Sunday, December 31, 2006


David Bornstein has done 2006's globe of over 6 billion beings a huge favour in his book: How to Change the World with a chapter title whose acronym is WWINTAT . Click map to see nominations of world's top 6 and the networks they invite civic societies to join. Click the comments to add your own nomination


This also connects his reporting of social entrepreneurs: their Olympics (1,2) and world championships sponsored by Skoll, and the http://www.changemakers.net health (and other projects) for all web


A social entrepreneur designs a simple and transparent mission for life by openly propagating at least one WWINTAT which all her or his alumni embody -literally to plant in every society from the assumption that there may be no awareness of it at time of start up the entrepreneurial revolution is conceived.

Can you help picture a stakeholder triangle that the truth systemisation of social entrepreneurship governs? The simplest pic we have yet found how to debate around appears at http://clubofdelhi.blogspot.com ; appropriate since India seems to be the number 1 inspiration of souls who believe in social entrepreneur revolutions (aka Economics for Peoples if you practice that school founded in the 1840s, by James Wilson - a Scot who died in Calcutta http://er100.blogspot.com http://clubofcalcutta.blogspot.com )

This suggests (if I am correctly interpreting both Bill Drayton today's most individually connected person of social entrepreneurship and Oded Grajew today's most civic-society nets connecting person) that communal understanding of WWINTAT can also facilitate the clustering of mosaics of social entrepreneur leaders who need to know each other at interpersonal project franchise levels, and whose alumni networks need to team with each other if we want any breakthrough project franchise that helps with one society's most desperate need to open source across all matching societies interlocally before top-down powers can tax the human flows of energy generated when peoples networks truly serve each other. http://project30000.blogspot.com

C.M.Macrae.72@cantab.net
N.A.Macrae.42@cantab.net
http://asinworld.blogspot.com

Thursday, July 07, 2005

The Day The World was Blown Apart. http://observer.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,,1789737,00.html By John Tulloch: Everyone injured or bereaved by the 7/7 explosions will have had the phrase running around their own or their comforters' thoughts: 'The wrong place at the wrong time for me/for my loved one'. It is true, but also a cliche and not much to work back from, because it underplays our freedom to make everyday decisions about where we are and when. We who experienced the explosions had made active choices to be doing what we were doing at the time of the terrorist attacks. We were also subject to a wide range of factors determining why we were there and what happened to us. Some of those contexts are very cruel. However, not all of them were, and to forget the loving ones, the ties of friendship and professionalism, the loyalties, preoccupations, obsessions and coincidences that put us in 'the wrong place at the wrong time' is to do more of the terrorists' work for them.
So why was I at the wrong place at the wrong time?

For our lost friend : Colin Morley -social entrepreneur webs & networks he supported included : sustainability & empowerment, Be The Change (1,2), Simpol, Open Space (1,2)