Ernie, 

 

I would change

 

* We as a society need to invest in sustainable infrastructure (physical,
financial, and political) that will ensure our children are better off than
we are

 

To 

 

* We as a society need to invest in sustainable infrastructure (physical,
financial, and political) that will ensure our children have every chance to
be are better off than we are

 

Chris

 

 

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Dr. Ernie Prabhakar
Sent: Wednesday, December 14, 2011 2:11 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [RC] Centrist Values

 

Hi guys,

 

We've spent a lot of time lately arguing our differences. I'd like to
suggest we shift direction, and try to articulate the things we *do* have in
common.

 

I know Solomon doesn't like the idea of an "ideology", but he clearly
enunciates a set of "conclusions" that most of us would agree with.  Even
many of Kevin's critiques we'd agree with in principle, if not in practice.

 

So, let's try to make a list of values we share.  Here's a start, pulling
from the lists below.  Please add your own:

 

 

* Public policy should be driven by informed opinion and honest debate, not
rigid ideologies or powerful interests

 

* Government and the political process should be radically streamlined to
improve transparency, efficiency, and focus

 

* We need a system where the leaders of the public and private sector serve
the public good and keep each other in check , not where they collude to
enrich themselves at our expense

 

* We as a society need to invest in sustainable infrastructure (physical,
financial, and political) that will ensure our children are better off than
we are

 

The hard part is to come up with a list that is comprehensive enough to
drive coherent action, yet simple enough to understand.  Broad enough to be
supported by a majority, yet still internally self-consistent.  Ambiguous
and open-ended enough to allow flexibility and creativity, yet rigid enough
to prevent abuse.

 

It won't be easy, but I believe it is possible. Who's willing to help?

 

-- Ernie P.

Centroids Admin

 

 

On Dec 6, 2011, at 3:06 AM, Kevin Kervick wrote:

 

> It is not that I am opposed to any new growth or reforms and indeed some
of the reconstruction ideas have merit, especially in transportation and
infrastructure. However, in a society that is economically and morally
bankrupt our priority should be getting back to basics by deconstructing
what is not working and rebuilding our economic and moral infrastructure,
based on an enduring set of values.

 

> Consequently, while I see both government and corporations as
co-conspirators in the modern day oligarchy I believe it is government
power, more than corporate excess that we should fear the most.

 

On Dec 5, 2011, at 8:18 AM, Rise of the Center wrote:

 

> You don't seem to have been listening to what I've said... I think
ideology is an impediment to political evolution. I don't care how you
define radical centrism on your website, because the idea of putting
together an ideology is something I'm very much against. I joined this group
to discuss issues of the day with roughly centrist people, not to help you
develop an ideology that I think would be an impediment to the evolution of
our country and the center of the political spectrum in our country if it
were to be adopted widely. I've written about this fairly extensively over
the last few years... one of the better examples of this being 'Centrists
Don't Buy Into Ideology Hoax', from way back last summer. Here is a sample,
and this applies just as much to your ideology as it does any other:

> 

 

On Dec 5, 2011, at 8:18 AM, Rise of the Center wrote:

 

> We don't need an ideology for the center. we've come to our conclusions
just fine without any damn political dogma telling us how we should arrive
at our political beliefs, thank you very much. Many of us shrink from the
two major parties largly because of this, as we saw that old political dogma
wasn't giving us workable answers to the problems of today.

>  

> I don't need an ideology to think that I don't want to pass on such an
insane level of debt to any children I may  have. I don't need an ideology
to think that we should work on developing ways to generate the energy we
need for our economy to keep churning, without destroying out environment.
Nor do I need an ideology to look at that situation and come to the
conclusion that a tax on carbon, or significant raises in the gas tax (or
any regressive tax) makes any sense. I don't need an ideology to think that
my gay friends should be able to visit their long time lover on their death
bed, even if their family doesn't want them to, and that they should be able
to get some kind of legal status for their relationship, whether you call it
marriage or something else.

>  

> I've come to these conclusions by looking at them, thinking about them,
talking to others about them, and coming to my own conclusions. Most don't
put a fraction of the amount of time I have, but many people, a majority on
nearly every issue, agree with my stances nonetheless. These issues may be
complex, but often the underlying issues are not.

 

-- 

Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community <
<mailto:[email protected]> [email protected]>

Google Group:  <http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism>
http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism

Radical Centrism website and blog:  <http://RadicalCentrism.org>
http://RadicalCentrism.org

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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