid government counter terrorism efforts by providing cover for infiltration of terrorist computer networks. Hamlen is part of the Cyber Security Research and Education Center in the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science.

The UT Dallas research is the first published example describing this type of stealth technology, Hamlen said.

“As a proof-of-concept, we tested Frankenstein on some simple algorithms that are completely benign,” Hamlen said. “We did not create damage to anyone’s systems.”

The next step, Hamlen said, is to create more complex versions of the software.

Frankenstein was described in a paper published online (https://www.usenix.org/conference/woot12/frankenstein-stitching-malware-benign-binaries) in conjunction with a presentation at a recent USENIX Workshop on Offensive Technologies.

The research was supported by the National Science Foundation and Air Force Office of Scientific Research.

Violência no futebol argentino – fim de semana de 25 e 26 de agosto de 2012

BASTA DE VIOLENCIA (Olé)

Autopista al infierno

Autopista al infierno

Un detenido por la interna de La 12.

Gustavo Grabia – Jose Sacchi

La interna de La Doce estalló en Santa Fe. Hay siete heridos de bala, tres son capos y uno está grave: es Mauro Martín, al que un disparo le destrozó el intestino.

El 11/7/12, apenas el Tribunal Seis decidió absolver a La Doce de Di Zeo por asociación ilícita, más de 200 barras cortaron la calle y festejaron al grito de “es la barra de Rafa, la que vuelve de las vacaciones, vamos a matar a todos los traidores”. Un mes y medio después, decidieron cumplirlo. Pertrechados con un arsenal y favorecidos por un operativo policial tan negligente que podría considerarse connivencia, emboscaron al grupo de Mauro Martín en el kilómetro 21 de la autopista Rosario-Santa Fe, y armaron una balacera infernal que dejó siete heridos, dos de gravedad, entre ellos Mauro Martín, al que un tiro le perforó el intestino grueso y el colon, fue operado de urgencia en el Hospital Provincial de Rosario y al cierre de esta edición estaba en terapia intensiva con pronóstico reservado, como le confirmó a Olé el director del nosocomio, Pietro Belletich.

De los otros heridos, dos son del círculo íntimo de Martín y la barra. Uno es Cristian Debaus, 38 años, apodado Fido, que recibió un tiro en la garganta y estaba internado con pronóstico reservado, en este caso en el hospital de Granadero Baigorria. Otro fue Luis Arrieta, el Loco Luis, ex jugador de Huracán y Estudiantes de Buenos Aires, que maneja un grupo grande de barras de Caseros y recibió un tiro en una mano. Otro primera línea que sufrió consecuencias fue Juan González, 26 años, al que un balazo le fracturó la tibia y el peroné. El Negro Juan es al mismo tiempo barra de Boca y empleado del Servicio Penitenciario Bonaerense. Increíble. Además Brian Arroyo (19) recibió un tiro en el esternón y estaba con pronóstico reservado, lo mismo que Darío Cantero (35) con una herida en el abdomen. Y hubo otros tres heridos leves que tras ser atendidos pudieron volver a Baires.

El plan de ataque se venía gestando hace tres semanas. A comienzos de agosto, los grupos de Los Polvorines, Hurlingham, Dock Sud, Lomas de Zamora, Claypole y Lavallol que paraban hasta julio con Di Zeo, decidieron que iban a tomar como sea la conducción de La Doce. El primer intento fue ir a San Juan a la final de la Copa Argentina. Pero sin los líderes, se les hizo complicado conseguir el financiamiento. Entonces marcaron con fibrón rojo el primer partido fuera de Capital y Provincia, donde los de Mauro tienen mucho apoyo de su club y la Policía, y dio Santa Fe. No consiguieron tickets, pero sí dinero para mover 10 micros y 11 autos. Y se mandaron igual. Decidieron salir temprano para copar la tribuna y que se pudriera adentro. La táctica era que una pelea en la cancha con la otra facción obligaría a Boca a aplicarles el derecho de admisión a todos. Y así desarticularían al grupo de Mauro. Pero cuando llegaron a Santa Fe a las 10 de la mañana, la Policía los mandó de vuelta. Insólitamente, por el mismo camino que venían los de Mauro y con sólo dos patrulleros de custodia. Cuando vieron llegar los siete micros de la facción oficial, sacaron las armas. Los de Mauro pararon para pelear. No tuvieron tiempo de decir nada. Desde un Peugeot negro 206 se bajaron Alejandro Putruelli y Facundo Cáceres Aranda y empezaron a disparar. Otros que venían en los micros se subieron a un puente de la autopista y gatillaron a repetición. No hubo víctimas fatales, por ahora, de milagro.

Los heridos fueron trasladados a distintos hospitales. Martín logró mostrar un último gesto de impunidad: consiguió que el policía que estaba de guardia en el Hospital Provincial no avisara quién era el barra que había ingresado herido. Ese oficial fue pasado a disponibilidad. Y el juez de la causa ya actúa con premura: tiene dos handies de los detenidos que podrían dar pistas de los organizadores y otros protagonistas de una guerra que promete continuar.

*   *   *

BASTA DE VIOLENCIA (Olé)

Testán investigando

Quieren determinar si hubo fuego cruzado o sólo un ataque de un sector a otro.

Quieren determinar si hubo fuego cruzado o sólo un ataque de un sector a otro.

El Juzgado de San Lorenzo ordenó el dermotest, la prueba que determina si una persona disparó un arma de fuego, a los barras baleados, entre ellos Mauro Martín. La idea es esclarecer si hubo un ataque cruzado entre ambas facciones.

Las investigaciones sobre el tiroteo entre las facciones de La Doce, el último sábado en la autopista Rosario-Santa Fe, están a la orden del día. Mientras Mauro Martín se recupera favorablemente” del disparo en el abdomen (así lo informó el director del Hospital Provincial de Rosario), que le perforó colon e intestino grueso, desde el juzgado número 12 de la ciudad de San Lorenzo avanzan a pasos firmes para sumar datos concretos.

Este sábado ordenaron la prueba de dermotest a los barras baleados en dicho cruce entre la banda de Martín y la que hasta hace un mes respondía a los hermanos Di Zeo. Dicho test sirve para determinar si una persona efectuó un disparo con un arma de fuego.

La idea es esclarecer si existió un fuego cruzado entre ambas facciones o sólo un ataque de un sector a otro. Si sólo fueron víctimas, o también victimarios. La investigación recién comienza…

*   *   *

BASTA DE VIOLENCIA (Olé)

Se va de Rosario

Mauro Martín permanece en el Hospital Provincial de Rosario. (La Capital)

Mauro Martín permanece en el Hospital Provincial de Rosario. (La Capital)

“Los familiares de Martín pidieron llevárselo”, contó el director del Hospital Provincial.

Si bien en un principio había sido rechazado el pedido, finalmente autorizaron la familia de Mauro Martín a sacarlo del Hospital Provincial de Rosario para llevarlo a uno de Buenos Aires.

Apenas fue operado, la familia de Mauro Martín había solicitado el traslado desde el Hospital Provincial de Rosario, donde fue internado luego del enfrentamiento, a uno de Buenos Aires. Y el pedido había sido rechazado. Sin embargo, en la tarde del domingo le dieron el ok y el líder de la Doce abandonaría Santa Fe en las próximas horas. Lo hará en una ambulancia de alta complejidad que llegará a Rosario.

El último parte médico que había entregado Pietro Belletich, director del nosocomio rosarino hablaba de un estado estable: “Pasó la noche consciente, le estamos tratando el dolor y esperando la evolución. El cuadro es delicado pero estable”. Mauro fue operado de urgencia el sábado por la tarde por una bala en el intestino grueso: Mauro Martín. Belletich había contado que los familiares del herido, baleado en el cruce en la autopista Rosario-Santa Fe con la facción que hace un mes lideraban los hermanos Di Zeo, pidieron llevárselo apenas fue operado. “Después de que salió de cirugía preguntaron si podían trasladarlo a Buenos Aires, y les dijimos que una vez que esté hermodinámicamente compensado podrían solictarlo. No obstante, el paciente está bajo intervención del juzgado, serán ellos quienes determinen cuándo y dónde será trasladado”, aclaró. Sin embargo, finalmente Mauro Martín llegará a Buenos Aires luego de que el Juez Filocco le tomara declaración testimonial.

*   *   *

BASTA DE VIOLENCIA (Olé)

“Yo me bajé el día de Tribunales”

Fernando Di Zeo dice que él y Rafa ya no mandan.

Fernando Di Zeo dice que él y Rafa ya no mandan.

Fernando Di Zeo reconoce que los agresores eran del grupo que comandaba con su hermano, pero asegura que ellos dejaron la conducción hace un mes.

Diez micros y once autos cruzando la autopista y autoproclamándose la verdadera barra de Boca. Más de 700 violentos peleándose primero con la Policía y tiroteando después en plena autopista a la facción de Mauro Martín. La ecuación llevó directo al apellido Di Zeo. Si hasta el jefe del operativo en Santa Fe aseguró que los barras eran de los hermanos Fernando y Rafael.

Del otro lado de la línea, Fernando, el menor de quienes dirigieron a La Doce entre 1996 y 2007, toma aire y afirma: “Sí, es cierto, ésos que fueron a Santa Fe formaban parte del grupo nuestro. Pero nosotros, los pibes grandes, no tenemos nada que ver. Yo me bajé de la barra el mismo día que terminó el juicio. Ahí, en pleno Palacio de Tribunales, decidí alejarme cuando vi que todos los que nos acompañaban cantaban que a los traidores los íbamos a matar. Ellos quieren volver a la cancha a cualquier costo, y a mí me parecía que en cualquier momento podía pasar algo y yo no quiero tener más causas por mi apellido. Lo hablé con mi mujer y me fui. Y a la semana lo convencí a Rafael”.

-Conociendo la historia de ustedes y que ya intentaron copar la barra el año pasado en el partido contra Rafaela, parece difícil creerles.

-Yo sé que todos dicen los Di Zeo esto o los Di Zeo aquello. Yo me hago cargo de lo del partido con Rafaela porque fuimos. Y no pasó nada. Pero cuando vimos cómo venía ahora la mano, decidimos salir y que hagan lo que quieran. Pueden creerme o no, pero es la verdad. Yo estuve cuatro años preso, tengo una familia, ¿sabés lo que es que tus hijos tengan que venir a verte a un penal? Yo hoy le estoy festejando el cumpleaños a mi hijo en casa y ya no quiero comerme ningún garrón por una gilada. ¿Queríamos volver a la cancha? Sí. ¿Queríamos volver a la tribuna? Sí. Pero nunca así. Nosotros crecimos en la época en que la barra se ganaba a las trompadas. Y ahora se matan con armas. En esa historia, los Di Zeo no entramos. Que investiguen todo lo que quieran, pero ni nosotros ni los pibes grandes del grupo estuvimos allá o alentamos a alguien a hacer esa locura.

*   *   *

BASTA DE VIOLENCIA (Olé)

“Estaba preanunciado”

Angelici dijo que a Falcioni le van a respetar el contrato.

“Ni Ledesma ni Ustari están inhabilitados”, dijo Angelici.

Angelici habló sobre el cruce de barras y, molesto, responsabilizó al Gobierno por los hechos: “El Estado no nos garantiza la seguridad. Ésto se podría haber evitado”, disparó. También se quejó por la suspensión de la Bombonera, que decretó la Justicia.

“Parece increíble. El estado no nos puede garantizar la sgeuridad que corresponde a todos los que vamos a la cancha. Estaba preanunciado, ésto se podría haber evitado”. Daniel Angelici habló sobre el cruce de barras que se produjo este sábado en la ruta 9, y responsabilizó directamente al Estado sobre el tiroteo entre la facción de Mauro Martín y la que hasta hace un mes respondía a Rafael Di Zeo.

“A mí no me entra en la cabeza que vayan diez micros sin entrada y que los manden de vuelta en vez de retenerlos ahí hasta que entre la totalidad y después los manden bien custodiados”, bramó. Y aseguró: “Estamos preocupados. Es un hecho lamentable porque hay heridos de bala. Y por todo lo peor que podría haber pasado”.

En diálogo con Radio Mitre, también se quejó sobre la decisión que tomó la Juticia de suspender la Bombonera por una fecha, tras los incidentes de los plateístas con el cartel: “Boca tiene una responsabilidad, son socios nuestros. Pero me parece excesiva la medida. Nosotros ya los teníamos identificados”, explicó al respecto. “No estamos de acuerdo. Ni con los socios ni con el poco dinero que entra por esos carteles que nos pone la Conmebol”.

Por último, se refirió al caso de la AFIP, que involucra a dos jugadores xeneizes: Ledesma y Ustari. “Inhabilitado no está ninguno de los dos, nadie nos notificó eso. Hicimos todo dentro de lo legal. Los derechos federativos y económicos de Ledesma los tenía Unión San Felipe, y si ahora quieren cambiar las legislaciones me parece bien, pero de acá en adelante, no retroactivamente”, tiró. Una novela que, parece, recién empieza…

*   *   *

BOCA  (Olé)

Tiros en la ruta

La Policía con uno de los detenidos en la ruta.

La Policía con uno de los detenidos en la ruta.

Cerca de 900 barras que hasta hace un mes respondían a los hermanos Di Zeo e iban a Santa Fe, fueron frenados en Rosario y a la vuelta se cruzaron con un grupo que forma parte de la banda de Mauro Martín. Se tirotearon y habría cinco heridos.

Cuando el tema de la AFIP se lleva el protagonismo, otra cuestión extradeportiva sigue empañando el fútbol. Y una vez más tiene que ver con la violencia. La interna de la barra de Boca está al rojo vivo y tuvo un capítulo en la ruta 9, donde alrededor de 900 barras que hasta hace un mes respondían a Rafael y Fernando Di Zeo se trasladaron a Santa Fe, fueron frenados por la Policía en Rosario, los mandaron de vuelta y allí se cruzaron con un grupo de Mauro Martín: hubo tiros y habría cinco heridos del lado de Martín. De nunca acabar.

De esto se viene hablando y en algún momento iba a explotar. Mientras gran la barra oficial ya estaba en Santa Fe sin tener inconvenientes en su traslado, la otra parte, la que espera volver al poder, fue frenada en Rosario. Estos 900 que “vuelven de las vacaciones” no están en la lista de derecho de admisión, pero iban sin entrada y en Santa Fe no había venta (el grupo de Mauro viajó con tickets desde Buenos Aires). Por ende, el conflicto estaba latente. En el regreso de esos diez colectivos y 11 autos pasó lo peor: a 100 kilómetros de la ciudad se cruzaron con una filial del oeste del Gran Buenos Aires que responde a La 12 que tiene el poder y se armó lo peor, con tiros a la orden del día.

Mientras se desató la furia en la ruta 9, los hermanos Di Zeo, que dicen estar afuera de todo, estaban en Buenos Aires. Y la mayor parte del grupo de Martín esperaba para ingresar al estadio de Unión. Los controles que no dejaron pasar a unos pero a otros sí, seguirán de cerca todos los movimientos en el regreso de ambos bandos.

*   *   *

BASTA DE VIOLENCIA (Olé)

Hace pip y saca fotos

Los handys de los detenidos y las cámaras de los peajes, claves en la investigación.

La causa por la batalla de la autopista recién está empezando. De hecho, los detenidos serán trasladados hoy ante el juez para su declaración indagatoria. Y si bien no se espera que den los nombres de quienes planearon y ejecutaron el macabro plan, la Justicia tiene dos vías para esclarecer el suceso: los handys de los que quedaron presos y las filmaciones de las cámaras. En el primer caso, en la agenda de los teléfonos están los nombres de los capos con quienes se comunicaron. El cruce de llamadas puede dar la ubicación casi exacta de cada uno. Este método se utilizó para esclarecer el asesinato de Gonzalo Acro en la interna de Los Borrachos del Tablón.

Por otro lado, los capos del grupo agresor eran quienes se movilizaban en los autos, no en los colectivos. Y hay cámaras de seguridad en los dos peajes que pasaron. Será cuestión de cotejar fotos y avanzar. Por lo pronto, el Peugeot 206 negro secuestrado está radicado en Capital y tiene 10 multas impagas.

*   *   *

BASTA DE VIOLENCIA (Olé)

“No vi quién me tiró”

Mauro y Fido, jefe y ladero heridos en el tiroteo. No apuntaron contra sus atacantes.

Mauro y Fido, jefe y ladero heridos en el tiroteo. No apuntaron contra sus atacantes.

Gustavo Grabia Ggrabia@ole.com.ar – Jose Sacchi Jsacchi@ole.com.ar

Mauro Martín, quien era trasladado a Capital esta madrugada, declaró ante dos policías y no reconoció a sus agresores. “Se arregla de otra forma”, dice su gente.

No importa que por unas horas haya estado al borde de la muerte. En el código de los barras, la Justicia no existe. Todo se arregla con venganza. Sólo así puede entenderse la declaración informativa que brindó ayer Mauro Martín desde la camilla en la que estaba internado en el Hospital Provincial de Rosario. Por orden del juez Eduardo Filocco, dos policías fueron a tomarle la exposición. El trámite sumó 20 minutos en los que Mauro relató cómo sucedieron los hechos.

“Estábamos parados al costado de la ruta por orden de la seguridad, esperando que el otro grupo pasara por la ruta contraria y se alejara. Pero cuando nos vieron, bajaron y empezaron a disparar. Yo estaba fuera de la camioneta en la que viajé y sentí un pinchazo en la panza. Después quedé inconciente y cuando me desperté estaba en el hospital”, dijo Martín según le contó a Olé una alta fuente policial.

Pero los policías ya conocían la descripción de los hechos. Lo que ellos querían eran los nombres de los agresores. Pero Martín no aportó ni siquiera un apodo. “No vi quién tiró, no reconocí a nadie”, afirmó, aunque en su círculo íntimo dicen que la realidad es distinta y que entre los que dispararon a mansalva estaban Marcelo de Polvorines, Bolita con su gente de Ezeiza, los de Hurlingham que son cercanos a Feco, los de San Martín cuyo jefe es Pachu y los del Sur, que antes estaban con Marcelo de Lomas y ahora van con otra gente vieja de la época del Abuelo. Una palabra de Mauro hubiese enderezado la investigación, pero prefirió no hablar. Esto último fue lo mismo que hizo Cristian Debaus, apodado Fido, quien fue herido con un balazo en la garganta y también recibió la visita de auxiliares de justicia. Pero el pacto de la ormetá funcionó a pleno.

Ante esta situación, el juez Filocco mandó a hacerles el dermotest (prueba que busca restos de pólvora en las manos) a todos los heridos y detenidos. “En el caso de los heridos dio negativo. Hoy les tomaré declaración a los detenidos y después veré”, le dijo Filocco a Olé . La causa está caratulada lesiones en riña y portación de munición y armas de guerra. Por este delito hay tres detenidos del bando agresor (Alejandro Utruelli, Facundo Cáceres Aranda y Elías Meza) y otros dos demorados del grupo de Mauro, que fueron agarrados cuando dejaban Rosario con ropas ensangrentadas que serían de los heridos y podría caberles el delito de ocultamiento de prueba.

El domingo además fue un día de alivio para La Doce oficial. Porque sus máximos líderes fueron dados de alta (sólo quedan internados Darío Canteros con un balazo en el abdomen y Brian Arroyo con uno en el tórax) y Mauro había conseguido la autorización judicial y el traslado médico para ser internado en un nosocomio de la Capital Federal. Al cierre de esta edición, estaban esperando la ambulancia de alta complejidad que lo llevaría a Buenos Aires, custodiada en todo el trayecto por un patrullero, por si las moscas. Si bien su estado general era mejor, los médicos siguen esperando que la zona afectada (la bala le perforó el intestino grueso y el colon) no se infecte. “Lo cosieron y hay que esperar 48 horas más para ver si la evolución lo deja definitivamente fuera de peligro”, dijeron los médicos del Provincial a Olé .

Mientras ellos esperan, todo Boca desespera. Porque saben que esta guerra, está lejos de terminar.

*   *   *

BOCA (Olé)

Ustedes no entran

El cartel que arrojaron los hinchas hacia el banco visitante.

El cartel que arrojaron los hinchas hacia el banco visitante.

[Copa Sudamericana, miércoles, 22 de agosto de 2012]

Boca, mediante un comunicado, informó que los cuatro plateistas que arrojaron el cartel contra el banco de Independiente no podrán asistir a la Bombonera. Y desmintieron que uno de ellos sea el hijo de Crespi.

Finalmente, Boca se expresó mediante un comunicado y aclaró cuál será el camino a seguir con los cuatro socios que tiraron el cartel publicitario sobre el banco de suplentes de Independiente. “Se decidió aplicar el derecho de exclusión”, se explicó en el mensaje.

De esta forma, los hinchas sufrirán momentáneamente el derecho de admisión, hasta que se acerquen al departamento legal del club para hacer su descargo. Después, el Tribunal de Disciplina evaluará la situación con la palabra de los acusados y definirá la sanción definitiva.

“Además desmiente categóricamente  que entre los involucrados se encuentre un hijo del vicepresidente 2° del club, Juan Carlos Crespi como algunos medios dejaron trascender”, agregó, clarísimo, el comunicado. Y el propio dirigente se encargó de aclararlo: “Mi hijo no estaba en esa platea, estaba justo en la de enfrente”.

*   *   *

BOCA (Olé)

Si querés, apelá

El cartel que arrojaron los hinchas hacia el banco visitante.

El cartel que arrojaron los hinchas hacia el banco visitante.

Mariano Dayan – Mdayan@ole.com.ar

Boca hará un descargo por la clausura de su estadio, aunque la sanción de una fecha pinta irrevocable.

El mazazo fue el gol agónico de Farías y el que llegó después, rápido y furioso: la decisión del Gobierno de suspender la Bombonera por una fecha. Así, Boca deberá enfrentar a Atlético Rafaela (por la quinta jornada del Inicial) seguramente en el estadio de Vélez. ¿Ya está? Los dirigentes van a apelar la sanción, aunque sin muchas esperanzas. Saben que no se pueden quedar de brazos cruzados y deben evitar recriminaciones feroces de los hinchas. De hecho, ya son varios directivos los que admiten la equivocación de haber quitado el techo de acrílico que protegía el banco de suplentes para hacer los nuevos palcos en el campo de juego, sin autorización previa. “Asumimos lo que pasó como un error. Lo quisimos poner de nuevo, pero no llegó a tiempo el proveedor. Igual, creemos que se podría haber tomado otro tipo de medida y seguiremos insistiendo por los caminos legales para jugar en nuestra cancha”, le aseguró César Martucci, secretario general, a Olé.

El descargo que presentará Boca no parecería tener rebote en lo disciplinario. La sanción pinta irrevocable. Es más, el tema se judicializó: el fiscal Walter López, correspondiente a la jurisdicción de la Bombonera, pidió la clausura de la platea preferencial, pero el juez Durante lo negó.

El club envió ayer un comunicado en el que reiteró que aplicará el derecho de exclusión a los socios involucrados y además desmintió que el hijo del vicepresidente segundo Juan Carlos Crespi estuviera vinculado a la agresión al banco de Independiente (ver aparte). Según averiguó Olé , los involucrados son: Pablo Vanderruster, Pablo y Federico Blanco y Elías Fridman. La investigación del fiscal, igual, seguirá su curso. Le imputará a la dirigencia el delito contravencional de omisión de recaudos de seguridad, que prevé penas de hasta 30 días de arresto y $60.000 de multa. Podría haber una probation, pero Boca ya está cumpliendo otra por el uso de bengalas y cargadas contra River.

*   *   *

BOCA (Olé)

“Todo mentira”

Crespi negó que su hijo estuviera involucrado en los incidentes que terminaron con la caída del cartel. “Va a otra platea”, dijo el dirigente.

Durante el transcurso del día corrieron rumores que indicaban que uno de los hijos de Juan Carlos Crespi habría estado involucrado en los incidentes del miércoles en la Bombonera. Sin embargo, el vicepresidente segundo habló con Olé y dio su punto de vista: “Es todo mentira. Desmiento totalmente eso. Uriel es mi hijo, tiene 30 años, pero va a la platea A. Mis tres hijos son terriblemente buena gente. El hecho de que haya salido en todos los medios, me da vergüenza. Es todo mentira”. Otro de los hijos de Crespi se llama Leandro y es Secretario de Actas de la Asamblea de Representantes.

Además, el club envió un comunicado en el que apoyó a Crespi: “Boca Juniors desmiente categóricamente que entre los involucrados se encuentre un hijo del vicepresidente 2° del club, Juan Carlos Crespi, como algunos medios dejaron trascender”.

La violencia en el fútbol desde todos lados (Mundo D)

http://mundod.lavoz.com.ar

Sábado 25 de Agosto, 12:26

Punto de vista. Para el sociólogo Pablo Alabarces, los actos vandálicos no son exclusivos de la barra brava. Sobre posibles soluciones, dijo: “Son parches. No existen medidas a largo plazo”.

Los hinchas de Belgrano en cancha de Colón. (Foto: Pedro Castillo)Los hinchas de Belgrano en cancha de Colón. (Foto: Pedro Castillo)

Por Joaquin Aguirre

“¡Me importa un pito que digan que fomentamos la violencia. Este pibe no es un barrabrava. Este es un salame!”. A los gritos y con una rabia un tanto impostada, un conocido presentador repasaba la secuencia televisiva en la que un plateísta de Boca arrojaba un cartel sobre el banco de suplentes de Independiente. “Que busquen al responsable en las villas. Ahí está la violencia”, decía.

Justamente lo contrario opina Pablo Alabarces, el sociólogo con más publicaciones referidas a la violencia en las canchas de fútbol. Según él, ésta es originada por “el hincha común”, la policía, los dirigentes y los medios de comunicación.

Para el reconocido autor de Crónicas del aguante, con lo ocurrido en Colón-Belgrano quedó demostrado “una vez más” que las agresiones que solemos ver domingo a domingo en las canchas no son patrimonio exclusivo de la barra brava.

Los plateístas de Colón tiran de todo y la culpa es de Olave. La policía reprime y la culpa es de Olave. Bueno… Olave también es culpable como todos los jugadores que desde su lugar también generan lo que generan. Pero se está equivocando el foco de la cuestión”, dice el profesional con creciente indignación.

Tratar estos incidentes como si fueran aislados no sirve para nada. Mi primer trabajo sobre violencia en el fútbol fue hace 12 años, así que imaginate que nada me sorprende a esta altura. Todo es previsible, esperable. Y también es esperable cómo se reacciona… Los medios dicen ‘los violentos, la culpa es de ellos’. Pero no dicen que entre ellos están los jugadores, la policía, los periodistas cordobeses… todos”.

Alabarces lidera un conjunto de intelectuales que hace unos meses presentó un polémico proyecto para erradicar la violencia aboliendo las actuales medidas (represión policial, mayores operativos, prohibición de público visitante, entre otras cosas) que a la luz de los hechos no han brindado soluciones. En lugar de ello, propone un trabajo conjunto de profesionales de distintas disciplinas para reeducar a los violentos. Reconocer la existencia de la barra. “No legalizarla, como malinterpretan algunos”, aclara. “Hasta ahora son todos parches. No existen medidas a largo plazo. Prohibir el ingreso de público visitante es un negocio televisivo”, agrega.

Días atrás, en una declaración para muchos desacertada, la presidenta Cristina Fernández sostuvo que “si el tema de la violencia lo circunscribimos únicamente a algunos grupitos vamos a equivocarnos y no vamos a darle una verdadera respuesta al problema, que tiene que ver más con cosas que pasan fuera de la cancha, que son las mas graves y no adentro”. Según Alabarces, la mandataria fue “demasiado liviana, hizo una alusión rápida y poco profunda del tema”.

–¿Cuál es la solución?

–La cultura futbolística argentina encierra una ética de la violencia llamada “el aguante”, reconocida y alentada desde los medios. En 10 años podemos solucionarlo. El responsable de la seguridad en Inglaterra me dijo que se “cura” en ese tiempo.

–¿Cómo se hace?

–Yo propongo una serie de medidas que van desde la intervención de la AFA a blanquear la guita que se maneja en el fútbol. A fines del año pasado empecé a analizar el “Fútbol para Todos”. Ahí hace tres años tenés publicidad gratis y no hay ni un aviso sobre la violencia.

–¿Qué más?

–Campañas. Sacar la policía y poner un batallón de antropólogos y trabajadores sociales. Trabajar con las comunidades, dialogar, convencerlos…

–Con progresismo…

–No es izquierdista, es lo más liberal… No prejuzgar a los barras, hacer al revés: darles un shock de confianza. Pero si exigís orden tenés que darles infraestructura. Los baños tienen que estar en condiciones y no como los ves en cualquier estadio. La gente tiene derecho a acceder a eso.

–Como en el “Primer Mundo”.

–Los ingleses decían “usted no puede tratar a los hinchas como animales y después quejarse porque se portan como animales”. Hubo casos en los que al comienzo cuando se encontraban con cosas nuevas en el estadio se las robaban, pero con el tiempo se sentían orgullosos de su nuevo estadio.

–¿Realmente creés que es posible un cambio?

–La idea de que el cambio cultural es posible lo demuestra que antes esa cultura no era así. La cultura cambió, y lo hizo en relación a cambios globales: el peso de los hinchas es mayor. Ellos se perciben a sí mismos como los únicos que garantizan la continuidad de esa cultura.

–Decís que los medios y los futbolistas también son responsables.

–Cuando Belgrano le empató a River en la promoción y el relator decía “River sale a matar o morir”, el hincha lo siente así. Y los jugadores son tribuneros, se besan el escudo, provocan… No sólo ellos, mirá a los árbitros cómo dirigen…

–¿Por qué creés que los dirigentes no le encontraron la vuelta a la violencia?

–Y… Mirá el mejor ejemplo es Cantero (presidente de Independiente). Venía bien enfrentándose con la barra. Pero en el partido que se suspendió por la lluvia contra Vélez, salió a quejarse y decir “el fútbol es para hombres”. Hasta el más sensato parece capturado por esa cultura del aguante.

–¿Te ofrecieron algún cargo público?

–No, y no lo aceptaría.

The Cambridge Declaration on Consciousness

On this day of July 7, 2012, a prominent international group of cognitive neuroscientists, neuropharmacologists, neurophysiologists, neuroanatomists and computational neuroscientists gathered at The University of Cambridge to reassess the neurobiological substrates of conscious experience and related behaviors in human and non-human animals. While comparative research on this topic is naturally hampered by the inability of non-human animals, and often humans, to clearly and readily communicate about their internal states, the following observations can be stated unequivocally:

 The field of Consciousness research is rapidly evolving. Abundant new techniques and strategies for human and non-human animal research have been developed. Consequently, more data is becoming readily available, and this calls for a periodic reevaluation of previously held preconceptions in this field. Studies of non-human animals have shown that homologous brain circuits correlated with conscious experience and perception can be selectively facilitated and disrupted to assess whether they are in fact necessary for those experiences. Moreover, in humans, new non-invasive techniques are readily available to survey the correlates of consciousness.

 The neural substrates of emotions do not appear to be confined to cortical structures. In fact, subcortical neural networks aroused during affective states in humans are also critically important for generating emotional behaviors in animals. Artificial arousal of the same brain regions generates corresponding behavior and feeling states in both humans and non-human animals. Wherever in the brain one evokes instinctual emotional behaviors in non-human animals, many of the ensuing behaviors are consistent with experienced feeling states, including those internal states that are rewarding and punishing. Deep brain stimulation of these systems in humans can also generate similar affective states. Systems associated with affect are concentrated in subcortical regions where neural homologies abound. Young human and nonhuman animals without neocortices retain these brain-mind functions. Furthermore, neural circuits supporting behavioral/electrophysiological states of attentiveness, sleep and decision making appear to have arisen in evolution as early as the invertebrate radiation, being evident in insects and cephalopod mollusks (e.g., octopus).

 Birds appear to offer, in their behavior, neurophysiology, and neuroanatomy a striking case of parallel evolution of consciousness. Evidence of near human-like levels of consciousness has been most dramatically observed in African grey parrots. Mammalian and avian emotional networks and cognitive microcircuitries appear to be far more homologous than previously thought. Moreover, certain species of birds have been found to exhibit neural sleep patterns similar to those of mammals, including REM sleep and, as was demonstrated in zebra finches, neurophysiological patterns, previously thought to require a mammalian neocortex. Magpies in particular have been shown to exhibit striking similarities to humans, great apes, dolphins, and elephants in studies of mirror self-recognition.

 In humans, the effect of certain hallucinogens appears to be associated with a disruption in cortical feedforward and feedback processing. Pharmacological interventions in non-human animals with compounds known to affect conscious behavior in humans can lead to similar perturbations in behavior in non-human animals. In humans, there is evidence to suggest that awareness is correlated with cortical activity, which does not exclude possible contributions by subcortical or early cortical processing, as in visual awareness. Evidence that human and nonhuman animal emotional feelings arise from homologous subcortical brain networks provide compelling evidence for evolutionarily shared primal affective qualia.

We declare the following: “The absence of a neocortex does not appear to preclude an organism from experiencing affective states. Convergent evidence indicates that non-human animals have the neuroanatomical, neurochemical, and neurophysiological substrates of conscious states along with the capacity to exhibit intentional behaviors. Consequently, the weight of evidence indicates that humans are not unique in possessing the neurological substrates that generate consciousness. Nonhuman animals, including all mammals and birds, and many other creatures, including octopuses, also possess these neurological substrates.”

* The Cambridge Declaration on Consciousness was written by Philip Low and edited by Jaak Panksepp, Diana Reiss, David Edelman, Bruno Van Swinderen, Philip Low and Christof Koch. The Declaration was publicly proclaimed in Cambridge, UK, on July 7, 2012, at the Francis Crick Memorial Conference on Consciousness in Human and non-Human Animals, at Churchill College, University of Cambridge, by Low, Edelman and Koch. The Declaration was signed by the conference participants that very evening, in the presence of Stephen Hawking, in the Balfour Room at the Hotel du Vin in Cambridge, UK. The signing ceremony was memorialized by CBS 60 Minutes.

Manifesto de neurocientistas sobre a consciência animal

16/07/2012

Comportamento animal

Quase humanos (Veja)

Neurocientistas publicam manifesto afirmando que mamíferos, aves e até polvos têm consciência e esquentam debate sobre direitos dos animais

Marco Túlio Pires

Chimpanzé alimenta um filhote de tigre dourado, em mini zoológico na cidade de Samutprakan, Tailândia

Chimpanzé alimenta um filhote de tigre dourado, em mini zoológico na cidade de Samutprakan, Tailândia: percepção de sua própria existência e do mundo ao seu redor (Rungroj Yongrit/EFE)

Os seres humanos não são os únicos animais que têm consciência. A afirmação não é de ativistas radicais defensores dos direitos dos animais. Pelo contrário. Um grupo de neurocientistas — doutores de instituições de renome como Caltech, MIT e Instituto Max Planck — publicou um manifesto asseverando que o estudo da neurociência evoluiu de modo tal que não é mais possível excluir mamíferos, aves e até polvos do grupo de seres vivos que possuem consciência. O documento divulgado no último sábado (7), em Cambridge, esquenta uma discussão que divide cientistas, filósofos e legisladores há séculos sobre a natureza da consciência e sua implicação na vida dos humanos e de outros animais.

Leia mais: A íntegra, em inglês, do manifesto que afirma a existência da consciência em todos os mamíferos, aves e outras criaturas, como polvos

Apresentado à Nasa nesta quinta-feira, o manifesto não traz novas descobertas da neurociência — é uma compilação das pesquisas da área. Representa, no entanto, um posicionamento inédito sobre a capacidade de outros seres perceberem sua própria existência e o mundo ao seu redor. Em entrevista ao site de VEJA, Philip Low, criador do iBrain, o aparelho que recentemente permitiu a leitura das ondas cerebrais do físico Stephen Hawking, e um dos articuladores do movimento, explica que nos últimos 16 anos a neurociência descobriu que as áreas do cérebro que distinguem seres humanos de outros animais não são as que produzem a consciência. “As estruturas cerebrais responsáveis pelos processos que geram a consciência nos humanos e outros animais são equivalentes”, diz. “Concluímos então que esses animais também possuem consciência.”

O que é consciência?

PARA A FILOSOFIA
Filosoficamente, é o entendimento que uma criatura tem sobre si e seu lugar na natureza. Alguns atributos definem a consciência, como ser senciente, ou seja, sentir o mundo à sua volta e reagir a ele; estar alerta ou acordado ou ter consciência sobre si mesmo (o que, para a filosofia já basta para incluir alguns animais “não-linguísticos” entre os seres com consciência).Fonte: Enciclopédia de Filosofia de Stanford

PARA A CIÊNCIA
A ciência considera como consciência as percepções sobre o mundo e as sensações corporais, junto com os pensamentos, memórias, ações e emoções. Ou seja, tudo o que escapa aos processos cerebrais automáticos e chega à nossa atenção. O conteúdo da consciência geralmente é estudado usando exames de imagens cerebrais para comparar quais estímulos chegam à nossa atenção e quais não. Como resumiu o neurocientista Bernard Baars, em 1987, o cérebro é como um teatro no qual a maioria dos eventos neurais são inconscientes, portanto acontecem “nos bastidores”, enquanto alguns poucos entram no processo consciente, ou seja, chegam ao “palco”.

Estudos recentes, como os da pesquisadora Diana Reiss (uma das cientistas que assinaram o manifesto), da Hunter College, nos Estados Unidos, mostram que golfinhos e elefantes também são capazes de se reconhecer no espelho. Essa capacidade é importante para definir se um ser está consciente. O mesmo vale para chimpanzés e pássaros. Outros tipos de comportamento foram analisados pelos neurocientistas. “Quando seu cachorro está sentindo dor ou feliz em vê-lo, há evidências de que no cérebro deles há estruturas semelhantes às que são ativadas quando exibimos medo e dor e prazer”, diz Low.

Personalidade animal – Dizer que os animais têm consciência pode trazer várias implicações para a sociedade e o modo como os animais são tratados. Steven Wise, advogado e especialista americano em direito dos animais, diz que o manifesto chega em boa hora. “O papel dos advogados e legisladores é transformar conclusões científicas como essa em legislação que ajudará a organizar a sociedade”, diz em entrevista ao site de VEJA. Wise é líder do Projeto dos Direitos de Animais não Humanos. O advogado coordena um grupo de 70 profissionais que organizam informações, casos e jurisprudência para entrar com o primeiro processo em favor de que alguns animais — como grandes primatas, papagaios africanos e golfinhos — tenham seu status equiparado ao dos humanos.

O manifesto de Cambridge dá mais munição ao grupo de Wise para vencer o caso. “Queremos que esses animais recebam direitos fundamentais, que a justiça as enxergue como pessoas, no sentido legal.” Isso, de acordo com o advogado, quer dizer que esses animais teriam direito à integridade física e à liberdade, por exemplo. “Temos que parar de pensar que esses animais existem para servir aos seres humanos”, defende Wise. “Eles têm um valor intrínseco, independente de como os avaliamos.”

Questão moral – O manifesto não decreta o fim dos zoológicos ou das churrascarias, muito menos das pesquisas médicas com animais. Contudo, já foi suficiente para provocar reflexão e mudança de comportamento em cientistas, como o próprio Low. “Estou considerando me tornar vegetariano”, diz. “Temos agora que apelar para nossa engenhosidade, para desenvolver tecnologias que nos permitam criar uma sociedade cada vez menos dependente dos animais.” Low se refere principalmente à pesquisa médica. Para estudar a vida, a ciência ainda precisa tirar muitas. De acordo com o neurocientista, o mundo gasta 20 bilhões por ano para matar 100 milhões de vertebrados. Das moléculas medicinais produzidas por esse amontoado de dinheiro e mortes, apenas 6% chega a ser testada em seres humanos. “É uma péssima contabilidade”, diz Low.

Contudo, a pesquisa com animais ainda é necessária. O endocrinologista americano Michael Conn, autor do livro The Animal Research War, sem edição no Brasil, argumenta que se trata de uma escolha priorizar a espécie humana. “Conceitos como os de consentimento e autonomia só fazem sentido dentro de um código moral que diz respeito aos homens, e não aos animais”, disse em entrevista ao site de VEJA. “Nossa obrigação com os animais é fazer com que eles sejam devidamente cuidados, não sofram nem sintam dor — e não tratá-los como se fossem humanos, o que seria uma ficção”, argumenta. “Se pudéssemos utilizar apenas um computador para fazer pesquisas médicas seria ótimo. Mas a verdade é que não é possível ainda.”

A inteligência dos polvos

O vídeo mostra diversas situações em que o polvo consegue resolver problemas. Desde a captura de presas em diferentes tipos de recipientes até escapar de locais extremamente difíceis. As situações mostram que o animal é capaz de formular soluções para problemas específicos, o que denota, na opinião dos neurocientistas, um estado de consciência inteligente.

*   *   *

“Não é mais possível dizer que não sabíamos”, diz Philip Low (Veja)

Entrevista

Neurocientista explica por que pesquisadores se uniram para assinar manifesto que admite a existência da consciência em todos os mamíferos, aves e outras criaturas, como o polvo, e como essa descoberta pode impactar a sociedade

Marco Túlio Pires

Epilepsia: especialistas estimam que 2% da população brasileira tenha a doença

Estruturas do cérebro responsáveis pela produção da consciência são análogas em humanos e outros animais, dizem neurocientistas (Thinkstock)

O neurocientista canadense Philip Low ganhou destaque no noticiário científico depois deapresentar um projeto em parceria com o físico Stephen Hawking, de 70 anos. Low quer ajudar Hawking, que está completamente paralisado há 40 anos por causa de uma doença degenerativa, a se comunicar com a mente. Os resultados da pesquisa foram revelados no último sábado (7) em uma conferência em Cambridge. Contudo, o principal objetivo do encontro era outro. Nele, neurocientistas de todo o mundo assinaram um manifesto afirmando que todos os mamíferos, aves e outras criaturas, incluindo polvos, têm consciência. Stephen Hawking estava presente no jantar de assinatura do manifesto como convidado de honra.

Philip LowPhilip Low: “Todos os mamíferos e pássaros têm consciência”. Divulgação.

Low é pesquisador da Universidade Stanford e do MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology), ambos nos Estados Unidos. Ele e mais 25 pesquisadores entendem que as estruturas cerebrais que produzem a consciência em humanos também existem nos animais. “As áreas do cérebro que nos distinguem de outros animais não são as que produzem a consciência”, diz Low, que concedeu a seguinte entrevista ao site de VEJA:

Estudos sobre o comportamento animal já afirmam que vários animais possuem certo grau de consciência. O que a neurociência diz a respeito?Descobrimos que as estruturas que nos distinguem de outros animais, como o córtex cerebral, não são responsáveis pela manifestação da consciência. Resumidamente, se o restante do cérebro é responsável pela consciência e essas estruturas são semelhantes entre seres humanos e outros animais, como mamíferos e pássaros, concluímos que esses animais também possuem consciência.

Quais animais têm consciência? Sabemos que todos os mamíferos, todos os pássaros e muitas outras criaturas, como o polvo, possuem as estruturas nervosas que produzem a consciência. Isso quer dizer que esses animais sofrem. É uma verdade inconveniente: sempre foi fácil afirmar que animais não têm consciência. Agora, temos um grupo de neurocientistas respeitados que estudam o fenômeno da consciência, o comportamento dos animais, a rede neural, a anatomia e a genética do cérebro. Não é mais possível dizer que não sabíamos.

É possível medir a similaridade entre a consciência de mamíferos e pássaros e a dos seres humanos? Isso foi deixado em aberto pelo manifesto. Não temos uma métrica, dada a natureza da nossa abordagem. Sabemos que há tipos diferentes de consciência. Podemos dizer, contudo, que a habilidade de sentir dor e prazer em mamíferos e seres humanos é muito semelhante.

Que tipo de comportamento animal dá suporte à ideia de que eles têm consciência?Quando um cachorro está com medo, sentindo dor, ou feliz em ver seu dono, são ativadas em seu cérebro estruturas semelhantes às que são ativadas em humanos quando demonstramos medo, dor e prazer. Um comportamento muito importante é o autorreconhecimento no espelho. Dentre os animais que conseguem fazer isso, além dos seres humanos, estão os golfinhos, chimpanzés, bonobos, cães e uma espécie de pássaro chamada pica-pica.

Quais benefícios poderiam surgir a partir do entendimento da consciência em animais? Há um pouco de ironia nisso. Gastamos muito dinheiro tentando encontrar vida inteligente fora do planeta enquanto estamos cercados de inteligência consciente aqui no planeta. Se considerarmos que um polvo — que tem 500 milhões de neurônios (os humanos tem 100 bilhões) — consegue produzir consciência, estamos muito mais próximos de produzir uma consciência sintética do que pensávamos. É muito mais fácil produzir um modelo com 500 milhões de neurônios do que 100 bilhões. Ou seja, fazer esses modelos sintéticos poderá ser mais fácil agora.

Qual é a ambição do manifesto? Os neurocientistas se tornaram militantes do movimento sobre o direito dos animais? É uma questão delicada. Nosso papel como cientistas não é dizer o que a sociedade deve fazer, mas tornar público o que enxergamos. A sociedade agora terá uma discussão sobre o que está acontecendo e poderá decidir formular novas leis, realizar mais pesquisas para entender a consciência dos animais ou protegê-los de alguma forma. Nosso papel é reportar os dados.

As conclusões do manifesto tiveram algum impacto sobre o seu comportamento? Acho que vou virar vegano. É impossível não se sensibilizar com essa nova percepção sobre os animais, em especial sobre sua experiência do sofrimento. Será difícil, adoro queijo.

O que pode mudar com o impacto dessa descoberta? Os dados são perturbadores, mas muito importantes. No longo prazo, penso que a sociedade dependerá menos dos animais. Será melhor para todos. Deixe-me dar um exemplo. O mundo gasta 20 bilhões de dólares por ano matando 100 milhões de vertebrados em pesquisas médicas. A probabilidade de um remédio advindo desses estudos ser testado em humanos (apenas teste, pode ser que nem funcione) é de 6%. É uma péssima contabilidade. Um primeiro passo é desenvolver abordagens não invasivas. Não acho ser necessário tirar vidas para estudar a vida. Penso que precisamos apelar para nossa própria engenhosidade e desenvolver melhores tecnologias para respeitar a vida dos animais. Temos que colocar a tecnologia em uma posição em que ela serve nossos ideais, em vez de competir com eles.

Sweden recognises new file-sharing religion Kopimism (BBC)

5 January 2012 Last updated at 13:49 GMT

Fingers nearly touchingFile-sharing is a religious ceremony according to the church leader

A “church” whose central tenet is the right to file-share has been formally recognised by the Swedish government.

The Church of Kopimism claims that “kopyacting” – sharing information through copying – is akin to a religious service.

The “spiritual leader” of the church said recognition was a “large step”.

But others were less enthusiastic and said the church would do little to halt the global crackdown on piracy.

Holy information

It doesn’t mean illegal file-sharing will become legal, any more than if ‘Jedi’ was recognised as a religion everyone would be walking around with light sabres” – Mark Mulligan, Music analyst

The Swedish government agency Kammarkollegiet finally registered the Church of Kopimism as a religious organisation shortly before Christmas, the group said.

“We had to apply three times,” said Gustav Nipe, chairman of the organisation.

The church, which holds CTRL+C and CTRL+V (shortcuts for copy and paste) as sacred symbols, does not directly promote illegal file sharing, focusing instead on the open distribution of knowledge to all.

It was founded by 19-year-old philosophy student and leader Isak Gerson. He hopes that file-sharing will now be given religious protection.

“For the Church of Kopimism, information is holy and copying is a sacrament. Information holds a value, in itself and in what it contains and the value multiplies through copying. Therefore copying is central for the organisation and its members,” he said in a statement.

“Being recognised by the state of Sweden is a large step for all of Kopimi. Hopefully this is one step towards the day when we can live out our faith without fear of persecution,” he added.

The church’s website has been unavailable since it broke the news of its religious status. A message urged those interested in joining to “come back in a couple of days when the storm has settled”.

Despite the new-found interest in the organisation, experts said religious status for file-sharing would have little effect on the global crackdown on piracy.

“It is quite divorced from reality and is reflective of Swedish social norms rather than the Swedish legislative system,” said music analyst Mark Mulligan.

“It doesn’t mean that illegal file-sharing will become legal, any more than if ‘Jedi’ was recognised as a religion everyone would be walking around with light sabres.

“In some ways these guys are looking outdated. File-sharing as a means to pirate content is becoming yesterday’s technology,” he added.

Piracy crackdown

The establishment of the church comes amid a backdrop of governmental zero-tolerance towards piracy.

The crackdown on piracy has moved focus away from individual pirates and more towards the ecosystem that supports piracy.

In the US, the Stop Online Piracy Act (Sopa) aims to stop online ad networks and payment processors from doing business with foreign websites accused of enabling or facilitating copyright infringement.

It could also stop search engines from linking to the allegedly infringing sites. Domain name registrars could be forced to take down the websites, and internet service providers forced to block access to the sites accused of infringing.

The government is pushing ahead with the controversial legislation despite continued opposition.

 

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Kopimism: the world’s newest religion explained (New Scientist)

14:35 06 January 2012 by Alison George

Download this in memory of me <i>(Image: Lars Johansson)</i>Isak Gerson is spiritual leader of the world’s newest religion, Kopimism, devoted to file-sharing. On 5 January the Church of Kopimism was formallyrecognised as a religion by the Swedish government.

Tell me about this new file-sharing religion, Kopimism.
We were founded about 15 months ago and we believe that information is holy and that the act of copying is holy.

Why make a religion out of file-sharing? Why not just be an ordinary club without defining yourselves as being a religious community?
Because we see ourselves as a religious group, a church seems like a good way of organising ourselves.

Was it hard to become an official religion?
We have had this faith for several years and one day we thought, why not try and get it registered? It was quite difficult. The authorities were quite dogmatic with their formalities. It took us three tries and more than a year to get recognised.

What criteria do you have to meet to become an official religion?
The law states that to be a religion you have to be an organisation that practises moments of prayer or meditation in your rituals.

What are the Kopimist prayers and meditations?
We have a part of our religious practices where we worship the value of information by copying it.

You call this “kopyacting”. Do you actually meet up in a building, like a church, to undertake these rituals?
We do meet up, but it doesn’t have to be a physical room. It could be a server or a web page too.

I understand that certain symbols have special significance in Kopimism.
Yes. There is the “kopimi” logo, which is a K written inside a pyramid a symbol used online to show you want to be copied. But there are also symbols that represent and encourage copying, for example, “CTRL+V” and “CTRL+C”.

Why is information, and sharing it, so important to you?
Information is the building block of everything around me and everything I believe in. Copying it is a way of multiplying the value of information.

What’s your stance on illegal file-sharing?
I think that the copyright laws are very problematic, and at least need to be rewritten, but I would suggest getting rid of most of them.

So all file-sharing should be legal?
Absolutely.

Are you just trying to make a point, or is this religion for real?
We’ve had this faith for several years.

What has the reaction been from established churches?
I haven’t spoken to many of them, but those I have spoken to have been curious, and seen it as an interesting discussion.

Can you get excommunicated from the Church of Kopimism?
We have never thought about it. But if you don’t believe in our values then I guess there is no point in being a member, and if you do believe in our values you can’t really be excommunicated.

How many church members are there?
Around 3000.

How do you become a Kopimist?
Our site is down for moment, because there has been too much traffic, but when it is up, you just have to read about our values and agree with them, then you can register on the web page.

Is there a deity associated with Kopimism?
No, there isn’t.

Is Julian Assange a high priest of Kopimism?
No. We have had no communication with him.

Does Kopimism have anything to say about the afterlife?
Not really. As a religion we are not so focussed on humans.

It could be a digital afterlife.
Information doesn’t really have a life, but I guess it can be forgotten, but as long as it is copied it won’t be.

Profile

Isak Gerson is a 20-year-old philosophy student at Uppsala University, Sweden. Together with Gustav Nipe – a member of Sweden’s Pirate party – and others, he has founded the Church of Kopimism.

 

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Kopimism, Sweden’s Pirate Religion, Begins to Plunder America (U.S.News)

‘Kopimism’ gives internet piracy a place to worship

April 20, 2012

The symbol of Kopimism, a religion dedicated to information sharing.The symbol of Kopimism, a religion dedicated to information sharing.

A Swedish religion whose dogma centers on the belief that people should be free to copy and distribute all information—regardless of any copyright or trademarks—has made its way to the United States.

Followers of so-called “Kopimism” believe copying, sharing, and improving on knowledge, music, and other types of information is only human—the Romans remixed Greek mythology, after all, they say. In January, Kopimism—a play on the words “copy me”—was formally recognized by a Swedish government agency, raising its profile worldwide.

“Culture is something that makes people feel much better and makes people appreciate their world in a different way. Knowledge is also something we should copy regardless of the law,” says Isak Gerson, the 20-year-old founder of Kopimism. “It makes us better when we share knowledge and culture with each other.”

More than 3,500 people “like” Kopimism on Facebook, and thousands more practice its sacred ritual of file sharing. According to its manifesto, private, closed-source software code and anti-piracy software are “comparable to slavery.” Kopimist “Ops,” or spiritual leaders, are encouraged to give counsel to people who want to pirate files, are banned from recording and should encrypt all virtual religious service meetings “because of society’s vicious legislative and litigious persecution of Kopimists.”

Official in-person meetings must happen in places free of anti-Kopimist monitoring and in spaces with the Kopimist symbol—a pyramid with the letter K inside. To be initiated new parishioners must share the Kopimist symbol and say the sacred words “copied and seeded.”

The gospel of the church has begun to spread, with Kopimist branches in 18 countries.

An American branch of the religion was recently registered with Illinois and is in the process of gaining federal recognition, according to Christopher Carmean, a 25-year-old student at the University of Chicago and head of the U.S. branch.

“Data is what we are made of, data is what defines our life, and data is how we express ourselves,” says Carmean. “Forms of copying, remixing, and sharing enhance the quality of life for all who have access to them. Attempts to hinder sharing are antithetical to our data-driven existence.”

About 450 people have registered with his church, and about 30 of them are actively practicing the religion, whose symbols include Ctrl+C and Ctrl+V—the keyboard shortcuts for copy and paste.

It’s no surprise the religion was born in Sweden—it has some of the laxest copyright laws in the world. The Swedish Pirate Party has two seats in the European Parliament, and The Pirate Bay, a Swedish website that’s one of the world’s largest portals to illegal files, has avoided being shut down for years.

Gerson is happy to allow people who want to open their own branches of Kopimism to copy its symbols and religious documents.

“There’s been a couple people that asked me [to start congregations], but I tell them they shouldn’t ask. You don’t need permission,” he says. “It’s a project, and I want projects to be copied, so I’m happy when people copy without asking.”

Most Kopimists say they realized they were practicing the religion before they found it.

“There are many people who are like me, who always held the Kopimist ideals, but hadn’t yet heard of the official church,” says Lauren Pespisa, a web developer in Cambridge, Mass., who gave a speech about the religion in March to a group of anti-copyright activists called the Massachusetts Pirate Party. “I think some people are like me and have embraced it officially and publicly, but some people believe in it and don’t really want to mix religion and politics.”

That’s a big criticism of the religion—lawsuits brought upon Kopimists is a form of religious persecution, according to Gerson. But Pespisa says that crying persecution in court probably “wouldn’t hold up in reality.”

In a blog post in late March, Carmean wrote that people should not “bring a legal argument to a religion fight.”

“Expecting any religion to provide a logic-based mandate for every single action that one might take is absurd and offensive,” he wrote. “It insults the basic moral fiber of Kopimists and all of humanity to outright demand a total moral code of conduct from anyone purporting to have a new perspective on issues of our time.”

Although many Kopimists are practicing a “sacred” ritual whenever they download or share a movie, CD, or book, they also regularly meet in online chat rooms to discuss the religion. Many of them are also internet activists, working to make file sharing legal, regardless of copyright. Even if they’re unsuccessful, Gerson is happy to help the information flow in any way he can.

“I think we need to change the laws, but I don’t think we need to focus only on them. I think laws can, in many cases, be ignored,” he says. “We want to encourage people to share regardless of what the laws say.”

Argentine Invasion (Radiolab)

Monday, July 30, 2012 – 10:00 PM

From a suburban sidewalk in southern California, Jad and Robert witness the carnage of a gruesome turf war. Though the tiny warriors doing battle clock in at just a fraction of an inch, they have evolved a surprising, successful, and rather unsettling strategy of ironclad loyalty, absolute intolerance, and brutal violence.

Drawing of an Argentinte Ant

(Adam Cole/WNYC)

David Holway, an ecologist and evolutionary biologist from UC San Diego, takes us to a driveway in Escondido, California where a grisly battle rages. In this quiet suburban spot, two groups of ants are putting on a chilling display of dismemberment and death. According to David, this battle line marks the edge of an enormous super-colony of Argentine ants. Think of that anthill in your backyard, and stretch it out across five continents.

Argentine ants are not good neighbors. When they meet ants from another colony, any other colony, they fight to the death, and tear the other ants to pieces. While other kinds of ants sometimes take slaves or even have sex with ants from different colonies, the Argentine ants don’t fool around. If you’re not part of the colony, you’re dead.

According to evolutionary biologist Neil Tsutsui and ecologist Mark Moffett, the flood plains of northern Argentina offer a clue as to how these ants came to dominate the planet. Because of the frequent flooding, the homeland of Linepithema humile is basically a bootcamp for badass ants. One day, a couple ants from one of these families of Argentine ants made their way onto a boat and landed in New Orleans in the late 1800s. Over the last century, these Argentine ants wreaked havoc across the southern U.S. and a significant chunk of coastal California.

In fact, Melissa Thomas, an Australian entomologist, reveals that these Argentine ants are even more well-heeled than we expected – they’ve made to every continent except Antarctica. No matter how many thousands of miles separate individual ants, when researchers place two of them together – whether they’re plucked from Australia, Japan, Hawaii … even Easter Island – they recognize each other as belonging to the same super-colony.

But the really mind-blowing thing about these little guys is the surprising success of their us-versus-them death-dealing. Jad and Robert wrestle with what to make of this ant regime, whether it will last, and what, if anything, it might mean for other warlike organisms with global ambitions.

Violência no futebol brasileiro – fim de semana de 18 e 19 de agosto de 2012

19/08/2012 18h00 – Atualizado em 19/08/2012 23h33

Homem é morto durante confronto entre torcedores de Vasco e Flamengo (G1)

Confusão aconteceu em rua de Tomás Coelho, no subúrbio do Rio.
Segundo a Polícia Militar, um torcedor rubro-negro ficou ferido.

Do G1 RJ

Diego Martins Leal, de 29 anos, foi baleado e morto durante uma briga entre torcedores do Vasco e do Flamengo na tarde deste domingo (19), em Tomás Coelho, subúrbio do Rio de Janeiro.

De acordo com as primeiras informações da Polícia Militar, a confusão começou quando um ônibus com flamenguistas vindo de Resende, no Sul Fluminense, passou por um grupo de torcedores do Vasco concentrados num porto de gasolina localizado na Rua Silva Vale. Diego foi morto no interior de um bar, na Rua Itaquati. Um torcedor do Flamengo ficou ferido.

O primo de Diego presenciou o crime. “Deram cinco disparos, e ainda deram facada nele. É uma violência que não acaba, briga de torcida organizada. Tinham marcado pelo Fracebook”, destacou.

Cerca de 60 suspeitos de participarem da briga foram detidos e levados para a 44ª DP (Inhaúma). Ainda segundo a PM, o autor do disparo foi reconhecido por testemunhas e identificado. Também foram apreendidos fogos de artifício.

Flamengo e Vasco jogaram no Estádio do Engenhão, na Zona Norte, pela 18ª rodada do Campeonato Brasileiro. O time rubro-negro venceu por um a zero, com gol de Wágner Love.

 

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19/08/2012 21h03 – Atualizado em 19/08/2012 21h13

Homem é baleado durante briga entre torcedores na Zona Oeste (G1)

Segundo hospital, ele foi atingido no abdômen e passa por cirurgia.
Outras seis pessoas ficaram feridas durante confronto em Jacarepaguá.

Do G1 RJ

Um homem foi baleado no abdômen durante uma briga entre torcedores de Vasco e Flamengo na ytarde deste domingo (19), próximo ao Largo da Tanque, na Estrada do Cafundá, Zona Oeste do Rio de Janeiro. Outros seis torcedores ficaram feridos na confusão.

Segundo informações da Secretaria municipal de Saúde, o torcedor, que ainda não foi identificado, deu entrada no Hospital Lourenço Jorge, também na Zona Oeste, onde foi submetido a uma cirurgia. Até as 20h40, ele permanceia no centro cirúrgico.

Ainda de acordo com a secretaria, outros dois feridos também deram entrada na mesma unidade: um levou um tiro de raspão na perna; o outro teve um trauma na face. Ambos passavam por avaliação médica até as 20h40.

Os outros quatro feridos foram atendidos no Hospital Cardoso Fontes, em Jacarepaguá. Um deles sofreu uma fratura no crânio, está em estado grave e foi transferido para o Hospital do Andaraí, na Zona Norte. Os outros três tiveram cortes e escoriações pelo corpo, e estão em observação.

Uma viatura do 18° BPM (Jacarepaguá) foi ao local da briga e prendeu sete torcedores, sendo três da torcida do Flamengo e quatro torcedores do Vasco, todos encaminhados para a 41ª DP (Tanque).

Também na tarde deste domingo, um vascaíno ainda não identificado foi baleado e morto durante uma briga entre torcedores dos mesmos times em Tomás Coelho, subúrbio do Rio de Janeiro.

Flamengo e Vasco se enfrentaram no Estádio do Engenhão, na Zona Norte, pela 18ª rodada do Campeonato Brasileiro. O time rubro-negro venceu por um a zero, com gol de Wágner Love.

 

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Corpo de torcedor do Vasco morto na zona norte é liberado, mas permanece no IML (R7)

Dois suspeitos foram presos logo após crime; DH investiga caso

Isabele Rangel, do R7 | 20/08/2012 às 09h35 | Atualizado em: 20/08/2012 às 10h51

O corpo do torcedor do Vasco Diego Martins Leal, de 30 anos, morto em uma briga de torcida em Thomaz Coelho, na zona norte, já foi liberado do IML (Instituto Médico Legal).No entanto, segundo a Polícia Civil, a vítima ainda não foi removida para enterro.

Diego foi morto em uma confusão envolvendo 50 pessoas em um posto de gasolina entre as ruas Itaquati e Silva Vale, nas proximidades da avenida Pastor Martin Luter King Júnior, às margens da linha dois do metrô. Segundo a Polícia Civil, ele teria sido morto a tiros por dois homens identificados logo após o crime. O caso está sendo investigado pela DH (Divisão de Homicídios).

A confusão ocorreu por volta das 16h, quando três vascaínos, que estavam em um veículo Zafira, pararam para abastecer. Dentro do carro estavam Darlan Pereira da Silva e dois primos dele, que moram em Brasília, mas estavam na capital fluminense para ir ao clássico carioca no Estádio Olímpico João Havelange, no Engenho de Dentro.

Segundo a Polícia Militar, ao avistar o motorista com a camisa do Vasco, ocupantes do ônibus, que vinham de Resende, no sul do Estado, pararam o coletivo e seguiram em direção ao veículo com paus, pedras e bolas de sinuca.  Darlan ainda tentou tirar a camisa, mas ele os primos foram perseguidos e tiveram que se abrigar no interior do posto para fugir das agressões. De acordo com a PM, o carro dele foi totalmente depredado.

Em meio ao tumulto, dois homens, que não faziam parte do grupo de Resende, iniciaram uma perseguição a um torcedor do Vasco, que estava em um bar da região. A vítima, identificada como Diego Martins Leal, ainda tentou fugir, mas acabou sendo baleado. Em meio ao tumulto, um torcedor do Flamengo também ficou ferido e precisou ser atendido pelo SAMU (Serviço de Atendimento Médico de Urgência).

A confusão só terminou com a chegada de policiais do Batalhão de Méier (3º BPM), que foram acionados pelo policial que ocupava uma cabine de observação no viaduto de Thomaz Coelho, que dá acesso à estrada Adhemar Bebiano.

Dois homens foram apontados por moradores como suspeitos de terem matado o vascaíno. Eles foram presos pela PM, levados para a Delegacia de Inhaúma (44º DP), mas transferidos para a DH (Divisão de Homicídios do Rio de Janeiro), na Barra da Tijuca, zona oeste do Rio. De acordo com a polícia, os dois podem ser indiciados por homicídio doloso (com intenção de matar).

Todos os ocupantes do ônibus, que é da empresa Transtaxi, foram detidos e levados para a 44º DP, para checagem de documentos e verificação de ficha criminal. No ônibus, foram encontrados cabos de enxada, pedras, bolas de sinuca, bandeiras e camisas do Flamengo.Outros sete presos em Jacarepaguá

Em Jacarepaguá, na zona oeste, outros sete torcedores foram presos próximo ao Largo da Tanque, na Estrada do Cafundá. Uma viatura do Batalhão de Jacarepaguá (18° BPM)  foi ao local após receber denúncias de moradores por telefone.

Entre os presos, três eram torcedores do Flamengo e quatro eram vascaínos. Todos os presos foram encaminhados para a Delegacia do Tanque (41ª DP).

Assista ao vídeo

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20/08/2012 16h35 – Atualizado em 20/08/2012 17h20

Corpo de torcedor do Vasco morto em briga é enterrado no Rio (G1)

O publicitário Diego Martins Leal, de 30 anos, foi sepultado em Inhaúma.
Dois suspeitos do crime, torcedores do Flamengo, foram presos nesta manhã.

Tássia Thum – Do G1 RJ

O corpo do torcedor do Vasco Diego Martins Leal, de 30 anos, morto durante uma briga de torcidas, foi enterrado por volta das 16h20 desta segunda-feira (20) no Cemitério de Inhaúma, no subúrbio do Rio de Janeiro. O crime aconteceu no domingo (19), antes do clássico entre Flamengo e Vasco, no estádio do Engenhão.

Cerca de 200 pessoas acompanharam a cerimônia de sepultamento do torcedor vascaíno, que era publicitário. Segundo amigos e parentes, Diego fazia parte de uma torcida organizada do Vasco, mas não utilizava a camisa do time na rua para evitar confusões com torcedores de times rivais.

Segundo o tio de Diego e professor de matemática Luiz Fernando Leal, Diego foi enterrado com a camisa do Vasco. Cerca de 20 integrantes da Torcida Força Jovem Vasco, todos descaracterizados, estiveram no enterro, mas preferiram não falar com a imprensa. “Ele era um cara que gostava do samba, namorava havia oito anos e pensava em casar. Mas, infelizmente, ele foi vítima de vândalos que saíram dispostos a matar. Ele era um cara da paz, nunca brigou ou sofreu ameaças”, disse o amigo de infância do jovem, Hugo Rodrigues, que é torcedor do Flamengo.

Cerca de 200 pessoas acompanharam o sepultamento do torcedor Diego Leal, no Cemitério de Inhaúma, no subúrbio do Rio, nesta segunda-feira (20) (Foto: Tássia Thum/G1)

Cerca de 200 pessoas acompanharam o sepultamento do torcedor Diego Leal, no Cemitério de Inhaúma, no subúrbio do Rio, nesta segunda-feira (20) (Foto: Tássia Thum/G1)

O tio disse que o rapaz não usava a camisa do time na rua e nem em fotos de redes sociais a pedido dos pais, que temiam a violência nos estádios. O primo da vítima, o farmacêutico Felipe Leal, disse que Diego não ia aos jogos do Vasco havia cerca de um ano. No domingo, segundo o primo, Diego estava em um churrasco com amigos próximo de casa, no bairro de Tomás Coelho, quando houve o conflito. Felipe Leal afirma que Diego não ia ao Engenhão, já que havia combinado de ver a partida em um bar próximo de sua residência.

Nesta manhã, a Polícia Civil apresentou dois suspeitos de assassinar o torcedor do Vasco.  Alessanderson Piedade Motta, de 28 anos, e Daniel Monteiro Abreu, 27, estão presos da Divisão de Homicídios (DH), na Barra da Tijuca, Zona Oeste do Rio, e vão responder por homicídio qualificado por motivo fútil. Segundo o delegado Rivaldo Barbosa, se condenados, eles podem pegar de 20 a 30 anos de prisão.

De acordo com o delegado, das cinco testemunhas ouvidas, duas reconheceram os suspeitos como responsáveis pela morte de Diego. O delegado informou que as investigações apontam Alessanderson, que já tinha passagem pela polícia por lesão corporal, como autor dos quatro tiros que atingiram a vítima e Daniel como o autor das facadas.

A confusão começou quando um ônibus com flamenguistas vindo de Resende, no Sul Fluminense, passou por um grupo de torcedores do Vasco concentrados num bar localizado na Rua Silva Vale.

Ao tentar se esconder, Diego entrou em um outro bar, na Rua Itaquati. No interior do estabelecimento, ele foi morto pela dupla.

Na delegacia, Daniel confirmou que é comum o enfrentamento de torcidas rivais. “Torcida organizada funciona desta forma. É eles contra a gente e a gente contra eles. Uma vez mataram um amigo nosso e ninguém foi preso”, afirmou Daniel.

Outras testemunhas serão ouvidas

Daniel tem tatuagem do Flamengo nas costas (Foto: Renata Soares/G1)

Daniel tem escudo do Flamengo tatuado nas costas (Foto: Renata Soares/G1)

Ainda segundo o delegado, outros torcedores serão chamados para prestar depoimento novamente. “Isso é lamentável, é algo inaceitável. Vamos continuar a investigação e tentar identificar outras pessoas que tenham participado do crime”, afirmou Rivaldo, que acrescentou também que não há indícios de que a torcida tenha marcado este encontro pela internet:

“Não temos essa informação sobre o encontro marcado. Mas vamos continuar investigando”, concluiu o delegado Rivaldo Barbosa.

Flamengo e Vasco jogaram no Estádio do Engenhão, na Zona Norte, pela 18ª rodada do Campeonato Brasileiro 2012. O time rubro-negro venceu por um a zero, com gol de Vagner Love.

Violência no futebol argentino – fim de semana de 18 e 19 de agosto de 2012

Incidentes en Chicago: dos policías baleados (Clarín)

También hay dos efectivos con traumatismos, debido al enfrentamiento que se produjo con un sector de la barra que quiso ingresar al estadio por la fuerza. Fueron detenidas dos personas.

20/08/12 – 21:00

Otra vez la violencia en el fútbol. Por tercer día consecutivo un partido queda manchado por los violentos. En el primer partido en su estadio en su regreso a la B Nacional, Nueva Chicago no pudo festejar ni adentro del campo de juego (igualó 0-0 con Gimnasia de Jujuy), ni afuera: un sector de la barra brava se enfrentó con la policía y hay dos oficiales heridos de bala, además de dos efectivos con traumatismos (uno en el cráneo), que fueron trasladados al Hospital Churruca.

El conflicto se originó por una interna entre dos facciones de la barra de Nueva Chicago. Es que a unos 150 barras del barrio Villegas, cercanos al sector de la barra denominado Los Perales, les aplicaron el derecho de admisión. Mientras que a los de Las Antenas, el grupo antagónico, tuvieron libre acceso a la cabecera local.

En la cancha de Chicago los de Las Antenas se ubican en una cabecera y los de Los Perales en la de enfrente. Los de Villegas quisieron ingresar al estadio por la fuerza y se enfrentaron con la Policía. Comenzaron las corridas en las afueras del estadio detrás del barrio Los Perales, hacia donde se dirigieron los efectivos policiales y según testigos se escucharon varias detonaciones. Allí habrían sido heridos dos efectivos policiales que fueron trasladados al Churruca. Hay dos detenidos a los que les fueron incautadas armas de fuego y son apuntados por la policía como los presuntos agresores.

Asimismo, cuando terminó el primer tiempo hubo nuevamente corridas, las cuales se repitieron en el desarrollo del segundo tiempo en la parte baja de una tribuna del estadio. Casi sobre la hora del partido el árbitro debió suspender el juego durante más de cinco minutos, ya que volvieron a producirse incidentes entre la policía y los barras.

En enero, Agustín Alejo Rodríguez, de 27 años, fue asesinado en el polideportivo del club. Rodríguez, miembro del sector de Los Perales, acudió al club por una supuesta reunión conciliatoria entre las dos facciones de la barra. Pero los de Las Antenas los habrían emboscado. En busca de venganza, los miembros de Los Perales ingresaron por la fuerza al Hospital Santojanni donde se encontraba herido el presunto asesino. El hecho sigue sin ser esclarecido.

El sábado hubo incidentes en Santa Fe entre la policía local y los hinchas de Belgrano. Juan Carlos Olave fue detenido tras el partido y procesado por una supuesta agresión a un oficial de policía y a un bombero. El arquero del Pirata intentó calmar a los hinchas cordobeses ante la represión policial.

Por otro lado, en Victoria, hubo un enfrentamiento entre los hinchas de River y la policía. Y después fue la barra brava de Tigre la que se enfrentó con las fuerzas de seguridad. Hubo un patrullero incendiado y un alto jefe de la Bonaerense sufrió una herida grave y debió ser operado de urgencia. Se trata de Daniel Herrera, Comisario Mayor Jefe de la Departamental Conurbano Norte, que recibió una pedrada en la cabeza y fue sometido a una cirugía reconstructora que le dejó 27 puntos de sutura.

Esta mañana, en la sede de Independiente sobre la calle Boyacá, en Flores, miembros de la barra brava del Rojo habrían arrojado una bomba molotov que incendió una marquesina. Además, el presidente del club, Javier Cantero, enfrentado con la barra, denunció un intento de robo en el estadio de Independiente, presuntamente por miembros de la barra de Independiente.

*   *   *

Pelea en Mataderos: Dos policías baleados en un choque con barras de Chicago (Clarín)

POR SEBASTIÁN VARELA DEL RÍO

Uno fue herido en el hombro y otro en una pierna. Hubo otros dos policías lesionados. El conflicto estalló porque los barrabravas intentaron eludir el derecho de admisión e ingresar sin entradas.

Mal momento. Un policía intenta controlar a los hinchas más exaltados. Hubo dos detenidos por portar armas de fuego. El enfrentamiento se produjo fuera del estadio y duró casi dos horas.

21/08/12

Llora Mataderos. Lo hace un poco por la costumbre impotente de vivir en un infierno. Lagrimea también por el infame gas que se ha vuelto habitual en cada uno de los episodios de una película de incidentes y asesinatos. El de ayer fue uno más de los capítulos de unahistoria que sigue derramando sangre . Una de las facciones de la barra de Chicago se enfrentó con la policía y dejó a dos efectivos heridos de bala . Otros dos fueron hospitalizados por diferentes traumatismos. Una larga batalla campal que puso la lupa nuevamente en los problemas de seguridad en las canchas argentinas en un fin de semana plagado de hechos de violencia. En la cancha de Colón la policía reprimió a los hinchas de Belgrano y el arquero Olave terminó detenido. En Independiente tiraron una bomba molotov contra la persiana de la sede social de Flores. Además, robaron computadoras del estadio. El fútbol, cada vez más oscuro.

En el barrio de Mataderos se sabía que algo iba a ocurrir. El rumor sobre posibles incidentes era habitual ya en la tarde del domingo.

“Cuidate si vas a la cancha que parece que mañana se pudre” , se podía escuchar de boca de los que en Mataderos conocen la interna. El primer partido como local en la vuelta a la B Nacional era una jornada para temer. El antecedente inmediato eran los incidentes en el portón de la tribuna visitante de Defensa y Justicia, hace una semana. Allí, a los barrabravas les cerraron el ingreso y hubo corridas. Varios habrían entrado al encuentro con armas de fuego y por temor a una masacre adentro de la popular, las dos facciones de la barra, Los Perales y Las Antenas no se enfrentaron.

El operativo de seguridad del partido de ayer ante Gimnasia de Jujuy estuvo lleno de incertidumbre. Sobre las 11 (el encuentro estaba programado para las 15) no se sabía la manera en la que se habilitarían las tribunas. De apuro, cerca del mediodía se decidió darle una cabecera a cada facción de la barra. La popular del lado del Barrio Manuel Dorrego para Los Perales . La tribuna “Mercado de Hacienda” estaba destinada a Las Antenas. Incluso se modificaron los corredores habituales de entrada del público visitante para prevenir un enfrentamiento.

Los problemas comenzaron en el portón de la tribuna donde se ubicaban los de Los Perales . Una facción de dicha hinchada, conocida como Los de Villegas, intentó ingresar corriendo y sin entradas. Cabe aclarar que Chicago viene implementando la modalidad de canje de entradas para socios, los únicos habilitados para concurrir a los partidos. La Policía, que identificó a varios que integran la lista de 90 personas sobre las que pesa el derecho de admisión, los frenó. A partir de eso se desencadenó una pelea que duró casi 100 minutos . Mientras el partido se jugaba, afuera había balas de goma, gases lacrimógeno y proyectiles.

Adentro del estadio, los miembros de la facción de Los Perales que estaban en la tribuna querían salir para sumarse a la pelea. La Policía formó un cordón policial para impedírselo. Las familias que estaban en la misma popular lograron pasar hacia un playón que comunica con la platea para apartarse.

En un momento del enfrentamiento, los barrabravas se replegaron hacia los edificios del barrio. Los efectivos seguían disparando balas de goma.

Los violentos respondieron con proyectiles de plomo que hirieron a dos policías.

Uno en el hombro y el otro en una pierna. Ambos están fuera de peligro, igual que otros dos con traumatismos en el cráneo.

Dos hombres quedaron detenidos por el hecho.

El 2012 fue sangriento para el club. En enero, un encuentro en el Polideportivo terminó con el asesinato de Agustín Rodríguez, de L os Perales . Su grupo fue a buscar venganza al hospital Santojanni, lugar en el que se encontraba internado por una puñalada Aldo Barralda, jefe de Las Antenas . La historia terminó con una batalla por los pasillos del hospital. Barralda falleció unos días después.

La historia de la interna está enmarcada por los puntos de contacto deLas Antenas con el kirchnerismo y de Los Perales con la pata peronista del macrismo.

Las Antenas quiere tomar el poder y contaría con la aprobación de sectores de la política. El uso de los barrabravas como fuerza de choque en los actos políticos no es nuevo.

Los jugadores de Chicago se mostraron enojados por los incidentes. Julio Serrano aseguró: “La Presidenta se tiene que hacer cargo. Los dirigentes políticos mantienen vivos a los barrabravas”. Daniel Ferreiro, secretario del club, afirmó preocupado: “Todos los integrantes de mi familia recibimos muchas amenazas por día”.

Por ahora, no se habla de sanciones a la institución. La posibilidad de no jugar más en Mataderos fue un rumor que circuló. Pero nada más.

*   *   *

Imágenes de los incidentes en Mataderos (TyC Sports)

*   *   *

BASTA DE VIOLENCIA (Olé)

De mal en peor

La Infantería ingresó a la tribuna de Chicago y se armó feo...

La Infantería ingresó a la tribuna de Chicago y se armó feo…

La facción de Los Perales de Chicago se trenzó con la Policía, que terminó con dos oficiales heridos de bala.

Faltaban tres horas para el inicio del partido y todavía no se conocía la distribución de tribunas para albergar a las dos facciones de la barra de Chicago: Los Perales (de Mataderos) y Las Antenas (de provincia). Como ayer anticipó Olé , el operativo policial tenía grietas profundas y desde la CD de la institución deslindaron responsabilidades hacia la Fuerza … El entorno del partido estuvo mal parido desde un principio, se esperaba una tarde nefasta. Y ocurrió. El saldo de la batalla entre Los Perales y la policía fue: dos oficiales con impactos de arma de fuego (uno en un hombro y otro en una pierna) internados en el Hospital Churruca, otros tres con contusiones. Habría dos barras detenidos, a los que se les incautaron armas.

La semana pasada, en la cancha de Defensa, Los Perales dejó afuera a Las Antenas. Hasta el domingo el plan del Ministerio de Seguridad era ubicarlos a todos juntos en la cabecera Calero y Persi. Un peligro latente. Con el correr de la mañana de ayer, se decidió separarlos. Pasadas las 12, se determinó que la barra de Capital ocupara la cabecera lindante a su barrio y en la popular de enfrente (originalmente estarían los jujeños, que fueron a la pequeña tribuna del costado de la platea), cercana a la General Paz, estuvo la gente de Provincia.

A los 43´ del PT se escucharon balazos de goma en el ingreso a la tribuna de Los Perales. Oficialmente el club y la Policía coincidieron en el argumento “quisieron ingresar sin entradas”. Por otro lado, se indica que el hecho se desató porque se les prohibió entrar a 50 barras que tienen derecho de admisión y se armó la gresca en las afueras del estadio y se extendió al barrio Manuel Dorrego. Durante el entretiempo continuaron los disparos, Infantería tiró gas lacrimógeno y produjo que los hinchas ubicados en esa popu se desplazaran hasta el playón.

La calma parecía haber llegado. Pero … Iban 22’ del complemento y volvieron a escucharse las detonaciones. El partido siguió al compás de los balazos. Hasta que a los 44´, increíblemente, una formación de Infantería transitó la tribuna y hubo otro choque, esta vez dentro del estadio. El juego se detuvo y los jugadores pidieron calma. El partido pudo culminar, pero Chicago quedó aún más herido.

*   *   *

B NACIONAL/ CHICAGO 0 – GIMANSIA (J) 0 (Olé)

Torito en problemas

Nueva Chicago y Gimnasia (J) igualaron sin goles en Mataderos. El partido se vio opacado por incidentes protagonizados por un sector de la hinchada local con la policía.

En Mataderos, Nueva Chicago, uno de los equipos recién ascendidos a la categoría, se midió ante Gimnasia y Esgrima de Jujuy. El partido, sin mayores sucesos, finalizó igualado sin goles. Repartieron puntos ambos. Pero, por desgracia, lo lamentable estuvo en las tribunas en donde se sucedieron una serie de incidentes entre la policía y una facción de la hinchada local.

Cuando el primer tiempo estaba por llegar a su fin, el grupo de Los Perales intentó ingresar al estadio sin entradas. Como resultado, los efectivos policiales los frenaron, desatando una pelea que se extendió a lo largo de los minutos, incluso con el segundo tiempo del partido disputándose.

A los 44 minutos del ST, a punto de que finalizara el choque, la policía entró en la cancha y hubo más incidentes con otros simpatizantes locales en una de las tribunas. Como resultado, el partido estuvo detenido por unos instantes. Se finalizó, aunque con los sucesos de violencia aún latentes. Una historia lamentable. Otra vez, incidentes.

*   *   *

Violencia, violencia y más violencia (Clarín)

POR GUSTAVO RONZANO

Otro fin de semana de violencia en el fútbol. Esta imagen pertenece al partido entre Colón y Belgrano. (Hugo Pascutti)

21/08/12 – 13:13

Aquella reunión del Comité Ejecutivo de AFA no fue una más. Como cada martes, aquel 29 de mayo volvieron a juntarse los dirigentes en el edificio de Viamonte 1366. Y el tenso cruce entre dos de ellos marcó a fuego esa noche: “Preocupate por tu club, que las cosas no están tan bien. Dejá a Boca fuera de todo esto”, le dijo el vice de Boca, Juan Carlos Crespi, a Javier Cantero. ¿Qué había dicho el presidente de Independiente? “En Boca todos se sacan fotos con la barra brava”.

La discusión tuvo un segundo round, pocas horas después, afuera de aquellas cuatro paredes. “No voy a andar discutiendo por los medios. El, yo y las treinta personas que estuvimos ahí sabemos lo que pasó, pero los problemas de vestuario quedan en el vestuario”, indicó Cantero. “Somos un buen ejemplo para todos. Somos un club muy bien administrado y por suerte no tenemos problemas como otros. En vez de criticar, deberían preguntarnos por qué no tenemos problemas. Esa es la manera de ayudar, y no pasearse por los canales de televisión. Espero que lo haya entendido, porque manejar un club no es igual que manejar un country, sin desmerecer a los countries”, contratacó Crespi. Y remató: “Yo no soy artista como algunos: Si tengo un problema lo resuelvo puertas para adentro”.

No hubo, claro, un antes y un después de ese episodio. Al cabo, día a día la dirigencia del fútbol argentino parece rendirle pleitesía a esa frase de cabecera que luce en su anillo Julio Grondona: Todo Pasa. Y así pasó otro fin de semana cargado de sinrazón. Un fin de semana largo, en este caso, que incluyó en el menú violencia en Santa Fe, el sábado; violencia en Tigre, el domingo; violencia en Mataderos, el lunes. Y una bomba molotov en la sede que tiene Independiente en Flores, en la madrugada del lunes. “Vamos a incrementar el derecho de admisión, no nos van a doblegar”, insiste Cantero, a quien sus pares del fútbol nacional siguen viendo como el auténtico sapo de otro pozo.

Es evidente que si no hay una política de Estado, una decisión en serio, profunda y sincera, los violentos continuarán formando parte de ese engranaje poderoso que no quiere sacar los pies de un plato demasiado grande y tentador. La presidenta Cristina Fernández de Kirchner elogió el 31 de julio a los barras porque “no miran el partido; arengan, arengan, arengan, la verdad, mi respeto para todos ellos”. Este martes, Aníbal Fernández, por si acaso, aclaró que no debe opinar de esas declaraciones porque “no soy ningún exégeta” de la Presidenta.

El senador nacional y presidente de Quilmes, en definitiva, no hizo más que sumar para la gran certeza: Cantero siempre estuvo solo.

*   *   *

Más repercusiones que soluciones (Clarín)

POR DAVID FLIER

El día después del fin de semana largo a puro descontrol en el fútbol argentino todo sigue igual. No habría quita de puntos para sancionar a los clubes involucrados.

21/08/12 – 12:32

Hasta ahora, los hechos de violencia que se sucedieron el último fin de semana en el fútbol argentino dejaron sólo repercusiones. Es que, mientras varios se han pronunciado al respecto de los incidentes ocurridos en Santa Fe, Victoria, Maraderos o en la sede de de Independiente en Flores, aún no se han aplicado sanciones al respecto.

“No es algo que sorprenda lo que ocurrió el fin de semana, siempre pasa algo”, señaló este martes Mónica Nizzardo, titular de la ONG Salvemos al Fútbol, en diálogo con Clarín. Y recordó el discurso de Cristina Fernández de Kirchner en el cual restó trascendencia a la influencia de las barra bravas en hechos de violencia.

También sobre la Presidenta recayó la diputada nacional de Unión por Todos, Patricia Bullrich. “Este nuevo incidente reafirma la gravedad de los dichos de la Presidenta de la Nación donde apañó, ponderó y justificó el accionar y la existencia de los barras en el fútbol”, dijo la legisladora en referencia a la bomba que había explotado en la sede de Independiente en Flores. La investigación acerca de este incidente es llevada a cabo por la Comisaría 50ª.

A su vez, aún no se han levantado voces oficiales para confirmar sanciones sobre Tigre o Chicago. Sobre los incidentes en Victoria, donde todos los demorados fueron liberados ayer, Luis Morales, titular del ApreViDe (Agencia de Prevención de Violencia en el Deporte) había señalado a Clarín que debían realizar el informe en base “a lo que mostraran las cámaras de seguridad”. Se trata del primer fin de semana de fútbol desde que el nuevo organismo asumió en reemplazo del CoProSeDe. “Siempre es lo mismo. Cambian la figurita y se escudan en que necesitan tiempo”, sostuvo Nizzardo, quien recordó que entre tanto recambio se suman víctimas de la violencia.

No es la primera vez en el año que los hinchas de Tigre se ven envueltos en hechos de violencia cerca de su estadio. En abril, luego de escupir a Clemente Rodríguez y a Santiago Silva, se tomaron a golpes con jugadores de Boca tras el encuentro que el equipo de Julio Falcioni perdió como visitante.

Mientras tanto, en Mataderos sólo existen rumores en relación a la sanción que recibirá Nueva Chicago. Se especula que el club no sufrirá quita de puntos, pero no hay precisiones todavía sobre qué pasará con su estadio. Algo muy probable es que los demás clubes de la B Nacional pidan jugar sin hinchas visitantes cuando reciban al equipo de Mataderos.

Lejos del área metropolitana de Buenos Aires, en Córdoba continúan las repercusiones acerca de los incidentes del sábado en Santa Fe. Por un lado, la dirigencia de Belgrano omitió en su reclarmo cualquier referencia a Juan Carlos Olave. El arquero había señalado que “fue oportuna la intervención de los jugadores, hasta el arbitro lo agradeció”. Olave, acusado de golpear a un bombero, se había defendido al decir que todo fue producto de un forcejeo por una manguera para que dejaran de tirar agua sobre la hinchada.

Sin embargo, lo curioso es que a pesar de la bronca entre los simpatizantes cordobeses, uno de ellos denunció que la parcialidad de Belgrano fue la que inició el conflicto en el estadio. “Es la primera vez que voy a la cancha y no puedo dejar de hacer la denuncia de lo que vi. Todo comenzó cuando un hincha de Belgrano se subió al alambrado y se robó una bandera de Colón. Ahí los locales se pusieron violentos y comenzaron a tirar piedras”, expresó el hincha cordobés, cuyo nombre no trascendió.

Lo cierto es que quedan muchas cuestiones por investigarse para que, esta vez, no siga todo como si nada hubiese ocurrido.

Information Overload in the Era of ‘Big Data’ (Science Daily)

ScienceDaily (Aug. 20, 2012) — Botany is plagued by the same problem as the rest of science and society: our ability to generate data quickly and cheaply is surpassing our ability to access and analyze it. In this age of big data, scientists facing too much information rely on computers to search large data sets for patterns that are beyond the capability of humans to recognize — but computers can only interpret data based on the strict set of rules in their programming.

New tools called ontologies provide the rules computers need to transform information into knowledge, by attaching meaning to data, thereby making those data retrievable by computers and more understandable to human beings. Ontology, from the Greek word for the study of being or existence, traditionally falls within the purview of philosophy, but the term is now used by computer and information scientists to describe a strategy for representing knowledge in a consistent fashion. An ontology in this contemporary sense is a description of the types of entities within a given domain and the relationships among them.

A new article in this month’s American Journal of Botany by Ramona Walls (New York Botanical Garden) and colleagues describes how scientists build ontologies such as the Plant Ontology (PO) and how these tools can transform plant science by facilitating new ways of gathering and exploring data.

When data from many divergent sources, such as data about some specific plant organ, are associated or “tagged” with particular terms from a single ontology or set of interrelated ontologies, the data become easier to find, and computers can use the logical relationships in the ontologies to correctly combine the information from the different databases. Moreover, computers can also use ontologies to aggregate data associated with the different subclasses or parts of entities.

For example, suppose a researcher is searching online for all examples of gene expression in a leaf. Any botanist performing this search would include experiments that described gene expression in petioles and midribs or in a frond. However, a search engine would not know that it needs to include these terms in its search — unless it was told that a frond is a type of leaf, and that every petiole and every midrib are parts of some leaf. It is this information that ontologies provide.

The article in the American Journal of Botany by Walls and colleagues describes what ontologies are, why they are relevant to plant science, and some of the basic principles of ontology development. It includes an overview of the ontologies that are relevant to botany, with a more detailed description of the PO and the challenges of building an ontology that covers all green plants. The article also describes four keys areas of plant science that could benefit from the use of ontologies: (1) comparative genetics, genomics, phenomics, and development; (2) taxonomy and systematics; (3) semantic applications; and (4) education. Although most of the examples in this article are drawn from plant science, the principles could apply to any group of organisms, and the article should be of interest to zoologists as well.

As genomic and phenomic data become available for more species, many different research groups are embarking on the annotation of their data and images with ontology terms. At the same time, cross-species queries are becoming more common, causing more researchers in plant science to turn to ontologies. Ontology developers are working with the scientists who generate data to make sure ontologies accurately reflect current science, and with database developers and publishers to find ways to make it easier for scientist to associate their data with ontologies.

Journal Reference:

R. L. Walls, B. Athreya, L. Cooper, J. Elser, M. A. Gandolfo, P. Jaiswal, C. J. Mungall, J. Preece, S. Rensing, B. Smith, D. W. Stevenson. Ontologies as integrative tools for plant scienceAmerican Journal of Botany, 2012; 99 (8): 1263 DOI: 10.3732/ajb.1200222

Politics and Prejudice Explored (Science Daily)

ScienceDaily (Aug. 20, 2012) — Research has associated political conservatism with prejudice toward various stereotyped groups. But research has also shown that people select and interpret evidence consistent with their own pre-existing attitudes and ideologies. In this article, Chambers and colleagues hypothesized that, contrary to what some research might indicate, prejudice is not restricted to a particular political ideology.

Rather, the conflicting values of liberals and conservatives give rise to different kinds of prejudice, with each group favoring other social groups that share their values. In the first study, three diverse groups of participants rated the ideological position and their overall impression of 34 different target groups.

Participants’ impressions fell in line with their ideology. For example, conservatives expressed more prejudice than liberals against groups that were identified as liberal (e.g., African-Americans, homosexuals), but less prejudice against groups identified as conservative (e.g., Christian fundamentalists, business people).

In the second and third studies, participants were presented with 6 divisive political issues and descriptions of racially diverse target persons for each issue. Neither liberals’ nor conservatives’ impressions of the target persons were affected by the race of the target, but both were strongly influenced by the target’s political attitudes.

From these findings the researchers conclude that prejudices commonly linked with ideology are most likely derived from perceived ideological differences and not from other characteristics like racial tolerance or intolerance.

Journal References:

J. B. Luguri, J. L. Napier, J. F. Dovidio. Reconstruing Intolerance: Abstract Thinking Reduces Conservatives’ Prejudice Against Nonnormative GroupsPsychological Science, 2012; 23 (7): 756 DOI:10.1177/0956797611433877

J. B. Luguri, J. L. Napier, J. F. Dovidio. Reconstruing Intolerance: Abstract Thinking Reduces Conservatives’ Prejudice Against Nonnormative GroupsPsychological Science, 2012; 23 (7): 756 DOI:10.1177/0956797611433877

 

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Prejudice Comes from a Basic Human Need and Way of Thinking, New Research Suggests

ScienceDaily (Dec. 21, 2011) — Where does prejudice come from? Not from ideology, say the authors of a new paper. Instead, prejudice stems from a deeper psychological need, associated with a particular way of thinking. People who aren’t comfortable with ambiguity and want to make quick and firm decisions are also prone to making generalizations about others.

In a new article published in Current Directions in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, Arne Roets and Alain Van Hiel of Ghent University in Belgium look at what psychological scientists have learned about prejudice since the 1954 publication of an influential book, The Nature of Prejudice by Gordon Allport.

People who are prejudiced feel a much stronger need to make quick and firm judgments and decisions in order to reduce ambiguity. “Of course, everyone has to make decisions, but some people really hate uncertainty and therefore quickly rely on the most obvious information, often the first information they come across, to reduce it” Roets says. That’s also why they favor authorities and social norms which make it easier to make decisions. Then, once they’ve made up their mind, they stick to it. “If you provide information that contradicts their decision, they just ignore it.”

Roets argues that this way of thinking is linked to people’s need to categorize the world, often unconsciously. “When we meet someone, we immediately see that person as being male or female, young or old, black or white, without really being aware of this categorization,” he says. “Social categories are useful to reduce complexity, but the problem is that we also assign some properties to these categories. This can lead to prejudice and stereotyping.”

People who need to make quick judgments will judge a new person based on what they already believe about their category. “The easiest and fastest way to judge is to say, for example, ok, this person is a black man. If you just use your ideas about what black men are generally like, that’s an easy way to have an opinion of that person,” Roets says. “You say, ‘he’s part of this group, so he’s probably like this.'”

It’s virtually impossible to change the basic way that people think. Now for the good news: It’s possible to actually also use this way of thinking to reduce people’s prejudice. If people who need quick answers meet people from other groups and like them personally, they are likely to use this positive experience to form their views of the whole group. “This is very much about salient positive information taking away the aversion, anxiety, and fear of the unknown,” Roets says.

Roets’s conclusions suggest that the fundamental source of prejudice is not ideology, but rather a basic human need and way of thinking. “It really makes us think differently about how people become prejudiced or why people are prejudiced,” Roets says. “To reduce prejudice, we first have to acknowledge that it often satisfies some basic need to have quick answers and stable knowledge people rely on to make sense of the world.”

Journal Reference:

Arne Roets and Alain Van Hiel. Allport’s Prejudiced Personality Today: Need for Closure as the Motivated Cognitive Basis of PrejudiceCurrent Directions in Psychological Science, (in press)

 

*   *   *

Ironic Effects of Anti-Prejudice Messages

ScienceDaily (July 7, 2011) — Organizations and programs have been set up all over the globe in the hopes of urging people to end prejudice. According to a research article, which will be published in an upcoming issue of Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science, such programs may actually increase prejudices.

Lisa Legault, Jennifer Gutsell and Michael Inzlicht, from the University of Toronto Scarborough, were interested in exploring how one’s everyday environment influences people’s motivation toward prejudice reduction.

The authors conducted two experiments which looked at the effect of two different types of motivational intervention — a controlled form (telling people what they should do) and a more personal form (explaining why being non-prejudiced is enjoyable and personally valuable).

In experiment one; participants were randomly assigned one of two brochures to read: an autonomy brochure or a controlling brochure. These brochures discussed a new campus initiative to reduce prejudice. A third group was offered no motivational instructions to reduce prejudice. The authors found that, ironically, those who read the controlling brochure later demonstrated more prejudice than those who had not been urged to reduce prejudice. Those who read the brochure designed to support personal motivation showed less prejudice than those in the other two groups.

In experiment two, participants were randomly assigned a questionnaire, designed to stimulate personal or controlling motivation to reduce prejudice. The authors found that those who were exposed to controlling messages regarding prejudice reduction showed significantly more prejudice than those who did not receive any controlling cues.

The authors suggest that when interventions eliminate people’s freedom to value diversity on their own terms, they may actually be creating hostility toward the targets of prejudice.

According to Dr. Legault, “Controlling prejudice reduction practices are tempting because they are quick and easy to implement. They tell people how they should think and behave and stress the negative consequences of failing to think and behave in desirable ways.” Legault continues, “But people need to feel that they are freely choosing to be nonprejudiced, rather than having it forced upon them.”

Legault stresses the need to focus less on the requirement to reduce prejudices and start focusing more on the reasons why diversity and equality are important and beneficial to both majority and minority group members.

Story Source:

The above story is reprinted from materials provided byAssociation for Psychological Science, via EurekAlert!, a service of AAAS.

Extreme Weather Linked to Global Warming, Nobel Prize-Winning Scientist Says (Science Daily)

New scientific analysis strengthens the view that record-breaking summer heat, crop-withering drought and other extreme weather events in recent years do, indeed, result from human activity and global warming, Nobel Laureate Mario J. Molina, Ph.D. explains. (Credit: NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Image by Reto Stöckli (land surface, shallow water, clouds). Enhancements by Robert Simmon (ocean color, compositing, 3D globes, animation). Data and technical support: MODIS Land Group; MODIS Science Data Support Team; MODIS Atmosphere Group; MODIS Ocean Group Additional data: USGS EROS Data Center (topography); USGS Terrestrial Remote Sensing Flagstaff Field Center (Antarctica); Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (city lights).)

ScienceDaily (Aug. 20, 2012) — New scientific analysis strengthens the view that record-breaking summer heat, crop-withering drought and other extreme weather events in recent years do, indeed, result from human activity and global warming, Nobel Laureate Mario J. Molina, Ph.D., said at a conference in Philadelphia on August 20.

Molina, who shared the 1995 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for helping save the world from the consequences of ozone depletion, presented the keynote address at the 244thNational Meeting & Exposition of the American Chemical Society.

“People may not be aware that important changes have occurred in the scientific understanding of the extreme weather events that are in the headlines,” Molina said. “They are now more clearly connected to human activities, such as the release of carbon dioxide ― the main greenhouse gas ― from burning coal and other fossil fuels.”

Molina emphasized that there is no “absolute certainty” that global warming is causing extreme weather events. But he said that scientific insights during the last year or so strengthen the link. Even if the scientific evidence continues to fall short of the absolute certainly measure, the heat, drought, severe storms and other weather extremes may prove beneficial in making the public more aware of global warming and the need for action, said Molina.

“It’s important that people are doing more than just hearing about global warming,” he said. “People may be feeling it, experiencing the impact on food prices, getting a glimpse of what everyday life may be like in the future, unless we as a society take action.”

Molina, who is with the University of California, San Diego, suggested a course of action based on an international agreement like the Montreal Protocol that phased out substances responsible for the depletion of the ozone layer.

“The new agreement should put a price on the emission of greenhouse gases, which would make it more economically favorable for countries to do the right thing. The cost to society of abiding by it would be less than the cost of the climate change damage if society does nothing,” he said.

In the 1970s and 1980s, Molina, F. Sherwood Rowland, Ph.D., and Paul J. Crutzen, Ph.D., established that substances called CFCs in aerosol spray cans and other products could destroy the ozone layer. The ozone layer is crucial to life on Earth, forming a protective shield high in the atmosphere that blocks potentially harmful ultraviolet rays in sunlight. Molina, Rowland and Crutzen shared the Nobel Prize for that research. After a “hole” in that layer over Antarctica was discovered in 1985, scientists established that it was indeed caused by CFCs, and worked together with policymakers and industry representatives around the world to solve the problem. The result was the Montreal Protocol, which phased out the use of CFCs in 1996.

Adopted and implemented by countries around the world, the Montreal Protocol eliminated the major cause of ozone depletion, said Molina, and stands as one of the most successful international agreements. Similar agreements, such as the Kyoto Protocol, have been proposed to address climate change. But Molina said these agreements have largely failed.

Unlike the ozone depletion problem, climate change has become highly politicized and polarizing, he pointed out. Only a small set of substances were involved in ozone depletion, and it was relatively easy to get the small number of stakeholders on the same page. But the climate change topic has exploded. “Climate change is a much more pervasive issue,” he explained. “Fossil fuels, which are at the center of the problem, are so important for the economy, and it affects so many other activities. That makes climate change much more difficult to deal with than the ozone issue.”

In addition to a new international agreement, other things must happen, he said. Scientists need to better communicate the scientific facts underlying climate change. Scientists and engineers also must develop cheap alternative energy sources to reduce dependence on fossil fuels.

Molina said that it’s not certain what will happen to Earth if nothing is done to slow down or halt climate change. “But there is no doubt that the risk is very large, and we could have some consequences that are very damaging, certainly for portions of society,” he said. “It’s not very likely, but there is some possibility that we would have catastrophes.”

Cloud Brightening to Control Global Warming? Geoengineers Propose an Experiment (Science Daily)

A conceptualized image of an unmanned, wind-powered, remotely controlled ship that could be used to implement cloud brightening. (Credit: John McNeill)

ScienceDaily (Aug. 20, 2012) — Even though it sounds like science fiction, researchers are taking a second look at a controversial idea that uses futuristic ships to shoot salt water high into the sky over the oceans, creating clouds that reflect sunlight and thus counter global warming.

University of Washington atmospheric physicist Rob Wood describes a possible way to run an experiment to test the concept on a small scale in a comprehensive paper published this month in the journal Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society.

The point of the paper — which includes updates on the latest study into what kind of ship would be best to spray the salt water into the sky, how large the water droplets should be and the potential climatological impacts — is to encourage more scientists to consider the idea of marine cloud brightening and even poke holes in it. In the paper, he and a colleague detail an experiment to test the concept.

“What we’re trying to do is make the case that this is a beneficial experiment to do,” Wood said. With enough interest in cloud brightening from the scientific community, funding for an experiment may become possible, he said.

The theory behind so-called marine cloud brightening is that adding particles, in this case sea salt, to the sky over the ocean would form large, long-lived clouds. Clouds appear when water forms around particles. Since there is a limited amount of water in the air, adding more particles creates more, but smaller, droplets.

“It turns out that a greater number of smaller drops has a greater surface area, so it means the clouds reflect a greater amount of light back into space,” Wood said. That creates a cooling effect on Earth.

Marine cloud brightening is part of a broader concept known as geoengineering which encompasses efforts to use technology to manipulate the environment. Brightening, like other geoengineering proposals, is controversial for its ethical and political ramifications and the uncertainty around its impact. But those aren’t reasons not to study it, Wood said.

“I would rather that responsible scientists test the idea than groups that might have a vested interest in proving its success,” he said. The danger with private organizations experimenting with geoengineering is that “there is an assumption that it’s got to work,” he said.

Wood and his colleagues propose trying a small-scale experiment to test feasibility and begin to study effects. The test should start by deploying sprayers on a ship or barge to ensure that they can inject enough particles of the targeted size to the appropriate elevation, Wood and a colleague wrote in the report. An airplane equipped with sensors would study the physical and chemical characteristics of the particles and how they disperse.

The next step would be to use additional airplanes to study how the cloud develops and how long it remains. The final phase of the experiment would send out five to 10 ships spread out across a 100 kilometer, or 62 mile, stretch. The resulting clouds would be large enough so that scientists could use satellites to examine them and their ability to reflect light.

Wood said there is very little chance of long-term effects from such an experiment. Based on studies of pollutants, which emit particles that cause a similar reaction in clouds, scientists know that the impact of adding particles to clouds lasts only a few days.

Still, such an experiment would be unusual in the world of climate science, where scientists observe rather than actually try to change the atmosphere.

Wood notes that running the experiment would advance knowledge around how particles like pollutants impact the climate, although the main reason to do it would be to test the geoengineering idea.

A phenomenon that inspired marine cloud brightening is ship trails: clouds that form behind the paths of ships crossing the ocean, similar to the trails that airplanes leave across the sky. Ship trails form around particles released from burning fuel.

But in some cases ship trails make clouds darker. “We don’t really know why that is,” Wood said.

Despite increasing interest from scientists like Wood, there is still strong resistance to cloud brightening.

“It’s a quick-fix idea when really what we need to do is move toward a low-carbon emission economy, which is turning out to be a long process,” Wood said. “I think we ought to know about the possibilities, just in case.”

The authors of the paper are treading cautiously.

“We stress that there would be no justification for deployment of [marine cloud brightening] unless it was clearly established that no significant adverse consequences would result. There would also need to be an international agreement firmly in favor of such action,” they wrote in the paper’s summary.

There are 25 authors on the paper, including scientists from University of Leeds, University of Edinburgh and the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory. The lead author is John Latham of the National Center for Atmospheric Research and the University of Manchester, who pioneered the idea of marine cloud brightening.

Wood’s research was supported by the UW College of the Environment Institute.

Journal Reference:

J. Latham, K. Bower, T. Choularton, H. Coe, P. Connolly, G. Cooper, T. Craft, J. Foster, A. Gadian, L. Galbraith, H. Iacovides, D. Johnston, B. Launder, B. Leslie, J. Meyer, A. Neukermans, B. Ormond, B. Parkes, P. Rasch, J. Rush, S. Salter, T. Stevenson, H. Wang, Q. Wang, R. Wood. Marine cloud brighteningPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 2012; 370 (1974): 4217 DOI:10.1098/rsta.2012.0086

Cientistas apontam problemas da cobertura da imprensa sobre mudanças climáticas (Fapesp)

Especialistas reunidos em São Paulo para debater gestão de riscos dos extremos climáticos manifestam preocupação com dificuldades enfrentadas por jornalistas para lidar com a complexidade do tema (Wikimedia)

21/08/2012

Por Fábio de Castro

Agência FAPESP – Na avaliação de especialistas reunidos em São Paulo para discutir a gestão de riscos dos extremos climáticos e desastres, para que seja possível gerenciar de forma adequada os impactos desses eventos, é fundamental informar a sociedade – incluindo os formuladores de políticas públicas – sobre as descobertas das ciências climáticas.

No entanto, pesquisadores estão preocupados com as dificuldades encontradas na comunicação com a sociedade. A complexidade dos estudos climáticos tende a gerar distorções na cobertura jornalística do tema e o resultado pode ser uma ameaça à confiança do público em relação à ciência.

A avaliação foi feita por participantes do workshop “Gestão dos riscos dos extremos climáticos e desastres na América Central e na América do Sul – o que podemos aprender com o Relatório Especial do IPCC sobre extremos?”, realizado na semana passada na capital paulista.

O evento teve o objetivo de debater as conclusões do Relatório Especial sobre Gestão dos Riscos de Extremos Climáticos e Desastres (SREX, na sigla em inglês) – elaborado e recentemente publicado pelo Painel Intergovernamental sobre Mudanças Climáticas (IPCC) – e discutir opções para gerenciamento dos impactos dos extremos climáticos, especialmente nas Américas do Sul e Central.

O workshop foi realizado pela FAPESP e pelo Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais (Inpe), em parceria com o IPCC, o Overseas Development Institute (ODI) e a Climate and Development Knowledge (CKDN), ambos do Reino Unido, e apoio da Agência de Clima e Poluição do Ministério de Relações Exteriores da Noruega.

Durante o evento, o tema da comunicação foi debatido por autores do IPCC-SREX, especialistas em extremos climáticos, gestores e líderes de instituições de prevenção de desastres.

De acordo com Vicente Barros, do Centro de Investigação do Mar e da Atmosfera da Universidade de Buenos Aires, o IPCC, do qual é membro, entrou há três anos em um processo de reestruturação que compreende uma mudança na estratégia de comunicação.

“A partir de 2009, o IPCC passou a ser atacado violentamente e não estávamos preparados para isso, porque nossa função era divulgar o conhecimento adquirido, mas não traduzi-lo para a imprensa. Temos agora um grupo de jornalistas que procura fazer essa mediação, mas não podemos diluir demais as informações e a última palavra na formulação da comunicação é sempre do comitê executivo, porque o peso político do que é expresso pelo painel é muito grande”, disse Barros.

A linguagem é um grande problema, segundo Barros. Se for muito complexa, não atinge o público. Se for muito simplificada, tende a distorcer as conclusões e disseminar visões que não correspondem à realidade.

“O IPCC trata de problemas muito complexos e admitimos que não podemos fazer uma divulgação que chegue a todos. Isso é um problema. Acredito que a comunicação deve permanecer nas mãos dos jornalistas, mas talvez seja preciso investir em iniciativas de treinamento desses profissionais”, disse.

Fábio Feldman, do Fórum Paulista de Mudanças Climáticas, manifestou preocupação com as dificuldades de comunicação dos cientistas com o público, que, segundo ele, possibilitam que os pesquisadores “céticos” – isto é, que negam a influência humana nos eventos de mudanças climáticas – ganhem cada vez mais espaço na mídia e no debate público.

“Vejo com preocupação um avanço do espaço dado aos negacionistas no debate público. A imprensa acha que é preciso usar necessariamente o princípio do contraditório, dando espaço e importância equânimes para as diferentes posições no debate”, disse.

De acordo com Feldman, os cientistas – especialmente aqueles ligados ao IPCC – deveriam ter uma atitude mais pró-ativa no sentido de se contrapor aos “céticos” no debate público.

Posições diferentes

Para Reynaldo Luiz Victoria, da Coordenação do Programa FAPESP de Pesquisa em Mudanças Climáticas Globais, é importante que a imprensa trate as diferentes posições de modo mais equitativo.

“Há casos específicos em que a imprensa trata questões de maneira pouco equitativa – e eventualmente sensacionalista –, mas acho que nós, como pesquisadores, não temos obrigação de reagir. A imprensa deveria nos procurar para fazer o contraponto e esclarecer o público”, disse Victoria à Agência FAPESP.

Victoria, no entanto, destacou a importância de que os “céticos” também sejam ouvidos. “Alguns são cientistas sérios e merecem um tratamento equitativo. Certamente que não se pode ignorá-los, mas, quando fazem afirmações passíveis de contestação, a imprensa deve procurar alguém que possa dar um contraponto. Os jornalistas precisam nos procurar e não o contrário”, disse.

De modo geral, a cobertura da imprensa sobre mudanças climáticas é satisfatória, segundo Victoria. “Os bons jornais publicam artigos corretos e há jornalistas muito sérios produzindo material de alta qualidade”, destacou.

Para Luci Hidalgo Nunes, professora do Departamento de Geografia da Universidade Estadual de Campinas (Unicamp), os negacionistas ganham espaço porque muitas vezes o discurso polêmico tem mais apelo midiático do que a complexidade do conhecimento científico.

“O cientista pode ter um discurso bem fundamentado, mas que é considerado enfadonho pelo público. Enquanto isso, um pesquisador com argumentos pouco estruturados pode fazer um discurso simplificado, portanto atraente para o público, e polêmico, o que rende manchetes”, disse à Agência FAPESP.

Apesar de a boa ciência ter, em relação ao debate público, uma desvantagem inerente à sua complexidade, Nunes acredita ser importante que a imprensa continue pluralista. A pesquisadora publicou um estudo no qual analisa a cobertura do jornal O Estado de S. Paulo sobre mudanças climáticas durante um ano. Segundo Nunes, um dos principais pontos positivos observados consistiu em dar voz às diferentes posições.

“Sou favorável a que a imprensa cumpra seu papel e dê todos os parâmetros, para que haja um debate democrático. Acho que isso está sendo bem feito e a própria imprensa está aberta para nos dar mais espaço. Mas precisamos nos manifestar para criar essas oportunidades”, disse.

Nunes também considera que a cobertura da imprensa sobre mudanças climáticas, de modo geral, tem sido satisfatória, ainda que irregular. “O tema ganha vulto em determinados momentos, mas não se mantém na pauta do noticiário de forma permanente”, disse.

Segundo ela, o assunto sobressaiu especialmente em 2007, com a publicação do primeiro relatório do IPCC, e em 2012 durante a RIO+20.

“Em 2007, a cobertura foi intensa, mas a popularização do tema também deu margem a distorções e exageros. O sensacionalismo é ruim para a ciência, porque faz o tema ganhar as manchetes rapidamente por algum tempo, mas no médio prazo o efeito é inverso: as pessoas percebem os exageros e passam a olhar com descrédito os resultados científicos de modo geral”, disse.