At a recent Independent Sector conference, Sterling Speirn, the new president of the Kellogg Foundation, asked: “Who is the enemy of civic engagement?” I have an answer.
So, who will take on the enemy of the public good? In my last piece, I gave a clear response to that question: We will.
Change occurs when people of good will decide to step forward and give of themselves. It happens when we are able to see different ways to move ahead, different paths to take, a different vision to pursue.
Isn’t that what Rosa Parks came to symbolize in our nation? She found a different seat on that bus – a seat that required her to step forward in a different direction and with a different intent. She envisioned in her imagination a different outcome and, in doing so, she triggered ripples of change through her actions.
At the Independent Sector conference, Sterling Speirn was urging those of us in the audience – and people everywhere – to think more deeply about the obstacles that stand in the way of meaningful progress. He was right to do so.
The enemy of the public good is all around us; sometimes it is even within us. Let us use our energies to bring down the enemy of public good, rather than to feed it.
Hope is a concept I have heard very little about for many years. But it is the very thing that keeps individual people and groups of people going when things and times are really tough.We have been living in really tough times in the last decade and more. Of course, there have been rough times at many other times over a long view of humanity. But I didn't live then and I do live now,even as a senior citizen. I have been immensely concerned for some time about what is or is not going on in our nation as well as the rest of the world, but found little to be hopeful for and much,much more to be fearful about.My spirit is lifted even to know that there are other people who have similar concerns!
Amen. For some time I have been speaking with my community about the pervasisve and destructive role that consumer based expectations are having when applied to civic problems. "Growth should pay its way," or "Not in my back yeard" "you are a public servant you work for me" or "the County ought ot do this for us" are pervasisve consummer oriented statements that demonstrate a disconnect fromt he role that personal responsility should play in our democratic existence.
Bravo!
Your 2nd point explains what I haven't been able to put into words when people insist that citizen journalism photos be monetized. I'm all for people getting compensated, but at the same time I think the motivation for taking such photos (e.g. London subway bombing) should be the public good and not because there's a weird little economy around citizen disaster phonecam pictures.