Graphic (12): Gun Control Perspectives

10 Security, 11 Society, Civil Society, Collective Intelligence, Cultural Intelligence, History, Mobile, Open Government, Peace Intelligence, Standards, Strategy, Tools
Marcus Aurelius Recommends

Following is self explanatory. About all I can add is:

– “The West wasn't won with a registered gun.”
– As Charlton Heston said, “… from my cold, dead hand …”
– “Better to be judged by twelve than carried by six.”
– “Don't dry fire in a gunfight.”
– “I am the NRA — and I vote!”

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Eleven Other Images Below the Line

Continue reading “Graphic (12): Gun Control Perspectives”

Journal: America Delibertely Uninformed & Proud of It…

03 Economy, 04 Education, 10 Security, Civil Society, Collective Intelligence, Cultural Intelligence

Seth Godin Home

Deliberately uninformed, relentlessly so [a rant]

Many people in the United States purchase one or fewer books every year.

Many of those people have seen every single episode of American Idol. There is clearly a correlation here.

Access to knowledge, for the first time in history, is largely unimpeded for the middle class. Without effort or expense, it's possible to become informed if you choose. For less than your cable TV bill, you can buy and read an important book every week. Share the buying with six friends and it costs far less than coffee.

Or you can watch TV.

The thing is, watching TV has its benefits. It excuses you from the responsibility of having an informed opinion about things that matter. It gives you shallow opinions or false ‘facts' that you can easily parrot to others that watch what you watch. It rarely unsettles our carefully self-induced calm and isolation from the world.

I got a note from someone the other day, in which she made it clear that she doesn't read non-fiction books or blogs related to her industry. And she seemed proud of this.

I was roped into an argument with someone who was sure that ear candling was a useful treatment. Had he read any medical articles on the topic? No. But he knew. Or said he did.

You see a lot of ostensibly smart people in airports, and it always surprises me how few of them use this downtime to actually become more informed. It's clearly a deliberate act–in our infoculture, it takes work not to expose yourself to interesting ideas, facts, news and points of view. Hal Varian at Google reports that the average person online spends seventy seconds a day reading online news. Ouch.

Not all books are correct or useful. Not all accepted science is correct. The conventional wisdom might just be wrong. But ignoring all of it because the truth is now fashionably situational and in the eye of the beholder is a lame alternative.

I know this rant is nothing new. In fact, people have been complaining about widespread willful ignorance since Brutus or Caesar or whoever invented the salad… the difference now is this: more people than ever are creators. More people than ever go to work to use their minds, not just their hands. And more people than ever have a platform to share their point of view. I think that raises the bar for our understanding of how the world works.

Let's assert for the moment that you get paid to create, manipulate or spread ideas. That you don't get paid to lift bricks or hammer steel. If you're in the idea business, what's going to improve your career, get you a better job, more respect or a happier day? Forgive me for suggesting (to those not curious enough to read this blog and others) that it might be reading blogs, books or even watching TED talks.

As for the deliberately uninformed, we can ignore them or we can reach out to them and hopefully start a pattern of people thinking for themselves…

Phi Beta Iota: One of the reasons we published 1995 GIQ 13/2 Creating a Smart Nation: Strategy, Policy, Intelligence, and Information was our early emerging sense that US “intelligence” did not know what the Nation needed to know, and neither did the Nation (in the Stephen Colbert sense of word:  “Nation, you are stupid!”).  America is at a turning point in which most of the foundation jobs have been exported and the menial jobs given over, deliberately, to illegal aliens; the schools have hit bottom, the government is out of control, and Wall Street, while in charge, has looted the Treasury and imploded the economy.  The federal government mutters darkly about “federalizing” state and local police and “disarming” the public.  What we really need–Thomas Jefferson understood this–is a fully armed, fully educated public that is attentive to its civic duty and will not tolerate corruption among its officials.  This is going to be a long struggle.  The good news:  Obama activated the Davies J-Curve.  America expected him to make positive change, he did not, now the myth is exposed.  States (we are the United STATES of America) are finally starting to exercise their Constitutional authority to see to their own defenses, and a MAJORITY of the voting public now sees the two-party tyranny for what it is: a corrupt cesspool….one bird, two wings, same shit.

See Also:

Worth a Look: Book Review Lists (Negative)

Worth a Look: Book Review Lists (Positive)

Journal: “Illegal” Immigrant vs. Corporate “Personality”

07 Other Atrocities, 08 Immigration, Civil Society, Cultural Intelligence, Government
Carlos Roa

Carlos Roa

Undocumented immigrant, veteran and student

Posted: October 19, 2010 02:46 PM

What Part of Human Being Don't You Understand?

I wonder if people who insist upon using the i-word ever think about the impact it has on human lives. “What part of ‘illegal' don't you understand?!” they say. Well, as an undocumented immigrant, I need people to understand the traumatic effect this racist language has on us and our families. Many people who don't experience this reality don't seem to realize the inescapable feelings of inferiority it creates. Or that we can get to a transparent, thorough dialogue on human rights and humane immigration solutions only when we remove the i-word as a central piece of the conversation.

Read the Full Blog at Huffington Post….

COMMENT by Robert David Steele Vivas as Posted at Huffington Post

I like this, a great deal.  Am cross-posting it to Phi Beta Iota the Public Intelligence Blog.

I strongly agree that allowing corporations to abuse the environment, communities, and their employees with the added protection of “personality” is a travesty, and one that my Virtual Cabinet has already addressed here at Huffington Post.

The URL for the Virtual Cabinet is:  http://www.huffingtonpost.com/robert-david-steele

With respect to how the USA has treated immigrants over the centuries, I am now ready to say that this abusive exploitation, of Chinese, of Irish, of others, combined with our genociding of the Native Americans and our enslavement of Black Africans, needs to be defined and treated as “Other Atrocities,” one of the high-level threats to humanity identified by the United Nations High-Level Panel on Threats, Challenge, and Change.

My review of their report is here:  http://phibetaiota.net/2008/05/a-more-secure-world-our-shared-responsibility-report-of-the-secretary-generals-high-level-panel-on-threats-challenges-and-change-a-more-secure-world-our-shared-responsibility-report-of-the-s/

However, what really touches me about this note [disclosure: I am a white Hispanic] is the author's clear angst over the racism that he has felt, and his very articulate call for a dialog and understanding.  This is where I think we need to go, and I will address this with the Virtual Cabinet in the weeks to come.

El Pueblo Avanza!  EPA

Reference: Electoral Reform Act & Third Party Politics

11 Society, Civil Society, Legislation
Two Faces, One Tyranny
Two Faces, One Tyranny

UPDATE of 19 Oct to resurface the CORE COMMON ISSUE and add THIRD PARTY book reviews (immediately below the line).  The legislative proposal still needs work, e.g. ballot access not well covered, but this is  the starting point.  It was created by Jim Turner and Robert Steele based in large part on points made by Ralph Nader is his book Crashing the Party–Taking on the Corporate Government in an Age of Surrender.  We cannot understand why Ralph Nader, Ron Paul, Cynthia McKinney, and Jackie Salit–and Mike Bloomberg–don't get serious about this ONE THING they can all agree on….

Worth a Look: Facebook Poll on Electoral Reform

Worth a Look: Independents Rising

Journal: America Is Fed Up: Two Wings, Same (Corrupt) Bird. ENOUGH!

Review: One Nation, Indivisible? A Study of Secession and the Constitution

Review: Threshold–The Crisis of Western Culture

Journal: Reich Whines Because Gore & Obama Took the Bribe, Now Democrats Realize They Were Theater

Click on either of the images to see a collection of documents on Democracy in America as it could be, should be, must be.  The Republic has been destroyed by a combination of domestic enemies and a public slow to realize that it was being disenfranchized.

Click on the page below to read the single page summary of eight simple reforms, most conceived by Ralph Nader, as refined by Jim Turner (Nader #2 for many years) and Robert Steele.

Electoral Reform Act of 2009
Electoral Reform Act of 2009

Only recently have major financial figures such as John Bogle and Peter Peterson come forward with works that call into question the integrity, santiy, and viability of the Republic as it is now being looted by Wall Street and the two-party tyranny.  Below are several titles worthy of study, with links to the summary reviews of those titles by Robert Steele.  Below them are twice as many titles capturing the spirit of the Republic that has been in re-gestation for decades.  The mood of Middle America is clear: we want our Republic back, and we want both government and commerce to be open, honest, and in the public service.  We are going to get what we want by 2012, peacefully, on the strength of our numbers and our common collective intelligence.

White House as Theater, Wall Street as Master
White House as Theater, Wall Street as Master

Added 19 Oct 2010:

Reference: Best Piece on Democracy in a Decade

Review (Guest): Film Review–”2012: Time for Change”

Journal: Demopublicans–NO DIFFERENCE

Reference: Third Party Bubble & Possibilities, RECAP

Journal: Third Party Desired by 58% in America + ReCap

Review: Spoiling for a Fight–Third-Party Politics in America

Declaring Independence: The Beginning of the End of the Two-Party System

Review: Radical Middle–The Politics We Need Now

Review: Crashing the Gate–Netroots, Grassroots, and the Rise of People-Powered Politics (Hardcover)

Review: Give Me Liberty–A Handbook for American Revolutionaries

Journal: Dean Breaks with Obama, Third Party Rumbles

Review: Shooting the Truth–The Rise of American Political Documentaries

Worth a Look: Nader 2000 campaign manager publishes article on discriminatory ballot access laws

A few current titles on two-party tyranny and political corruption:

Running on Empty: How the Democratic and Republican Parties Are Bankrupting Our Future and What Americans Can Do About It (Paperback)

Grand Illusion: The Myth of Voter Choice in a Two-Party Tyranny

2008 ELECTION 2008: Lipstick on the Pig

The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism

Review: Blue Gold–The Fight to Stop the Corporate Theft of the World’s Water

They Dare to Speak Out: People and Institutions Confront Israel’s Lobby

Gag Rule: On the Suppression of Dissent and Stifling of Democracy

Don’t Start the Revolution Without Me!

Blessed Unrest: How the Largest Movement in the World Came into Being and Why No One Saw It Coming

The Revolution: A Manifesto

The Populist Moment: A Short History of the Agrarian Revolt in America (Galaxy Books)

VOICE OF THE PEOPLE: The Transpartisan Imperative in American Life

We the Purple: Faith, Politics, and the Independent Voter

After Collapse: The Regeneration of Complex Societies

Panarchy: Understanding Transformations in Human and Natural Systems

Our Endangered Values: America’s Moral Crisis

Unspeakable Truths: Facing the Challenges of Truth Commissions (Paperback)

Peaceful Positive Revolution: Economic Security for Every American

Use the Reviews menu to rapidly survey over 1,400 non-fiction books all focused on the future of the Republic and the Earth in the context of restoring the faith of humanity in itself. Each review leads back to both the Amazon page, and to the original review on Amazon should you wish to vote on the review.

Journal: Three Days of Attention for Homeless Vets

11 Society, Civil Society, Cultural Intelligence, Gift Intelligence, Military, Officers Call

Written lead & video button

WATCH: Can Three Days Make A Difference For Homeless Veterans?

On Sunday, 60 Minutes reported on a visit to San Diego, where a yearly “Stand Down” event for homeless veterans is designed to change lives in just three days.

A skeptical Scott Pelley found that while the event's clean, safe and empathetic environment can't fix the problems homeless veterans face, the event serves as a “ceasefire” to show vets that they aren't alone.

Phi Beta Iota: There are two threads here, the first being that attention is healing and nurturing, whether it is new-borne babies or hardened vets.  The second is that this is a complete break from treating homeless vets or homeless anyone as “the other” that is not “noticed” as if they did not exist.  San Diego has done a good thing with this annual event, it ought to take place all across America.

Reference: Republican “Pledge to America” Hyperbolic Hypocritical Crap Surpassed Only by Nancy Pelosi’s Ignorance of the Constitution

07 Other Atrocities, 11 Society, Civil Society, Collective Intelligence, Cultural Intelligence, Government, Misinformation & Propaganda, Money, Banks & Concentrated Wealth, Power Behind-the-Scenes/Special Interests, Secrecy & Politics of Secrecy
Empty Image
Fact-Checking and More

The “Pledge to America” is largely hyperbolic hypocritical crap.

See Instead:

Prefaces (Steele, Sanders, Atlee, Hartmann, Seagraves)

Chapter: Paradigms of Failure

Election 2008 Chapter: The Substance of Governance

Election 2008 Chapter: Legitimate Grievances

Election 2008 Chapter: Candidates on the Issues

Election 2008: Balanced Budget 101

Election 2008 Chapter: Call to Arms, Fund We Not Them

2008 Chapter: Annotated Bibliography on Reality

Journal: Food Addiction–Could It Explain Why 70 Percent of Americans Are F

01 Agriculture, 03 Economy, 06 Family, 07 Health, 07 Other Atrocities, 11 Society, Analysis, Civil Society, Commerce, Corporations, Government, Misinformation & Propaganda, Money, Banks & Concentrated Wealth
Mark Hyman, MD

Mark Hyman, MD

Practicing physician

Posted: October 16, 2010 09:04 AM

Food Addiction: Could It Explain Why 70 Percent of Americans Are Fat?

Our government and food industry both encourage more “personal responsibility” when it comes to battling the obesity epidemic and its associated diseases. They say people should exercise more self-control, make better choices, avoid overeating, and reduce their intake of sugar-sweetened drinks and processed food. We are led to believe that there is no good food or bad food, that it's all a matter of balance. This sounds good in theory, except for one thing…

New discoveries in science prove that industrially processed, sugar-, fat- and salt-laden food — food that is made in a plant rather than grown on a plant, as Michael Pollan would say — is biologically addictive.

Read entire story…

Phi Beta Iota: This is a HUGE story that merits more emphasis at The Huffington Post.  It is a perfect example of a newly-discovered “true cost” of the industrialization of agriculture which IS a contradiction in terms.  It is a perfect example of government complacency, ignorance, and ultimately irresponsibility.  This is precisely what public intelligence in the public interest is about.

See Also:

Worth a Look: Book Reviews on Corporate & Transnational Crime

Worth a Look: Book Reviews on Corporate Lack of Integrity or Intelligence or Both

Worth a Look: Book Reviews on Elite Rule

Worth a Look: Book Reviews on Middle Class

Worth a Look: Book Reviews on Poisons, Toxicity, Trash, & True Cost

Worth a Look: Book Reviews on Poverty

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