Journal: Rebellion 2.0–Smart & Funny

Blog Wisdom, Cultural Intelligence

Nick ShoreNick Shore

SVP of Strategic Consumer Insights and Research, MTV

Posted: November 7, 2010 03:05 PM

Wit was the weapon of choice for millennials at the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear.

Millennials are often compared to their boomer parents in terms of their penchant for social activism and positive change. Cynically minded social commentators have also characterized the millennials' flavor of activism as “slacktivism” or, more recently, as a “diffuse, click-and-go” activism (see Malcolm Gladwell's article).

On Oct. 30, however, we saw a very different side of this generation.

Millennials gathered in the tens of thousands to attend the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear in Washington, D.C., to speak out against fear-mongering in politics.

With an economy that's no laughing matter, one might have expected to see a generational temper tantrum, but instead we bore witness to the dynamic that we at MTV have lovingly dubbed “smart ‘n' funny as the new rock ‘n' roll.”

Read rest of this inspiring post….

Reference: Saniteer

Blog Wisdom

T-shirt at the Restore Sanity rally…

“Saniteer: One who advocates for, practices and defends rational discourse and civility towards all people, regardless of political views. Collectively, our nation’s best hope for restoring honor, respect and functionality. D.C. 10.30.10″

Tip of the Hat to Sandy Heierbacher at LinkedIn.

Phi Beta Iota: Sanity and civility are nice, intelligence (individual, collective, and as decision-support also known as evidence-based planning, programming, and budgeting) is better.  We achieve that with Electoral Reform.

See Also:

Event: 30 Oct Restoring Sanity Rally with Jon Stewart, Keep Fear Alive Rally with Stephen Colbert
Graphic(s): Sanity Rally Signs + Photo Gallery of Rally from The Washington Post
Journal: Sanity Rally Goes Global
Journal: Actual Signs from the Sanity Rally
Journal: It Takes a Comic (or Two)…to Rebuild a Nation
Journal: Third Party Desired by 58% in America + ReCap
Reference: Rally to Restore Sanity–An American Moment
Strategic Analytic Model for Creating a Prosperous World at Peace

Reference: Happiness Ten Precepts

Cultural Intelligence

Mary J. LoftusMary J. Loftus

Associate Editor, Emory Magazine

Posted: November 6, 2010 09:36 AM

Top 10 Things Religious Leaders Say about Happiness

Here are the top 10 things I learned about true spiritual happiness based on listening to a panel consisting of  the Dalai Lama; Rev. Katharine Jefferts Schori, presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church, Chief Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth and Islamic scholar Professor Seyyed Hossein Nasr of George Washington University.

1. Happiness is radically subjective.

2. Happiness, contrary to conventional wisdom, can't be purchased.

3. Happiness involves the mind and the body.

4. Happiness is generated internally, not by fame or fortune.

5. Happiness can be found here on earth.

6. Happiness occurs in communal celebration.

7. Happiness is not all about us.

8. Happiness can be developed through practice and repetition, prayer or meditation.

9. Happiness comes through perspective.

10. Happiness can be found in beauty.

See paragraph for each of the ten.

See Also:

Review: The Art of Happiness at Work

Review: The Hidden Wealth of Nations

Review: The Politics of Happiness–What Government Can Learn from the New Research on Well-Being

Review: Nudge–Improving Decisions About Health, Wealth, and Happiness

Review: Deep Economy–The Wealth of Communities and the Durable Future

Review: Transforming Leadership–The Pursuit of Happiness

Worth a Look: Book Reviews on Conscious, Evolutionary, Integral Activism & Goodness

Journal: Three Rounds and Out

07 Other Atrocities, 09 Terrorism, 10 Security, Methods & Process, Military
Short Video--Death After Three

This is just too cool.  The smart guys always went into artillery, where you had to be able to count not just spell.  As upset as one might be with all the high end waste, fraud, and abuse within our military-industrial-congressional complex (MICC), this short film is a celebration in combat effectiveness.  Go Army!  [The Marines still do not have Naval Gunfire Support, the Navy decided a couple of decades ago it really doesn't give a shit about supporting Marines, and multiple Commandants of the Marine Corps have let them get away with it.]

Reference: The Open Internet Alive and Growing

11 Society, Augmented Reality, Collective Intelligence, Counter-Oppression/Counter-Dictatorship Practices, info-graphics/data-visualization, InfoOps (IO), Journalism/Free-Press/Censorship, Methods & Process, Open Government, Policy, Reform, Research resources, Standards, Strategy

Jon Lebkowsky Home

Advocating for the Open Internet

“Net neutrality” and “freedom to connect” might be loaded or vague terminologies; the label “Open Internet” is clearer, more effective, no way misleading. A group of Internet experts and pioneers submitted a paper to the FCC that defines the Open Internet and explains how it differs from networks that are dedicated to specialized services, and why that distinction is imortant. It’s a general purpose network for all, and can’t be appreciated (or properly regulated) unless this point and its implications are well understood. I signed on (late) to the paper, which is freely available at Scribd, and which is worth reading and disseminating even among people who don’t completely get it. I think the meaning and relevance of the distinction will sink in, even with those who don’t have deep knowledge of the Internet and, more generally, computer networking. The key point is that “the Internet should be delineated from specialized services specifically based on whether network providers treat the transmission of packets in special ways according to the applications those packets support. Transmitting packets without regard for application, in a best efforts manner, is at the very core of how the Internet provides a general purpose platform that is open and conducive to innovation by all end users.”

Press release:

Numerous Internet and technology leaders issued a joint statement last night encouraging the FCC to expand its recent analysis of open Internet policy in a newly fruitful direction.

In the statement, they commend the agency’s recent request for input on “Two Underdeveloped Issues in the Open Internet Proceeding” for its making possible greater recognition of the nature and benefits of the open Internet — in particular, as compared to “specialized services.” In response to the FCC’s request, their submission illustrates how this distinction dispels misconceptions and helps bring about more constructive insight and understanding in the “net neutrality” policy debate.

Longtime network and computer architecture expert David Reed comments in a special blog posting: “It is historic and critical [to] finally recognize the existence of ‘the Open Internet’ as a living entity that is distinct from all of the services and the Bureaus, all of the underlying technologies, and all of the services into which the FCC historically has partitioned little fiefdoms of control.”

Another signer, John Furrier of SiliconANGLE, has publicized the statement, stating “the future Internet needs to remain open in order to preserve entrepreneurship and innovation.”

The statement’s signers are listed below. Please reply to me, Seth Johnson (seth.p.johnson@gmail.com), to request contact information for those available for comment.

Seth Johnson
Outreach Coordinator

See Also:

Graphic: Open Everything

2007 Open Everything: We Won, Let’s Self-Govern

Journal: Open Mobile, Open Spectrum, Open Web

NIGHTWATCH Extracts: Afghanistan, Russians, & Time

06 Russia, 08 Wild Cards

Afghanistan: An Afghan national army soldier fired on foreign troops at a military compound in Sangin district, Helmand province, Afghanistan, after which he sought refuge with the Taliban, who took him to a safe location, a Taliban spokesman said 5 November, Afghan Islamic Press reported. The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force's (ISAF) press office said it had received information about the incident and had launched an investigation to ascertain its veracity. The ISAF will release further details once the investigation is complete.

Comment: As noted previously, defection to the Taliban is contagious. Once it takes root among the Pashtuns, it will become unstoppable.

Taliban: A Taliban leader named Mullah Aminullah – an authentic associate of Mullah Omar — gave a televised interview to a Karachi television station in which he restated the longstanding Taliban position on negotiations. He said the Taliban will not engage in any peace talks as long as the Americans are in Afghanistan. The Taliban announced jihad when the infidels came to the country from everywhere, hence the movement will not negotiate. When these foreigners leave the country, the Taliban can speak about peace then.

Comment: Many would-be leaders pretend to speak for the Taliban without the authorization of Mullah Omar. Others pretend to speak for other anti-government groups, who are misinterpreted as the Taliban. Aminullah is in neither group. Taliban are in no hurry.

Russia-CSTO-US-Afghanistan:
Russia and six former Soviet republics in the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) on Thursday urged NATO-led forces in Afghanistan to end their “ineffective tactics” of pushing militants from combat zones in the south to other areas, especially the once relatively peaceful north.

Russia's UN Ambassador Vitaly Churkin, speaking on behalf of the CSTO, told the UN General Assembly that four of the organization's members – Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan – are in the central Asian region bordering Afghanistan and are concerned about the growing instability in the north caused by ineffective NATO tactics.

Churkin said the campaign by international and Afghan forces against Taliban and al-Qaida strongholds is ineffective because it is “squeezing militants from the combat zones, which allows them to maintain their combat power and relocate to other parts of the country including northbound.”

Churkin also said Russian troops engaged in anti-drug operations will continue. One Afghan elder in Shinwar District, Nangarhar Province said after last week's NATO-Russian-Afghan drug raid, that if he had known there were Russians, he would have killed them.

Comment: The Afghan presidency has accused the NATO command of agreeing to re-introduce Russian troops without his consent, even though Afghan police participated in the raid. The press accounts indicate somebody forgot to tell the Afghan president that the Russians are back.

Obviously there is more to the story than what is in the press. Nevertheless, any serious student of Afghanistan must know that the Pashtuns hate the Russians more than the Americans. The prospect of killing Russians is a larger recruiting incentive for the Taliban than killing Americans.

NIGHTWATCH KGS Home