I’m writing from Seattle where I released my new book, Hope Unraveled: The People’s Retreat and Our Way Back. What strikes me most in my conversations with people is the extent to which we have become mechanistic in our response to a fundamentally human condition. Here’s what I mean.
Over the last four days, I have been attending the national Conference on Foundations Community Foundation annual conference. I have spent 15-hour days talking with community foundation executives about the condition of the country, what we need to do to pursue an alternate path in public life and politics, and the role community foundations can play. There are incredible people here, individuals who care deeply about their communities and the effectiveness of their programs.
But as I talked with folks here, and think about some of my conversations with people before arriving here, I am struck by how mechanistic we have become in response to trying to engage people in public life and politics and to generate meaningful change in communities; my thoughts even extend to how people are increasingly talking about “rebuilding” New Orleans and the Gulf Coast.
All of this often occurs in a kind of civic vacuum – a void of thinking about the real conditions that exist in a community that must be addressed; a failure to see what levers for change actually exist; a missing sense of what will truly engage people to step forward and find their way back to public life and politics.
The mechanistic response is a kind of milquetoast, middle of the road, make-few-waves approach to the deep challenges we face in our society, which I talk about in Hope Unraveled. I believe that we must discard this mechanistic approach and embrace an alternative which has two big components:
The mechanistic approach robs us of these two components. It puts us on automatic pilot just when we need to make choices about what it means to be truly strategic and what will give people hope.
So, here I am Seattle and the good news is that many of the community foundation executives here want to figure out how to take an alternate path in public life and politics. I’m ready to get going.
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"Mechanistic". Leave it to you, Rich, to come up with the exact word I've been looking for in my conversations with my fellow community members. It has definite appeal to me, coming from an engineering background. It does seem that people prefer the "cookie cutter" solutions, or "best practices" as you put it, when it comes to addressing community problems. I feel that to help an at-risk society we have to look at solutions that may be risky. In Las Vegas I sometimes get the feeling that groups are still reluctant to work towards the common good due to this risk factor. "What will our organization look like in the media if we pursue this track?", "What political support do we stand to lose (as opposed to gain) if we choose a not-so-politically-correct partner?" If we're to develop centers of strength in this community, we've got to stop playing it so damn safe! I had a mentor in the seventies that used to tell me that taking chances and giving chances makes things happen. He also told me to "Dare to be stupid once in a while and you might be surprised by the results". Hence, I was never shy about expressing my opinions about topics that mattered to me. Sorry, Rich. I also appreciate the fact that you point out the intrinsic value of hope. Families that lose hope can make it a generational loss. Throw that in with generational poverty and generational illiteracy the future's so dark, I don't have to wear shades (sorry for the paraphrasing). Just keep in mind that you are the torch-bearer for me and others like me trying to revive our communities.