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107699996944907490

February 16, 2004 By Chris Uncategorized

This is a classic example of intrinsic motivation: My daughter is six years old and she is learning to read. At night we have been reading her The Hobbit and she has declared that it is the best book ever written. She is keen to read have more Tolkein read to her, but we’re wary of reading Lord of the Rings to her at bedtime. It’s a little gory for her age right now. Last week, my daughter confessed to her grandmother that she was secretly teaching herself to read so that she could read Lord of the Rings by …

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February 15, 2004 By Chris Uncategorized

Jim McGee points to a great post from Jevon McDonald on the price of silence in organizations, and what to do about it. Opening up communications starts from the bottom: A change in the prevailing culture of an established organization cannot come from the very top-down approach that is being reevaluated. It must come from people, like Harry in our previous story, who will lead by example. Facilitators and early adopters are key to the success of personal publishing in your organization. By bringing key figures into the picture, such as Presidents, Vice Presidents, and prominent people within departments, on …

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February 13, 2004 By Chris Uncategorized One Comment

Howard Rheingold blogs Wes Boyd, the founder of Moveon.org who recently spoke about the power of self-organization: We got involved in the run-up to the war in Iraq, and that’s where our big growth happened. People were disturbed about the rush to war. When the political establishment is not addressing people’s concerns, that is when the Net can afford a way for those people to come together. A little more than a year ago, we said that we’d done petitions and lobbying congress — should we try advertising? We asked for $35,000 for an ad in the NYT. In 48 …

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February 11, 2004 By Chris Uncategorized One Comment

Moving up a nice set of thoughts from my comments. Dave said: Democratic growth may lie somewhere between the enlightened individual (ie “the truth if known is not the truth”) and the solid political framework, say the constitution. Some where in our ability to open our myths to their own energies, not to end the myth, but to accept it as myth…truth’s origin..turtles all the way down so to speak. The need for solid political systems, stability if you will, begs the pattern to transcend the solid/comprehensible vs. fluid/transformational. Dave…feel free to contribute observations like that anytime. I’ve been really …

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February 10, 2004 By Chris Uncategorized

My dear friend John Engle is an Open Space facilitator living and working in Haiti. I just found out that he has a blog (oh joy!) and he blogs from Haiti about the recent unrest there, and how nothing is ever as simple as it seems: Merline and I do live, witnessing the violence of grinding poverty: hungry people on one’s path so often, children living on the streets, people who are seriously ill but have no money for treatment or pain relievers. The violence that is making the news right now stems from the grinding violence of poverty, which …

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