I completely agree with this...
 
M
 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Sandwichman
Sent: Thursday, November 25, 2010 10:28 AM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Lets get back to the future of work and away from
pushing and shoving


I suppose having indirectly instigated this thread I should weigh in with my
views. I think there's an important distinction to be made between
occasional outbursts of rudeness or snark (which I myself indulge in if my
nose is out of joint) and a chronic motivation of contempt and disrespect
for individuals, groups and ideas that don't conform to one's own. What I
objected to was not an outburst but an insidious theme, one of the tentacles
of which is "Jew = Zionist = predator," another of which is "anyone who
disagrees with or criticizes my views = predator." Trust me, I've read
enough Thorstein Veblen to tell the difference between his critical
analytical use of the term and its appropriation as a catch-all slur.

People sometimes say things I think are asinine or simply glorified cliches.
I've got no problem with that. I can criticize or I can ignore them. But
slander and defamation I won't tolerate or accommodate. These are not just
unfortunate incidents, they are the perpetrator's motivation. Sorry to be
inflexible but it is also clear to me that there are people I would want to
engage in conversation who would have a lower level of tolerance for this
kind of thing than I do.



On Thu, Nov 25, 2010 at 8:54 AM, Arthur Cordell <[email protected]>
wrote:


I am trying to manage things so that a core group of interested people can
contribute in a civilized way.  I happen to think that Bullshit is
inappropriate and is an expression of anger.  How about saying: I think you
are wrong.  Or how about saying nothing.  Not every post has to be responded
to.  Too often it seems that people feel compelled to respond in one way or
another.  While in the law silence is consent on the FW list silence is just
that.  Silence.  I often open a posting, see that is of no interest or it is
something that is strictly opinion (which I have heard before) and gently
delete.  

 

Imagine that we are a group of people who have gathered outside a lecture
hall where a lecture on the future of work had taken place.  We are
informally chatting and offering up suggestions, ideas and thoughts.
Informal. Gentle.  And then someone angrily offers an expletive.  There may
be a temptation to walk away from the group and find a more congenial
setting or just walk away and devote time to other pursuits. 

 

Let's give things a week or so to sort out. 

 

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of D and N
Sent: Thursday, November 25, 2010 11:41 AM
To: Keith Hudson; RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION 


Subject: Re: [Futurework] Lets get back to the future of work and away from
pushing and shoving



 

Keith.     I, as everyone in this world is confronted by or offered bullshit
every day of our lives. Bullshit. Bullshit. Bullshit. From politicians. From
Big Business. From teachers. >From down-and-outers on the street. It's a
fact of life. It's in the dictionary. We even step in it ourselves all too
often and pass it around as we walk through life. Not everything that comes
from "lettered folk" is AWEsome. All too often, in retrospect, ideas are
shown to be ill-conceived or just plain wrong. But, bullshit, once worked
through the "filters" of the world, can be the fertilizer of the mind. Is it
that the cradle is still too tight around you that you continually slip back
to it?


Darryl

On 11/25/2010 7:39 AM, Keith Hudson wrote: 

Arthur,

When I wrote my very careful description of what I thought to be the
relevance of the new discoveries of epigenetics on the perseverance of
culture from generation to generation -- to which REH responded with
"Bullshit" -- then I wish I had had Oliver Wendell Holmes's amazingly
prescient quotation to hand. In poetic language this describes exactly what
I was attempting to discuss.

I won't be writing to Futurework again until there are clear signs that REH
and Christoph Reuss understand and observe the normal rules of courtesy. Or
you can delete me from the list. I won't mind either way. I have had enough
of both of them to last me for quite a long time to come.

Keith


At 10:03 25/11/2010 -0500, you wrote:



Content-Type: multipart/alternative;
        boundary="----=_NextPart_000_0046_01CB8C88.0B442F90"
Content-Language: en-us

Lots of good and constructive responses to how to nurture the health and
integrity of the list.

 

This morning up popped this sobering Thought for Today

 

A THOUGHT FOR TODAY:

We are all tattooed in our cradles with the beliefs of our tribe; the record
may seem superficial, but it is indelible. You cannot educate a man wholly
out of the superstitious fears which were implanted in his imagination, no
matter how utterly his reason may reject them. -Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr,
poet, novelist, essayist, and physician (1809-1894) 

-----------------------

So like the myth of Sisyphus we continue.  And where possible we try to
recognize what is going on in us and what is going on in the world around
us.  And we try accept that there are filters that we know about and filters
that we dont know about that cause us to interpret the world in one way or
the other.

arthur

 

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Gail Stewart
Sent: Thursday, November 25, 2010 12:36 AM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Lets get back to the future of work and away from
pushing and shoving

 

Hi Arthur and all,

 

I'm uneasy with the notion of excluding people from the list, especially
long-standing participants. On their behalf, I'd like to suggest that it is
at first distressing and then perhaps increasingly irritating not to have
one's perceptions or deepfelt convictions addressed, especially when the
issues raised are clearly related to issues of work and hence the FW list,
e.g. predators, on Chris's part,  and cultural perceptions, on Ray's.  

 

While I don't pretend to have read everything everyone has said, I try to
keep up with a general sense of where the discussion on FW is going. I don't
recall seeing any sustained attempt to address Chris's "predators" whether
psychologically, politically or economically (for example).  We seem to have
treated the matter more as a conspiracy theory personal to Chris. The theory
is surely more prevalent than that in our society, although under a variety
of names and is not irrelevant to "work and working." Maybe we could give it
a more thorough going-over than has been done.

 

Similarly, I think we have been rather dismissive of Ray's attempt to
illuminate our understanding of his culture, tending often to see it as
merely a variant of our own. (I hope I'm not being unfair -- it is at least
my impression that we are not treating his participation as coming from a
different (forgive me but the term may be more familiar as denoting radical
difference) "paradigm." 

 

If I'm not mistaken, it is near impossible for those of us immersed in
conventional Western culture to perceive the world as I suspect Ray must
perceive it. Making a couple of guesses, I would suggest that, rather than
seeing the environment as we do,  as "out there," he may see it as context,
so that all of us are "in here." I've known very few persons non-native to
North America who can even glimpse that perspective, let alone sustain it.
(My own glimpses of life lived that way around, which involve a Copernican
shift in my "Western" outlook, have been few and unsustainable.) 

 

Similarly, human relations are perhaps perceived differently by Ray, his
culture possibly being far more accepting of us (i.e. other persons) than we
who are of Western culture are of other persons. Indeed the FW list is so
biased  itself in terms of the gender of its participants that dialogue with
Ray comes heavily from the odd angle of male rather than Western culture
more inclusively. (The list would of course be enlivened, made more
intelligent and empathic with more balanced participation from both genders.
But perhaps I'm biased myself. <grin>) 

 

A wise woman I knew insisted, "we are enriched by our differences." Rather
than, on this list, trying to argue each other into abandoning other
outlooks in favour of our own, perhaps we might re-embrace our current
"transgressors," avoid an "our way or the highway" approach, value our
differences -- and get back to discussing "work."

 

Ray, would you please say something again about the perception of "work" in
the community in which you grew up? A friend of mine, an aboriginal elder,
shocked me when he insisted that, in his village, they didn't have an
"economy" but only "a way of life." As an economist it took me a while to
understand how it was possible not to have an economy, let alone the
important implications of this for our Western concept of work. In a very
practical way it seemed to me these implications might be used to strengthen
the arguments for the basic income of interest to Sally and others -- and
indeed could helpfully affect a number of our policies.

 

All this said, I do deplore the decline in civility which has occurred and
have been surprised and saddened by it. I hope that era is behind us.

 

Regards,

 

Gail

 

P.S. Apologies for all the Western culture talk -- I wish there were a
better term. Any candidates?

  

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Harry Pollard <mailto:[email protected]>  

To: 'RE-DESIGNING  <mailto:[email protected]> WORK, INCOME
DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION' 

Sent: Wednesday, November 24, 2010 5:24 PM

Subject: Re: [Futurework] Lets get back to the future of work and
awayfrompushing and shoving

 

My experience, Mike, is that when restrictions are placed on a list to make
it better, it tends to disappear.

 

We must be careful about any actions we take.

 

Harry

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Michael Gurstein


Sent: Wednesday, November 24, 2010 9:38 AM 

To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION' 

Subject: Re: [Futurework] Lets get back to the future of work and away
frompushing and shoving

 

Arthur,

 

What you seem to be suggesting for list governance is rather more of the
"hidden hand" market place--bad actors will be shunned and correct their
behaviour as a result.  It appears that for whatever reason some of those in
the marketplace don't respond to the same set of product cues in the same
way as others do hence the bad behaviours are in many cases engaged with
rather than shunned.

 

If the list were in fact self governing rather than left to the laissez
faire of the open market there would be some process of collective
self-regulation/governance.  

 

Having been involved in several such efforts I know that they can be tedious
in the extreme but perhaps as list coordinators you folks might like to
suggest a few simple rules for collective self-government as for example
along the lines of "formal complaints by two members of the group to the
coordinators and then there is a public process of voting people "off the
island" -- or some such.

 

M

-----Original Message----- 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Arthur Cordell 

Sent: Wednesday, November 24, 2010 6:29 AM 

To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION' 

Subject: [Futurework] Lets get back to the future of work and away
frompushing and shoving

I received this message from an active FWer.  And I am adding my own plea to
FWers below.

 

========================

 

Arthur,

I won't participate in the futurework list as long as racist and venomous
comments continue. This kind of talkdoesn't contribute anything to the list
but bile.

 

==========================

 

My open plea to FWers.

 

 

FW was set up to discuss the future of work but seems to go off track from
time to time.  The conversation soon leads to schoolyard type of talk I said
this, no you said that&you are a creep, no you are a creep. Pointless
schoolyard pushing and shoving.  

 

If people want to engage in this virtual pushing and shoving please do it
off list.  One to one.  So that others dont have to be party to what are
private shoving (pissing?) matches.

 

I have asked individual FWers to not respond to those FWers who provoke in
this way (you know who you are) thinking that by shunning those who behave
this way  would cause them to change their ways or drift off to another list
where this sort of behavior is tolerated.  But for whatever reason a few
(you know who you are) seem to want to pick a fight and so things heat up.

 

Now is our chance to be a self-governing group.  Lets not do or say anything
virtually that we wouldnt say if we were talking face to face.

 

I prize civility and exchange of ideas.  How do other FWers feel about this?
Suggestions and ideas welcome.

 

 

Arthur

 

  _____  

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Keith Hudson, Saltford, England 

 
 
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-- 
Sandwichman


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