Money is Time

The new movie Time has a pretty interesting concept.  I haven’t seen the movie so I’m making some assumptions from what I can glean from the trailer.  Anyway, it sounds like you spend minutes for whatever you want to buy.  Minutes off of your life.  “8 minutes for a cup of coffee!”  But apparently if you are rich you can somehow buy more minutes.

This brings up some interesting thoughts. For example, if everything that we did and everything we bought cost us minutes, would we choose more wisely?  Would we treat our time more like a commodity? Would I be sitting here watching a movie I’ve seen 4 times?  Maybe we would all be better off if we thought this way.  How many people would buy a snuggie for 30 minutes of our life or better yet a gun for 96 hours?  How many of us would sit around and spend 30 minutes watching Jersey Shore if it cost the same as a case of beer?  I think decisions would be a lot harder to make. That is until our minutes became as meaningless to us as our money has.

Consider this:  How much more upset would we be if we were paying 350 minutes for a gallon of gas and ExxonMobil was earning billions of minutes every quarter – virtually ensuring themselves near eternal life?  How many more people would be Occupying Wall Street if our government bailed out the banks to the tune of a couple thousand years – the very banks who manipulated our minutes to their own benefit?

Hope this post was worth the Starbucks Mochachino that it cost you to read it!

Google+

You can now follow me on Google+ at this link.  Basically I thought it was a better forum for photography and several photography friends are using it.  Facebook has jumped the shark in my opinion or possibly boned the fish.  Anyway, hopefully the Google+ site will help motivate me to post more pictures.  Whatever I post there I will also post here and vice versa.

Progress Report

Obviously an F.  Did anyone else happen through the time warp that went straight from October 2nd to today?  Life has got to slow down or else I’m going to have to start living in the moment more!

 

Who is the George Washington of 2011?

As the Occupy Wall Street Movement continues, the local paper included a very interesting article about the Movement coming to Harrisburg, PA.  For those of you unaware of Occupy Wall Street, they are a loosely affiliated group whose one general principal is that  “We are the 99% that will no longer tolerate the greed and corruption of the 1%.” The gist is that the money controls the politicians and the politicians control the money. And about 99% of us are forgotten about.  I’m with you brother.  It is time for a revolution.  Actually, in my opinion, a total revolution is the only thing that could possibly change the current situation.  Didn’t anyone see “Wall Street:  Money Talks”?  Not a great movie but scarier than Amityville Horror.  An account for those of us who don’t read the Wall Street Journal about how the banks failed.  How rich people got richer by leveraging the welfare of the 99% and how the government probably knew and assisted.  I know its fiction but I don’t think it is far off the mark.

The biggest issue for the proliferation of this movement appears to be that they have no leader.  This isn’t were I am looking for a George Washington.  This is where I am looking for a Sam Adams. No, not a cold beer but a grassroots guy to topple the applecart.  For those of you who aren’t history buffs (and I count myself among you).  Sam Adams at times was maligned for his tactics prior to the Revolutionary War.  He was more apt to spread propaganda and promote mob violence – remember the real Tea Party – than negotiate with his adversaries. I read part of that in the paper and did a little more research.  A funny connection here is that Sam Adams’ original hatred of the English came because of the power of English banks.

Anyway, Adams and some of his Colonial buddies, in order to further the movement, solicited the assistance of George Washington.  What this movement needs is a George Washington.  Someone with stature; someone who can consolidate the ideas and make a statement.  Anarchy will get peoples minds working but it won’t get us to the next step. As Seth Godin has said, we have to Ship It.  If we ship from 75 different places, the final product is going to need put together.  What this movement needs is a single shipment.  Maybe a Continental Congress of sorts.  Everyone bring their ideas together and allow them to coalesce into one list of demands.  And then a shipper.  A George Washington!

If this is going to be the United States’ version of the Arab Spring or the Spanish 15-M movement or maybe the 21st Century version of the “real” Tea Party, it needs a George Washington. Who?  I don’t know but I am sure that if the pressure on Wall Street is kept up, the right leader will arise.

Q and A

Two things came across my desk today that prompted this post.  The first was an article by Seth Godin dealing with the economy entitled “The Forever Recession (and the coming revolution)”.  In the article Mr. Godin talks about how the current recession will probably never end until we begin to think differently about how the world has changed and where we need to be heading.  Excellent article by a forward thinker.  For those of you who don’t know Seth Godin’s work, he is definitely a guy who questions the status quo and challenges us to think differently.  In my opinion, whether he is right or whether he is wrong is not as important as the fact that he takes an angle that we haven’t thought of yet and makes us think.  He somehow forces us down a narrow road that opens up into some mass of discovery.  He causes us to question.

Second, I asked a teacher about a procedure she used when questioning her students.  She asked them to take a second and think about what she asked, then answer it to themselves to see if it made sense, and then answer out loud.  This led to a discussion about quality questioning and quality responding.  The idea comes from the book Quality Questioning:  Research-based Practice to Engage Ever Learner by Walsh and Sattes.  In the excerpt from this book that I received, the authors note that not only is a quality question necessary but also it is important to know how to process the question in order to respond correctly.

My Challenge back to you then is to find the questions in “The Forever Recession,” make sure that you have really heard what Godin is asking, take those questions and prepare to respond.  Based on his article, I’m guessing that he is not waiting for you to raise your hand, I’m guessing that you better not spend too much time worrying about whether this will be on the test, I’m thinking that sometimes our response is an action. And like good teachers and good students it is our responsibility to share with our neighbor, our colleagues, our friends.

Progress Report – 9/29

Blogged!  And finally a poem.  Bonus:  The idea came to me while running.

One thing I learned from my personality inventory is that I ten to avoid confrontational situations.  Hoping that they will eventually go away.  Today I decided to just take the bull by the horns and it actually was less confrontational than I imagined.  A-

Times Change

There was a time

When that was home

And this just a house

Far away

Unfamiliar

Overwhelming

There was a time

When this was difficult

And that was simple

Straightforward

Comfortable

Uncomplicated

Then the time came

When the pendulum swung

To a house and a home

Far away but simple

Difficult but rewarding

Comfortable and complicated