Dave Pollard's environmental philosophy, creative works, business papers and essays. In search of a better way to live and make a living, and a better understanding of how the world really works.
My
thoughts and hopes go out to all the people and creatures of New
Orleans and the Gulf Coast. We are going to learn a lot in the next few
days about human nature, resilience, our inability to understand the
lessons of history, and the uselessness of centralized emergency
"plans".
All You Need to Know About the Election, the Electorate, and US Politics:
A series of articles in the past week really hit home on the realities
of American politics and the current state of politics in the US. Joe
Bageant's anonymous political consultant friend has an analysis of Obama's "move to the center", and concludes:
Obama
had to move sharply to the right on his position on trade, economics,
globalization, social services and taxes, to avoid having the US power
elite put all their money to work for McCain. With a dumbed-down
electorate and a compliant mass media, lots of negative advertising
(i.e. lots of campaign money) is now all you need to win an election
(with rigged voting machines as a backup).
Obama's
social polition is just fine with the power elite (who actually disdain
social conservatives). But if Obama doesn't move on economic issues,
they're just fine with the white socially conservative working class
helping them defeat Obama.
"Elite consensus on [foreign policy] is center to right, discussion are
allowed on the mechanics of running the empire and the management of
the military industrial complex, but never regarding the reality of its
existence, its necessity or usefulness to most Americans." War is the only healthy industry left in the US economy, and the US military machine is needed to protect the global financial interests of the power elite, so peaceniks need not apply to be its president. The fraudulent Let's Bomb Iran house resolution 362 is bipartisan; there is no significant difference between the two parties on this issue (thanks to Valdis Krebs for the truthout links).
The
power elite has already got Obama rehashing what is now conventional
wisdom in the US, that it is the responsibility of individuals, not the
government, to make people's lives better. The "ask not what your
country can do for you..." anti-regulation, taxes-are-evil,
privatize-everything, anti-social-services rhetoric is firmly
entrenched in both of the two look-alike brands Americans get to choose
from in November. If the government screws up, or if you're poor or
sick or unemployed or ignorant it's your fault, you stupid, lazy voter. And both brands are "produced" by the same company, the power elite that owns both parties.
And
the sad reality is that most Americans fear change, the word that
appears so prominently on all Obama's messages. Yes, 90% of them are
victims of a relentless thirty-year class war pursued ruthlessly by the
power elite, but they have been conditioned by learned helplessness to
feel impotent to change anything, and to distrust anyone changing
things for them. So no matter how bad it is, Americans have been
propagandized to believe that getting government to change anything
will just make a bad situation worse. And since it's the individual to
blame for all the ills of the society, not government, best thing is to
have no changes at all, and to weaken government (excepting the
military of course) so there can be no changes in the future, either.
And, incidentally, when McCain has a heart attack and dies in office in
the midst of the Iran War, do you really think the power elite will
allow a small-town Alaskan woman mayor to run their country? In the meantime, Olbermann responds to McCain proclaiming recently to those poor dumbed-down working class guys "victory in Iraq is finally in sight."
The Collective Decision-Making Process: Chris Corrigan has created a new model of "talking our way to a decision" based on Otto Scharmer's Theory U.
I liked it so much I changed some of the words to create the collective
decision-making process shown at right. The activities in the top half
are individual, personal, while those in the bottom half are
collective. Those on the left side are reflective while those on the
right side are active. Through invitation and "opening space", personal
passion is engaged and leads to collective conversation, which through
collective understanding leads to collective consensus, and then,
through collective and personal decision, to personal responsibility
for actions. This is what took me a long time to understand: While
decisions may be collective (or may be made by fiat), actions are
always ultimately personal; even in those actions that we undertake
together, we are each, literally "doing our own thing". If we are not
first engaged, and if we are not part of the conversation that leads to
consensus, and if we don't then take personal responsibility to act,
nothing gets done. I have seen in business that bad decisions are
always ignored -- people will jump through hoops to appear to be doing what they are told while actually
doing what they believe makes sense. Our sense of personal
responsibility is that strong. Passion --> Conversation -->
Consensus --> Decision -- That's how things get (effectively and sustainably) done in this world.
Life After Birth: Another compelling, brooding, poetic essay and photo from Pohangina Pete.
The Ants Go Marching One by One:
"We must think of ourselves as a line of ants bringing food to our
Queen. But If we step out of line and decide to distribute the food
amongst ourselves we will no longer be only receiving portions for our
hard work. We will no longer be starving and working for more. The
Queen will now be the hungry one and she will eventually die of
starvation. All we have to do is step out of line; it’s that simple."
How to Design a Web Page:
Liz Danzico's slideshare presentation on the usability of WordPress is
very smart: "People will do stuff [workarounds] when design
fails...Most people ignore most of the [web page]...People don't like
surprises [i.e. changes]...People prefer verbs [over nouns] to navigate web pages...[after
completing a task online] users need suggestions, nexts, and
reassurance...Show, don't tell." Thanks to Kathy Sierra for the link.
Why Cap-and-Trade Solutions to Global Warming Won't Work:
"'Cap and trade' is the rage today as a primary solution to global
warming. But the European Union's struggle with this approach indicates
it has an uncertain future. This is because global warming, at its core, is not a technology or policy problem. It is the greatest failure of thought in human history."
From
Upton Sinclair: "It is difficult to get a man to understand something
when his salary depends upon his not understanding it." (thanks to William Tozier for the quote)
From Esther Dyson: "Always make new mistakes" (thanks to Natalie Shell for the quote)
From
JP Rangaswami: "More and more, knowledge management is going to be
about reducing the cost of, and simplifying the process for, letting
someone watch what you do. Nonintrusively. Time-shifted. Place-shifted.
Searchable. Archivable. Retrievable." (thanks to Nancy White for the quote)
From Charles Bowden in Blood Orchid:
"We are an exceptional model of the human race. We no longer know how
to produce food. We no longer can heal ourselves. We no longer raise
our young. We have forgotten the names of the stars, fail to notice the
phases of the moon. We do not know the plants and they no longer
protect us. We tell ourselves we are the most powerful specimens of our
kind who have ever lived. But when the lights are off we are helpless.
We cannot move without traffic signals. We must attend classes in order
to learn by rote numbered steps toward love or how to breast-feed our
baby. We justify anything, anything at all by the need to maintain our
way of life. And then we go to the doctor and tell the professionals we
have no life. We have a simple test for making decisions: our way of
life, which we cleverly call our standard of living, must not change
except to grow yet more grand. We have a simple reality we live with
each and every day: our way of life is killing us." (thanks to Beth Taggard for the quote)
Subscribe to this blog by
MADE IN CANADA
trust your
instincts
MY GRAVITATIONAL COMMUNITY
People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
here. [* indicates
people I connect with in real time, f2f, via IM, Skype or SL chat.]
- original research,surveys etc.
- original,well-crafted fiction
- great finds: resources,blogs,essays, artistic works
- news not found anywhere else
- category killers: aggregators that capture the best of many blogs/feeds, so they need not be read individually
- clever, concise political opinion consistent with their own views
- benchmarks,quantitative analysis
- personal stories,experiences,lessons learned
- first-hand accounts
- live reports from events
- insight:leading-edge thinking & novel perspectives
- short educational pieces
- relevant "aha" graphics
- great photos
- useful tools and checklists
- précis, summaries, reviews and other time-savers
- fun stuff: quizzes, self-evaluations, other interactive content
Blog writers
want to see more:
- constructive criticism, reaction, feedback
- 'thank you' comments, and why readers liked their post
- requests for future posts on specific subjects
- foundation articles: posts that writers can build on, on their own blogs
- reading lists/aggregations of material on specific, leading-edge subjects that writers can use as resource material
- wonderful examples of writing of a particular genre, that they can learn from
- comments that engender lively discussion
- guidance on how to write in the strange world of weblogs