CENTCOM Week in Review Ending 3 September 2009

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AA:  Al-Qaeda launchpad in Yemen gives Saudis new headache 09/02/09

AF:  Warlord's Defection Shows Afghan Risk 09/02/09

AF:  What's Right With Afghanistan 09/02/09

IQ:  Iraq al Qaeda militant says Syria trained him 08/31/09

KG: US troops ordered out of Kyrgyzstan after Russia deal 08/30/09

PK:  Pakistan's most-wanted: look at who isn't listed 09/01/09

PK:  Zawahiri urges support in Pak tribal areas: SITE 08/28/09

PS:  Once-legendary Fatah figure makes a comeback 09/01/09

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Review: Mapping the Moral Domain: A Contribution of Women’s Thinking to Psychological Theory and Education

5 Star, Leadership, Values, Ethics, Sustainable Evolution, Voices Lost (Indigenous, Gender, Poor, Marginalized)
Amazon Page
Amazon Page
5.0 out of 5 stars 1988 Precious Gem–Richly Deserves Appreciation Today
September 3, 2009

Carol Gilligan

Amazon appears to be depriving customers of top reviews from the past–part of a concerted effort they have been making to ease the path for new reviewers, never mind the cost in lost wisdom. I am personally appalled that this incredibly important book, obviously in a new edition, has no reviews carried forward.

1988 is when this book was published, which for me means that in very personal terms, I have been “out of touch” and “unknowing” of the deep social relevance of this work and its focus on the caring voice of women (as opposed to the “justice” voice of men) in both psychology and sociology.

In a nut-shell, this book is a collection of edited works ably integrated by the contributing editors, which pioneered the “voices” discussion from the female point of view. While there have been many books about the voices of the oppressed, the indigenous, and other marginalized groups, this book focuses on the voices of women in their dialectic with men–women as “caring” men as focused on rational “justice.” I am reminded of Voltaire's Bastards: The Dictatorship of Reason in the West and E. O. Wilson's book,Consilience: The Unity of Knowledge.

Underlying the female focus on caring is the female focus on intangibles such as community and good will…..so much so that I have a note, women may be the archetype of what it means to be human. The book opens very ably with observations about how detachment and dispassion are in fact moral choices with tangible outcomes and consequences.

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Review: Wave Rider: Leadership for High Performance in a Self-Organizing World

6 Star Top 10%, Complexity & Resilience, Decision-Making & Decision-Support, Democracy, Leadership, Voices Lost (Indigenous, Gender, Poor, Marginalized)
Amazon Page
Amazon Page

4.0 out of 5 stars Some Warts But If You Buy Only One Book, Try This One….

September 3, 2009

Harrison Owen

The author (developer of the modern Open Space Technology) that revives the Native American open circle)  tells us the book will inevitably be a repetition of his past books in different form, but I do not deduct for that because for me this is the first and only book, and may therefore prove his point: you have to keep telling the story in different forms to reach different segments of the public. I put the book down feeling it was an excellent overview, and feeling no need to acquire and read the other books.

I identify with the author when he notes (without complaint) that his insights that are so mainstream today (at least among the avant guarde) caused him to be labeled as totally lacking in credibility. Been there, done that–called a lunatic by CIA in 1992 for pointing out the urgency of getting a grip on open sources of information.

The author, the founder of the “Open Space” protocol that elicits boundless creativity in very short times by NOT seeking to structure, lead, or control, spends a lot of time on the concept of self-organization, concluding at the very end of the book that EVERYTHING is self-organizing, and all systems that seek to command & control are, by and large, part of the problem, not part of the solution.

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Review: Conscious Globalism: What’s Wrong with the World and How to Fix It

4 Star, Capitalism (Good & Bad)
Amazon Page
Amazon Page

4.0 out of 5 stars Righteous, Not as Deep As Some, Great Overview
September 3, 2009

David Schwerin

This book is a logical follow-on to the author's earlier book, Conscious Capitalism: Principles for Prosperity, a book that is doing very very well in Chinese translations. Early on he points out that we need to achieve a global change in consciousness, and I am reminded of Barbara Ehrenreich's book, Conscious Evolution: Awakening Our Social Potential as well as Steve MacIntosh's Integral Consciousness and the Future of Evolution. Everything I am reading is converging, and it is not because of what I am choosing as much as it is about what there is to choose from–this is a tsunami.

The author observes that the Internet is both a people unifier, allowing for information sharing across all traditional barriers and boundaries, and it is also a source of competitive information, something I take to mean that smaller players are now competitive with larger players because of their increased access to information.

The author points out that “the rules” were made of, by, and for those with wealth, and that our challenge today is to find investment capital with a conscience. I think that is happening as Natural Capitalism: Creating the Next Industrial Revolution and Blessed Unrest: How the Largest Social Movement in History Is Restoring Grace, Justice, and Beauty to the World combine with Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things and The Philosophy of Sustainable Design thinking. Further on he talks about how respecting the environment encourages innovation and reduces waste, but I am struck by the absence of references to any of the greats in this entire line of reflection.

The author follows the spiritual principles adopted by Phi Beta Iota, the Honour Society for Public Intelligence, and focuses constantly on moving us all, one individual at a time, from “Me” to “Us.”

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EUCOM Week in Review Ending 2 September 2009

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AA: NGOs discuss the future of nuclear power in Europe and Bulgaria 08/28/09

AZ: Karabakh Peace Process Must Be Fully Inclusive 09/01/09

CY: ‘North Cyprus isolation crime against humanity' 09/02/09

CZ:  Czech soldiers have extremist leanings – military counterintelligence report 09/02/09

IL: ARMING TERRORIST ISRAEL 08/31/09

IL:  NICE to Enhance Security Offering With the Acquisition of Hexagon 08/31/09

PT:  U.S. sends two Syrians from Guantanamo to Portugal 08/29/09

RU: Russia's tails appear to be wagging the Kremlin dog 09/02/09

TR: Tanbay: Turkey close to solving Kurdish problem for the first time 08/31/09

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SOUTHCOM Week in Review Ending 1 September 2009

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AA: ARMOR: Improvised Armor In South America 08/29/09

AA: Falkland/Malvinas experience repeatedly recalled in Unasur summit 08/30/09

AA: Latin American Physical Security Market Growing: Report 08/31/09

AA: Mexico and Argentina move towards decriminalising drugs 08/31/09

CO: “An eternal battle against oblivion” 08/31/09

CO: Meeting a Girl FARC Guerrilla in Bogotá 08/29/09

GT: Malnutrition in Guatemala A national shame 08/27/09

SV: Safe Regions to Control Violence in El Salvador 08/29/09

VE: Fourth Generation Warfare: Twisting our minds into total submission… 08/26/09

VE: Venezuela: Communes Providing Hope, Solidarity and Participation 08/28/09

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