Dr. Gary K. Busch Director and Senior Associate Gary Busch joins Scribe Strategies & Advisors (UK) as Director and Senior Associate with a wealth of experience behind him: an international trades unionist, an academic, a businessman and a political affairs and business consultant for 40 years. The breadth of his multi-faceted career and his expertise are a major asset to Scribe's London office. Gary Busch has been Chairman and CEO of International Bulk Trade, Transport Logistics, Transport Africa and the North Pacific Lines. These companies have owned, chartered and operated marine dry cargo vessels and cargo aircraft worldwide. He set up the transport and logistics systems for the Russian aluminium industry and operated transport and port facilities within Russia and for Russian exports. His airline companies were the national cargo airlines of two African countries. He was a Professor and Head of Department at the University of Hawaii and has been a visiting professor at several universities. He was the head of research in international affairs for a major U.S. trade union and Assistant General Secretary of an international union body. He has been a consultant on international political developments for several major international corporations, think-tanks and private intelligence companies, with a speciality in African politics. He speaks and reads 12 languages and has written six books and published 58 specialist studies. His articles have appeared in the Economist Intelligence Unit, Wall Street Journal, WPROST (a leading Polish weekly news magazine), Pravda and several other major international news journals. He was the host and executive producer of three 39-week series on Public Broadcasting and has been a frequent contributor to television documentary series. He is the editor and publisher of the web-based news journal of international relations www.ocnus.net and the distance-learning educational website www.worldtrade.ac.
But they sure know how to write formal text that sounds like a pseudolegal argument that this is okay under copyright law. Most economists teach a theoretical framework that has been shown to be fundamentally useless. -- James K. Galbraith
Diary (not especially about Busch):
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2005/2/19/132525/239
Comments specifically about Busch:
http://www.dailykos.com/comments/2005/2/19/132525/239/21
http://www.dailykos.com/comments/2005/2/19/132525/239/4
Comment 21 and its subthread are the right ones.
Inconclusive, but interesting...