

Ing. Salih CAVKIC
orbus editor in chief


Murray Hunter
University Malaysia Perlis

Perpetual Self conflict: Self
awareness as a key to our ethical drive, personal mastery, and perception of
entrepreneurial opportunities.
Murray Hunter

The Continuum of Psychotic Organisational Typologies
Murray Hunter

There is no such person as an entrepreneur, just a person who acts
entrepreneurially
Murray Hunter

Groupthink may still be a hazard to your organization - Murray Hunter

Generational Attitudes and Behaviour - Murray Hunter

The environment as a multi-dimensional system: Taking off your rose
coloured glasses
- Murray Hunter

Imagination may be more important than knowledge: The eight types of
imagination we use - Murray Hunter

Do we have a creative intelligence? - Murray Hunter

Not all opportunities are the same: A look at the four types of
entrepreneurial opportunity -
Murray Hunter

The
Evolution of Business Strategy
- Murray Hunter

How
motivation really works - Murray Hunter

Evaluating Entrepreneurial Opportunities: What’s wrong with SWOT? - Murray
Hunter

The five types of thinking we use - Murray Hunter

Where do entrepreneurial opportunities come from? - Murray Hunter

How
we create new ideas - Murray Hunter

How emotions influence, how we see the world? - Murray Hunter

People tend to start businesses for the wrong reasons - Murray Hunter

One Man, Multiple Inventions: The lessons and legacies of Thomas Edison
- Murray Hunte

Does Intrapreneurship exist in Asia?
- Murray Hunter

What’s
with all the hype – a look at aspirational marketing
- Murray Hunter

Integrating the philosophy of Tawhid – an Islamic approach to organization
-
Murray Hunter

Samsara and the Organization - Murray Hunter

Do
Confucian Principled Businesses Exist in Asia? - Murray Hunter

Knowledge,
Understanding and the God Paradigm - Murray Hunter

On Some of the Misconceptions about
Entrepreneurship - Murray Hunter

How feudalism
hinders community transformation and economic evolution: Isn’t equal
opportunity a basic human right? - Murray Hunter

The Dominance of “Western” Management Theories in South-East Asian Business
Schools: The occidental colonization of the mind. - Murray Hunter

Ethics, Sustainability and the New Realities - Murray Hunter

The Arrival of Petroleum, Rockefeller, and the Lessons He taught Us - Murray
Hunter - University Malaysia Perlis

Elite
educators idolize the “ high flying entrepreneurs” while deluded about the
realities of entrepreneurship for the masses: -
Murray Hunter

Lessons from the Invention of the airplane and the Beginning of the Aviation
Era - Murray Hunter

Missed Opportunities for ASEAN if the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) fails
to start up in 2015 - Murray Hunter

From Europe, to the US, Japan, and onto China: The evolution of the
automobile - Murray Hunter

|
‘The exhaustion of Greek political system and a
society in flames’
by Dimitra Karantzeni
As the days go by, current
chaotic situation in Greece is rendered more
and more perplexed and difficulty approachable, in a level that one
could state that perhaps this country likes to put itself into a
permanent submissive position of misery, as well as that hypocrisy is a
component of the last generations, somehow infused into people’s DNA.
First of all, when it comes to citizens, they often
declare that they are conscientious, hardworking, inherently democratic
people who honor their ancient legacies from Plato, Aristotle and the
other philosophers of Antiquity. What it’s hesitated to be said, is that
Greeks are primarily responsible for the perpetual downfall accompanied
by a boundless international self-humiliation, for a corruption so deep
that shouldn’t be isolated in the political field but better treated as
a whole, since it touches every aspect of everyday personal and social
life.
Greek citizens
are the ones applauding, cheering and waving the
flags of victory for the representatives they voted, just after the
announcement of the elections’ result, literally opening their hands
greedily, so as to grab any kind of position available, that would calm
for a while their national anger and frustration. At the same time, they
are the same people that the day after, burst into blasphemies and
curses against their country’s useless politicians, hiding in the drawer
- for four years or something less – their flags of shame ...
Even now that bankruptcy is a reality that we all
experience, but no one dared to officially announce, Greek leaders
remain free, with people’s endless tolerance, to arrange lives as they
wish, by playing Russian roulette in the salons of Troika and then turn
back, sometimes with bombastic nationalistic elations for the salvation
of the country and other times with the tail between their legs.
Nevertheless, this is just the one side of the coin,
as country’s political system seems equally unable to escape its
voracious self. To start
with, ruling party New Democracy (ND) appears as a misreplication of a
center-right political force, which tries really hard to fight its
conservative nature. Before winning the elections, ND intensively
opposed memorandum and its harsh terms, accusing ruling party PASOK (Panhellenic
Socialist Movement) for the betrayal of national sovereignty. Today, New
Democracy ironically tries to coexist and maintain unity in a fragile
governmental coalition with its greatest oppositional party, PASOK, and
the alternative Europeanist left-wing party of Dimokratiki Aristera (DIM.AR.),
in order to guarantee the extension of the same measures taken.
In his recent interview for the leading Greek
business magazine Ependytis, professor Anis Bajrektarevic
rightfully remarked: “…Europe departed from the world of work…the EU has
helplessly lost its political ‘left’…” (Επενδυτης,
11 November 2012, page 13)
Indeed, leftist forces in Greece on the other hand, levitate between
fragmentation and dissolution, achieving the absolute disorientation of
the electorate. A noteworthy fact is the complete weakening of erstwhile
socialist PASOK which has experienced a vast loss of popular support,
approaching historically low, single-digit percentages, while its
members abandon one by one, the sinking boat. Moving on to Greek
Communist Party, it remains in hibernation, losing several rounds in the
marathon of political parties for survival, essentially putting itself
offseason with all its utopian visions – otherwise perfect to describe
the structures of another Platonic ideal state -, as it persists to
outdated proposals lacking realism and organized strategy. A situation
that can’t help but magnify the fears for its future transformation into
more or less, a ‘‘historical’’ party, that honorary occupies
parliamentary seats, along with the ghosts of the past.
Regarding SY.RI.ZA (Radical Left Coalition Party) and
DIM.AR. (Democratic Leftist Party), they appear undecided between the
charming contact with the governmental power on the one hand and the
will for a few revolutionary elavations against corruption,
bipartisanship and despotism of external interventional powers (Troika)
on the other. Unfortunately, none of them seems to offer anything
special, as they limit their actions to a counterproductive presence,
occasionally throwing a few drops of socialism in the cocktail of
center-right powers, who have undertaken the mission of economic
independence by beating the 'three forces of darkness "...
Within this maelstrom, people have completely lost
the power to fight and the faith to envision a radical change, and what
is left is drama, passive resistance and a piteous seeking, conscious or
not, of a voluntary patronage, a refuge in the poisonous hugs of the far
right forces (Golden Dawn) which flourish undisturbed, with the coverage
of parliamentary legitimization and abolish the intended constitutional,
moral, etc. laws, suggesting violence and revenge, or in other words, a
return to the philosophy of the jungle.
As a matter of fact, the point is that beyond any
financial support available and even if the debt ever becomes somehow
manageable, the major problem remains in the core of Greek society,
where all social layers oppose one another into a dangerous belligerent
zone and every existing political doctrine seems so exhausted to place
the country into a whole new perspective.
A state that appears for a long-standing period
unable to fill its institutional and governmental gaps is inevitably
exposed to any attempt of destabilization and manipulation by forces –
internal or not – which carefully await to benefit from its degradation.
If we’d dare to scratch the surface, we’d clearly see that a country’s
solidarity is a fragile concept that isn’t necessarily threatened by
supranational institutions which aim to restrict its eras of national
sovereignty. Social intolerance, indifference, extremism, and
trivialization of democratic values are some places where the danger
could be hidden. As they say, ‘‘Man’s worst enemy, is the man Himself’’…
15.11.2012
Asia needs ASEAN-ization not Pakistanization of its continent
What China wants in Asia: 1975 or 1908 ? – addendum
(Gunboat diplomacy in the South and East
China Sea – Chinese strategic mistake)
prof. dr. Anis Bajraktarević
As the recent maritime contests in both
the South and the East China Sea has shown, Beijing underestimated an
emotional charge that the territorial disputes carry along, as well as
the convenience given to the neighbors to escalate these frictions in
order to divert public attention from their own pressing domestic
socio-economic and political issues. A costly, spiral and dangerous game
of the reinvigorated nationalistic rhetoric, it presently instigate a
climate that could easily hijack the next Asian decade as a whole.
Speculations over the alleged bipolar world of tomorrow (the so-called
G-2, China vs. the US), should not be an Asian dilemma. It is primarily
a concern of the West that, after all, overheated China in the first
place with its (outsourcing) investments. Hence, despite a (cacophony of
voices, actually of a) distortive noise about the possible future G-2
world, the central security problem of Asia remains the same: an absence
of any pan-continental multilateral setting on the world’s largest
continent.

On the eastern, ascendant flank of the
Eurasian continent, the Chinese vertigo economy is overheated and
too-well integrated in the petrodollar system. Beijing, presently,
cannot contemplate or afford to allocate any resources in a search for
an alternative. (The Sino economy is a low-wage- and labor intensive-
centered one. Chinese revenues are heavily dependent on exports and
Chinese reserves are predominantly a mix of the USD and US Treasury
bonds.) To sustain itself as a single socio-political and formidably
performing economic entity, the People’s Republic requires more energy
and less external dependency.[1]
Domestically, the demographic-migratory pressures are huge, regional
demands are high, and expectations are brewing.[2]
Considering its best external energy dependency equalizer (and inner
cohesion solidifier), China seems to be turning to its military upgrade
rather than towards the resolute alternative energy/Green Tech
investments – as it has no time, plan or resources to do both at once.
Inattentive of the broader picture, Beijing (probably falsely) believes
that a lasting containment, especially in the South China Sea, is
unbearable, and that –at the same time– fossil-fuels are available
(e.g., in Africa and the Gulf), and even cheaper with the help of
battleships.[3]
In effect, the forthcoming Chinese military buildup will only strengthen
the existing, and open up new, bilateral security deals[4]
of neighboring countries, primarily with the US – as
nowadays in Asia, no one wants to be a
passive downloader. Ultimately,
it may create a politico-military isolation (and financial burden) for
China that would consequently justify and (politically and financially)
cheapen the bolder reinforced American military presence in the
Asia-Pacific, especially in the South and the East China Sea. It
perfectly adds up to the intensified demonization of China in parts of
influential Western media.[5]
Hence, the Chinese grab for fossil fuels or its military competition for
naval control is not a challenge but rather a boost for the US
Asia-Pacific –even an overall– posture. Calibrating the contraction of
its overseas projection and commitments – some would call it managing
the decline of an empire – the US does not fail to note that nowadays
half of the world’s merchant tonnage passes though the South China Sea.
Therefore, the US will exploit any regional territorial dispute and
other frictions to its own security benefit, including the costs sharing
of its military presence with the local partners, as to maintain pivotal
on the maritime edge of Asia that arches from the Persian Gulf to the
Indian Ocean, Malacca, the South and East China Sea up to the
northwest–central Pacific. Is China currently acting as a de facto
fundraiser for the US?
A real challenge is always to optimize the (moral, political and
financial) costs in meeting the national strategic objectives. In this
case, it would be a resolute Beijing’s turn towards green technology,
coupled with the firm buildup of the Asian multilateralism. Without a
grand rapprochement to the champions of multilateralism in Asia, which
are Indonesia, India and Japan, there is no environment for China to
seriously evolve and emerge as a formidable, lasting and trusted global
leader.[6]
Consequently, what China needs
in Asia is not a naval race of 1908, but the Helsinki process of 1975.
In return, what Asia needs (from China and Japan) is an ASEAN-ization,
not a Pakistanization of its continent.[7]
Opting for either strategic choice will reverberate in the dynamic
Asia–Pacific theatre.[8]
However, the messages are diametrical:
An assertive military – alienates, new
technology – attracts neighbors.
Finally, armies conquer (and spend) while technology builds (and
accumulates)! At this point, any eventual accelerated armament in the
Asia-Pacific theatre would only strengthen the hydrocarbon status quo,
and would implicitly further help a well-orchestrated global silencing
of consumers’ sensitivity over the record-high oil price.
With its present configuration, it is hard to imagine that anybody can
outplay the US in the petro-security, petro-financial and petro-military
global playground in the decades to come. Given the planetary
petro-financial-media-tech-military causal constellations, this type of
confrontation is so well mastered by and would further only benefit the
US and the closest of its allies. China’s defense complex is over-ideologized,
under-capitalized, technologically outdated and innovation-inert, while
the US’ is largely privatized, highly efficient, deployable and prime
innovative. Thus, even in security domain, the main China’s problem is
not a naval or overall military parity, but the disproportionate
technological gap. After all, China’s army was not meant (by Mao) and
maintained (by Deng and his successors) to serve the external projection
purpose. It was and still remains an ideological enterprise of cohesion,
an essential centrifugal force to preserve territorial integrity of this
land-colossus.
Within the OECD/IEA grouping, or closely: the G-8 (the states with
resources, infrastructure, tradition of and know-how to advance the
fundamental technological breakthroughs), it is only Japan that may
seriously consider a Green/Renewable-tech U-turn. Tokyo’s external
energy dependencies are stark and long-lasting. Past the recent nuclear
trauma, Japan will need a few years to (psychologically and
economically) absorb the shock – but it will learn a lesson. For such an
impresive economy and considerable demography, situated on a small
land-mass which is repeatedly brutalized by devastating natural
catastrophes (and dependent on yet another disruptive external influence
– Arab oil), it might be that a decisive shift towards green energy is
the only way to survive, revive, and eventually to emancipate.
An important part of the US–Japan security treaty is the US energy
supply lines security guaranty, given to (the post-WWII demilitarized)
Tokyo. After the recent earthquake-tsunami-radiation armageddon, as well
as witnessing the current Chinese military/naval noise, (the cabinet of
the recently reconfirmed PM Noda and any other subsequent government of)
Japan will inevitably rethink and revisit its energy policy, as well as
the composition of its primary energy mix.
Tokyo is well aware that the Asian geostrategic myopias are strong and
lasting, as many Asian states are either locked up in their narrow
regionalisms or/and entrenched in their economic egoisms. Finally, Japan
is the only Asian country that has clearly learned from its own modern
history, all about the limits of hard power projection and the strong
repulsive forces that come in aftermath from the neighbors. Their own
pre-modern and modern history does not offer a similar experience to the
other two Asian heavyweights, China and India. This indicates the Far
East as a probable zone of the Green-tech excellence (as much as ASEAN
might be the gravity center of the consolidated diplomatic and
socio-political action) and a place of attraction for many Asians in the
decade to come.
Anis H. Bajrektarevic, Geopolitics of Energy Editorial Member
Chairperson for Intl. Law & Global Pol. Studies
Vienna, 08 OCT 12
contact:
anis@bajrektarevic.eu
Notes and References
*
Present text is an addendum to the previous policy paper: What China
wants in Asia: 1975 or 1908? (Gunboat diplomacy in South China Sea –
Chinese strategic mistake), first published by the China Daily Mail (20
May 2012)
[1] Most of
China’s economic growth is attributed to outsourced manufacturing. The
US, the EU, Japan, Taiwan, Korea, Singapore and other Asian and
non-Asian OECD countries predominantly take advantage of China’s coastal
areas as their own industrial suburbia. It remains an open question how
much this externally dictated growth of China has a destabilizing effect
on the inner compact of the Sino nation.
[2] The
geopolitical event of the year is ahead of us. The forthcoming 18th
Congress of the China’s Communist Party should soon decide on its
leadership for the next 10 years. In the secretive, opaque world of CPC
decision making, the ongoing contest between taizi dang (children
of senior Party figures and heroes of the Revolution) and tuanpai
(party members of a modest social background who successfully played
their careers in the Communist Youth League) is an important one
although not the only ideological and socio-political power-struggle
puzzling the future of China.
[3]
Since the glorious Treasury Fleets of Admiral Zhèng Hé have been
dismantled by the order of the Mandarin bureaucracy in 1433, China has
never recovered its pivotal naval status in the Asia-Pacific.
[4]
More bilateralism (triggered by unilateralism) is not only less
multilateralism– essentially, it is a setback for any eventual
emancipation of the continent.
[5]
In late September 2012, China put its first aircraft carrier (the
Liaoning) into service with a lot of parade domestically and huge
anxiety in its neighborhood. However, the media underreported three
important details: (i)this Soviet-constructed vessel is over 20 years
old (bought from Ukraine in 1998); (ii) its runway deck cannot support
any aircraft landing; (iii) China’s best tactical jetfighter J-8 (a
copycat of the Soviet MIG 23s, 30-year-old technology) is not designed
for landing on any aircraft carrier. From the military technology point
of view, China is still well-behind were e.g. the Imperial Japan was
some 80 years ago – as the Liaoning carrier is neither home-made
nor of any practical use for either the Sino Navy or its Air Force.
[6]
More on the pan-Asian security architectures and preventive diplomacy
in: Bajrektarevic, A. (2011) No Asian century without the pan-Asian
Institution, GHIR (Geopolitics, History, and Intl. Relations) 3 (2)
2011, Addleton Publishers NY
[7]
An ASEAN summit in June 2012 failed to issue a joint communiqué for the
first time in its 45-year history after an open disagreement over the
wording of a section on the South China Sea territorial claims.
Cambodia, the current ASEAN chair, was seen by several member states of
stonewalling in support of its ally, China. Quickly absorbing the shock,
the ASEAN diplomatic offensive has started, primarily shuttled by the
Indonesian Foreign Office. One of the chief negotiators recently told me
in Jakarta: “The biggest threats (related to the South China Sea
territorial disputes, rem. a.) to ASEAN’s centrality are the gnawing
moves that ultimately pit its 10 members against each other.” The
views I’ve heard while in Kuala Lumpur and Bangkok this fall,
well-corresponded with the concerns expressed in Jakarta: “What will
be rejected is the seeming habit of major powers – be they China or the
US – to define countries as allies or adversaries…and so, riling ASEAN’s
divisions.”
[8]
Historically, both Europe and Asia had a weak centre with the
continent’s peripheries traditionally pressing on a soft centre. With
the strengthening of 19th
century Germany (Bismarck’s Greater Prussia), and of late 20th
century’s Deng’s China, the centre started pressing on its peripheries
for the first time in modern history. One of the central security
dilemmas between Bismarck and Helsinki times was ‘how many Germanys’
Europe should have to preserve its inner balance and peace. Europe and
the world have paid an enormous price in two world wars to figure it
out. With the bitter memories of Nazism still residing in the body and
soul of the continent, the recent unification of Germany was only
possible within the Helsinki’ tranquilized Europe.
16.10.2012
PUBLICATIONS:
What China wants in Asia: 1975 or 1908 ? – addendum - prof. dr. Anis
Bajraktarević
ASEAN Nations need indigenous innovation
to transform their economies but are doing little about it. - Murray Hunter
From Europe, to the US, Japan, and onto China: The evolution of the automobile -
Murray Hunter
Missed Opportunities for ASEAN if the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) fails to
start up in 2015 - Murray Hunter
Lessons from the Invention of the airplane and the Beginning of the Aviation Era
- Murray Hunter
Elite educators idolize the “ high flying entrepreneurs” while
deluded about the realities of entrepreneurship for the masses: -
Murray Hunter
The
Arrival of Petroleum, Rockefeller, and the Lessons He taught Us - Murray Hunter
- University Malaysia Perlis
Ethics, Sustainability and the New Realities - Murray Hunter
The Dominance of “Western” Management Theories in South-East Asian Business
Schools: The occidental colonization of the mind. - Murray Hunter
How feudalism
hinders community transformation and economic evolution: Isn’t equal opportunity
a basic human right? - Murray Hunter
On Some of the Misconceptions about Entrepreneurship - Murray Hunter
Knowledge, Understanding and the God Paradigm - Murray Hunter
Do Confucian Principled Businesses Exist in Asia? - Murray Hunter
Samsara and the
Organization - Murray Hunter
Integrating the philosophy of Tawhid – an Islamic approach to organization. -
Murray Hunter
What’s
with all the hype – a look at aspirational marketing - Murray Hunter
Does Intrapreneurship exist in Asia? - Murray Hunter
One Man, Multiple Inventions: The lessons and legacies of Thomas Edison -
Murray Hunter
People tend to start businesses for the wrong reasons - Murray Hunter
How
emotions influence, how we see the world? - Murray Hunter
How we create new ideas - Murray Hunter
Where do entrepreneurial opportunities come from? - Murray Hunter
The
five types of thinking we use - Murray Hunter
Evaluating Entrepreneurial Opportunities: What’s wrong with SWOT? - Murray
Hunter
How
motivation really works - Murray Hunter
The
Evolution of Business Strategy - Murray Hunter
Not all opportunities are the same: A look at the four types of
entrepreneurial opportunity -
Murray Hunter
Do we have a creative intelligence? - Murray Hunter
Imagination may be more important than knowledge: The eight types of imagination
we use - Murray Hunter
The environment as a multi-dimensional system:
Taking off your rose coloured
glasses
- Murray Hunter
Generational Attitudes and Behaviour -
Murray Hunter
Groupthink may still be a hazard to your organization - Murray Hunter
Perpetual Self conflict: Self awareness as a key to our ethical drive, personal mastery, and perception of
entrepreneurial opportunities - Murray Hunter
The Continuum of Psychotic Organisational Typologies - Murray Hunter
There is no such person as an entrepreneur, just a person who acts
entrepreneurially - Murray Hunter
Go Home, Occupy Movement!!-(The McFB– Was Ist Das?) - prof. dr. Anis Bajrektarevic
Diplomatie préventive - Aucun siècle Asiatique sans l’institution pan-Asiatique - prof. dr. Anis Bajrektarevic
Democide Mass-Murder
and the New World Order - Paul Adams













Maasmechelen Village

Maasmechelen Village


Adria

Bosnian
Važne42;ажни но
>
Notícies importants
Czech
Důležité zprávy
Danish
Vigtige nyheder
Dutch
Belangrijke nieuws
English
Important News
Estonian
Tähtis Uudised
French
Nouvelles importantes
German
Wichtige News
Greek
Σημαντικές ειδήσεις
Hungarian
Fontos hírek
Irish
Fógra tábhachtach Nuacht
Italian
Importanti novitŕ
Latvian
Svarīga Jaunumi
Lithuanian
Svarbu Naujienos
Portuguese
Importante Notícias
Slovenian
Pomembne novice
Spanish
Noticias importantes
Swedish
Viktiga nyheter


BALKAN AREA


prof. dr. Anis Bajrektarevic

Go Home, Occupy Movement!!
-
(The McFB – Was Ist Das?)
-
prof. dr. Anis Bajrektarevic

Diplomatie préventive - Aucun sičcle Asiatique sans l’institution pan-Asiatique
- prof. dr. Anis Bajrektarevic\/span|

ADDENDUM – GREEN/POLICY PAPER: TOWARDS THE CREATION OF THE OSCE TASK FORCE ON (THE FUTURE OF) HUMAN CAPITAL
prof. dr. Anis Bajrektarevic

Gunboat Diplomacy in the South China Sea – Chinese
strategic mistake
-
Anis H. Bajrektarevic

Geopolitics of Quantum Buddhism: Our Pre-Hydrocarbon Tao Future
prof. dr. Anis Bajrektarevic

The Mexico-held G–20 voices its concerns over the situation in the EURO zone
- Anis H. Bajrektarevic

What China wants in Asia: 1975 or 1908 ? – addendum - prof. dr. Anis
Bajraktarević


Maasmechelen Village


Maasmechelen Village

| |