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Tiberius Brastaviceanu

Swarm Wall Street: why an anti-political movement is the most important force on the pl... - 0 views

  • Why are people occupying Wall Street?
  • ‘Anti-capitalist and unAmerican’, says Republican
  • disaffected, disorganized youth,
  • ...41 more annotations...
  • without
  • a set of policy demands
  • Meanwhile the occupation grows day by day.
  • camp in Manhattan makes the doyens of the status quo feel nervous
  • ‘Occupy’ camps in 70 cities across the nation last weekend.
  • Political leaders must be wondering what is going on. (‘Who are these kids? Would they vote for me?’)
  • the protesters
  • have no single message or identity
  • the movement
  • seems to follow the pattern set in Egypt and elsewhere in the Arab world earlier this year
  • Last week, the movement crossed a threshold. A localized set of swarm events evolved into a distributed swarm network.
  • OccupyWallStreet is a new kind of political movement.
  • The fact that the protesters have not leveled any political demands is significant.
  • creating a clamor of grievances that works surprisingly well to consolidate actions.
  • protesters are refusing to engage in traditional political action per se.
  • the movement is political, but this is a different kind of politics, which seeks to circumnavigate the tactics and fora of established political action.
  • To understand the true potential of the Occupy movement, we need to reflect on how the collective voice of the protesters is giving shape to a new vision of political culture, reigniting the hopes and dreams of those who are paying attention to it, in the US and elsewhere.
  • OccupyWallStreet is not a political movement in the traditional sense. It is a countercultural swarm. We need to see it as a swarm to understand why people are drawn to it, and what makes it the most important political force on the planet today.
  • The most powerful movements of the 20th century were identity-based movements,
  • ‘We, the oppressed X, gather together to challenge the forces amassed against us’.
  • these movements have political limits, set by the system that they chose to work within. We see the limits of these movements when we compare and contrast the way that they shape the identities of their members with swarm movements.
  • we can say that traditional movements shape and transform their member’s identities in the following way: first, by orienting thought in relation to a
  • ‘cognitive map’ of how things work
  • second, corralling identity in terms of a unitary social class or group
  • and finally, by activating the movement by steering its energies towards contesting established political and legal structures.
  • Swarm movements shape identity in a completely different way.
  • First off, they are are issue- or cause-based, rather than identity-based, movements.
  • affirm the diversity of participants as their fundamental strength
  • Instead of seeking to reduce the movement
  • diversity
  • is powerful when focused on a common cause.
  • A second point of difference between traditional and swarm movements concerns what these movements seek to achieve. 
  • Traditional movements focus on challenging and changing institutions. The goals of these movements are thus extrinsic to the movements themselves: they are achieved as a result of movement activity. Swarms can (and usually do) set extrinsic goals. Their primary goal, however, is to sustain the critical mass that holds the network together. As a result, movement activity is focused more on the intrinsic goal of empowering the swarm than any extrinsic goal the movement might hope to achieve. This can make swarms look unfocused from an external point of view. But within the movement, conditions tend to be highly conducive for participation. Swarm movements are intrinsically empowering and thus intrinsically rewarding for participants. Ultimately, participants do not need to look beyond the act of participation for a reason to join the swarm. Swarming is its own reward; the payoff is the empowerment that comes from swarming.
  • the more we look for extrinsic goals, the further get from understanding what really inspires swarm activity. Swarms are based in a common sense of potential. What catalyzes a swarm movement is the sense that here, today, a new way of working and living together is possible.
  • Swarms are transformative movements. Insofar as members acknowledge a common sense of  identity, it is a transformative identity, a sense of being part of a movement that is changing the world.
  • First, a mass of people acquire a new cognitive map, representing an original conception of what they can achieve together as a network. The cognitive maps that inspire OccupyWallStreet and Occupy Together resonate with innovations in the online world. OccupyWallStreet is an ‘open space’ movement. The camp structure is an open API that anyone is free to hack into and explore using MeetUp as a Directory. The second step in the process comes when the mass of people who apply these cognitive maps start reflecting on how working together expands their common potential. This insight gives rise to the swarm. A swarm movement comes into being as a swarm when a mass collective grasps what it is capable of achieving en masse.
  • No government or political institution can hold its ground when confronted with a new collective sense of what human beings are capable of doing and achieving en masse.
  • Swarm movements do not expend their energies by contesting the status quo. They reinvent it. Norms slide in all directions and political institutions are forced to keep up.
  • The protesters in Liberty Square and across the US are engaged in a more serious business than contesting dominant institutions.
  • The human microphone system is a physical expression of the appreciative process that happens on the internet all the time.
  • OccupyWallStreet applies the same modus operandi to transformative political action. I see it as a living expression of the intuition behind ‘Coalition of the Willing’:
benjamb

COHAB Initiative : Co-Operation on Health & Biodiversity - 0 views

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    COHAB is a community of individuals and organisations working together to address the gaps in awareness, policy and action on the links between biodiversity and human health and well-being. The Initiative supports efforts to enhance human security through the conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity and the goods and services it provides. COHAB provides a platform for dialogue, promoting understanding and experience sharing, and working to build partnerships across sectors and cultural divides.
benjamb

Climate Lab - 0 views

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    Climate Lab is a nonpartisan nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization based in Washington, DC.  Our mission is to develop web-based tools for knowledge sharing and collaboration that drive action to address climate change.
benjamb

WorldShift Movement - 0 views

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    WS M affords us all the opportunity to unite as One People, with One Voice, who together can bring about the transformation of our existing unsustainable world to a global society in which peace, sustainability, restorative justice and compassionate action are the everyday lived reality of all life on Earth.
Tiberius Brastaviceanu

Gift economy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

    • Tiberius Brastaviceanu
       
      Does the position on the scarcity-abundance spectrum influence the type of economy that dominates a society?  
  • Lewis Hyde locates the origin of gift economies in the sharing of food,
  • a notion
  • ...56 more annotations...
  • of the gift as something that must "perish"
  • strictly egalitarian sharing of all food resources in each atoll.
  • reciprocal gifts of money, or remittances back to their home community.
  • the potlatch ritual, where leaders give away large amounts of goods to their followers, strengthening group relations. By sacrificing accumulated wealth, a leader gained a position of honor.
  • kórima
  • one's duty to share his wealth with anyone.
  • some Spanish villages in the 1930s,
  • a currency-less gift economy where goods and services are produced by workers and distributed in community stores where everyone
  • is essentially entitled to consume whatever they want or need as "payment" for their production of goods and services.
  • offering
  • usually food
  • the free gift of alms is a religious requirement
  • tzedakah is a religious obligation that must be performed regardless of financial standing.
  • information is a nonrival good and can be gifted at practically no cost.[
    • Tiberius Brastaviceanu
       
      This is part of the conditions for a gift economy to emerge. 
  • Traditional scientific research can be thought of as an information gift economy.
  • reputation
  • Consumer Gift Systems
  • music downloading as a system of social solidarity based on gift transactions
  • open-source software developers have created "a 'gift culture' in which participants compete for prestige by giving time, energy, and creativity away"
  • Wikipedia
  • gifts to be a form of reciprocal altruism.
  • social status is awarded in return
  • food-sharing is a safeguard against the failure of any individual's daily foraging
  • concern for the well-being of others
  • a form of informal insurance
  • may bring with it social status or other benefits
  • a traditional gift economy is based on "the obligation to give, the obligation to accept, and the obligation to reciprocate,"
  • it is "at once economic, juridical, moral, aesthetic, religious, and mythological.
  • the gift must always move.
  • a difference between a "true" gift given out of gratitude and a "false" gift given only out of obligation
  • the "true" gift binds us in a way beyond any commodity transaction, but "we cannot really become bound to those who give us false gifts.
  • Hyde argues that when a primarily gift-based economy is turned into a commodity-based economy, "the social fabric of the group is invariably destroyed."[
  • prohibitions against turning gifts into capital
  • treating gift exchange as barter
  • treating Kula as barter is considered a disgrace.
  • commercial goods can generally become gifts, but when gifts become commodities, the gift "...either stops being a gift or else abolishes the boundary...
  • Contracts of the heart lie outside the law
  • Sociologist Marcel Mauss
  • gifts entail obligation and are never 'free'.
  • it is easy to romanticize a gift economy, humans do not always wish to be enmeshed in a web of obligation
  • person seeking independence who decides not to accept
  • There are times when we want to be aliens and strangers.
  • A gift creates a "feeling bond
  • Commodity exchange does not
  • Georges Bataille
  • to his point of view the structure of gift forms the presupposition for all possible economy
  • the receiver of the gift to confirm a subjection
  • practice that bears out different roles for the parts that undertake an action in it, installing in this act of donating the Hegelian dipole of master and slave
  • anarcho-primitivists and anarcho-communists, believe that variations on a gift economy may be the key to breaking the cycle of poverty.
  • desire to refashion all of society into a gift economy.
  • a gift economy as an ideal, with neither money, nor markets, nor central planning
  • the paradigm of "mutual aid"
  • mutual benefit is a stronger incentive than mutual strife and is eventually more effective collectively in the long run to drive individuals to produce.
  • a gift economy stresses the concept of increasing the other's abilities and means of production, which would then (theoretically) increase the ability of the community to reciprocate to the giving individual.
  • collective shunning where collective groups keep track of other individuals' productivity, rather than leaving each individual having to keep track of the rest of society by him or herself.
benjamb

Films For Action - 0 views

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    Watch Over 700 Videos Hand-Picked to Change the World
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