[Oe List ...] Fwd: [Springboard] Deep culture behind our debate on health care reform

Ellen & David Rebstock grapevin2 at gmail.com
Sat Sep 5 15:43:23 CDT 2009


Re Rosenberg and Non-Violent Communication
One person on the Board with me at the Sonoma County Peace and Justice
Center holds NVC meetings at San Quinton Prison every month along with
another woman from Yulupa Cohousing where Ellen and I live.  They also did a
seminar here last fall.  Several others are on what we call here the Heart
Team.  At every business meeting we have a Heart Keeper along with a Turn
Keeper, Scribe, etc. If the meeting gets tense the Heart Keeper slows every
thing down with a period of silence.  Having 29 units, 46 adults, and 13
kids on an acre and one-half means it is hard to maintain participation in
our activities, committees, and various tasks when one or two people have
decided not to talk to each other.  Sometimes people are asked to meet with
members of the Heart team to resolve conflict.
As Jan said the emphasis is on asking what ones needs are and what ones
feelings are in the process.  This struck me when Jim said that in the
Israel / Palestine facilitation he said there was a difference in the
reaction in the discussion of Basic Rights versus Basic Needs.  In the
health care town meeting  we went to last week it became clear that this
contrast between those who were in essence saying "Ive got mine, you need to
earn your own" versus an understanding that no matter who you are and how
poor you are your health care is basic to your ability to be in a position
to earn your own health care much less survive.  When you talk about health
care as a basic need versus a basic right it seems to take away the issues
of finances status, ehnicity, age, class and gender, etc that get in the way
when you talk about rights versus everyone having a basic need of health
care.  There is no absolute perfection in this issue but we sure can do a
whole lot better thatn we are.  It is interesting that here the Doctors and
the Nurses are in the head of the line wanting health care and insurance
reform.
Dave Rebstock

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Judi White <sophiacircle at windstream.net>
Date: Sat, Sep 5, 2009 at 5:22 AM
Subject: Re: [Springboard] Deep culture behind our debate on health care
reform
To: Order Ecumenical Community <oe at wedgeblade.net>, Springboard Dialogue <
springboard at wedgeblade.net>, Colleague Dialogue <dialogue at wedgeblade.net>


In studying the 6-day War this last year in American History, partnered with
my goal of facilitating students' ability to see through the events to their
own life experiences, the reflective conversations brought up the issues of
entitlement that both cultures felt, and trust in the value of the otherness
of the other culture's perspective and of the purpose of another nation's
intervention. As you already know from your work there, neither has the
right answer in and of itself. The students, by the way, were not rocket
scientist gifted  although there were a couple few included - but in fact
were low and normal in their meta cognitive functioning.  In support of what
you said, here's many deeper factors involved in the great debate occurring
at this time and they all need to have their say.
--
Judi White
25 North Lake Street
Crescent City, FL 32112
Phone: (386) 569-6956

---- James Wiegel <jfwiegel at yahoo.com> wrote:







I can see, from this conversation, how much more is going on in the health
care reform debate, and how much more is being added in, so it becomes an
"argument about everything" . . . and this is among us, a quite small
demographic of people, I think, with a shared history and a
"transestablishment" (facilitative) perspective of brining people together
for consensus, common vision, etc.

In the project I have been helping with re:  combining ICA's ToP and other
methods for use in the Israeli - Palestinian conflict, one of the project
partners talks about 3 levels of a conflict:  conflict over resources,
conflict over goals, conflict over identities.  Their insight is that once a
conflict becomes about identity, there is something non negotiable that
enters in to the conversation.   Another of the project partners talks about
elements of the "deep culture" that fuel conflict -- a "cognitive pathology"
and an "emotional pathology" (see below)


Deep Cultures often have elements
       which are counterproductive for peace. Two syndromes in particular
       can generally be identified. There is a cognitive pathology in Deep
       Culture which affects how a society thinks and analyses a conflict.
       There is also an Emotional pathology which strongly affect
       attitudes.

       The Cognitive syndrome, DMA for
       short, is centered on Dichotomy (reducing the conflict to 2 conflict
       parties only)i,
       Manichaeism (where one side is “Good” and one side is “Evil”)
       and Armageddon (that there will be a final and inevitable battle in
       which Good decisively destroys Evil).

       The Emotional syndrome, CGT for
       short, is centered on Chosenness (the belief that a group of people
       have been chosen by transcendental forces or history for a political
       mission), Glory (the myths of past and future glory, underscoring
       their Chosenness), and Trauma (the experience of past injuries and
       defeats, underscoring the need to pursue their Mission).



       iWe
       reinforce this syndrome when we call the “Israeli – Palestinian”
       identities into the room



Jim



Coincidence is the spiritual equivalent of a pun.  G. K. Chesterton



Jim Wiegel

401 North Beverly Way, Tolleson, Arizona 85353-2401

+1  623-936-8671   +1  623-363-3277

  jfwiegel at yahoo.com   www.partnersinparticipation.com

--- On Wed, 9/2/09, jonzondo at juno.com <jonzondo at juno.com> wrote:

From: jonzondo at juno.com <jonzondo at juno.com>
Subject: Re: [Oe List ...] More about the definitions of Liberal and
Conservati ve
To: oe at wedgeblade.net
Date: Wednesday, September 2, 2009, 11:15 PM

1)Most conservatives I know support Diebold voting machines.  Some make
money off of them.  And in Washington State, there was conservative
resistance to a paper trail.
2) The elections of 2000 and 2004 and the lack of interest in counting every
vote.
3) Discussions with my conservative relatives.
4) "Illegal" Phone calls made in several states to my friends of different
ethnicities giving false information about the 2008 election, all in an
effort to reduce the number of people voting for Obama.

I hope that all people are ready for fair clean elections.  That will be a
blessing.

Jon Elizondo


You've got to be kidding!  Where could you possibly have come up with the
idea that conservatives oppose fair clean elections and open government?
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You've got to be kidding!  Where could you possibly
have come up with the idea that conservatives oppose fair clean elections
and
open government?  Part of the huge problem with Obama is that he promised
transparency and hasn't practiced it.  And can you possibly know about
Acorn and think the Democrats are all about clean electins? Conservatives
support everything on your list. They just don't support distortion and
manipulation of all those issues.

Susan




From: oe-bounces at wedgeblade.net
[mailto:oe-bounces at wedgeblade.net] On Behalf Of Dave
Thomas
Sent: Wednesday, September 02, 2009 8:49 PM
To:
'Order Ecumenical Community'
Subject: [Oe List ...] More about the
definitions of Liberal and Conservative




Learn more about
Liberals and the types of Conservatives (Traditional Conservatives,
Libertarians, Christian Conservatives and Neo-Conservatives) who oppose them
at
http://www.pugetsoundliberals.org/bootcamp/05AboutLiberals.htm


Also note our Liberal
Priorities, which Conservatives consistently
oppose:
·
Fair Clean Elections and Open
Government
·
Fair Taxes and Competent
Spending
·
Investment for
Productivity
·
Quality Health, Education, Jobs,
Income
·
Environmental Protection and
Energy Independence
·
Security and Equal Rights

·
Justice and Peace
Everywhere
·
International Cooperation and
Leadership

Conservatives oppose all
of these  Dave
Thomas





From:
oe-bounces at wedgeblade.net [mailto:oe-bounces at wedgeblade.net] On Behalf Of ed
feldmanis
Sent: Tuesday, September 01, 2009 7:59
PM
To:
oe at wedgeblade.net
Subject: [Oe
List ...] What do we mean by a right? To Jim, Dave,et.al. re:
Conservativism

Jim,

The most eloquent modern day
description that I have seen is in the book Conscience of a Conservative by
Barry Goldwater.

I have to agree with Dave as far as his description
goes. Here is where I found the problem, at least for me: Conservatives may
give
lip service to these values, but they intolerantly restrict the freedoms and
opportunities they would offer people different from themselves, often
valuing
the freedom of businesses more than the freedom of individuals.


I find that statement in general to be devastatingly true
and possibly un-American. However, I don't agree that every conservative is
merely giving lip service. My own impression is that Barry Goldwater was
very
sincere and specific in his book. At the point of writing the book, in my
opinion, there was some sense in that folks still wanted to make America
work
for everybody and they thought they had more common ground than there is
today.

For a while it, the Goldwater book, was the standard of what a
conservative was. Conservativism was tied to merit, learning,  service, pay
as you go spending, and the wide spread use of incentives before deciding to
create an agency; and, by the way, there was some sense of what is called
state-craft.  If pushed beyond Goldwater to Teddy Roosevelt it was also
tied to conservation.  I think in my time this is as close to having a
dynamic - conservativism- defined in some stability. (Notice some of the
liberalism inherent in the above description.)

Where I really disagree is
where many people simply call the new crowd conservatives; for example, the
crowd now in power and mostly Southerners and their business conspirators.
The
label, I think, in this case, is a cop out for the sake of convenience.  In
my mind, I can not get the label of conservative to stick on extremists or
people who have neo-fascist ideas.  These are the same people who called
Goldwater a liberal. And they are the so-called conservatives of our day.
I don't buy it, but the press and then everyone else seems
to.

Ed



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