https://typewriterdatabase.com/1949-royal-kmg.16171.typewriter
Marshall Plan sticker on Royal KMG
https://typewriterdatabase.com/1949-royal-kmg.16171.typewriter
Marshall Plan sticker on Royal KMG
In 1945 Europe lay in ruins after six years of war, and the task of moralreconstruction seemed almost as urgent as the more obvious economic tasks.
This could be a good line for the Marshall Plan question!
While the Marshall plan was a significant factor in the reconstruction of Europe, it was not the sole one.
While the marshall plan may have been vital to the economic revovery of Europe, it was not just the economy that needed to be resturctured, McLeaod (1997 quoted in Open University, p.1) highlighting the 'moral reconstruction' of Western Europe, at which the religious insitutions of the Catholic and Protestant Churches were the most important. Nevertheless, while some may highlight the importance of the church in the moral reconstruction of Western Europe, others may highlight the increased secularisation of Europe, with (idk capitalist?) activities and mindsets reducing adherment to the church in states like Britain, this mindset arguably aided by the Marshall Plan.
As such, in terms of the moral reconstruction of Western Europe, the Marshall Plan played a very insignificant role, the organisationalpower and innfluence of the Christian Churches, although waning,
Importantly, receiving nations were required to deposit money equivalent to those products in their central banks. This rebuilt financial health in Europe and order forms for US companies for a generation.
So basically the money was given to the nations, who then had to put it in their central banks, and then pay it out to US firms?
To complement the Clean Energy Finance Authority, the tariff could be lowered in exchange for foreign procurement of clean energy technologies or of clean products made in the United States
So the CBAM as the stick, and the CEFA as the carrot
There's no other way. And if you look at the world today, the big pace of increase in emissions is in countries like India. China is by far the world's largest emitter today. So for an orderly phase out, I think the Marshall Plan option is simply not an option.
Our choice to fail over the last 30 years has brought us to this position. And a way out of that, a way out of the Marshall Plan, is to say we can have these negative emissions 00:34:42 I think we need to say that, okay that's one way out of it – if they work. Another way out of it is the Marshall Plan. And so we need to open that that dialogue up. but we've... in effect, I think the IAMs have closed that dialogue,. Which is one of the reasons, going back to... It would be interesting to see other parts of the world looking at this, because, I would have a guess, when we say 'that's not feasible', many people elsewhere in the world are saying 'well of course it's feasible, we've been doing... we've been living like that for years!'
for: quote, quote - Kevin Anderson, quote - Kevin Anderson - Marshall plan, discussion - Johan Rockstrom / Kevin Anderson, perspectival knowing
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we're increasing emissions today between 1 and 2% per year. Now, to reduce emissions even in the global model runs we have, with optimistic I mean, overly optimistic negative emission technologies – assume mitigation pathways, as you know, between 5 and 7% per year. So that is three times revolution pace, at the current modeling runs. 00:33:47 If you take away negative emission technologies, you would exceed 10% very rapidly. You would be more the 10 to 15%. I would call that... That's not revolution, that is a complete disruption of the global economy. It's like a pace that is beyond... I mean then you need to bulldoze down coal-fired plants, basically. You would be in a complete global Marshall Plan. It's a war zone agenda.
for: quote, quote - Johan Rockstrom, quote - Johan Rockstrom - NET
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multilateral cooperation is key to accelerate such action that new and additional voices need to be heard and engaged with especially 00:10:11 those of youth women indigenous groups and local communities the need to centre action on the principles of reaching out to the furthest first and leaving no one behind something like gandhian talisman
There is a need to integrate top down, middle and bottom up actors into a grand synthesis to achieve the greatest efficacy in a Marshall plan.
The community is the building block of society. Community action is still an idling capacity, an untapped resource. There is a natural synergy between communities and youth, and the bridge is schools.