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.
BLOG Links for the Week:
Saturday January 10, 2009
Cheryl's
newest photos from Esperance, Australia: Marlo checks out a sleeping
sea lion, and later a sea lion baby, on this magnificent beach
Since
I missed posting links last week, there's a bumper crop this week Also,
I'm behind in my blogroll scan, so these are mostly links from
subscribed sources and diligent readers. Back to the regular round-up
next week.
Things
I Learned in 2008:PS
Pirro and Communicatrix
have wonderful year-end lists. Here is mine, undoubtedly incomplete,
and in no particular order:
How to really love,
and really care about people: It starts with letting go.
And learning to be modest.
No one is in control.
There is no global conspiracy, no elite in charge, no centre of power,
and people who see themselves as leaders, or who we see as leaders,
will always fail. It's all up to each of us, doing what we must.
I cannot be
responsible for others' expectations of me. It's important to learn how
to say no,
gracefully.
Before we can do
anything well, we first need to know ourselves.
The most important
quality in any relationship is honesty.
How to begin to begin
to be authentic, open, raw, nobody-but-yourself: It starts with really
paying attention, being there, in the moment, and constantly
challenging and breaking up our own worldview, our
own conceptions and beliefs and fears, while at the same time not
taking on the 'gunk' of others'.
I expect a
lot of myself, and of others, and that underlies my misanthropy and my
veneration of exceptional people. The things that make people
exceptional to me are intelligence, articulateness, sensitivity,
emotional strength (based on self-knowledge), and imagination.
Discovering where we
belong and what we're meant to do gets more difficult as the world
becomes more complex and interconnected -- there are simply more
choices, more possibilities.
The greatest of all
the many threats to our world and our survival is our imaginative
poverty. We are too horrifically constrained by the only life we know.
The key to doing
anything effectively is generally love, conversation and community. We
must do what we can to nurture and facilitate these three things.
If we want something,
we should just ask. People are open to invitation.
One key to helping
others (especially children) to help themselves: Just get them started.
We should use stories, demonstrations, provocations, conversations.
Then, mama birds all, we should get out of the way and let them soar.
There is no mastery.
There is only practice.
Knowing
What You've Lost: One
of Patti Digh's finest essays is
one she wrote three years ago about the death of her father, who was
born on Christmas Day and died at age 53. My mother died on Christmas
Day 1988, at age 60.
Make or Break Time for Business:Gregory
Lent and Umair
Haque are riffing that
traditional-model big businesses need to reinvent themselves quickly or
die. I think there is some truth to this -- the recession and the
commensurate collapse of consumer spending pose an enormous threat to
businesses that are highly leveraged (i.e. profits increase or decrease
by many times the increase or decrease in sales) and dependent on
double-digit annual profit growth (because this growth determines their
share price, which in turn affects their financing capacity and the
bonuses and options they need to attract competent employees). But I
think this "growing collective consumer consciousness" line of argument
is nonsense, romantic echo-chamber stuff. The average
citizen/consumer doesn't get smarter because s/he has less money to
spend -- s/he just buys
cheaper stuff (which often means fast food, junk food, Chinese Wal-Mart
crap, dirty fuel instead of more costly renewables. What big companies
need to do to survive in a world of dumbed-down lower-income consumers,
alas, is not reinvent themselves but to deleverage (which means
layoffs, short-termism and abandoning innovation) and lower prices and
costs (which means offshoring, outsourcing, and squeezing suppliers).
The recession is not good news for anyone. The renaissance of the
informed, empowered citizen/consumer is probably further off now than
ever.
Will
We Act to Prevent Great Depression II?:Paul
Krugman is doubtful. And there
have, of course, been many great depressions before the one in the
1930s, back before the memory of potato famines and cannibalism. But
still we believe, against all the evidence surrounding us, that it
can't happen again.
How
to Fix the Financial System:
A 3-part NYT article suggests sober,
long-term ideas for repairing the broken financial system that make a
lot more sense than bailouts.
They include nationalization (which is, of course, politically
unacceptable) and instead of trying to perpetuate and restart the
insane borrow-more-spend-more cycle, recommend a more resilient
restructuring that will let the markets self-correct for the excesses
(also politically unacceptable, because the rich, the incompetent
executives and the over-extended and reckless investors will take the
hit, instead of the taxpayer). Good link in this article to the cause
of the Madoff scandal as well -- basically laying the fault on the
regulators.
The
City Hurts Your Brain: I've
often said that I hate cities, and that as I get older and more aware
of myself I am convinced that cities make me ill -- stressed, sad,
pessimistic, disengaged, disconnected. Now research
confirms that cities are not good for us:
"Just being in an urban environment...impairs our basic mental
processes. After spending a few minutes on a crowded city street, the
brain is less able to hold things in memory, and suffers from reduced
self-control...People who had walked through the city were in a worse
mood and scored significantly lower on a test of attention and working
memory." Thanks to Tree
for the link, and the one that follows.
The
Mother of Twin Oaks: Kat
Kinkade, who died last year, was the founder of Twin Oaks, one
of the most successful and enduring intentional communities in the US.
Her moving NYT obituary tells you something about the idealism that
lies behind intentional communities, and some of the challenges they
face.
Our
Vulnerable Food System: Wes
Jackson and Wendell Berry explain that the industrial
agriculture system, which has exhausted and exposed soils, made crops
dependent on massive use of oil-based fertilizer, pesticides and
herbicides, increased
vulnerability to drought, storms and disease, poisoned the soils, and
replaced permaculture with fragile monoculture, is utterly
unsustainable and (just as thge excesses of the financial system led to
its collapse) headed for collapse, perhaps (as I've reported before) as
early as this year. Our willingness to shrug off these dangers until
collapse actually occurs does not bode well for our ability to cope
with the cascading crises ahead of us.
Information
for the Polyamorous and Those Who Love Them:
I recently discovered two useful articles on this subject. Advice
for someone monogamous in love with someone polyamorous.
("Especially if your partner isn't currently involved in other
relationships, it's tempting to believe that it won't come up--that
your partner might be polyamorous in some abstract sense, but if your
relationship is good enough, you'll never have to deal with the reality
of seeing your partner want somebody else. Avoid this temptation; this
isn't something you're likely to be able to make go away.") And How
to practice polyamory. ("Learn
to manage your time.")
...and
About Afghanistan:In
the failed state of Afghanistan, everything is for sale
-- drugs, political office, justice, and, of course "protection". "Kept
afloat by billions of dollars in American and other foreign aid, the
government of Afghanistan is shot through with corruption and graft.
From the lowliest traffic policeman to the family of President Hamid
Karzai himself, the state built on the ruins of the Taliban government
seven years ago now often seems to exist for little more than the
enrichment of those who run it." The continued involvement of our
soldiers to bolster this state of bribery and corruption run amok is
insane.
Yet
Another Eco-Holocaust: The
damage from the massive toxic ash spill
from the TVA's Kingston coal-fired power plant
will eclipse
that of the
Exxon Valdez spill. There is
abundant evidence of negligence, lax
regulation (the site has a chronic history of spills and other
environmental and safety failures), and incompetence. When will we
learn that big corporations will never regulate themselves,
and care
about nothing but the next fiscal quarter's profits? As long as
corporations are designed to be psychopathic (see the following item),
our failure to regulate them, police them, punish them for misdeeds,
and jail their leaders when they misbehave, is nothing short of
madness. Thanks to Graham
Clark for the links.
Not
an Economic Collapse, a Renaissance: Architect
Christopher Travis argues that instead of worrying about and rescuing
the industrial economy, we should be bringing into existence a new
economy, "a system of exchange and value that recognizes our
interdependence, that is endlessly and systemically innovative, an
economy of infinite possibility,
of sufficiency, an economy that works for everyone."
Reforming
the Hopelessly Broken US Health System:Tom
Daschle has the most difficult job in the world.
To make the US health system affordable and accessible will mean ending
the two-tier structure that gives the rich the best health care money
can buy, and gives US doctors salaries that only the rich can afford.
It will also mean acknowledging that the private sector is simply
incompetent to manage an effective health care system, and needs to be
fired -- an unimaginable heresy in a nation that loves to hate
government and worships the 'free market'.
From Poetic Medicine
by John Fox (thanks to Evelyn
who is, like me, at yet another crossroads, for the link): "Poetry
provides guidance, revealing what you did not know you knew before you
wrote or read the poem. This moment of surprising yourself with your
own words of wisdom or of being surprised by the poems of others is at
the heart of poetry as healer."
The Want Bone, by
Robert Pinsky (thanks to The
Augusta Archive for the link):
The Want Bone
The tongue of the waves tolled in the earth's bell.
Blue rippled and soaked in the fire of blue.
The dried mouthbones of a shark in the hot swale
Gaped on nothing but sand on either side.
The bone tasted of nothing and smelled of nothing,
A scalded toothless harp, uncrushed, unstrung.
The joined arcs made the shape of birth and craving
And the welded‑open shape kept mouthing O.
Ossified cords held the corners together
In groined spirals pleated like a summer dress.
But where was the limber grin, the gash of pleasure?
Infinitesimal mouths bore it away,
The beach scrubbed and etched and pickled it clean.
But O I love you it sings, my little my country
My food my parent my child I want you my own
My flower my fin my life my lightness my O.
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