Angels against war: Peace Song of the Day for 2/19

Angels & Airwaves is not the usual kind of group that makes the Peace Song of the Day list. They are an alternative rock band, in the Space Rock style. Though, one of their songs clearly shows the horrors of war, and points to peace. Hope you find it interesting.

“The War” by Angels & Airwaves is the Peace Song of the Day. The song is made extra singable by a chorus of “Oh’s”. (In some live versions, they are almost a yo-oh rock yodel, which the audience can sing-a-long with.)
Continue reading Angels against war: Peace Song of the Day for 2/19

Peace Song of the Day: Angel from Montgomery

“Angel from Montgomery” by John Prine is the Peace Song of the Day for February 17th. This is an unusual choice. Its peace is found largely in the sense of harmony it projects. Though, it also has moments about feelings, and suppressing feelings, which teach principles of NVC/Nonviolent Communication. (And, it is a favorite song of The Duke and The Duchess. So, it was destined to make the list sometime.)
Continue reading Peace Song of the Day: Angel from Montgomery

Who is leading us to the sound of guns?: Peace Song for 2/16/2012

Protocol by Gordon Lightfoot is the Peace Song of the Day for February 22nd. This song asks…

“Who are the ones who would lead us now to the sound of a thousand guns?”

Continue reading Who is leading us to the sound of guns?: Peace Song for 2/16/2012

Dancing with systems

Thinking in SystemsAfter re-reading Donella Meadow‘s essay, Leverage Points: Places to Intervene in a System, I continued to her other wonderful essay, Dancing with systems.  She describes why the best way to interact with a system is to dance with it:

We can’t control systems or figure them out. But we can dance with them!

I already knew that, in a way before I began to study systems. I had learned about dancing with great powers from whitewater kayaking, from gardening, from playing music, from skiing. All those endeavors require one to stay wide-awake, pay close attention, participate flat out, and respond to feedback. It had never occurred to me that those same requirements might apply to intellectual work, to management, to government, to getting along with people.

But there it was, the message emerging from every computer model we made. Living successfully in a world of systems requires more of us than our ability to calculate. It requires our full humanity–our rationality, our ability to sort out truth from falsehood, our intuition, our compassion, our vision, and our morality.

Meadows provides a list of ways (with explanations) of how to dance with systems: Continue reading Dancing with systems

Camus’ Neither Victims nor Executioners: Parody of Revolution

The Power of Nonviolence Writings by Advocates of PeaceThe eleventh chapter of The Power of Nonviolence: Writings by Advocates of Peace contains Albert Camus‘ 1946 essay Neither Victims nor Executioners. This week we discuss the  fourth part of the essay, Parody of Revolution. Camus wrote this 16-page essay as World War II had just ended, and it seemed as if the Soviet Union and the United States were dragging the planet into the horrors of a third world war. Eleven years later, he would win the Nobel Prize for Literature.

I recently heard a lecture where a speaker insisted the only successful revolutions were the French Revolution, the Soviet Revolution, and the Chinese Communist Revolution.  The speaker’s definition of a successful revolution  was that the power class had to be displaced. Since all of those revolutions were violent, the speaker insisted that only violent revolutions are successful.  The speaker discounted all of the nonviolent revolutions of the 20th Century (US Civil Rights, Gandhi in India) as unsuccessful.  Camus describes revolution as follows:

Ideally, a revolution is a dialogue in political and economic institutions in order to introduce more freedom and justice; practically, it is a complex of historical events, often undesirable ones, which brings about this happy transformation.

Camus argues that national revolution is never possible without at least the silent complicity of the world’s superpowers.  For instance, the Maldives could not have a coup without the United States standing aside.  Continue reading Camus’ Neither Victims nor Executioners: Parody of Revolution

How to change, or transcend, paradigms

Thinking in SystemsAt the time, I had already been following the writings of My recent post about Donnella Meadows books being on sale in January prompted me to re-read her essay, Leverage Points: Places to Intervene in a System.   In the essay she explains in ascending order of effectiveness the ways to effect change in a system.  I was particularly by her number 2 suggestion: The mindset or paradigm out of which the system arises.  I had to read the following paragraph from that section aloud to the Duchess:

So how do you change paradigms? Thomas Kuhn, who wrote the seminal book about the great paradigm shifts of science, has a lot to say about that.  In a nutshell, you keep pointing out the anomalies and failures in the old paradigm, you keep speaking louder and with assurance from the new one, you insert people with the new paradigm in places of public visibility and power.  You don’t waste time with reactionaries; rather you work with change agents and with the vast middle ground of people who are open-minded.  Continue reading How to change, or transcend, paradigms

Why do your war boats ride?: Peace Song for 2/10/212

“I’ve Got To Know” by Woody Guthrie is the Peace Song of the Day for February 10th. You can find this song in the Rise Up Singing songbook on page 161.
Continue reading Why do your war boats ride?: Peace Song for 2/10/212