MessageOne positive trend that has emerged during recent decades is the 
diminution of ideological approaches to human betterment and their replacement 
by problem solving approaches.  It is a growing and increasingly universal 
recognition of the sheer immensity of the problems that humanity will encounter 
if it is to continue that has fueled this trend.  We cannot, for example, turn 
to Marxism or free-market capitalism or religious fundamentalism of whatever 
kind to resolve the growing problems arising out of massive population growth, 
growing resource scarcity, increasing urbanization or global warming.  They are 
problems that need to be solved by looking directly at them, analyzing them, 
finding solutions and putting the resources needed to deal with them in place.  
Making fiery speeches or getting down on our knees to pray is no longer helpful.



Ed




  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: michael gurstein 
  To: [email protected] 
  Cc: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION,EDUCATION' 
  Sent: Friday, June 17, 2011 10:44 PM
  Subject: Re: [Futurework] [Ottawadissenters] RE: Musing on the 
VancouverStanley Cup riot


  I think we need more than happy talk or doom and gloom... But while there are 
positive things to add to the mix--the Internet, bio-engineering, accelerating 
scientific understandings and technical capabilities in a very wide range of 
fields there is also a lot (and perhaps more) to be gloomy about--accelerating 
energy use, inceasing social irrationality, accelerating failures in social and 
political adaptation.  I think in the end we will be done in but ultimately 
because we aren't proving to be particularly good at developing the social and 
political institutions we need for long term human survival. We have the tools 
but we as a species don't seem to have the means to develop the widely 
acceptable, sustainable and humane use of them that will allow us to survive.

  M
    -----Original Message-----
    From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Arthur Cordell
    Sent: Friday, June 17, 2011 6:46 PM
    To: [email protected]
    Cc: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION'
    Subject: RE: [Ottawadissenters] RE: [Futurework] Musing on the Vancouver 
Stanley Cup riot


      

    John,


    Not going to argue with you.  But besides being positive and positively 
giddy about the future what is a broad based positive image for the future.


    We can all name the various isms that came and went.  And about which 
people were willing to sacrifice since one or another ism held promise for a 
better future.


    So from this old man to a somewhat younger man: What is a positive image 
for the future that can provide a context for social action and social 
cohesion. 


    Hint: going green doesn't do it.  Ditto Facebook or Twitter.   Nor does 
animal rights do it, or name the cause du jour.


    In the past when growth was good (god?) elections were fought and won on 
it.  Today growth has become a parody: The words competition, innovation, 
growth, productivity, jobs are just that.  Words from the past and are mouthed 
over and over in election campaigns to cover over the vacuum of a society that 
needs a new way of organizing itself. A society in need of new goals that 
resonate with citizens.


    If we continue to run elections on yesterdays goals we run the risk of 
alienating still more citizens  who will increasingly respond to yet another 
call to vote and become involved with a sigh and a Whatever.


    What is that new image?  And its not embracing change for the sake of 
change.  


    I rather like the idea of a Stable State economy and society;  one which is 
sustainable and within which one can find personal meaning and engagement.  
Where growth happens or not and is not obsessively tracked but where it does 
happen is a byproduct of positive human activities.


    What is yours?


    arthur


    From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of John Verdon
    Sent: Friday, June 17, 2011 9:10 PM
    To: [email protected]
    Cc: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
    Subject: Re: [Ottawadissenters] RE: [Futurework] Musing on the Vancouver 
Stanley Cup riot




    Arthur,


    With great respect - really, but you sound like an old man. I know we are 
all older. But you sound like there is no-one and no reason for optimism or a 
possibility of a new and better future.


    Of course the future is uncertain - uncertainty and impermanence are the 
eternal reality - made most poignant in this age of post-modernity - with no 
capacity to grasp the given 'god-made' world of the pre-modern, nor the fated 
clockwork universe of the modern. But the reality is that human life has always 
been fragile and any individual's, species' or even ecosystem's lifespan was 
uncertain. 


    Nostalgia is often simply a type of forgetting of the existential trials 
and tribulations of the past. 


    Tell the 'Youth of Facebook' that there is no possibility of a better 
world, tell our youth so heavily involved in the NGO world struggling to 
implement greener, more equitable, more self-actualizing work and life - that 
there is no chance or vision of a better world tomorrow. Read Umair Haque's 
"The New Capitalist Manifesto" (there are many who feel as he does). 


    There is no possibility of a better world without struggle and the need for 
hope - but that has always been the true human condition. Have become 
complacent in our affluence that we can no longer imagine a different world? 
Based on new sciences and a capacity to evolve ourselves? 


    I remember when I was a young man - a hippie with dreams and a believe in 
the power of love - I met many an old person who felt we were already well on 
the way to hell in a handbasket - and there were many justifiable indications 
(including an impending Ice Age). Human existed before that last Ice Age 
arrived. How did we survive? 


    What do I know? Not much frankly. But I do know that the future is full of 
possibilities and that while 'hype' always under-performs it is always a lack 
of imagination in anticipating a positive future that fails us.


    I know - This will post will meet with glib disdain for those well reasoned 
folk harboring an apocalypse-wish. We do in fact live in an age with a 
Zeitgeist of deep immanence and it is true that the past will truly suffer 
apocalyptic devastation - just as living as hunter-gatherers felt the move to 
agriculture was apocalyptic, as agriculturalists felt the move to industrial 
society was apocalyptic and as industrial society feel the move to the 
information age and a digital economy is apocalyptic. Each society cannot 
imagine a new type of world and society and fear the death that is inherent 
within all transformations. Humans as we think of ourselves may not survive 
just as Neanderthal did not survive. But as I said at the beginning - to see 
life as it really is - means we must all accept and embrace impermanence and 
uncertainty - that is what it means to be alive.


    my two cents

    john

    On Fri, Jun 17, 2011 at 8:39 PM, Arthur Cordell <[email protected]> 
wrote:

      

    I originally posted this last Fall, 2010.  It was in the thread "why the 
revolution will not be tweeted"  (thanks to Barry Randall for resuscitating 
it).  I think it is relevant to the current thread.


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

    The growth of social movements requires a positive image of the future.  
Something that is lacking today.  There is much finger pointing at what can be 
done here and there but there is no over arching image of what is worth working 
for. 

    The past was about growth is good.  When the economy stalled the positive 
image was to get the economy growing.   It was about getting a job and staying 
with one company.  It was about settling down, having a family etc. etc.   Now 
we realize that growth uses resources, pollutes, leads to global warming, etc.  
Now working for one firm is long gone, as are pensions, as is the stability 
that comes from family formation.  There is nostalgia for some aspects of the 
past but dread for most aspects of the future.  We seem to be stuck between a 
past that brought us here but may not bring us further and a future which is 
wrought with uncertainty and, at times, images of danger.  

    Society is in a hyper self conscious state and while there is much 
criticism there is (aside from some fundamentalists on the right and the left) 
little in the way of a positive image of the future about which coalitions can 
be built.

    arthur





    From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ed Weick
    Sent: Friday, June 17, 2011 2:17 PM
    To: [email protected]; [email protected]
    Subject: [Futurework] Musing on the Vancouver Stanley Cup riot


    The area in which the rioting took place is still vaguely familiar.  It was 
1949 or '50.  I had a small, cheap downtown room on Homer Street.  I was going 
to become the world's greatest artist.  Seventeen or eighteen at the time, I'd 
dropped out of high school, spent fourteen months working in a sawmill to put 
some money together, and registered at the Vancouver School of Art (now the 
Emily Carr School).  I stayed for a year, long enough to learn that there were 
plenty of other kids more equipped to become the world's greatest artist than I 
was.  When I now look back, my greatest accomplishment was having a ten minute 
conversation with Lauren Harris, who came to visit us at the school.


    If there had been a Stanley Cup riot at the time, would I have joined in?  
Well, there was no riot.  There couldn't have been.  I and all of the kids I 
knew felt a part of Vancouver.  It was our city; ours to live in; ours to enjoy 
and keep in good shape.  I think that young people generally felt that way at 
the time.


    Move on to 1957.  I had just graduated from the Faculty of Commerce at UBC 
with an economics degree.  I had several firm job offers; even the dumbest kid 
in the class had a job offer or two.  The world was ours to make the best of.  
Would we have taken part in a riot?  No, why would we?  There was no point.


    Fast forward to the present.  Jobs are much harder to get now than they 
were back in the 1950s.  Many young and not so young people are out on the 
street no longer looking for jobs because they just aren't there.  Universities 
are packed with young people because they have nowhere else to go and because 
they hope a degree will help them get a job when they graduate - if they can 
afford to graduate and if the jobs are there.  The world that I felt so good 
about back in the 1950s because it was my world and so full of promise has now 
become, as Barbara Ehrenreich puts it, their world - a world which young people 
feel they have no real part in and no control over.  It doesn't belong to them, 
it belongs to government or the corporate world or to someone you can't reach, 
touch or control.  Whoever is in charge can put a fence around themselves and 
keep you out, as was done in Toronto at the G20 summit.  And if you try to do 
something about it, you can be sure the cops will be there.


    This doesn't excuse the kind of behavior we saw in Vancouver, but it may in 
part explain it.  If I were a young person in Vancouver in the world of now 
would I not jump up and down when I saw a cop car in flames?  Might I not want 
to break a window?  I simply don't know, but I do know that I'm not going to be 
too hardheaded about what happened in Vancouver on Wednesday night.


    Ed






    -- 
    John Verdon
    4 Ashbury Place
    Ottawa, ON
    K1M1H3
    voice 613-744-4278
    searching for the pattern which connects....
    knowing the difference that makes a difference...
    Sapere Aude - The true is the whole.
    Compassion is the natural condition of what one really is.








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