Saturday 31 July 2010

Zubin Mehta and Placido Domingo: lessons in leadership and life


Below is a video of Zubin Mehta conducting Placido Domingo at the first Three Tenors concert in Rome on the eve of the 1990 World Cup. The music is No Puede Ser (It Cannot Be), by the Spanish composer Sorozobal.

Interestingly Domingo was also at the final of the World Cup in South Africa this year, and naturally joined the celebrations for the Spanish victory, Spain being his home country. I wonder if he sang "it cannot be" on that occasion.  Probably not.

I love this particular video: not only because of the exquisite singing, the emotion and the magnificent setting, but also because it clearly shows great artists co-creating a transcendent moment, so we can do the same in our own lesser worlds.

Take a look.





Even though the singing is totally wonderful, and the triumph at the end is a collective one, for me the moment is mainly down to the energy, the empathy, the openness and the trust, in fact the inspired leadership, of the conductor.

After all the hard work of rehearsal, leadership at this level really is about paying attention, letting go, trusting and waiting.

Mehta had the task of bringing together the energy of two orchestra's who had never played together until that evening, a hugely talented star, and the audience waiting to be thrilled.  He lead through listening.

I love how Zubin Mehta throws his arms wide at a certain point, opening himself up entirely to whatever is coming, and then waits, even dropping his arms completely, surrendering to the emerging energy, until  Placido Domingo approaches the heights, and the conductor brings the orchestra to a towering conclusion in support of the star.

The trick is to allow it to happen, to provide a still centre that is at the same time outside the centre, holding the space, and strong enough to protect the magic that is approaching.

Watch it again, and you'll see what I mean.


I am very grateful to the always interesting Otto Scharmer for sharing this insight at a leadership workshop.  He uses the term  "presencing", which has the meaning both of bringing something important into the present, and also of "pre-sensing" that it is about to emerge, and allowing it to do so.

And I am thinking that the point illuminates so much about every aspect of life.

Although I have to say that on the political side of things, I am getting a bit tired of waiting for any kind of collective anger or militancy to emerge about what's about to happen to our welfare state, but perhaps here too the moment has not yet arrived ........

For me personally it is a lesson in that form of leadership we call parenting - the absolute importance of standing back, but holding the space.  But for you the lesson may be entirely different ....

And I totally, totally love, just LOVE, the exhultation and triumph in Mehta's face at the end.


A conductor's score and batonsImage via Wikipedia
A conductor's score and batons.




Wednesday 28 July 2010

Fear of Falling, or is that Leading?

I am at the UniCredit Bank Group's Leadership Learning Centre in Turin.  I'm helping to facilitate a leadership programme here.

It's a fabulous programme, although its not actually run by UniCredit itself: we're just lucky enough to be using the place.

And what a place it is!

All baroque revival on the outside, and super modern learning technology on the inside.  Certainly one of the best and most interesting learning environments I have ever worked in.


Scuola Unimanagement Torino 200
Downloaded from Flickr under Creative Commons License



And the learning is embodied in the building itself.

For example, three floors up, its all glass underfoot.

You can't look down when you get out of the lift.  Absolutely not.  You just look straight ahead, and keep walking.  It's OK if you don't look down.

Its all the risk and terror of leading in these uncertain times every time you go for a coffee.

Astonishing, really. For a moment you feel right on the edge. Which is great for a leadership programme, because the edge is exactly where a leader should be.

In fact, I would argue, its where we all should be.







And as for the staircase, also made of solid glass: even more challenging.  

Its fine going up, but down?  No way.  

But perhaps if my coffee depended on it, I would do the stairs too, terrified or not.




Oh I get it!  Embodied learning. 

About leadership, in this case.  Learning to tolerate the fear of flying

And you know, it really works. Wonderful really.



Tuesday 27 July 2010

Me, I Would Far Rather Live in a More Equal Society


Regular visitors to these musings will know that I care about the greatest well-being for the greatest number.  In other words, I would rather live in a more equal society.

I know perfectly well that the United States of America is not only the richest, it is the most unequal society in the West, as can be seen in the attractively coloured graphic below (and more clearly by clicking the Wikipedia link).  Even central Asia, south Asia and parts of Africa are less unequal that the US.

Nevertheless, when I saw one of the most egregious manifestations of this shameful datum in LA recently, even I was shocked.  I wrote about my observations in The Social Ecology of Bunker Hill. And UK is sadly not far behind - it is the third most unequal society in this group of wealthy western countries.


This index measures the degree of inequality i...Image via Wikipedia
Derived from CIA Data.

To help me understand what is going on regarding inequality in the US (and elsewhere) I have since read The Spirit Level: why equality is better for everyone, by Richard Wilkinson and Kate Pickett.  Better late than never you might say.

However, yesterday I also had the pleasure of meeting Professor Pickett, who made an excellent presentation at a meeting that I am co-facilitating, and as the authors are also rebutting their detractors this very week, this post seems not untimely.

The Spirit Level is the clearest exposition I have yet read that reducing the poverty gap in the world's richest countries would improve life not only for the poor, but for society as a whole.

Its a really interesting read, and you can also check out the whole argument and the impressive evidence that the authors have amassed on the website of the  Equality Trust.

The arguments have of course been challenged by various exclusionary elements.  These have been summarised in a recent Guardian editorial, from which they may also be accessed: The Spirit Level: Spooking the Right.  The authors have responded to these attacks here

Wilkinson and Pickett show that in the richer group of countries, and also, interestingly, within the US, inequality is correlated directly, often very closely, with higher levels of mental illness and drug use, of obesity, of teenage parenthood, of violence and imprisonment.  Conversely inequality is negatively correlated with trust in society (a sense of community), with children's educational achievement and with social mobility (although data on social mobility is not available for the various states within the US).

In other words, countries that have more income equality have less mental illnes, drug use, obesity, teenage motherhood, violence and imprisonment, and more trust, educational achievement among children and social mobility.

What's not to like?  Sounds like a pretty darn good bargain to me.

There are two ways, according to Wilkinson and Pickett, through which we might achieve greater income equality:
  • Less income gap in the first place (as in Japan), or
  • Redistribution through taxes and benefits (as in Sweden)
I think the second would be easier for us (although not easy), so we should go for it.  

Really, this is a total no-brainer.  The disadvantaged would be better off, and I (and everyone else) would have greater well-being.  More equal societies work better for everyone.  As I say, what's not to like?

And of course we'd get a whole lot of other things I'd like as well, such as less Murdoch, less carbon emissions, less consumerism and more ecological conservation and public spiritedness.  So I'm definitely in.

Maybe the struggle for all this would throw up better, more informed and genuinely engaged leadership too.  Could hardly be worse than what we've got at the moment.

So I am very clear in my own mind:  the first thing I'm going to do between my travels is fight the cuts in UK, and also work for more discussion, and through that greater understanding and acceptance, of the Spirit Level theory.




Wednesday 21 July 2010

Orpheus: the Mythical. A Musical by Richard Stilgoe and the Orpheus Centre

I have never been to a musical by a mixed group of performers with and without disabilities, but I did last night: it was magic, and I'm totally bowled over.

Now, recently I have been engaging in some pathetic self-promotion lightly amusing self-deprecation by dropping a few celeb names here and there. In "It's True! I met Rihanna ..."  I said that my life-time total  number of brushes with celebrity is three.

Well, its actually four.

And this time I'm being serious.

I missed Richard Stilgoe from my list.  He wrote the lyrics of Starlight Express, and chunks of Phantom of the Opera, and has done lots of other stuff on stage and radio.  A very witty, very funny guy indeed, and totally brilliant musically.  I do know him a bit, socially.  I don't want to presume too much, but I do know him just a bit.  I can add him to my list.

He's also the father of the brilliant jazz musician, the super-cool Joe Stilgoe.  So I suppose in fact I have actually had five brushes with celebrity.

But enough of that.  What I want to say is not about me, and it's actually important.

In the overall scale of things, the Orpheus Centre is the kind of thing that really matters.

Richard founded The Orpheus Centre, in his former family home in Godstone, Surrey, and he spends a great deal of time with the people who live and work there.  It seems that its a really great place.

Named after Orpheus (the famous Greek musician), the Centre provides residential and domiciliary services and a fantastic learning programme for young adults with a range of disabilities.

It works with them to achieve personal progress through the performing arts.  It supports them to gain confidence and self esteem and learn essential skills that will help the transition into fully independent living.

The Company performs all over the place (including last year at the Royal Opera House), and with other outfits like the Graeae Theatre Company and StopGAP Dance Company, also fabulous.

And they have put together this really wonderful, hilarious and uplifting show, on the theme of Orpheus' and Euridice's adventures in Hades.

Richard wrote the words and the music, and Joe helped with the musical arrangement.  The Director is the very lovely spiky-haired Syd Ralph, and she's done an absolutely fabulous job.  Its a really well-paced show. Also involved are some young actors from the Guildford School of Acting, who were brilliant, and looked as if they were having a total ball, which I learned afterwards that they were.

Seeing as its about the Argonauts, and Orpheus travelled with Jason, Hercules and Theseus, etc. etc. and Apollo, Caliope, Persephone, Mercury and all that crowd could always be put in there in the background, wreaking their havoc, Richard was able to cram almost every known myth into the story.  There were lovely sheep, the three headed dog Cerberus, and a terrific dragon.  There was humour, pathos, and really good dancing and singing, including really lovely wheelchair choreography.

I loved the testosterone-engulfed argonaut sailors, pretty thick the lot of them but filling the theatre with energy, and also the Sirens, softly singing "danger! danger! danger!" while dancing with the greatest possible allure.

It was also crammed with lovely Stilgoe-esque puns: e.g. the Argos being built with parts bought from a huge catalogue, and steered by some-one beating a tom-tom.

(For the non-Brits among you, "Argos" is the name of a chain of stores in UK where nothing is on display: you order from an immense catalogue, and our main GPS navigation system is called "Tom-Tom").

And the Golden Fleece was a traffic warden's yellow fleece jacket, of course.

Not to mention, obviously, the title of the thing.

Matt Lucas introduced it, and did a lovely job.  He told us about his all-time worst heckle, and got the audience to do it en masse, to purge him of the horror, which was a lot of fun.  Others during the week will be Michael Aspel, Penelope Keith, Tim Pigott-Smith and Jane Asher.  And no less that HRH Prince Edward will be there for a Royal Gala one night.

The only, only (tiny) shortcoming is that there was no encore - we had one thumping good tune to end on, but we needed another one even more so to send us off like jet-fueled rockets into the warm summer evening:  I think they just didn't expect to hear the audience in very demanding mood at the end, and so we were frustrated, and left a little more quietly than we might have done, which was a pity.

Never mind.  I still loved it.

So if you are anywhere near Guildford this week, hie ye over to the Yvonne Arnaud theatre.  You won't be sorry you did.







Members of the Orpheus Centre
Performing at the Linbury Theatre, Royal Opera House
London 2009
By Jack Stilgoe Jackstil.  Downloaded from Flickr under creative commons license



Richard StilgoeImage via Wikipedia

Richard Stilgo


And here's a great picture of the whole troupe at Buck House a little while ago.

Friday 16 July 2010

It's true! I met Rihanna ....

My lifetime celebrity count so far is George Harrison (almost), Adam Faith and now ..... Rihana! And the laugh's on me.

On Wednesday we learned that a Beatles fan, Sue Baker of Reading, was able to meet the Fab Four quite easily in the early days, by simply going to their houses and knocking on their doors.  Check it out.  She met them all that way, and they would invite her in and stuff.  That's just how it was in those days.

The same thing happened to me, pretty much.  Twice in fact.  Not so much with George, but certainly with Adam.

I went to school in Esher, outside London, and we heard that George Harrison had bought a house there, just down the road, so, without missing a beat, Sue and Heather and I went down to meet him. 

I think we went two or three Saturdays is a row and rang the bell beside the huge closed gate of his house.  We got no response at all, then one weekend a voice came out of the grill in the gate-post:  "Go AWAY, little girls" the voice said, in firm, sonorous, disembodied tones. 

So we retreated, in some disarray, feeling that our privacy had been breached in some way (before the days of CCTV don't forget).  Such is the hubris of youth.

We never went back.  We noted that the voice definitely did not have a Liverpool accent.  He’s probably on a world tour or something we said.  

 George Harrison. (1943-2001)  from M Devreux' Flickr Photostream

Adam Faith also lived in Esher, in a mock-Tudor house built on a hillside somewhere, I don’t remember where.  So we went to see him as well, now being quite experienced at this kind of thing.

There was no gate this time, so we walked up the drive, past the rhododendrons and laurels, and knocked on the door.  And, after a short pause, blow me down if the door didn’t open and we were invited in, just like that.  First time lucky.

There was Adam Faith, right there, not much taller than us, all lovely and blond and square-jawed, with two minders. He looked really shy and we thought he was soooooo sweet.

We went downstairs to a sort of billiard room, and the three of us sat on a sofa on one side of the room, and the three of them sat on chairs at the other side.  They were very nice to us and we just chatted about this and that, relaxed as can be. We asked him what it was like to be famous.  It's great he said, I get to meet lots of nice girls like you. One of the minders asked us how old we were. Fifteen we said, we are all fifteen.

After about 20 minutes one of the minders said well thanks very much it was nice to meet you, and we went upstairs and back down the drive, pleased as punch.  He had hugged us goodbye! We didn't say omygod because that was then, but that's how we felt.  We could hardly wait to tell our story to the others.  Such is the innocence of youth.

Adam Faith (1940-2003) downloaded from the Flickr photostream of Truus, Bob and Jan
Hard to believe that cardigan was EVER cool.

And only the other day I had another brush with celebrity, bringing my life-time total to three.

It was 7th June this year, on a flight from London to LA, and it was Rihanna -  omygod, omygod, omygod.

Now I totally know who Rihanna is, and the whole Chris Brown domestic abuse thing and stuff,  and how well she handled it, and I totally love her for that, but I don't follow her really, really closely, and I have to say I didn’t recognize her, especially with her new red do. 

There was quite a stir in the cabin when she came in with a friend and some guy who was carrying their bags, but I just thought that here was one helluva foxy lady, which she definitely is, and foxy ladies always cause a stir.

She came on board just at the very last minute, in a bit of a fluster, and her seat was right beside mine.  I kid you not.  OMG, OMG. OMG. And she was really, really nice and friendly with her lovely smile and she didn’t want to make a fuss or anything. 

However, I was just a tiny, tiny bit annoyed because there were plenty of other spare seats in the cabin, and I like to have an empty one beside me if possible, for my books and stuff.  I feel quite militant about that when the plane has space. And if the truth be told, I didn't think I could deal with all that foxyness right beside me all the way to LA. 

So I quickly decided to move to an empty row, and just in case she thought I was being rude, I explained why: so that we could all have more space, and she and her friend would also be able to have the empty seat between them, which makes such a difference, doesn’t it?  And just in case she thought it was the foxyness (as if!), I told her I totally loved her hair.  Fantastic I told her and it really suits you.  Oh thank you so much she said.

So I moved forward a few rows, and the next thing I knew they had upgraded to first class, and one of the flight attendants was showing me her photo in Metro.  Oh, I said, that's who it was.  Well, well.

Should have known that a really foxy lady like that wouldn't need  any help from moi if she needed a bit more space on the way home.

Oh well!



 Rihanna July 2010 by Platinumphoenix
Downloaded from Flickr under Creative Commons License


Monday 12 July 2010

The Social Ecology of Bunker Hill


Today, Sunday, I was up with the lawn sprinklers and the house-maids, that is even before the joggers, in this rather pleasant part of LA in which I am staying ...... 

I find it rather sweet the way these palms all lean towards the south!

I set off on a journey of ecological exploration, and found a sad story of social exclusion and control.

I drove through almost empty streets on my first visit to down-town LA, not three miles distant.  I was very glad for the lack of cars when I encountered the many-layered complexities of the town centre, with all its fly-overs and underpasses and god-knows-what to confuse the new-comer.

Fortunately Third Street took me directly to my destination, Bunker Hill, where I had heard that there is a small park so steep that only goats can do the landscaping, as a small flock from San Diego did this week.

Here are a couple of them, getting down to work, with Price Waterhouse Cooper in the background.


LaMaCod.  Downloaded from Flickr under Creative Commons license

It's the third year at this gig for the weed-whacking goats, but sad to say, it may be their last.  It seems that the park is another example of the ecological depredation I have been mulling in connection with Newport Beach (a couple of posts back), which is why I came to take a look.

Check out the goat story.  it's really quite cute.  It seems that they saved the taxpayer $3000 over more conventional weed-control methods (i.e. in labour costs), and also, as one homeless person who lives in the neighbourhood said, they make everyone more friendly.....

For me the kicker was the last sentence of the goat story, tossed off lightly and without comment, where surely comment is due: the area will soon be developed.

No matter what small amount of social benefit is provided by this little patch, it will soon be crushed by the great god Mammon.  However, I found the situation to be much worse than even I had expected.

Angel Knoll, as the little park is called, occupies an escarpment which has for a long time marked (as they often do) a social as well as a physical boundary: in this case between an historically elite area of LA and the more poverty-stricken miasmas of the flatlands below. 

And this is still apparently the case, but in a new and desperate way.

At the top of the hill and to its west, once a residential area, are now to be found such entities as the luxurious, palm-fronted Omni Hotel, the super-shiny Price Waterhouse Cooper, shown in the above photo and on the right below, the striking and lovely Walt Disney Music Center, and others of similar stripe, many grouped around a pleasant water park.


Omni Hotel

 Walt Disney Music Center

However, if you look the other way, towards the east, while no longer exactly impoverished, the area is markedly less up-scale. 

LaMaCod.  Downloaded from Flickr under Creative Commons license

It is here, among these buildings right in the heart of LA, that many, many (tens of thousands), homeless people live.

Strangely enough, this clear socio-geographical distinction is echoed in the park itself, which is divided in two.  The upper part, the elite westerly part, is watered, green, planted with shady trees and provided with benches.



The lower, easterly part, seen here now neatly nibbled by the goats, is the part closest to the homeless people, and is completely free of any amenity (except free wi-fi, but that's a joke, surely). The luxurious trees you can see in this photo are in the upper, more westerly part of the park.



The two are divided by a fence, and a further fence surrounds the whole, forbidding and exclusionary, especially in the more desirable portion.




The single gate to the park is hidden away at the upper-most  corner of the park: convenient for the office workers above to have their lunch in, less so for the homeless people living in the streets below. 

It is approached from below by a rather forbidding flight of concrete steps, almost hidden beside the little railway for the tourists (originally built to help servants move from their homes in the flatlands to the elegant workplaces above).


Try going up that with a shopping cart, I thought.

You can't see the gate very easily from the top either, but it's there, underneath the California Plaza building, if you can spot it beyond the staircase, behind the palm tree.



But to get back to my story.

I drove down the flank of the escarpment on which Knoll Park lies, moving from west to east, past the pleasant and then the arid sections of the park.  It was around seven o'clock this morning when I turned right onto Hill Street, which runs along the base of the escarpment, and past famous Pershing Square.

The whole street and its environs were astir, totally astir, with people waking up, packing their belongings, yawning, stretching, pushing their shopping carts, stowing blankets in rucksacks.  There was a marked busyness and purpose about all this activity, particularly startling compared to the stillness of the streets I had just left.

Most shockingly I saw a person asleep in a wheelchair, in a door-way with a blanket pulled up over his head.  I can hardly imagine living on the streets at all, let a alone in a wheelchair.  And sleeping in a wheelchair every night?  Crikey, that's all I can say to that. I don't mean to be facetious, but words completely fail me here.

In addition, many showed signs of other disabilities: mental illness, and all the exhaustions and despairs of addiction.  How many are disabled in some way I thought.  I wonder what services they have access to.  It turns out that a major, perhaps the only, service that comes to them actually favours the rich.

Not all appeared to be long-term denizens of this zone: I saw one tall young man, neater than many of the others, praying with his palms up-turned, who had a suit, protected by plastic wrapping, swinging desperately on a hanger at the back of his ruck-sack.

In the space of 2-3 short blocks I think I saw upwards of 200 people, of which perhaps a quarter were women, busily engaged in packing up the evidence of their existence.  I parked and walked around, moving through the community as if in a different dimension, which of course I am.

Soon I saw the reason for all this activity - two agents with the words "neighborhood security" emblazoned on the back of their shirts, smartly uniformed in purple, lightly armed and equipped with very nice bicycles and various other accoutrements of authority, were waking people up and making them move on.  How callous they seemed, how insolently they stood and watched a man getting dressed on his bench.





By eight o'clock the streets were quiet again, ready for the tourists.  Many of the former sleepers in fact looked very much like tourists themselves, with back-packs, wheelie-bags and not much else, anonymously and ironically blending with the affluence surrounding them.

Life in this part of the world is strikingly luxurious for many, but extremes of poverty are so close to the surface, and unemployment growing so rapidly, that one wonders how it can all be contained.

Three things come to mind:-
  • Ideology: The American Dream, a ruthless two-edged sword replacing any notions of collective entitlement with exclusion and desperation, is nevertheless a powerful opiate; 
  • Intoxication: And then of course the real opiates, the cheap narcotics with which LA is awash greatly assist; and 
  • Force: let's not forget the critical element of control (not to mention fear and loathing), AKA in this case "neighborhood security".
Shortly afterwards I sat outside a very nice coffee-house on the edge of this neighbourhood,  just west of Pershing Square (drafting this blog as a matter of fact), and a young woman passed out at the table next to me.  A family with teenage children waiting for the lights to change nudged each other and laughed.

One of those two purple-clad bozos on bicycles turned up and shook her awake. She roused herself and walked unsteadily away, muttering abuses at him and us.

Not long after that, as I still sat there, two young men occupied the same table, apparently in the aftermath of a one night stand.  When the one that was dressed in flowing black priest-like robes walked away, the other, who had a huge suitcase with him containing only a sleeping bag and a few bits and pieces of electrical equipment (I know because he opened it up right in front of me), went into an emotional melt-down, weeping, pacing up and down the sidewalk and shouting at all around. It appeared he had not been paid.

The management called the authorities, and the very same cyclist arrived back again and took the young man away.  About half an hour later the poor fellow returned, without his suitcase, opened the door of the coffee house and shouted that everyone should boycott the place.

It was a totally ineffective act of defiance.  By that time there had been an almost complete turnover in the clientele, and no-one except the staff and I knew what he was talking about, and the staff just laughed, along with everyone else. Laughed rather nervously I thought: perhaps because they may be only a low-paid "job" away from the streets themselves.

What an important function these drugs fulfill: further disempowering vulnerable people where there should be solid programmes and services to remove poverty and joblessness, but which cannot be provided because, despite all the wealth around, the tax base is just way too small relative to the need.  The costs of those two cyclists tasked with keeping street people as much as possible out of the eyes of everyone else is negligible compared to what should be in place. A total travesty of an equal, free and decent society is revealed.

Well as I know that the USA is the most unequal of any OECD country, I was shocked to be confronted by the reality.  This was without doubt the most unabashed, in your face, front and centre poverty and oppression that I have seen in any major western city: utterly shameful in a city so rich, so engulfed in conspicuous consumption.

The only difference between this and a third world city (of which I have visited over 100, according to a FaceBook widget) was that there were apparently no children: in this at least LA holds back from absolute barbarism, but that is not much to say for the richest city in the eighth largest economy in the world (California).

And yet social struggle around Bunker Hill seemed very muted, very puny, very subdued to me, at least on that particular Sunday morning, although heaven knows, day-to-day living on the street must certainly be enough of a struggle for the extremely deprived. But where is the broad movement that understands this situation, that can advance their interests?  What has happened to the upswelling of hopes that put Obama in power?

I know there are committed and principled organisations representing the interests of the poor and deprived, but why is it so hard for them to gain traction, to gain political weight and momentum in this country so committed, in fine words, to "equality" and "democracy"?  Here I do not mean to sound naive: I am being rhetorical. It is a history of vicious attacks, supplemented by a suffocating ideology and attrition, about which I need to know more.

Without the solid foundation of a political movement behind him, Obama's progressive politics have just shrivelled away in the heat.  Perhaps "evaporated" would be a better term:  "shriveled" implies at least a prior state of solid substance. Compare this, for example, with Lula, by no means a revolutionary, who has made similar compromises with the world financial barons, but has nevertheless maintained in Brazil, with the active support (and let's be clear, pressure) of his constituency, a much more vigorous social contract, while at the same time getting out of recession rather quickly (relative to UK and US, that is).  At least inequality is declining in Brazil.

I got back into my car and drove westwards to another escarpment, this time dividing the merely wealthy from the incredibly super-rich (and incredibly under-taxed).  The fabled slopes of Beverley Hills float like an Avalon above the coastal plane of Santa Monica.  Here, at a bend in Sunset Boulevard is a cinema, where I went to see a film, South of the Border, to see what it could tell me about the limitations of social struggle in Amerika.

Not much as it turned out, being sadly more focused on individual leaders (and on Oliver Stone himself) than on the movements behind them.

More is to be found elsewhere, for example in What is living and what is dead about social democracy.  This is a paper by Tony Judt, in the NY Review of Books, which explores the dissonance in US thinking between being basically fairly liberal and wanting a decent society for all, but definitely not wanting taxes for oneself, and why the latter wins out.  Says it better than I ever could.

And the same political dissonance, er ... confusion, has been found in UK, on which the ConDem's will soon be building their terrifying edifices of disempowerment. It's pretty bad there already, with rough sleepers and disabled people, among other populations, seriously under-served and neglected.  How will we resist a similar fate before all the assaults on our welfare state that are in the pipeline?

To this question, of course, there is only one answer: organize. The question is, will the rate of organization outpace the accelerating efforts of the government to demonize the disempowered, in the ways that have been so very effective in the US.

Update: January 26 2011

Six months later, listening to Southern California national public radio KPCC in sunny Newport Beach, I hear a programme entitled Homelessness in Los Angeles: The Safer City Initiative.  Turns out that I was in Zip Code 90014, the actual, original Skid Row.  More accurately, I was on its outermost edge.

According to this excellent programme, the city fathers have been trying to address homelessness  (AKA pander to voters) with a heavy police presence, sending rough sleepers off to jail etc. etc.  and have thwarterd the efforts of more principled people trying to provide services to the vulnerable and desperate people living there.

It seems that the two-man "Neighborhood Security" team I had seen were were part of a much bigger planned programme of heavy handed policing.  It has not been a success, according to the programme.  No surprises there.

However, it is clear that there is at least a debate, in some circles, about the best way to solve homelessness: but its also clear the public is just not with this issue.

Update July 9 2011

In light of this debate its at least somewhat interesting the Will&Kate have chosen to visit 90014.  Its in line with his work on homelessness in UK, and perhaps will give the debate a broader airing than is usually possible, as summarised, for example this LA Times piece:  Royal Visit - making the most of Will and Kate's Skid Row photo-op.




Tuesday 6 July 2010

Tea in the Garden

Somewhere in LA, a lovely garden.




And fortunately its tea-time ......


Nothing like tea in the garden to restore the soul.

How lucky I am to have a loved and generous friend-and-relation with a house that I can sit in while she is away.  Thank you darling!

________________


If you liked this, you may also enjoy:  A garden: the best damn reading spot in the world

Friday 2 July 2010

The Trees of Orange County

As I mentioned in my last post, there is quite a bit of concrete in Newport Beach.  At least two thirds of the town is covered in the stuff. 

But there are loads of trees, and they have really knocked me out.

When you look at them individually, they are amazing - some with smooth thick bark like an elephant, or ribbed like a crocodile: some flaky as old paint.






 Pink and blue and green










But when you see a mass planting, that is something else altogether:




By Nimisha Prasanth Pookal (flowers)
downloaded from Flickr under creative commons

By Nimisha Prasanth Pookal (flowers)
downloaded from Flickr under creative commons

I just love them.

But my favourites are two little old olive-type trees outside my daughter's apartment.  They are pretty dull, frankly, as trees, although one has a lovely knarled old trunk, and the setting is unremarkable, but they are completely full, all day long, with tiny humming-birds, just doing their thing, whatever humming-birds do.

Mostly they seem to be engaged in full and frank exchange of views, and active conflict resolution.  They seem to be rather assertive, and yet highly defensive little birds.

This suits my current mixed mood, and I love them for that.


By Nimisha Prasanth Pookal (flowers)
downloaded from Flickr under creative commons

Stunning!