Campaign Video

Https://youtu.be/zBxbnuPAazE

Thursday, 2 April 2026

How the world REALLY works

 



How the world "really works"


1.physical realities - physics,
2.human incentives,
3.power dynamics, and
4.institutionalized systems

Rooted in energy, biology, evolution, and social organization, our modern way of life depends on solar energy and these four key materials: 
ammonia (for fertilizer), 
plastics, 
steel, and 
cement. 

It seems too basic but follow the logic.

These things enable food production, infrastructure deveopment, transportation systems, and manufacturing at global scale.

Fossil fuels still dominate because they offer the highest energy density and versatility—renewables like solar/wind are unsuitable for heavy industry, shipping, aviation, and seasonal storage although nuclear options may change that.

China used more cement in two years than the U.S. did in the entire 20th century.

This is why plans to reduce carbon based fuels fly in the face of realities and risk economic retreat or technological limits.

Globalization amplifies this: supply chains move goods efficiently but create vulnerabilities from large single source suppliers dependent on cheap energy and  enforcement by military power.

2. Human Behavior: 

People respond primarily to incentives—monetary, social, status, reproductive, or survival-based incentivies. Evolutionary psychology requires social groups (kin, tribe)  and this leads to  competition.  

Extrinsic rewards like money and status drive behavior often supplanting intrinsic motivation for creative or social priorities.

Money really is the root of all evil. 

Markets channel self-interest into productivity via prices and competition; governments use coercive taxes and laws a ruse of legitimacy.
Corruption, rent-seeking, and short-term thinkiing emerge because individuals and groups try to optimize things for their own gains.

Leaders vs. followers, firms vs. regulators - these dynamics explain most dysfunction rather than any inherent human evil.

3. Power Structures: 

Elites and oligarchies tend to be ruled by small groups. Leaders with better information, skills, and control of resources dominate, even in democracies or radical movements. Some others may rise via talent, disruption, or crisis—but the pattern persists and it's structural. 

In politics, business, NGOs, or technology, small networks set agendas. Inequality grows in stable times as elites consolidate their own advantages, until war, revolution or  depression reset it.

While democracy and rule of law may mitigate this via accountability, elections, rule of law, and a free press they don't really eliminate it. Voters face informational problems. The truth may be out there but it can be hard to find. This explains how an organized, vocal and irate minority like MAGA can outmaneuver a majority.

4. The international system of nation states is proving to be unworkable - it lacks overarching enforcement. States prioritize survival and power because others might threaten them. They need enough power to be secure against threats. They need power to deter rivals preemptively which explains why there is recurring great-power competition. Might is right so that  "rules-based order" often bends to military, economic, technological superiority.

The U.S. dollar's reserve status gives leverage via sanctions and finance; China uses infrastructure loans and manufacturing dominance for its power.

Secular cycles last roughly 200–300 years involving population growth.  Growth demands resources, causes overproduction, and leads to unemployment.  Inequality spikes and eventual results in instability or conflict/plague or possibly reforms.

Empires such as the USA decline with the kind of decadence and division seen today. 

Meanwhile,  physical and biological constraints endure. Pandemics, climate shifts, or innovations 
 may arise and cause shocks.

There is no dark Master Plan to all this, rather the world works through a myriad of decentralized processes, the coordination of individual markets, social norms, and evolution by states, corporations, and elites which exert controls and policies. 

To be clear, only the abundance created from access to energy and technology has lifted billions from subsistence living.

The trade-offs have been environmental costs, inequality, and fragility to disruption.
People are living longer in health and face less extreme poverty with exceptions.
Humans benefit from understanding that life,  their reality,  rewards the understanding of these grand constraints and THEIR own support of institutions that harness simple human motiviated self-interest in exchange for collective gains.

Unfortunately our systems are nonlinear and human foresight is limited. We make mistakes. This can be alleviated through the use of AI tools.

Finally we are never "wrong" about maintaining energy, food, or materiel for the common good.  We KNOW the world works through physics, biology, and evolved human nature interacting with institutions.

We are rewarded by our adaptability, clear-eyed analysis of trade-offs, and our building of systems where individual incentives better match long-term results for all.



Wednesday, 1 April 2026

DINKS

 



DINKS Dual Income but No kids


After living in Ottawa for almost thirty years I have many friends who have chosen either not to have children or to have possibly one child. They are DINKS - dual income with no kids.
The result has manifest itself last year.
Canada's population fell for the first time since confederation 

Statisically the count should have fallen sooner but was being propped up through immigration. The drop was about 100,000, the size of a small city.

Planetwide its the same problem -static  or low growth population.
• China: Largest absolute decline — net loss of ~3.2–3.3 million (–0.22% to –0.23%).
worldometers.info +1
• Japan: ~ –0.55% (loss of hundreds of thousands).
• Russia: ~ –0.42% (loss of ~600,000).
worldometers.info
• Germany: ~ –0.51% (loss of ~430,000).
worldometers.info
• Italy, Poland, South Korea, Thailand, Spain: Smaller but notable declines (–0.1% to –0.8%).
Subsaharan Africa and SE Asia continue to balance the drops.

The truth? Canadians are not having children at replacement levels. It has become too expensive to have a family, own a home, get a degree, and its showing up in the statistics.
Jobs are scarce: people are moving from the hinterland into the cities.

You do not need to be a weatherman to know which way the wind is blowing.  The trend is down with no obvious resolution.

My recommendation? When a couple wants to be married do not charge for it, no license fees please, instead, give them a free night at the Chateau Laurier and a bottle of wine.

Find a way to give young families an affordable place to live, care for their school age children because this population drop trend is a threat to the very fabric of Canadian society.

Current events are are portending future trends.

Monday, 30 March 2026

see eeeeeee oh!

 





SEE eeee Oh!


I know that being the CEO of a company is demanding, difficult and rewarding. I was the CEO of two different hospitals.

This is what I learned first hand. You can hold an opinion, have many very good reasons to hold that view and some board member will disagree with you for their own very good reasons. There will be political struggle at the highest level to see things through.

You arrive in the position with political capital. You are the new kid in town, everybody loves you. Then as you make decisions you piss people off, and you lose political capital and finally after about five years, you have no political capital and the knives can come out.

In our OCTranspo case we have a CEO that seems to be a good fit, for all the right reasons but it would be foolish to think that there are no skeletons in the closet for the reasons I mention above.  "There were no findings" is a very coy response to what we all know intuitively.

This is also why the average term of a CEO is about five years. It is also why they are the highest paid person in the organization they head. They have all the power and all the responsibility but they also have all the accountabiity.

Let Mr. Leary do his job they way he surely knows how to do it and hopefully he has learned a few things along the way.

Our patience is probaby a lot less than it might be at this late stage.

Sunday, 29 March 2026

No Kings Please

 



Ironically, Canada's head of state is a King thereby confirming that the form of government is not as important as the substance of the humans that comprise the government.

While marching in the street is a demonstration and communication of a powerful idea, in a democracy it is no substitute for the vote outcome following the mid term elections in the USA.


Wednesday, 25 March 2026

ALTO - a raised railbed please



 Alto_Elevated_Railbeds: are the preferred option


The Alto project must be constructed using elevated railbeds (tracks built on viaducts, bridges,

or other raised structures) which are very common on high-speed rail (HSR) systems worldwide.High-speed trains require extremely straight, level, and stable alignments with minimal gradients
and curves, so engineers frequently elevate tracks to cross rivers, valleys, roads, urban areas,
or uneven terrain without sharp deviations or at-grade conflicts. This approach also reduces
land use, avoids flooding risks, minimizes vibrations for nearby areas, and allows for smoother
high-speed operation.
en.people.cn
Why Elevated Railbeds Are Used in HSR
● Engineering needs: HSR demands precision (e.g., tight tolerances for ballastless track).
Elevating sections on concrete or steel viaducts helps maintain level profiles over
obstacles.
● Practical benefits: It enables grade separation (no level crossings with roads), preserves
farmland or ecosystems below, and supports rapid construction techniques like precast
segmental girders or launching gantries.
● Prevalence: In some networks, like China's, bridges and viaducts make up the vast
majority of the route (e.g., ~86-88% on certain Beijing-Shanghai HSR sections).
en.people.cn
Notable Examples of Elevated HSR Sections
Here are prominent cases from around the world:
● China (world's largest HSR network): Extensive use of elevated viaducts and bridges.
Many lines feature long stretches on concrete box-girder viaducts built with industrialized
methods (e.g., 1,000-ton girders moved by gantries). Long-span examples include theTongling Yangtze River Bridge (630m main span, road-rail), Almonte River Viaduct in
related contexts, and numerous crossings over rivers and valleys. China's approach
often prioritizes elevation to cross dense or challenging landscapes eficiently.
structurae.net
● Japan (Shinkansen): Many sections run on elevated concrete viaducts, especially in
urban or mountainous areas. Examples include elevated platforms and tracks at stations
like Sendai or along the Tohoku and Joetsu Shinkansen lines through Saitama. The
system integrates elevated structures seamlessly with tunnels and at-grade segments.
en.wikipedia.org
● France (TGV): Iconic viaducts, such as the twin TGV viaducts over the Rhône River near
Avignon. French LGV lines include numerous bridges and elevated sections to maintain
high speeds across varied terrain.
happypontist.blogspot.com
● Spain (AVE): Features like the Almonte River Viaduct (one of the longest for HSR) and
other long-span bridges. Elevated tracks are common for crossing rivers and valleys.
structurae.net
● Germany and other Europe: Viaducts such as the Froschgrundsee and Grümpen
Viaducts on German HSR lines. HS1 in the UK (Channel Tunnel Rail Link) includes the
Medway Viaduct and other elevated structures.
structurae.net
● United States (emerging HSR):
● California's High-Speed Rail project includes major viaducts, like the Hanford
Viaduct (over 6,300 feet long in the Central Valley) and planned sections in the
Tehachapi Mountains (e.g., Bena Road Viaduct). Many overpasses and elevated
segments are designed for grade separation.
iceusa.com
● Other proposals (e.g., Brightline West, Texas Central) incorporate elevated
designs where needed.
● Other regions: Thailand's Bangkok–Nakhon Ratchasima HSR has elevated sections
over features like the Lumtakong dam. India's upcoming lines and South Korea's Honam
HSR use precast segmental viaducts.
youtube.com


Visual Context
Elevated HSR often appears as sleek concrete viaducts with the trackbed raised 10–100+
meters (or more in extreme cases) above the ground, supported by piers. China's factory-style
bridge production and Europe's graceful spans (e.g., over rivers) are particularly striking. Some
of the world's highest railway bridges overall carry (or are designed for) rail trafic, though
dedicated HSR examples tend to prioritize length and smoothness over extreme height.In short,
elevated railbeds are not rare—they're a standard feature of modern HSR engineering. Purely
at-grade lines exist in flatter, less obstructed areas, but elevation is the go-to solution for
reliability and performance in most networks.






Saturday, 21 March 2026

Music and Lyrics - Creativity is King



Artificial intellgence engines generate music and vocals based on my lyrics. 

1. SENSING LOVE

https://suno.com/s/S0oXw9b5GR7NdMRO


2. I think I'll like you

https://suno.com/s/8N3bjBVgnpZi6n40


3. Exquisite Good byes

https://suno.com/s/gioxKuZeBxxTaekI


4.A Breath of Whitewater

https://suno.com/s/qSSpSRQLFFiXykti


5.Summer of Susan

https://suno.com/s/pkMnyRi6UQqc6TqB


6.Rhythm Thoughts

https://suno.com/s/4Pfb2tIhp3gXD069


7.We love Snow for Christmas

https://suno.com/s/n39vUL1gkFKbGESw


8.Someone to Love

https://suno.com/s/lzXqTA6VAGsWSAmB


9.Three Women on the Trail

https://suno.com/s/6CSpeRXlxAd3AALD


10. The Cold Town

https://suno.com/s/6G8aMYVXKsynxqwM


11.The Painful Voice

https://suno.com/s/t29zdjOK89KX4cGE


12. Friends on Rough Water

https://suno.com/s/xbAcUipa2RIJ7sO7


13. Kissed by the River

https://suno.com/s/jMHqRweidqvesrwk


14. The White and the Light

https://suno.com/s/nwpp1w3r9H9CY5gr


15. The time of our lives

https://suno.com/s/x9EofUCxmBPMjIAP


16.Lovin' , Losin', Leaving

https://suno.com/s/lcPyGMsD7TKDtNj9


17. The Company of friends

https://suno.com/s/xkYnPuqDhBAAcYCm


18. Lady of the Lightl

https://suno.com/s/tFXQiWpLKUYfsw2E


19. The Mirror Cracked

https://suno.com/s/WHqlNGFeiKfbjaYB


20. Gatineau Love

https://suno.com/s/q7T8RfDRsidxqnOh

What's going on?



 Nicole Foss provides a glimpse into the future.

Blog - Applied Systems Thinking

  https://share.google/QcPVMM2Y79hnIGNOp

We are trying to understand the world. 

I once invited Foss to speak at St. PAUL'S university right here in Ottawa.

She is largely unknown, but she is brilliant in her prose and conceptual understanding.

1. It’s essential to stop believing all politicians and all legacy media who have been lying to you about everything important.

2.independence from centralised systems will be incredibly important

3.We need to work together across tribal lines

4.The US bombed (with a double tap strike no less) an elementary school and incinerated 180 children and their teachers. Loss of moral high ground. This is a war crime.

5.The current conflict may be only the beginning of energy infrastructure destruction. [Its assymetric..$20,000 iranian drones take out billion dollar gas infrastructure]