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Posts tagged "Sustainability"

A real Venezuelan revolutionary

Let’s help Venezuelan young entrepreneur Guido Núñez-Mujica make a difference.

I met Guido during my last trip to Venezuela in December. When I read his excellent essay on Hugo Chavez’s prohibition of video games published by Boing Boing in November I felt immediately compelled to contact him.

A couple of tweets and a few weeks later, we were having lunch in Caracas. Our face-to-face conversation confirmed my initial gut-feeling about Guido’s character: he is a brave Venezuelan revolutionary — although the revolution he advocates is of a radically different nature than the travesti that Hugo Chavez’s petro-populist Bolivarian Revolution has turned into.

A computational biologist from Universidad de Los Andes (one of Venezuela’s universities whose students have suffered the most from repressive attacks by Chavez’s government security forces) who calls himself a “nonconformist, forward-looking geek,” Guido has a terrific idea that can make an important, tangible contribution to improving the lives of the poorest people on earth. His company is developing LavaAmp:

…a portable, rugged, inexpensive thermal cycler that can perform reliable DNA tests for infectious diseases in low resource environments. LavaAmp is not a diagnostic method for one specific disease, but a hardware platform that can be used to test for many different conditions. We envision LavaAmp as part of a new, evidence-based public health approach to managing both new pandemics and neglected diseases. Local governments and international agencies need cheap, accurate, reliable information about the spread and incidence of disease to plan and deploy an effective response. At less than one-tenth the price of current devices, LavaAmp would open the door to widespread testing for diseases, giving the world’s poorest people access to the kind of preventative medicine most people in rich countries take for granted. LavaAmp could also revolutionize education in tools in molecular biology for developing countries, educating the bioinnovators of the future.

Millions of people in the Global South suffer from neglected diseases, many of which could be treated, even cured, if they were detected early enough. But reliable, low cost diagnosis hasn’t been available, as drug companies have no incentive to invest in the diseases of the poor. New pandemics can go undetected until they have spread out of control, like HIV, and treatable ailments can cripple impoverished communities because it is too expensive to detect them early enough to do something.

You would think that social entrepreneurship initiatives like Guido’s would be embraced by a government that boasts putting the poor at the top of its priorities. But Guido decided to pursue his project abroad mainly because of the red tape and corruption he saw on other projects. He was simply not willing to deal with petty bureaucrats that while paying lip service to socialism and helping the poor, block solutions to health care problems asking for kickbacks in the range of the tens of thousands of US dollars just to give the necessary permits. Bureaucrats working for a government that lambasts global capitalism, but instead of supporting creative small entrepreneurs whose products could be manufactured locally, favor imported, expensive equipment for hospitals whose providers have the depth of pocket to pay for juicy bribes. Now, even if the LavaAmp will be manufactured abroad it still will be useful for research and healthcare in Venezuela and other countries.

So while the “revolutionary” that rules our country travels on his never-ending demagoguery world-tour, Guido rolls up his sleeves and puts up the real hard work that real revolutionaries have a talent for. On a shoestring budget, he has managed to build a working prototype for LavaAmp, travels regularly to Silicon Valley and other technology hubs to talk to potential investors, and visits other Latin American countries to research their markets and meet up with potential customers.

LavaAmp is one of 34 finalists chosen in a competitive contest to attend the Unreasonable Institute in Boulder, Colorado, where they will receive crucial training, mentorship, and access to capital they need to take flight. If you wish to become a sponsor, please submit the funds here, where you will also be able to learn more about the Unreasonable Institute and Guido’s awesome project. He is only 5% short of the funding goal to win the contest, so every penny is wholeheartedly appreciated!


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Do we really know anything about AIDS in Africa?

Economist Emily Oster gives a truly unconventional, fresh perspective on the epidemics of HIV. Her implications for international AIDS policy are stunning and illuminating.

On World AIDS Day, let’s revisit Emily Oster’s brilliant deconstruction of the conventional wisdom around the disease’s epidemics and its policy implications.

Using Economics 101 tools, Oster reaches these stunning conclusions:

  • The AIDS problem would perhaps disappear by itself if we concentrate on solving the developing world’s most pressing economic problems such as basic shelter, clean water and infant mortality rates. This would give people a higher life expectancy, and therefore a higher incentive for conducting safe sex.
  • The success of the “ABC campaign” during the 1990’s in Uganda, based on encouraging people to “Abstain, Be faithful and use Condoms,” might have been due to a sharp decrease in the country’s exports rather than its effectiveness on people’s behavior.

A remarkable example of unconventional thinking as a force that can change the world for the better.

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The Year of Nothing, Part 2

This Year of Nothing allowed me to develop a razor-sharp sense of what I want to do next and what I want to be. Never before have I felt that I Get It as I do now.



Do not pull, do not push
And fortune will return of its own accord
And the Way will naturally come…
If you are still, you will get it,
If you are active, you will loose it.
Yang Zhu


Besides reminding me of the value of friendship, this Year of Nothing has provided me with a razor-sharp sense of self-knowledge.

Never before have I been clearer on what I want to do and what I want to be. Never before have I felt that I Get It as I do now.


Getting It

While it’s true that practicing formal Taoist meditation has helped me a lot in gaining this newfound clarity of values, the process has been simpler than that.

As soon as I stopped spending most of my waking hours doing something I didn’t find meaningful, eliminating the inherent cognitive dissonance, I started to Get It.

Not having a clear objective, nothing to achieve for a while, liberated a ton of psychic energy, and refocused it inwards.

Now I know that while I’m alive and awake, I want to do something that delivers genuine value to others — not just to myself.

I want to contribute, however humbly, to change the world for the better.


Money

An obvious question I’ve been pondering all this time is how to align my quest for meaning with the necessity of making a living out of it.

In the beginning, I was quite pessimistic about this. I was still working on the assumption that running a business was a fundamentally selfish thing.

I’ve come to the conclusion that this prejudice was in large part due to my training in Economics.

Traditional economic theory is based on the notion that people seek their narrow self interest, and that this is perfectly fine — the market’s Invisible Hand is supposed to ensure that selfish individual behavior translates into broad social gains.

But after some time I managed to break free from that prejudice.

The idea that business can be motivated by forces beyond profit is, of course, one of the hottest topics in the media today.

This Year of Nothing gave me the time to absorb the huge amounts of information available on- and offline on the subject, and to meet lots of people who have embraced the concept.

But most importantly, because I haven’t been involved with any particular business for a while, I was able to open my mind and truly ponder the validity of this idea against my previous conceptions.



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The business guidelines

Here are a few rough guidelines I’ll be following for my upcoming income-generating initiatives. Of course, I’ll be updating you on their evolution through this blog:


Affiliate information products

Since I started sharing my insights and tips about creating a lifestyle based on meaning and personal development through this blog, I’ve had some tremendously encouraging feedback from readers about the value they receive from the project.

This feedback, and the steady increase in traffic that the blog has enjoyed since its launch, made me conclude that there is room for a little “store” section where readers will be able to buy information products that I endorse.

I will only endorse products that I have found to be extremely useful and empowering during this already 1-year old journey. Eventually, I will also offer information products created by yours truly.

A store section for the blog is the most obvious way I can think of for creating a small business based on meaning and real value.


Art

Throughout this Year of Nothing I have re-connected with my passion for art.

I have had plenty of time to listen to music again. That was one of the things I missed the most in my life, and I got it back.

Through my travels, I have attended all kinds of concerts, shows and music festivals. I have been stopped in my tracks by dozens of awesome street musicians in subways and alleys, and been able to take the time to properly contemplate their performances.

I even ended up one night hanging out with Farruquito (one of Spain’s most acclaimed Flamenco dancers) and his friends at El Taxidermista bar in Barcelona until almost 6 am the next day.

I don’t know what got me more drunk: the alcohol, or the insanely powerful energy emanating from these people when they’re offstage, partying, singing and dancing for themselves. :-D

Check out some of Farruquito’s incredible moves here:

I’ve been in many museums and exhibitions. I’ve attended cinema festivals and rented tons of old movies I hadn’t had the time to watch.

This Year of Nothing allowed me to truly appreciate art as the ultimate human activity aligned with higher purpose. Art can do so much good to the world at so many levels that it’s hard to think about a more valuable human activity.

So I have come to the conclusion that I want to launch a little project related to the art business. I still don’t have much of a clue about the form it will take, but I’ll keep you posted on its progress…

And to those of you who know about my frustrated musician background: yes, I have seriously started thinking about playing an instrument again. But that’s a bit of a longer term project — I will still probably do Nothing about it until mid next year :-)


Economics

During this Year of Nothing I have also re-connected with Economics, and I have revived the excitement that I felt for the discipline back in college.

I definitely think I can use my skills as an economist for dedicating some of my time to contribute to projects aligned with a higher purpose.

Before this Year of Nothing, whenever I read or heard someone say that quietness, idleness and meditation can be a big emotional amplifier, I used to discard it as New Age BS.

Not anymore. Somehow, a Year of Nothing hugely expanded my sensitivity towards poverty, the environment, and the myriad sustainability problems we must all deal with. It’s like I’ve developed a visceral repulsion towards them that goes beyond the rational understanding of their causes and nature. And I’ve decided that I want to deal with them indeed.

Again, this is all work in progress… stay tuned for updates in this area too.



So what do you think? Does my plan make sense to you? What are your plans for 2010 (resolution time is approaching!) in terms of aligning your business or career with a sense of meaning and higher purpose?



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