All posts by Mike Zonta

Rising inequality charted across millennia

Hunter-gatherer societies typically had low wealth disparities. Their mobility would make it hard to accumulate wealth. (stock image)
Credit: © Rafal Cichawa / Fotolia

Findings have profound implications for contemporary society

November 15, 2017 (Washington State University)

Researchers at Washington State University and 13 other institutions have found that the arc of prehistory bends towards economic inequality. In the largest study of its kind, the researchers saw disparities in wealth mount with the rise of agriculture, specifically the domestication of plants and large animals, and increased social organization.

Their findings, published this week in the journal Nature, have profound implications for contemporary society, as inequality repeatedly leads to social disruption, even collapse, said Tim Kohler, lead author and Regents professor of archaeology and evolutionary anthropology at Washington State University. The United States, he noted, currently has one of the highest levels of inequality in the history of the world.

“Inequality has a lot of subtle and potentially pernicious effects on societies,” Kohler said.

The study gathered data from 63 archaeological sites or groups of sites. Comparing house sizes within each site, researchers assigned Gini coefficients, common measures of inequality developed more than a century ago by the Italian statistician and sociologist Corrado Gini. In theory, a country with complete wealth equality would have a Gini coefficient of 0, while a country with all the wealth concentrated in one household would get a 1.

The researchers found that hunter-gatherer societies typically had low wealth disparities, with a median Gini of .17. Their mobility would make it hard to accumulate wealth, let alone pass it on to subsequent generations. Horticulturalists — small-scale, low-intensity farmers — had a median Gini of .27. Larger scale agricultural societies had a media Gini of .35.

To the researchers’ surprise, inequality kept rising in the Old World while it hit a plateau in the New World, said Kohler. The researchers attribute this to the ability of Old World societies “to literally harness big domesticated mammals like cattle and eventually horse and water buffalo,” Kohler said.

Draft animals, which were not available in the New World, let richer farmers till more land and expand into new areas. This increased their wealth while ultimately creating a class of landless peasants.

“These processes increased inequality by operating on both ends of the wealth distribution, increasing the holdings of the rich while decreasing the holdings of the poor,” the researchers write.

The Old World also saw the arrival of bronze metallurgy and a mounted warrior elite that increased Ginis through large houses and territorial conquests.

The researchers’ models put the highest Ginis in the ancient Old World at .59, close to that of contemporary Greece’s .56 and Spain’s .58. It is well short of China’s .73 and the United States .80, a 2000 figure cited in the Nature paper. The 2016 Allianz Global Wealth Report puts the U.S. Gini at .81 and Kohler has seen the U.S. Gini pegged at .85, “which is probably the highest wealth inequality for any developed country right now.”

This worries him for several reasons.

Societies with high inequality have low social mobility. Kohler pointed to a Science paper from earlier this year that found rates of mobility have fallen from 90 percent for U.S. children born in 1940 to 50 percent for children born in the 1980s. The results, wrote the researchers, “imply that reviving the ‘American dream’ of high rates of absolute mobility would require economic growth that is shared more broadly across the income distribution.”

Other studies have found that unequal societies tend to have poorer health, while more equal societies have higher life expectancies, trust and a willingness to help others, said Kohler.

“People need to be aware that inequality can have deleterious effects on health outcomes, on mobility, on degree of trust, on social solidarity — all these things,” he said. “We’re not helping ourselves by being so unequal.”

Decreasing inequality is extremely difficult and usually comes about through plague, revolution, mass warfare or state collapse, according to The Great Leveler, a new book by Stanford University’s Walter Scheidel. Kohler himself has documented four periods of mounting inequality among the ancient Pueblo people of the American Southwest, with each ending in violence and greater equality. The last one coincided with the complete depopulating of the Mesa Verde area.

“In each case, you see not just this decline in Gini scores, but we also see an increase in violence that accompanies that decline,” Kohler said. “We could be concerned in the United States, that if Ginis get too high, we could be inviting revolution, or we could be inviting state collapse. There’s only a few things that are going to decrease our Ginis dramatically.”

Story Source:

Materials provided by Washington State University. Original written by Eric Sorensen. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.

It’s Time to Meet Your Shadow Side

 November 13, 2017 – OnBeing.org

A couple years ago I was in Telluride, waiting around for a talk to begin at the Nugget Theater downtown. I was talking to Lucy, the woman who has owned the 186-seat theater for the last 20 years. In thinking about that small mountain town rich with mining history, I sensed that those walls had seen more characters than just those featured in the infamous film festival movies. I asked her if the place was haunted. “No,” she replied with a smile. “But the staff shirts do say ‘behind you in the dark.’

This came to mind as I was thinking about shadow and leadership. The shadow is often referred to as a black bag that you drag behind yourself, filled with all the things that you haven’t been able to consciously look at for a variety of reasons: You weren’t ready to, you couldn’t, it was too much, etc. And yet, wherever you go, there it is: behind you in the dark.

Ah, shadow.

Years ago before I began a deep dive with my first coach and mentor, she asked me:

“Are you willing to look at the shadow-side of you? The part of you that doesn’t want you to do all that you aspire to do? Are you willing to see, listen to and look directly at anything in you that is wanting to hold you back? And, what might be the greatest potential gift in doing that?”

I had little idea what this meant. The thought of looking at something I hadn’t even known about seemed terrifying, quite honestly. Thinking about it felt like this image from Tim Burton’s sketches.

An illustration from Tim Burton's 1982 film "Vincent."

An illustration from Tim Burton’s 1982 film “Vincent.”

At that point, my mind raced a bit: Why hadn’t I seen this shadow thing before? What was I going to find? Looking at this seemingly terrifying, potent dark thing was going to be a gift? What the… ?!

She explained that shadow was that part of us that said: “It’s better to be small and inauthentic than emotionally crushed.” It’s the part of us that wants to keep us safe. The greatest potential gift of looking at that square in the face still seemed to me a bit like eating an entire box of Cracker Jacks only to be left with a gut ache and a lame-ass prize. But I trusted her, and my nighttime vision, and therein began the exploration of the dark.

The dark side wasn’t as terrifying as part of me had imagined. I met and got re-acquainted with stuff from childhood — happenings that my little self tried to make sense of and those young reasonings that were still running in the background cycles of my experience, which created a current sense of reality for myself that was operating from an old map. And that old map was projecting old things that were not going to get me where I aspired to be, and in fact were getting in the way.

“Shadow Work is consciousness-seeking,” writes David Kantor in his book My Lover, Myself:

“It is a descent into the underworld in search of  the dark side of the soul for the purpose of bringing our shadows back up into the light of day where we may come to know them and reconnect with them. Our shadows are a projection of reality rather than reality itself. The problem with our shadows is not that we have them, but that we deny their presence. When we continue to suppress our shadows, they overwhelm our sense of reality so that we come to believe that their voices are the ultimate truth. […] Once we become aware of our shadows we start to understand how subjective our view of reality really is.”

This is the importance of shadow work: If we don’t work on our stuff, our stuff will work on us. It will work on us while even our best intentions are to have an amazing life. And it will show up everywhere projecting its own reality in front of us like a bad movie — or perhaps recurring situations you keep finding yourself in — until it is brought to light. Once we see it — and learn how it operates — we can recognize it when it shows up.

Reclaiming what’s in shadow brings those pieces of you back into wholeness. It allows you to see the projection and walk out of that theater into your more dimensional life. It allows you to harness your potential more effectively. Embracing what’s shadowed helps you find a tender love for yourself, warts and all.

I found more clarity, like I was shifting from a fragmented camera obscura projection of reality to the direct experience in the dimensions of embodied life. More of my resources showed up for myself, my work, my relationships, my play since the old maps of distorted images stopped running as background cycles. With that energy freed up, I found a refreshing and renewed sense of life itself.

“How you choose to interact with the opposing forces within you will determine your life. Starve one or the other or guide them both,” recounts an old Cherokee story. Learning to work with shadow could be one of the most liberating things you can choose to be conscious about, in your relationships with yourself, your work, intimate relationships, and living more fully in alignment with your purpose.

Know what the beautiful part is? When it comes to shadow work, your medicine is always right in front of you: What you’re creating is telling you something potent about how your shadow side may be showing up for you. It’s good to get curious, look awry, and wonder what’s playing on the screen from behind you in the dark.

This interview with Parker Palmer, I hope, shines more light on the shadow side — specifically how it shows up in leadership and why it’s an important piece of self-inquiry for anyone who works with humans.

“Imagining a New America” with Ta-Nehisi Coates

TA-NEHISI COATES

Ta-Nehisi Coates is a poetic journalist and a defining voice of our times. He’s with us in a conversation that is joyful and hard and kind, soaring and down-to-earth all at once. He spoke with Krista as part of the 2017 Chicago Humanities Festival before an audience of over 1,500 people, black and white, young and old. To a teacher in the audience who asks how to speak to the young now about the complexity of our world, he says, “Give me the tools. Arm me. Allow me to be able to understand why. That’s not hope, but I think that’s the sort of perspective I would’ve come from, at that age.

GUESTS

TRANSCRIPT

Krista Tippett, host: “And so we must imagine a new country.” These are words of the poet, journalist, prophet of our times: Ta-Nehisi Coates. This hour, he’s with us in a conversation that is joyful and hard and kind, direct and soaring and down-to-earth all at once.

I’m Krista Tippett, and this is On Being.

Continue reading “Imagining a New America” with Ta-Nehisi Coates

Translation Adventure — 11/19/17

Translators:  Ben Gilberti, Calvin Harris, Ned Henry, Alex Gambeau, Heather Williams

Sense Testimony:  Persons want Power over the Other

Conclusions:

  1. Persons are the allness of Truth being infinite oneness and harmony always.
  2. All is consciousness appearing lacking nothing for it is ability motion action effectively being Consciousness
  3. One Power connects all I AM with ALL there IS.
  4. The one power is the I AM I formaless thinking force in the Universe.
  5. One onmipotent truth is unfolding appropriately.

Crazy Ex-Girlfriend | A Diagnosis | The CW


Watch the music video for “A Diagnosis”, then watch full episodes of Crazy Ex-Girlfriend FREE on The CW App: http://go.cwtv.com/genCXGyt

SUBSCRIBE: http://go.cwtv.com/YTSubscribe

About CRAZY EX-GIRLFRIEND:
Rebecca Bunch is a successful, driven, and possibly crazy young woman who impulsively gives up everything – her partnership at a prestigious law firm and her upscale apartment in Manhattan – in a desperate attempt to find love and happiness in that exotic hotbed of romance and adventure: suburban West Covina, CA.

Barber: Adagio for Strings, Original Version, Dover Quartet


The Dover Quartet plays the masterpiece by Samuel Barber in its original form, from the composer’s String Quartet Op. 11. The piece is primarily known in its version for string orchestra, which is also incredibly powerful- the quartet version, however, lends a sense of intimacy and vulnerability to the work that is truly unique.

Follow our weird and fun Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/DoverQuartet/

Website: doverquartet.com

“Without a word, Kaepernick message is powerful” by Ann Killion

CHICAGO, IL – DECEMBER 04: Quarterback Colin Kaepernick #7 of the San Francisco 49ers warms his hands in the third quarter against the Chicago Bears at Soldier Field on December 4, 2016 in Chicago, Illinois. (Photo by Joe Robbins/Getty Images)

November 13, 2017 (SFChronicle.com)

The conversation continues.

In bars, at dinner tables and parties, in line for coffee.

People are angry, interested, offended, supportive, intrigued, irritated.

But–in one form or another–the conversation continues. The one that Colin Kaepernick started 16 months ago.

On Monday, Kaepernick was named GQ magazine’s “Citizen of the Year.”  Which meant that his face, his cause, his exclusion from the NFL–his now-iconic image that I’m quite sure will last far into this century as a recognizable symbol for peaceful protest–was back in the news.

Kevin Durant was also recognized by GQ as its “Champion of the Year.”  On Monday, the Warrior’s forward said he was honored to share the magazine with Kaepernick.

“He started a conversation that was needed in this country,” Durant said.  “He knew he would take a lot of heat for what he did.  He stood up for people who can’t stand up for themselves.

“As athletes, we’re taught to kind of shut up and play our sport,” Durant added.  “He put everything on the line. You’ve got to respect it.  We all stand behind him as athletes. He makes us proud to be part of the athletic community.”

Durant’s comments came two days after his teammate Stephen Curry posted a thoughtful piece on the Players’ Tribune, timed for Veterans Day.  Entitled “The Noise,” Curry wrote about what it means to have a platform. What it means to accuse peaceful protestors of “disrespecting the military.”

“Every single veteran I’ve spoken to, they’ve all said pretty much the exact same thing:  That this conversation we’ve started to have in the world of sports . . . whether it’s been Colin kneeling, or entire NFL teams finding their own ways to show unity, or me saying that I didn’t want to go to the White House–it’s the opposite of disrespectful to them,” Curry wrote.

“A lot of them have said that even if they can’t totally agree with every position of every person, this is exactly the thing that they fought to preserve: the freedom of every American to express our struggles, our fears, our frustrations and our dreams for a more equal society.”

Curry went on to plea for real help for veterans, not just “thank you for your service.”

“If i’m going to use my platform, I don’t want to just be noise. I want to use it to talk about real issues that are affecting real people.”

A proposed Veterans Day weekend boycott o the NFL, by people offended by protests, didn’t materialize. But neither has a follow-up meeting between the NFL and involved players, including Kaepernick. Meanwhile, bad quarterbacking continues to derail once-promising teams. And Kaepernick remains out of work.

Kaepernick chose not to be interviewed by GQ. He wanted to participate in the magazine piece in order to–according to the editors–“reclaim the narrative of his protest” that he feels has been hijacked by those with political agendas. Kaepenick didn’t add his voice to “the noise” about which Curry wrote.

People want him to speak but, for now, his silence has been powerful. No one can twist his words or criticize his statements, or turn them into GIFs or memes on social media.

His actions have spoken loudly, as he continues to support–through money and actions–groups that serve the disenfranchised.  His inability to get a job speaks even more loudly.

Instead, others spoke to GQ about him. Filmmaker Ava DuVernay wrote, “Look at this brother–he’s doing better than any of us would’ve done. A lot better. With a lot more elegance.” Rapper J.Cole said “he sacrificed his career.”

Ameer Hasan Loggins wrote about how Kaepernick came to his class at Cal, with his “little notebook and pencil,” driving up from San Jose to attend every week.

“We’ve decided the conversation leans on ‘Does Colin want to be an activist, or does he want to be an athlete?'”  Loggins wrote. “As if the two cannot happen simultaneously. You can care about people and play sports. Athletes do it all the time. The problem is that his particular activism was toward the cause of blackness. That’s what he’s being ostracized for.”

Civil-rights activist Harry Belafonte also was included i the piece.

“Not being ‘political” is not a solution,” Belafonte wrote. “Any young person who takes that position would have to ask Muhammad Ali and Jackie Robinson and so many of us if we had anything at stake.”

Kaepernick’s former 49ers teammate, Eric Reid, also had a voice.

“These issues are real,” he said. “And people know they’re real. But some will do anything to distract from that, to change the narrative, and it’s gotten Colin blackballed from the NFL.

“The Bible talks very explicitly in Proverbs about being the voice of the voiceless and speaking up for the vulnerable. Another version is: ‘Faith without works is dead.’ I guess selfishly I’m trying to get to heaven.”

Kaepernick has been the voice the voiceless. He doesn’t have to say a word, and yet the conversation continues.

Leonard Bernstein’s Symphony No. 3 – Kaddish


Live-streamed on Monday, 23 March 2015 from The Henry Crown Hall, Jerusalem
A memorial concert in honor of David Azrieli
Second half of the concert was dedicated to Bernstein’s Kadish.
Conductor – Steven Mercurio
Soprano – Sharon Azrieli
Anchor – Richard Dreyfuss

The Jerusalem Oratorio Chamber Choir
Kate Belshé, conductor

The Ankor Choir of The Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance
Dafna Ben Yohanan, conductor

The Tel Aviv Philharmonic Choir
Leonti Wolf, conductor

Shahar Choir, Rehovot
Gila Brill, conductor

The Work – Official Trailer


Published on Aug 10, 2017

The Work is out in cinemas and on demand now.
https://theworkmovie.com

Set entirely inside Folsom State Prison, The Work follows 3 men during 4 days of intensive group therapy with convicts, revealing an intimate and powerful portrait of authentic human transformation that transcends what we think of as rehabilitation.

https://www.facebook.com/theworkmovie/
https://twitter.com/theworkmovie

Also:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yZWOUSvnLnU