Tasty holiday treats: Meg Wheatley’s 10 ways to create healthy community change. Nice set of videos. Dave Pollard has moved his blog. Update your bookmarks! CBC News blogs the minute by minute development of the most productive thing to happen in Copenhagen last week: The Yes Men eviscerating our government’s shameful performance on the world stage. Metafilter has a nice little article with some great links on the Christmas Truce of 1914 Merry Christmas!
I was watching the Cop15 conference at a distance and I have been thinking that big conferences are maybe not what it will take to shift things. Bigger and more may not be what is needed, or what works. One of the problems is the pressure and expectation that comes from big gatherings – it tends to result in a level of planning and pre-ordained outcomes that actually suppresses emergent behaviour, and emergent behaviour is the mechanism I believe we need to evolve our next level of being, if we are to have a next level as a species. An …
Tasty morsels from the syndicated grapevines: Thomas Arthur shares a beautiful reflection on his place and time. Myriam Laberge with some excellent tips for improving information delivery in conferences. For best results combine it with an insanely good slideshow. Jordon Cooper has a nuanced take on big business and the environment. Also from Jordon, Life’s pictures of the year. Tom Atlee on Open Source Religion. Worldchanging reports on young people using Google Wave to negotiate what the adults should be doing at Cop15
Today, the new moon rises, a time of aupicious beginnings, especially coming so close to the winter solstice. These are important moments in Nuu-Cha-Nulth culture, and the times are important in Nuu-Chah-Nulth history. Last month, five Nuu-Chah-Nulth tribes won a landmark court case that gave them the right to sell the fish that they catch. Not on an industrial scale mind you, but on a scale big enough to create small local commercially viable fisheries for communities that desperately need both the work and the reconnection to the sea. Moreover, the courta case declared this as an Aboriginal right, a …
It’s 11:30 and I’m about ready to tuck into bed. Through my open window I can hear the roar of the surf rolling on the beaches a mile away. The surf report says that the swells are coming in at 9 feet but are going to rise to 17.5 feet by tomorrow. The roar is deafening, but it is a sound that has been heard on these beaches from time immemorial. The Nuu-Chah-Nulth, upon whose territory I am working, have lived here as long as the sound of the waves has been heard, and they’ll be here until those waves …