Here is What I Blogged:
J. LeRoy Blog
Urban Planner . Technophile . Musician . Participant in Interracial Marriage . Opinionated . Reader . Celebrating Anything that Moves for Over 38 Years
J. LeRoy Music
Reading
Now:
(out of sync, I'll update the list soon)
Marooned in Real Time by Vernor Vinge

Recently finished but not yet reviewed:
Fast Forward MBA: Business Planning for Growth by Phillip Walcoff
Razor Wire Pubic Hair by Carlton Melick III
Dealing with People You Can't Stand by Rick Brinkman
The Risk Pool by Richard Russo
Into the Miso Soup by Ryu Murakami
America: The Book by Stewart et al
Killer Customers by Selden and Colvin
Sewer, Gas & Electric: The Public Works Trilogy by Matt Ruff
Earth by David Brin
Speed Tribes by Karl Taro Greenfeld
Broken Angels by Richard Morgan
Awareness by Anthony de Mello
Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card
No More Vietnams by Richard Nixon
Altered Carbon by Richard Morgan
The Song of the World by Jean Giono
Dust Tracks on the Road by Zora Neale Hurston
Infinity's Shore by David Brin
My Life by Bill Clinton
The Idiot
by Fyodor Dostoyevsky
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime by Mark Haddon
Futures Conditional by Robert Theobald
Amy Tan: The Hundred Secret Senses
Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman

The Return of the King by Tolkien
A National Party No More by Zell Miller
Good Omens by Neil Gaiman and Terry Pratchett
Heaven's Reach by David Brin.
A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Toole
Moral Politics by George Lakoff
Two Towers by Tolkien
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01/01/2005 - 01/31/2005
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2006-10-09
 
Cafe des 2 Moulins


Cafe des 2 Moulins
Originally uploaded by whereswilliam.
My business partner, William, is in Paris for 10 weeks. He is slowly learning the Web 2.0 world in order to communicate with people back in the states.

 

2005-03-22
 
Abandoning Blogger

Hi all,

I love blogger, but I am finding I need categories. So I've moved my general blog to here.

I also am collaborating on a blog about cooperation

And a Blog about Intelligent Transportation Systems (this one is still run through blogger).

 

 


It's spring! Baseball is back on my Radio.
creative commons c. 2005 J. LeRoy

 

2005-03-16
 
Why Portland is Successful

Here are some clips from a recent Portland, Oregon city council meeting.

At issue is the plan to turn a section of Portland into an artificial "Little Italy". Here are two lively and enjoyable public presentations about why that shouldn't happen. Please note that while they are both silly, irreverent and somewhat sarcastic, there is an air of cooperation around them that is nothing short of miraculous to this jaded urban planner.

(Thanks to Pleasant Blog)

 

 
Wiki Suit Larry

As communication gets more low-impact and the barrier for participation lowers, authors like David Brin and Andrew Scott Card have been on-line workshopping books before they are complete. From this they gather energy, enthusiasm and feedback.

Larry Lessig is now getting ready to revise his book "Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace". Insodoing, he's started a Jotspot wiki to get people in the community to help guide his thoughts.

I am wondering, What does this new type of collaboration say about the following things:

- The role of the "expert"
- The division between author and subject
- The ability for authors to deepen and enrich their original thoughts
- The ability for groupthink to dampen and stifle the thoughts of the individual


 

 
Recent Communication

As part of this research / think-tankiness for cooperation that I'm involved in, we meet once a week and discuss various elements of communication. A recent meeting, which I missed was rather transcendent for the participants. Their post-meeting e-mails prompted me to write this:

Hello All,

Well, it certainly sounds like I missed something last Tuesday. I have been out the last two sessions .. the first because I went to New Orleans for a week to eat and fully explore the Gluttony sin (and maybe a bit of Sloth). The second meeting I missed because I was trapped in my office while my wife was sitting on I-5 watching an accident get cleared up. No deadly sins were involved with that one, I’m happy to report.

So, today I ran my old printer until it nearly shot flames from the ink cartridge … printing out all the discussion and reading and what not that I’ve missed.

I hope I don’t put anyone off by just spouting and not quoting originals (much) … but there was so much! Lastly, please forgive the preachy-ness. Please write it off as exuberance and passion!

Last Tuesday

I’m glad to see that many of you have experienced the main reason why I was interested in this in the first place – successful cooperation brings with it a certain fulfillment or euphoria. It is honestly liberating to work with other people and feel like you’ve not only achieved something, but have been able to truly share something. Sort of a Networked Peak Experience.

From all of the discussion earlier about what is or is not a cultural paradigm – what is or is not an impediment to cooperation – what is nature – what is nurture – etc. I believe we are missing the forest for the trees. There are always stumbling blocks to understanding and communication. I have an entire bookshelf full of Krishnamurti, Rollo May, Laing, etc that can make your head spin, all discussing this basic issue: Language is a crappy means of communication. It’s value-laden, it’s imprecise, it’s inherently personal. And cooperation and communication are inherently inter-personal. And it’s all we got, baby.

That’s why events like last Tuesday, where you really connect (again, I wish I was there to see it) are so uplifting. They’re theoretically nearly impossible!

Malcom came up with the wonderful bullet list of

  • Commonality
  • Diversity
  • Locality
  • Transcendence

I think if you made that an equation it would look like this:

Commonality + Diversity + Locality + Transcendence = Purpose

When people truly experience Purpose it is highly empowering.

People Gather All The Time

Jon had mentioned several activities that were avenues to finding this Purpose. (Being in a band, family, sports team). But he stopped there and was unable to come up with other avenues. I find them often. Having coffee with a person, feeling around for where the conversation is going to go, and then feeling it suddenly rush off in that direction is a favorite of mine. Focus is more and more transient today. But I notice bits of cooperation, group think, team play … purpose all around me.

When I started my company, I went out and got a business partner. He owns 50% of the company, while it was my idea and I laid much of the groundwork. People were confused by this. But, for me, I knew that I could never find true enjoyment out of the company without those moments of transcendent joy one gets when one is … more than one. Late night sessions when we are working to make a deadline and it’s three a.m. and most people say “That must have been awful” … that’s when I love it the most.

Theories Rock | Theories Suck

This also brings me to another thing that’s been troubling me, but I haven’t been able to really concretely nail down. I was surprised by the strong negative reaction to some of the concepts we have examined in this class. I probably would have been equally surprised if we canonized them and started a cult around them. I’m glad we didn’t do that.

Theories are just theories, guidelines for thought. We can examine the constructs and apply them when they are relevant or valid. But, as our discussion shows, context, culture (i.e. the people involved) dictate what tact is … tactful. Everything is not a nail … but that doesn’t negate the need for a hammer. And people are nails, nuts, bolts, screws, pins, staples, … you need a full toolkit and some ingenuity to deal with them all. Use the right tools (and hope they’re using ones that resonate with you) and you get Purpose.

“Dualities”

Nature abhors a vacuum, Jim abhors a dichotomy. But Jon referred also to “life’s duality”. The concept of the “we-dentity” is powerful and undeniable. Thinking past the “I” is one of the hardest things people (especially me) can do.

Bruce (I think) said “[Social Dilemmas] reflect learned social behavior based on cultural assumptions more than they reflect human nature.” The obvious extension to this is that we should identify what human nature is and work forward from that. Since we cannot accurately define human nature without culture, this too becomes a social dilemma.

We all have a collection of adapted or learned and adaptive or “human nature” traits. The discussion of Darwinian thinking and how it’s somehow combative and has to be viewed in a particular light to see cooperation is bizarre to me. All beings upon this earth show adaptive and adapted traits that involve some form of cooperation. The view that it solely relies on competition would make Darwin bang his head on the table.

This is further frustrated by the Nature / Nurture arguments that are so popular with everything from sexuality to choice of dinner entrée. Just as we drill down to chaos in physics, we also drill down to chaos in psychology. We reach a point where dichotomies break down.

Culture itself becomes a false distinction upon reduction-ab-absurdum. I know Chinese people who are more “American” than most “Americans” (loud, in-your-face, egotistical) and I know Americans who are more “Chinese” than most Chinese. I know gay men who are way less effeminate than George Bush or certainly George Will.

Does this mean that duality, dichotomy and culture aren’t relevant? They totally are … but, again, in context and judiciously applied.

Technology is not Neutral

I must start by saying that when Sandra said that Technology was value-neutral … I think I heard me saying it at coffee a few weeks ago. So, I am revising and extending my remarks….

I will slightly alter my original statement “Technology is value-neutral” to the marginally different “Technology is not value-neutral.” Or at least sometimes it’s not.

The reason is because, in being a thing, technology is defined by the people who interact with the thing. So technology may not be created with a specific value or use in mind, but people will assign it a moral value.

Nuclear missiles are value-neutral. They are big pieces of metal with some instable stuff inside them and can fly through the air. No value problem there. Give them to Khrushchev and Kennedy and they take on different moral values. But who creates, defines and extols those moral values? The observers. And we communicate those values through the inexact mechanism of language.

So, technology floating in the vacuum of space … value-neutral. Technology in the abstract value-neutral (Luddites and Amish aside…). But technology inserted into any human endeavor immediately takes on the values of the purposes to which it is applied. Not even it can get away with “I was only following orders”.

We can quickly recognize this in our reaction to the utterly true statement “Guns don’t kill people; people kill people.” Regardless of what side of the gun debate you may be on, the technology has a moral value, because you give it one.

Building Our Own Cage

We want to define what cooperation is, how we can reliably achieve it and why the (*&$ it isn’t being done all the time because Dammit! We like to cooperate!

This quickly moves us into building our own cage. We build our own cages when we begin to preemptively label things as good or bad, right or wrong, male or female, sweet or savory, punk or pastel – before giving them a chance to define themselves.

Any cage we build, locks us in and (often) the truth out. In any discussion, participants need to establish mechanisms of understanding.

The tools provided to me by Jon, Malcom, Bruce, Sandra, Ken Wilbur, Kevin Lynch, Doc Searls, Erin Ostrom, and everyone else I’ve had the luck to come into contact with are vital to adapting to the people I will come into contact with in the future. But none of them are going to always be applicable. All of them will have glaring exceptions. Alas, there is no universal truth. (Rats)

When Howard says he wants to build a literacy of cooperation – he wants to build a language. Languages are fluid and flexible (and inexact) means of communication that help us, as a group, get closer to common understandings. This is why we get “Towards a Literacy of Cooperation” or “Towards a Psychology of Being.” Howard and Maslow both recognize that their definitions, theories and observations are subject to revision. Understanding is always a process and not a destination.

Closing

Wow, you’re still reading … I thought you would have round-filed this by now. Thank you for reading through all of this. I know I went all preachy there. But it was with good intent. (Value-neutral?)

Again, I’m glad the last meeting was so powerful for some of you. I look forward to being at the next one.



 

2005-02-10
 
Surplus Happiness

Recent articles in the Economist and elsewhere have indicated that we like to help other people only when we have so much stuff that we can't help it.

A Short but (hopefully) growing discussion of this can be found here.

 

2005-02-08
 
High Stake Communication

From my Smartmobs blog:

Last weekend I tried to write a coherent article about emergent cooperation in the middle east in general and Iraq in particular.

I wrote and deleted and re-wrote and just didn't get what I wanted. So I'm just going to give you a bunch of links.

The first thing I wanted to show was this article showing cooperation between the new Iraqi Government and the Italian Government. The goal here seems to be to give Iraq a stable connection from Iraq to the rest of the world that does not rely on easily sabotaged technologies.

The next thing is the meta-topic of pan-arabic cooperation internally and externally to try to get a handle on general unrest. (General Stuff). Whether we are discussing the difficulties of intra-religious cooperation or inter-everything cooperation ... there seems to be no doubt that there is movement to get somethign done.

What is fascinating is to read these articles from around the world and start counting up all the institutional issues that impact middle east cooperat

 

2005-02-04
 
The Grokster Case - Mark Cuban

Mark Cuban has written an excellent and concise piece regarding the impacts that current litigation brought by the entertainment industry could have on our future. It strikes me that the Grokster Case is not unlike This Case Here.

 

2005-01-28
 
A 7,000 Way Tie in the Making

Today I was exposed to morning television news. My wife likes it. I can't explain it. I've given up trying to resist. To me it seems like 8 minutes of news 20 minutes of annoying banter and 32 minutes of loud commercials - largely for Subway "Restaurants" (sic).

But today in the Morning Show content segment, they had a talking head from the Bush Administration talking about how we were expecting the elections to go really well and for Iraqis to make a stand.

I asked the gentleman, as if my television were capable of two way communication, that given how few people vote in the US -- "Why would people risk death to vote for one of 7,000 candidates, 6,999 of which no one knows from a box of rocks?" Although, statistically, I guess that with 7,000 candidates, everyone should know at least one personally.

He did not reply and I went to the office.

When I got to the office it took no more than a single trip to news.google, to find out that the world is asking the same question.

I foresee little satisfaction on anyone's part from these elections.

 

2005-01-27
 
Cooperative Farming

From my blog on Smartmobs...

Two days of NPR reports were very enlightening. One was on Factory Farming, the other on Cooperative Farming.

A few days ago NPR had this story about factory farming and ranching in Iowa. Being originally from Nebraska, I've seen this develop over the last 40 years. When I was a kid, factory farms were almost unheard of. People spoke disparagingly of feed lots, which were micro corporate farms. But they also were unexcited about working with the government and sometimes with their neighbors.

During the growth in factory farms, family farms were often isolated. People who have lived on the land for generations were pushed out. Some small towns were encircled by these massive ranches. The huge companies who own these farms used their influence to get the EPA to suspend air quality and pollution regulations. These ranches store their animal waste all year and then, in the spring, spread it over acres and acres of land. Needless to say, the odor is amazing. Read More!

Today there was this story about farmers in Arizona cooperating with their neighbors, environmental groups, and the government to create grass banks. They set aside areas of land to regenerate and open their land to impacted regional ranchers. This sustainable farming model has significant opportunity costs for those who engage in it, but it means that the ranches will be able to stay in business far into the future.

So here we have several syllabus topics in one.

Social Dilemma

In reaction to falling prices for meat, many family farms went out of business and sold to factory farms. These farms were able to achieve cost reductions by acheiving the highest yeild of meat per acre. The goal of their business model is to cut costs. Raising hundreds or thousands of cattle in a relatively small area requires them to be healthy at all times. By design, factory farmed meat cannot be organic. Factory farms, for their part, cannot be good stewards of the environment or good neighbors.

In reaction to falling prices for meat, the farmers in Arizona gathered together and created a venture that would sell higher priced meat but grow it in a way that allowed them to retain their way of life. This meat will be sold to people willing to pay extra for the organic grass fed beef. While this is environmentally sound, it does result in higher priced goods which many cannot afford.

Evolution of Cooperation

Western Farmers are, by and large, not quick to cooperate with those they perceive to be outsiders. This cooperation, however, is working because they understand that their way of life is endangered. When examining the options, it made more sense to move to a cooperative working and managing arrangement than it did to embody the rugged individualist paradigm. By moving to cooperation they were able to maintain their ranches and, perhaps, feel even closer to them.

Sharing Economies

The western farmers, through sharing, have ensured the persistence of their own individual farms. They are allowing others' cattle to graze on their land in exchange for knowing that future grassland will exist. They know that cooperative marketing ventures will provide their meat with more markets.

What Does All This Mean?

The corporate farming techniques, both for meat and veggies, are designed to provide the most food to the public for the least cost. Certainly this is merely the least immediate cost to the consumer, but when you can't afford to feed your kids that's a pretty important cost.

The cooperative farming technique seeks to provide the best quality food and ensure that food will be around in the future.

So, you tell me, what does all this mean?

 

2005-01-14
 
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2005-01-12
 
Know Your Congress

GovTrack uses, oddly enough Technorati technology to search all active congressional activity for you.

Want to know what bills directly impacted vacuums in the 108th congress? Or maybe something even more relevant?

 

 
Political Hackberries

The Blackberry handheld is being used, apparently, throughout government to get things done. For good or ill. (NPR) (Time) (Howard) (Jim) (Grockwel)(Globe and Mail)(PC World)

The interesting thing here is the further decentralization of decision making. As we move further from a centralize "single server" approach to decision making, to a more peer-to-peer model, the need for face to face meetings to make decisions will become less necessary.

This, of course, is not a new thought.

The question is, how will it change the timber of government? In both the Time and NPR examples, electeds or power mongers didn't need to be in the smoke filled room to make a decision. They were in their cars or at Billy Joel concerts.

They could have just as easily been at home, in their own jurisdictions.

Given that congress is in session a fraction of the year, perhaps a good first step would be to enable congress people and their staff to work throughout the year and, simultaneously, keep stronger ties to their home fronts.

Say, in the Seattle Area, if a citizen advisory panel for a major highway project had a blog -- Senator Patty Murray could participate. The RSS feed could be fed to her handheld. She could comment as things went along. People would see her participation and she'd keep directly involved with minimal work.

Or, perhaps, her staff serves as a news aggregator for her. Blogs from all projects in her area would come to them, they'd sift and send her a personalized RSS of front burner stuff.

 

 
Blogflict

Oh no!

I have a bunch of blogs now with overlapping interests.

You might see links here to other blog entries in other locations .... I may post things here and link to them from there.

Whatever shall I do?


 

 

This writing by J. LeRoy. If ya quote it, link to me.
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