Wild Field

The synopsis of this new Russian movie playing tonight at the San Francisco Film Festival seems to be about how to approach risk with extremely limited resources:

Mitya, a young doctor, lives and practices medicine in the middle of the steppe. Although it appears barren, patients frequently arrive at his home-office – one man’s heart has stopped beating from heavy drinking, another’s cow is dying, a young couple are bleeding to death from stab wounds. A local policeman, the only government authority in this vast region, is also a frequent visitor to the doctor.

The Q&A with director Mikheil Kalatozishvili is available here (spoiler alert – they discuss the film’s end):

Swineflu Map

Moments after I was asked for ideas on how to track the pandemic, I noticed the the BBC posted an interactive map showing the spread of swineflu

Update (April 29, 2009): Network World has posted 10 tips for swine flu planning, which is actually about how to respond rather than how to plan to spread the flu as the title might imply. Note that none of the steps mentions slaughter of all pigs. It seems to me that Egypt’s decision targets Christians and whether they intended it or not have now generated a whole new set of risks related to civil unrest and protest. This really should be about pig farms and health safety regulations, so forced slaughter seems like a waste of resources rather than a top ten approach to reduce risk.

Extreme Left Threat in France

Spiegel Online wonders why Germans are so calm while France seems to be destabilizing.

…the French weekly newspaper Courrier International writes that a “touch of revolt” is taking hold throughout the country. Former Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin even believes that France is on the eve of a “revolution.” The signs include plant occupations, wildcat strikes and workers taking managers hostage.

In early March, the manager of a Sony plant was held against his will, and 10 days later workers held an executive of the pharmaceutical company 3M hostage. Workers occupied a plant owned by US construction equipment manufacturer Caterpillar in the western city of Grenoble and detained the entire management team, while directors at chemical producer Scapa, transportation company FM Logistic and Peugeot-Citroën supplier Faurecia were subjected to similar treatment. The management of automotive supplier Molex were held hostage in their offices for about 26 hours.

I have not read about this kind of rise in physical danger for executives in other news sources. Is there a revolutionary threat? After all, this is really a story about differences in expression between France and Germany and some might conclude that the French are often on strike anyway.

Likewise the quote by a right-wing politician like Dominique de Villepin could be written-off as sour grapes about Sarkozy’s victory — trying to paint as negative a forecast as possible to win votes and position himself for another election. On the other hand Villepin is certainly is someone who knows something about revolution, given his role in training the troops and militias that performed the massacres in Rwanda according to an independent commission report in 2008.

In any case, while the US administration has warned of uprisings by the right and left during economic downturns, other countries are clearly facing similar pressures.

Lady in Red

The poem allegedly was chalked on an alley wall where John Dillinger was shot

Stranger stop and wish me well,
Just say a prayer for my soul in hell.
I was a good fellow, most people said,
Betrayed by a woman dressed all in red

A third of the entire Bureau of Investigations (pre-FBI) budget in 1934 was spent on hunting Dillinger