Digital Diplomacy By Jesse Lichtenstein
It was a Wednesday night in San Francisco’s SoMa neighborhood, and Jared Cohen, the youngest member of the State Department’s policy planning staff, and Alec Ross, the first senior adviser for innovation to the secretary of state, were taking their tweeting very seriously. Cohen had spent the day in transit from D.C.; Ross hadn’t eaten anything besides a morning muffin. Yet they were in the mood to share, and dinner could wait. It wasn’t every day they got to tweet about visiting the headquarters of Twitter.
“Exactly 140 characters,” Cohen said.
“What a ninja you are,” Ross said.
Introduction: Beyond War and Peace by Adam Kahane
Our two most common ways of trying to address our toughest social challenges are the extreme ones: aggressive war and
submissive peace. Neither of these ways works. We can try, using our guns or money or votes, to push through what we want, regardless of what others want—but inevitably the others push back. Or we can try not to push anything on anyone—but that leaves our situation just as it is. These extreme ways are extremely common, on all scales. One
on one, we can be pushy or confl ict averse. At work, we can be bossy or “go along to get along.” In our communities, we can set things up so that they are the way we want them to be, or we can abdicate. In national aff airs, we can make deals to get our way, or we can let others have their way. In international relations—whether the challenge is climate change or trade rules or peace in the Middle East—we can try to impose our solutions on everyone else, or we can negotiate endlessly. Read more »
Fencing Israel: Terrorism, wilderness, and the Israeli security wall by Haim Watzman
Published in the March/April 2008 issue of Orion magazine. ![]()
Map: Mike Reagan
Photographs: Daniel Blatt
TRAFFIC IS SNARLED throughout Jerusalem. Today is Israel’s Memorial Day, a time of mourning that, at nightfall, will segue into the celebrations of Independence Day. What is a cause for celebration for Israelis, however, is a black day for Palestinians. They call Israel’s birth the Nakba, or Catastrophe, an event marking the loss of their land to the Jews and the transformation of many Palestinians into indigent refugees. Nearly sixty years later, the two people are still at war, with the land between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea caught in the middle. The land at stake is not large, but it is varied—from the rolling green hills of the Galilee in the north to the majestic, barren wadis of the Negev in the south. Read more »
Camphill School "an amazing blessing"
Karen Heller: Camphill School 'an amazing blessing'
Oh, the glory! This weekend marks the music recital at Camphill School in Chester County, a remarkable holistic school for children with pronounced cognitive and developmental disabilities.
The recital, under the supervision of cotton-haired Elsbeth Sunstein, is so popular and vast that it lasts two days, involving almost half the students. There's "Chopsticks," and also Kathleen Rahling's accomplished take on Mozart's "Rondo."
Located on 80 verdant acres with custom-built cottages, Camphill resembles a retreat or utopian community more than a boarding school for special-needs children. One hundred students are taught by an international staff of 150, many of whom live in group houses with their charges.
Read more »
Meet The King of Tibet By Kendall Hunter
Originally published at http://www.tonic.com.
Namgyal Wangchuk was coronated as a Tibetan King by the 14th Dalai Lama when he was only 12 years old. Now 17 and living in exile, he tells his remarkable story in the film "My Country Is Tibet."
The same night His Holiness the Dalai Lama arrived at Radio City Music Hall last month, another Tibetan of extraordinary lineage —17-year-old Namgyal Wangchuck (or Trichen) was being introduced to an audience of only a few.
Showing the Benefits of ‘Green’ Retrofits
From http://nytimes.com.
The practice of retrofitting buildings with simple, environmentally friendly technology like more-efficient boilers and better-quality windows has been around for years, but there is little research on how much energy these changes actually save — and by extension, how much money they can save landlords and lenders.
In an effort to supply that information, Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation, the philanthropic arm of the German bank, is financing the creation of a public database of several hundred retrofitted buildings in New York City and a companion report to determine the savings from such moves.
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/02/realestate/commercial/02deutsche.html?... Read more »
The Sacred and the Social: Journey to a New Philippines.
WeStrive.org presents a brief interview, recorded on the day of the Philippine elections (May 10 2010), with presidential candidate Nicanor Perlas. It is available as a podcast under WeStrive.org's media offerings. This article is meant to accompany the podcast interview.
Written by Vassag Hovsep and Ica Fernandez
A significant phenomenon around societal transformation recently took place in the Philippines.
In a country deemed as one of the most corrupt in Asia, activist Nicanor Perlas spearheaded the drive towards New Politics by attempting to catalyze a cultural-spiritual revolution. This revolution found form in the recent Lakbay Maharlika, a lakaran or "sacred journey" which began at the statue of Hermano Puli situated in the provincial town of Lucban, Quezon and ended at the Rizal monument in Metro Manila. Read more »
Coming to Our Senses: A Perspective on Childhood and Technology
The young child is a gift to the world, a vulnerable and joyful work in progress so to speak. These days, the young child is also subject to intensive marketing, and is often viewed by the commercial world as a marketplace commodity, a once and future consumer. Modern media technology provides an effective delivery system for the latter while engaging the child’s natural interactive curiosity. There is no denying that technology, of course, gives us enormous benefits in an ever-evolving number of ways and that it is here to stay as an integral part of modern society. That said, I would ask you to step back with me and examine a deeper long-term consequence (beyond the content) of technological media exposure: the disruption of children’s developing senses. Read more »
Ning to Charge for Social Networking Sites
ANNOUNCEMENT
In July, we will roll-out three new pricing plans and begin phasing out our free service. Many of you chose the Ning Platform to build your communities because it’s the easiest to use, has the most reliable performance and easily scales to hundreds of thousands of members. Our shift to a paid service model will enable us to focus to a greater degree on enhancing the features, performance and services we offer to our paying Network Creators. You’ll immediately see greater control over your network branding, design and member experience. All three plans offer an incredible value
relative to our current premium services offerings.
See details here:
http://about.ning.com/announcement/ Read more »
Maryland adopts new socially aware corporation law
Maryland has become the first state to adopt legislation creating a new type of corporation - one required to perform social good as it works to make a profit.
State lawmakers there say substantial credit goes to a Berwyn nonprofit organization and a Philadelphia lawyer, with Philadelphia's City Council playing a supporting role, in what is being hailed as a significant milestone for the sustainability movement.
With a few pen strokes this week, Gov. Martin O'Malley signed legislation making so-called benefit corporations official in Maryland. Under the new law, which takes effect Oct. 1, directors of registered benefit corporations will have the legal protection to consider employees, the community, and the environment in addition to shareholder value when they make operating and liquidity decisions. Read more »


