Thursday, 26 May 2011

BIG Society

Been meaning to put thoughts down about this for ages! Figure it won't happen unless I start somewhere, so here goes: version 1 -

To me, a Big Society is about everyone's participation in human society, feeling and playing our full part, not for personal gain but knowing there will be bountiful benefits to be shared all round.

It is not about volunteering as a chore, task or job to do any government's or authority figure's work. It is not about money, the economy or balancing fiscal budget. It so not about counting the cost!

It's about being BIG - open, expansive, broad-minded, compassionate, forgiving, welcoming, sharing, giving, contributing, mindful, respectful - with each other and ourselves.

It's about you and me, individual and separate yet together and for each other.

Tuesday, 19 April 2011

The Placebo of Politics

Why do politicians think they are magicians?

Promising this that or the other to win votes has long been their tactic to appeal to and to appease the electorate. They take advantage of our hopes to paint glossy pictures of how they will solve all our fears and needs. Over the years, we have believed them.

But with technology to hand, we have become more savvy. Or think we are, with the help of Twitter, facebook, blogs and 24 hour news. Increasing awareness of our 'rights', perhaps even of our 'responsibilities', also contribute to the general sensation that we are able to shape the world we live in. Still, for every 'jasmine revolution' there is a clampdown; in Bahrain, Syria, China - does it matter where? For every progressive thought, there's a fundamentalist backlash.

I don't suppose I am unique in feeling 'kettled' in by a shrinking world, a broken economy and 21st century values of our own making. No wonder the pressure is building. However, magic can't be the answer. Illusion only serves to hide things under the carpet, storing up grim realities for an even harsher day.

Politicians in the Scottish elections want us to believe their manifesto promises will bring more jobs, more policemen on the beat, better care for the sick and elderly, better education, better everything. All I get is a huge whiff of unreality. The money in the bank just will not stretch that far! There are no easy ways to get all we want or think we want. Never have been.

In fact, the law of unforeseen consequences is quick to show just how narrow authority-led pronouncements can be. A current key example is the controversial dictat from Westminster of a cap on overseas student numbers which started life as a way to contain net migration. Somehow, it didn't occur to our leaders that such policy would impact on the viability of Scotland's tertiary & education sector, on our economy, demographics, the job market, our international standing and more. The coalition government, for all its aspirations of new hope, transparency and 'listening' in a Big Society, has yet to acknowledge the full meaning of impacts for the UK overall.

There is an opportunity at this point in our collective history to connect the emerging factors in 21st century life, factors that reveal, even underline our inter-dependence and inter-relatedness as a human society. We can choose to look beyond magic mirrors and illusions towards the genuine article of a society in which each human person or group of persons is working at the potential we have with each other, for each other, for the country.

Or we can be beguiled by the magical offerings of the political parties and their election candidates. Four years may be a long time to rely on a placebo.

Saturday, 17 April 2010

Woke up last Thursday to be told flight to Birmingham was cancelled. Because of a strike, I assumed. No, volcanic ash. Erhm, we've had April's Fool already.... Nope. It was no joke.

It's exhausting to think of all the natural occurrences of recent months. Blizzards and snowdrifts beyond living memory, earthquakes on three continents, now volcanic eruptions in Iceland. Seems relentless. Yet each time, we find ways to cope. The fighting human spirit, the dogged determination to get through, to get by, to get up and out.

Oh the effort of it! And for what. Make way for the next natural disaster.

But what if we bring all that good training, that instinct for survival, to bear on the un-natural economic 'crunch'. I suspect the seismic debt could succumb under sheer human will.

It seems to easy a 'way'.

Monday, 22 February 2010

Rights and Reasons

Seems such a simple thing to do -- believe that human rights or a human rights-based approach is the core value to live by. So why is it so hard? And why do groups, organisations or institutions find it so hard to uphold such a fundamental principle?

When my thoughts filter down to "It's the human condition", I can just hear scientists pooh-poohing my 'evidence base'. It has become crucial in 21st century World to have verifiable answers to everything, but the necessity of burden of proof means we can still fall foul of self-made rules when we conjure them into boxes whether they fit or not.

I guess the tension between my rights and your rights will always be the sticking point. Can there ever be such as thing as (unqualified) freedom? What happens when mine meets yours head on? It's the sort of encounter that brings on and perpetuates The Other as the undesirable, the problem.

So.

How do we as a civil society get to the point of truly valuing each individual for exactly what she or he is?

I think it is a tricky question. But one that has a first solution in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

Surely.


Thursday, 15 October 2009

Tunisia September 29 - October 4 2009

What still stays with me, even though it's nearly two weeks since we've been back, is an amazing connection I have made with a bunch of inspiring, concerned individuals of varying ages from Tunisia.

Never thought I'd have the opportunity but the British Council made it possible for me to visit this North African country with four others from Scotland. Over five days of 'Interaction', a leadership exchange programme, a dialogue has started that must not be allowed to fade.

So much energy. Passion. Shared beliefs. So many ideas for making a difference.

Watch this space as developments happen.

Where has time gone?

I really don't use this site enough. Guess I'll catch up eventually.

Sunday, 21 June 2009

Big Brother Society

Can't believe how time flies! And it's not just about getting older.

Since March, the world has changed irrevocably. Almost as if civilised society is collapsing inwards. The fallout from the Westminster debacle about MPs expenses has not run its course but the media have been diverted to the Iranian streets. Some individuals somewhere must be daring to breathe easier.

There's an aura of 'big brother watching' about this life as it's happening around us; a sort of cross between reality TV and Orwellian socio-pathology. I have such a strong sense of inevitability about the next feeding frenzy -- as the economic downturn bites in, let's watch the national health service jump!