Sunday, August 18, 2013

Malpractice and the Heart (7/13)

Dear all,
A summer schedule that's a little slower reminds me of the importance of having enough space in our lives--at least sometimes--that things we didn't even know were priorities can rise to the top. And I am thankful this week for a stretch of stunningly comfortable summer weather, for garden produce, for good friends, and for people who act on their caring for this world.
Love,
Pamela



The effects of malpractice on the heart

There is something that moves me about jury duty, something that is very right.  All of these hundreds of people gather together, not eager but willing to make real, in the flesh, our right to a trial by our peers.

Our panel came in without a clue, but gradually it became clear that this was a medical malpractice case.  A man had had a horrible accident, been treated by trauma surgeons, then contracted a flesh-eating parasite in the hospital.  The surgeon and her team were being sued.  There we were together in the courtroom:  two lawyers for the plaintiff, four for the doctors, this man who had been through hell, one of the doctors being sued, and forty ordinary citizens called to see that justice was done.

Yet I didn’t see anything we could do to ensure a just outcome.  A terrible, an unspeakably tragic, thing had happened.  Clearly this man needed and deserved all the medical help available to treat his injuries and infection, to manage his pain and disability, to restore him to the greatest possible degree of health, and to offer him some assurance of being able to meet life’s on-going needs.  Yet we would be asked to award for much more than that.  Would his life go better if he had hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars for loss of life’s pleasures?  Would the payment of millions from the doctors’ malpractice insurance make the hospital a safer place?

We cannot fix the past.  Just as a life that has been taken cannot be brought back, a body that has been damaged cannot always be restored.  And we won’t be able to go on and live fully in the present and future until we have completed the process of grieving our loss.   Somehow the awarding of millions of dollars for distress, embarrassment and loss of pleasure confuses and blurs that reality.  It seduces us into believing that there is an external solution, an easy substitute for coming to terms with our loss and our grief.

While nothing that is done in the present can change what has already happened,  or take the place of grieving, the rawness of past hurt can be assuaged by an apology.  This provides an acknowledgment hat someone sees how they hurt me, and joins with me in wishing that it hadn’t happened.  When a young man who had been methodically stealing valuables from our house years ago was finally caught, I was relieved to be out of that nightmare, but his trial and conviction just seemed sad for everybody.  Real closure came several years later when he sent us a note with a heart-felt apology.

I don’t know the trauma doctors who pieced this man’s broken body back together only to see it ravaged by an infection from their own hospital.  Perhaps they were negligent; more likely it was just one of those horrible things that happen.  It is possible that they didn’t care; I can only imagine that they were devastated.  Yet the nature of adversarial law forbade an apology—and this poor old man who had been through so much had to choose between big bucks and forgiveness.

And the jury—those forty people who gave up a day’s work to be available for this case, and the fourteen who were finally chosen to give a week more of their lives to provide that precious trial by peers—were given none of the tools they needed.  It was as if everyone’s heart had been taken away—the old man and his wife, the doctors, all those lawyers, the judge, the jurors.  We were being asked to pick our way through medical facts, blame, law and dollars, with the only sure winners being lawyers and insurance companies.  There was no way to deal with the real issues—our basic human needs to grieve, to apologize, to forgive, and to try together to make things right.



Morning scent

Up early
to steal a few moments
in the garden
Pinch back tomato vines
pick up fallen apples
Breathe in the beauty
and the cool
before a busy day.

Much later
on the interstate
and far away
a momentary movement
hand to face
brings a scent
that’s unmistakable
And I am back again
amid the growing promise
of tomatoes.




Imagine:  A new economy is possible!
Measuring well-being

    The standard measurement of our societal health is the Gross Domestic Product (GDP), the sum of the value of all economic activity.  In a way this makes sense:  the more value is being produced, the better off people should be.  But there are two significant flaws.  First, some economic activity, like building prisons, or cleaning oil spills, does not indicate that things are going better for people.  Second, things that are outside the realm of economic activity, but critical to our well-being--health, a sense of security, loving and being loved, making a meaningful contribution, having access to beauty and nature, being at peace--have no place in the measure.  (For a very short video, go to http://www.neweconomyworkinggroup.org/video/well-being-and-new-economy)
    But change is in the air.  Several countries, from Bhutan to France, are experimenting with new measures.  A high-level UN meeting on “Happiness and Wellbeing: Defining a New Economic Paradigm,” brought together 600 participants this spring to follow up on a resolution passed at the UN General Assembly by unanimous vote, calling for implementation of a dramatically different, more “holistic” understanding of economic development. It specifically rejected the GDP-based approach and called for the creation and use of an alternative set of indicators that would more accurately measure human well-being.



Some things that have made me hopeful recently:

“The Seed Underground”, among the many quiet revolutionaries who are saving our food heritage.

Finland's educational system, which is consistently at the very top of global educational rankings,  with teachers who are highly trained and very well-paid, students who are given little homework and not tested until their teens, and no private schools.   http://www.edimprovement.org/2013/04/what-makes-finlands-education-system-so-successful/

The synthesis of three decades of research that develops a comprehensive evolutionary theory of human cooperation (and not competition!).
http://www.yesmagazine.org/issues/how-cooperatives-are-driving-the-new-economy/survival-of-the-nicest-the-other-theory-of-evolution

The Two Row Wampum canoe trip, now going on, to honor the 400th anniversary of the first treaty between Native Americans and Europeans, with Haudenosaunee and other Native People paddling  side-by-side with allies and supporters down the Hudson River in two equal, but separate rows.  http://honorthetworow.org/learn-more/history/



New:  posts on other people's blogs:
http://www.classism.org/children-mass-culture 

More resources:
NEW:  Check out my friend Daniel Hunter's new book, a narrative of direct action campaigning:  Strategy & Soul: A Campaigner's Tale of Fighting Billionaires, Corrupt Officials, and Philadelphia Casinos:  www.strategyandsoul.org

Muscle Building for Peace and Justice; a Non-Violent Workout Routine for the 21st Century--an integration of much of my experience and thinking over the years:  doingdemocracy.com/MB4PnJ02.htm

faitheconomyecology.wordpress.com, a website that I've contributed to often (check the archives)

www.ourchildrenourselves.org, a home for all the parenting
writing I've done over the past 20 years.

www.startguide.org. START: a way to study and work together with
others to create a better world.

For earlier columns, go to www.pamelascolumn.blogspot.com.

My favorite magazine:  YES! Magazine reframes the biggest problems of our time in terms of their solutions. Online and in print, they outline a path forward with in-depth analysis, tools for citizen engagement, and stories about real people working for a better world:  www.yesmagazine.org.

Scapegoating and blame (6/13)

Dear all,
    Well, we had a lovely wedding.  There is something about a community gathering around, with each person offering their strand to weave a strong container to hold a couple that I find deeply hopeful and reassuring.
    And our region is caught in a weather cycle that brings hot, humid days, and a strong late afternoon thunderstorm, day in and day out, with no end in sight.  It feels like we're in the tropics.  My short-term response is to enjoy the storms and get up early enough to garden in the beauty and cool of early morning.  The longer-term response is less clear, but I know it will require working together in hope and faith, something I would wish for us in any case.
Love,
Pamela



Scapegoating and blame

We started with the topic of scapegoating, as it is seen in the treatment of Jews.  I have some familiarity with this dynamic:  for centuries in the West, Jews—an easily identifiable minority with a strong cultural bent toward learning—have been used by those in power as their up-front agents, especially as money lenders and bankers.  When the economic or political situation sours, their vulnerable minority status allows them to be named and targeted as the problem, providing an outlet for the pent-up anger and frustration of the populace, while shielding those with real power. 

We have created an “other” to whom blame can be assigned; punishment has been meted out; the problem has been contained; and life for the rest of us can go on.  While the Holocaust was perhaps the most calculated and certainly the most horrendous example of this type of scapegoating, the examples are legion, and the impulse to blame the Jews has burrowed deep, if often unconscious, into our common psyche.

I hadn’t done much more systematic thinking about this dynamic, but a friend who was a child in Germany during World War II raised the issue of Germans as scapegoats.  People who take a stand against the barbaric treatment of Jews under Hitler can easily fall into seeing the Germans as the problem.  How convenient!  If we can assign the blame for anti-semitism to the Germans, we are off the hook.  We have created an “other”, the problem has been addressed, and life for the rest of us, now rendered blameless, can go on.  In a very similar fashion, an image of Germans as the bad guys has burrowed deep.

It becomes obvious that the same dynamic is at work around racism.  Those of us who live in the North in the United States can be easily seduced into a belief that true racism resides in the South.  Having created an “other” and assigned the blame, we are off the hook about racism, and can bask happily in our more evolved goodness.

Clearly scapegoating has many uses.  It channels dissatisfaction away from the real issues, thus supporting the status quo and obstructing change.  It provides a safe target for venting our feelings.  It helps us avoid painful truths by freeing us from the responsibility of considering our part in the situation.  We can use it to jack up our sense of our own goodness.

As we saw all the overlap between scapegoating and blame, the conversation got more personal.  Could we survive without blame? How often do we assign blame in a situation of disagreement or conflict, and see that as an adequate response?  What if we actually had to do something?  Are we willing to confront our part in the situation, face our complicity, and decide to be different?  Could we find a way to do that without blaming ourselves?

The challenge is full of opportunities.  If blame is not an option, then situations just have to be faced for what they are, which allows for ways forward to be found. If no one is to blame—neither me nor, most commonly, my partner—then no one can be consigned to the status of “other” and the task is simply to find a path out of this less-than-ideal situation.  Even when I feel that the other person is totally in the wrong, if I can vent without targeting and take the lead in finding a blame-free way forward, I’m the one who gets to grow.

Then the conversation broadened back out—way out.  “Maybe”, said one young women, “this is why I haven’t found a way to be involved in social change.  It seems like it’s all about finding bad guys and pointing fingers.”  Ultimately, it won’t help to blame the bad guys either—not even the ones who are wielding the real power.  They need to take responsibility and change, but scapegoating and blame are ultimately the tools of the insecure.  An infinitely more powerful approach mirrors the way a loving parent sets a limit with a small child.  “I’m not going to let you do that, sweetie.”  There’s no blame—just compassion for the person hidden behind that bad behavior, and great confidence that things can be different.

I think we all left with our minds atingle.  I certainly went away newly excited about the possibilities of a world without blame.




Dare to imagine:  A new economy is possible!

What about a maximum wage?

The moral imperative for a minimum wage is clear. But what about a maximum wage?  It’s not hard to make the case that something needs to be done.  Back in 1965, US CEOs in major companies earned 24 times more than the average (not minimum wage) worker. A typical American CEO now makes 380 times more than the average worker.

Around the world, change is in the wind.  An Egyptian ruling that a maximum wage in the public and government sectors be no more than 35 times the minimum wage has been in force since January 2012.  France’s president last summer promised to cap the salary of company leaders at 20 times that of their lowest-paid worker.  In February, new code amendments of the German Corporate Governance Commission, which all German companies follow, were released, including a mandate that all publicly-traded firms place a cap on executive compensation. While the specific executive pay maximum is left up to each corporation, the Commission made it clear that current pay levels have soared too high.  Perhaps the time has come in the US to talk about a maximum wage as well.

http://toomuchonline.org/the-scruffy-and-stuffy-agree-cap-ceo-pay/
http://www.yesmagazine.org/new-economy/should-there-be-a-maximum-wage?utm_source=ytw20130628&utm_medium=email




Some things that have made me hopeful recently:

The practice in Finland of prorating traffic fines according to the net wealth of the driver.

The growing movement in Philadelphia of community gardens, urban food initiatives, and vacant lot protection that brings agriculture, justice, health and nutrition, community organizing and labor together in exciting new ways.

The consistency with which polling reveals voters who demonstrate more generosity, compassion and open-mindedness than the politicians who represent them.

The rooftop greenhouse project, Gotham Greens, which has partnered with Whole Foods to build the nation's first commercial-scale rooftop greenhouse for growing year-round local produce atop a food store in Brooklyn beginning this fall.




New:  posts on other people's blogs:
http://www.afsc.org/friends/claiming-all-our-children#comment-891442132 

More resources:
NEW:  Check out my friend Daniel Hunter's new book, a narrative of direct action campaigning:  Strategy & Soul: A Campaigner's Tale of Fighting Billionaires, Corrupt Officials, and Philadelphia Casinos:  www.strategyandsoul.org

Muscle Building for Peace and Justice; a Non-Violent Workout Routine for the 21st Century--an integration of much of my experience and thinking over the years:  doingdemocracy.com/MB4PnJ02.htm

faitheconomyecology.wordpress.com, a website that I've contributed to often (check the archives)

www.ourchildrenourselves.org, a home for all the parenting
writing I've done over the past 20 years.

www.startguide.org. START: a way to study and work together with
others to create a better world.

For earlier columns, go to www.pamelascolumn.blogspot.com.

My favorite magazine:  YES! Magazine reframes the biggest problems of our time in terms of their solutions. Online and in print, they outline a path forward with in-depth analysis, tools for citizen engagement, and stories about real people working for a better world:  www.yesmagazine.org. 

Extractive or generative? (5/13)

Dear all,
    As we settle into an intensive family time around our older son Tim's upcoming wedding, I'm newly grateful for the deep connections I have with that core of loved ones, and all the circles of caring that spread out around it.  A wish for myself is to give those connections their true value, and not be confused by a culture that values work and production so much higher. 
    I've loved putting this column together--I hope some part of it releases new energy in you.
Love,
Pamela


Extractive or generative?

When people talk about our economic system, the traditional language is about free markets, free enterprise, free trade, the invisible hand, the profit motive, supply and demand.  Critics use different—and often stronger—language: runaway capitalism, profiteering, unbridled greed, systemic inequality, corporate control.  But until recently, I’d never heard our economy characterized as “extractive”, and that term has gotten me thinking. 

There’s something about it that rings very true.  We pride ourselves on the amount of minerals and fossil fuels that we can extract from beneath the earths’ crust.  We extract maximum value from the topsoil and the forests and the oceans.  Employers typically have a goal of extracting ever more work from their employees.  Financial institutions prosper when they extract maximum profit from every transaction—ATM withdrawals, credit card charges, mortgage rates, currency exchange interactions, and things most of us don’t even understand, like credit swaps, hedges and derivatives. The goal in each case is maximum extraction for maximum profit.  The losers, clearly, are ordinary people, the earth, and other living things.

The alternative could be characterized as a “generative” economy.  I looked this word up to make sure I knew what it meant:  “having the power or function of generating, originating, producing, creating”.  Where there wasn’t anything before, there is now something new.

Generative.  My mind goes immediately to the soil.  I was picking lettuce not long ago, getting ready to make a lunch for work, and noticed a little dirt at the base of a leaf.  I rubbed it off, but didn’t even bother to wash it.  After all, that was dirt that had been created in my compost pile, and I knew all the good ingredients that had gone into it.  I love generating soil for my garden.  There is some necessary extraction of nutrients from the soil as the plants grow, but with compost continually added, it just keeps getting richer and richer.  Overall, my little agricultural system is far more generative than extractive.

There are many other places in our lives where this distinction might apply. I think of extracting productivity from those who work under us, as opposed to generating loyalty and trust.  I think of extracting obedience from children, as opposed to generating a spirit of mutual cooperation.  I think of extracting the benefits of a nice neighborhood or a well-functioning religious congregation for oneself, as opposed to putting energy into generating benefits for others. I think of extracting entertainment from an outside source as opposed to generating fun for oneself and others.  I think of extracting the maximum value out of any exchange, as opposed to focusing on the opportunity it brings to generate new possibilities or relationships.

I’m deeply committed to building the power and the will to challenge our extractive economy, from curbing fossil fuel extraction to taming multinational corporations to taxing speculative financial transactions that maximize profit without increasing our community well-being.  I’m also committed to supporting new economic institutions that help build up a generative economy—coops of all kinds; credit unions; community gardens; enterprises that embrace the triple bottom line of profit, people, and planet; initiatives of the Transition movement.

As I continue to find my place in such efforts, however, I don’t have to wait.  At the same time, I can consider my own life choices.  I can notice where I am extracting as a citizen, family member, worker and consumer—and where I am generating new wealth, resources and possibilities.  As I notice, I can shift my weight toward a generative economy.



Dare to imagine:  A new economy is possible!

Two bankers who work with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) have recently proposed a bold way to deal with public debt:

One could slash private debt by 100% of GDP, boost growth, stabilize prices, and dethrone bankers all at the same time. It could be done cleanly and painlessly, by legislative command, far more quickly than anybody imagined.

The conjuring trick is to replace our system of private bank-created money -- roughly 97% of the money supply -- with state-created money. We return to the historical norm, before Charles II placed control of the money supply in private hands with the English Free Coinage Act of 1666.

Specifically, it means an assault on "fractional reserve banking". If lenders are forced to put up 100% reserve backing for deposits, they lose the exorbitant privilege of creating money out of thin air.

The nation regains sovereign control over the money supply. There are no more banks runs, and fewer boom-bust credit cycles.

More at:  http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/9623863/IMFs-epic-plan-to-conjure-away-debt-and-dethrone-bankers.html

This theory, a variant of which was proposed and almost implemented by President Roosevelt during the Depression, has many critics as well as supporters among economists.  Yet the IMF is not a radical institution, our current financial system is not working well, and it seems prudent to consider very different ways of managing our banks, our money and our debt. 




Some things that have made me hopeful recently:

The kindness of strangers in Russia, as seen through dashboard cameras. http://kottke.org/13/05/tender-moments-caught-on-russian-dash-cams.

KIVA, a web-based no-interest loan program, that allows individuals throughout the world to loan as little as $25 to other individuals who are working to rise out of poverty.  www.kiva.org

Studies showing that bees, which are experiencing devastating colony collapse, often fare better in the modern urban environment than their rural counterparts, partly because the urban polyculture is healthier than vast agricultural monocultures.  http://www.flyingkitemedia.com/features/germantownbeekeeping040213.aspx

The public school system in Union City NJ, an overwhelmingly Latino immigrant and poor community, where commitment to shared effort, common-sense solutions and an emphasis on high quality pre-kindergarten programs has created student achievement scores that approximate the statewide average, and a high school graduation rate of 89.5%, about 10 percentage points higher than the national average.  http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/10/opinion/sunday/the-secret-to-fixing-bad-schools.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0



New:  posts on other people's blogs:
http://www.afsc.org/friends/claiming-all-our-children#comment-891442132 

More resources:
NEW:  Check out my friend Daniel Hunter's new book, a narrative of direct action campaigning:  Strategy & Soul: A Campaigner's Tale of Fighting Billionaires, Corrupt Officials, and Philadelphia Casinos:  www.strategyandsoul.org

Muscle Building for Peace and Justice; a Non-Violent Workout Routine for the 21st Century--an integration of much of my experience and thinking over the years:  doingdemocracy.com/MB4PnJ02.htm

faitheconomyecology.wordpress.com, a website that I've contributed to often (check the archives)

www.ourchildrenourselves.org, a home for all the parenting
writing I've done over the past 20 years.

www.startguide.org. START: a way to study and work together with
others to create a better world.

For earlier columns, go to www.pamelascolumn.blogspot.com.

My favorite magazine:  YES! Magazine reframes the biggest problems of our time in terms of their solutions. Online and in print, they outline a path forward with in-depth analysis, tools for citizen engagement, and stories about real people working for a better world:  www.yesmagazine.org.   

Ownership and Repair (4/13

Dear all,
    Even with so many hard and worrisome things in the world, there is much I find to be thankful for.  April is one of my favorite months, and it couldn't be more lovely.  All is well with our family, and an unexpected bout of sickness is giving me time to catch up and be in touch.
    This month, my offering is a revelation about ownership and repair, a spring love poem, a tiny digestible bit of economics, and, as always, some things that have made my hopeful.  I hope you find it nourishing.
Love,
Pamela


Ownership and repair

I have been puzzled over the years by how tenacious I get in mending torn and broken possessions.  Sometimes it seems ridiculous.  Why not, for goodness sake, just throw them out and get something that will work?

It has occurred to me that the issue is one of relationship and service.  When I buy something new, it serves me.  I am in the relationship of master or mistress to that possession.  I have it at will.  I have placed some value on the service it can provide me, and expect it to serve me well.  If it ceases to play the role I expect of it, however, there is no reason not to discard it and replace it with something that does.

Once I start repairing, however, there is a relational shift.  Now that my time and skill have gone into making that thing whole again, the relationship is more one of peers.  It serves me, and I serve it to the best of my repairing ability.  Sometimes it doesn’t do as well as I would wish, and sometimes my repairs are wholly inadequate—and I am the one found wanting.

While I have many stories of this dynamic that are longer and more complex, the brown sweater provides a simple example.  Relatively new (to me) it has been a serviceable, if undistinguished, addition to my wardrobe.  When I noticed a seam that was coming undone, I took a few minutes to make a neat repair, glad for the skill that made the task so easy. Later it was more seams, a small hole in the back, and a missing button.  This repair took a little more time, and more ingenuity.  As I studied it for anything I might have missed, I felt a new sense of connection.  This sweater had a new lease on life because of my care, and I cared for it more as a result.

As I mend more, I care more. The challenge then becomes when to acknowledge that something I have cared about has come to the end of its useful life, to find a way to dispose of it fittingly, and to mourn its loss.  The acquisition of a replacement is bittersweet, and brings with it all the weight of a new relationship.

But I have no regrets.  I would rather have all the responsibilities of a give and take relationship, where I sometimes do well and sometimes fall short, than be in the role of master, surrounded by servant/slave possessions that exist at my pleasure, to be discarded at the first sign of frailty or imperfection.  Sometimes, I have to admit, it can feel a bit like running a nursing home, and letting one of them go can bring some relief.  There are certainly advantages to having something new that works to perfection.  But I’m still glad to have the skills to prolong so many good and useful lives, and I would never want to give up that sense of connection, and all that opportunity to care.



Love poem lapse

The trolley is stopped
stuck behind a trash truck, likely—
I don’t mind.
I’m gazing out the window
composing a love poem
to the sycamore outside.

I love these great trees that line our streets,
know the texture of their bark
the shape their branches take
just how their fingers meet the sky
the seed balls scattered, nature’s quiet jewels,
throughout their crown.

I love these trees in winter, and I
know how they will greet the spring
with tiny folded leaves of April green.
and shade our summer days.

I give myself a mental shake.
This trolley’s really stuck—
no one’s going anywhere.
I should be working,
making use of this delay.
I pull out the article I need to read,
settle into productivity--
then give myself another shake.

What could be a better use of time
this busy city day
than soaking in the beauty of our world,
noticing my love for that great sycamore
etching it deep into my heart?




Dare to imagine:  A new economy is possible!
Economic cooperatives

    The Mondragón Cooperative, in the Basque Country in northern Spain, is one of the oldest and most successful examples of economic cooperatives.  Begun in 1956, the Mondragón co-ops have transformed a depressed area into one of the most productive in Europe with a high standard of living and an egalitarian way of life. What started with a handful of workers making simple paraffin cookers and heaters, now consists of over 82,000 people in an integrated group of some 258 cooperatively-owned businesses, subsidiaries, and affiliated organisations, with total sales in 2011 of 14 € billion. These co-ops produce computer chips, high tech industrial machinery, household appliances, and many other products. They are owned and managed by their workers. Seeing the achievements of the Mondragón helps to overcome the idea—widespread in North America—that worker run cooperatives can exist only on the economic fringe.
        Shift Change, a documentary film by veteran award-winning filmmakers Melissa Young and Mark Dworkin, tells the little known stories of employee-owned businesses, including the Mondragón Cooperative, that compete successfully in today’s economy while providing secure, dignified jobs in democratic workplaces:  http://shiftchange.org/video-clips/




Some things that have made me hopeful recently:

An Israeli man who posted a photo of himself and his daughter on Facebook with the message, "Iranians... we love you", starting an avalanche of love letters between "enemy" nations.  Israel Loves Iran: The Facebook Campaign Launches Love Avalanche

All the hundreds of peacemakers on the ground who helped keep the Kenyan elections from spiraling into the violence that everyone feared.

The 59,440 people who have pledged to resist the Keystone XL pipeline that would encourage the extraction of incredibly polluting and climate-warming Alberta tar sands oil, and carry it across the American plains.  (http://act.credoaction.com/sign/kxl_pledge/?rc=homepage)

Ron Finley, who plants vegetable gardens in South Central Los Angeles--in abandoned lots, traffic medians, along the curbs--to offer some alternative in a community where "the drive-thrus are killing more people than the drive-bys" (from his Ted Talk on "gangster gardeners":  http://www.ted.com/talks/ron_finley_a_guerilla_gardener_in_south_central_la.html)
More resources:

NEW:  Check out my friend Daniel Hunter's new book, a narrative of direct action campaigning:  Strategy & Soul: A Campaigner's Tale of Fighting Billionaires, Corrupt Officials, and Philadelphia Casinos:  www.strategyandsoul.org
Muscle Building for Peace and Justice; a Non-Violent Workout Routine for the 21st Century--an integration of much of my experience and thinking over the years:  doingdemocracy.com/MB4PnJ02.htm (or just google the title)

faitheconomyecology.wordpress.com, a website that I've contributed to often (check the archives)

www.ourchildrenourselves.org, a home for all the parenting
writing I've done over the past 20 years.

www.startguide.org. START: a way to study and work together with
others to create a better world.

For earlier columns, go to www.pamelascolumn.blogspot.com.

My favorite magazine:  YES! Magazine reframes the biggest problems of our time in terms of their solutions. Online and in print, they outline a path forward with in-depth analysis, tools for citizen engagement, and stories about real people working for a better world:  www.yesmagazine.org.