compared2what? » Mon Jun 24, 2013 5:14 pm wrote:Searcher08 » Mon Jun 24, 2013 3:48 pm wrote:American Dream » Mon Jun 24, 2013 6:21 pm wrote: "Wouldn't it be powerful if all the spiritual/New Age people who are now apolitical and/or liberal got more serious, started questioning their own views of the world and got more involved with radical, grassroots movements for deep social change"...
The apolitical strand
A) What about expanding this statement to be three strands?
Wouldn't it be powerful if all the spiritual/New Age people who are now apolitical
got more oriented to external action,
started questioning their own and others views of the world and
got more involved with radical, grassroots movements for deep social change
The liberal / progressive strand
B) Wouldn't it be powerful if all the spiritual/New Age people who are now liberal / progressive got more serious, started questioning their own views of the world and got more involved with radical, grassroots movements for deep social change
The conservative (*) strand
C) Wouldn't it be powerful if all the spiritual/New Age people who are now conservative got more serious, started questioning their own views of the world and got more involved with radical, grassroots movements for deep social change
What these descriptions are lacking, which AD's description had in abundance - is rich sensory detail.
Due to time, I'll just look at A
Wouldn't it be powerful if all the spiritual/New Age people who are now apolitical
got more oriented to external action,
started questioning their own and others views of the world and
got more involved with radical, grassroots movements
for deep social change
Next Iteration, (incorporating AD's Sensory-Rich description and my expansion ideas)
Wouldn't it be powerful if all the spiritual/New Age people who are now apolitical
got more oriented to making do-it-yourself art, raising babies, distributing free food to all who need, playing music in the park, building community gardens- and meditating in them!, building up squats, standiing in solidarity with the most poor and oppressed;
started questioning their own and others views of the world through learning both creative and design thinking and critical thinking skills and the skills of being a very productive and stress-free person - and got more involved with both creating and growing radical, grassroots movements for deep social change.
Personally, for a first draft, I think that looks , sounds and feels pretty rockin
It's a beautiful vision. And that you were inspired by AD's question to prove his point that way is the highest form of flattery, imo.
Strands "B)" and "C)" might maybe be better expressed if they were modeled on another question, though. Because, as stated, they read as if it was as reasonable to presume that "liberals/progressives" or "conservatives (*)" were NOT involved with radical grassroots movements for deep social change as it is for apolitical New Agers.
And it's not. So that's confusing.
It momentarily threw me a little wrt the liberals in AD's version, too. But only until I got to the word "radical," at which point it became clear that the question was implicitly pro-radical-left, which is what I understand to be AD's political orientation. So it made sense. And there being no more reason for anyone to hide that sort of thing than to spell it out every time, that took care of that.
I like the sound of your utopia. And it's infinities better than anything I could come up with. So if you start a cult any time soon, let me know. I've been feeling just about ready to take the plunge recently.
Lots to chew on here!
Just for the sake of some clarity and common language I will provide some definitions here:
LIBERALISM: a political philosophy based on belief in progress, the essential goodness of the human race, and the autonomy of the individual and standing for the protection of political and civil liberties; specifically : such a philosophy that considers government as a crucial instrument for amelioration of social inequities (as those involving race, gender, or class)
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/liberalism
Progressivism is a general political philosophy advocating or favoring gradual social, political, and economic reform through government action.[1] Modern Progressivism emerged as part of a more general response to the vast social changes brought by industrialization.
It is left of center in the political spectrum and is to be contrasted with conservatism on the right and the revolutionary left, the former generally resisting changes it advocates and the latter rejecting its gradualism.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Progressivism
The term political radicalism (or simply, in political science, radicalism) denotes political principles focused on altering social structures through revolutionary means and changing value systems in fundamental ways. Derived from the Latin radix (root), the denotation of radical has changed since its eighteenth-century coinage to comprehend the entire political spectrum—yet retains the “change at the root” connotation fundamental to revolutionary societal change. Historically, radicalism has referred exclusively to the "radical left", under the single category of far-left politics, rarely incorporating far-right politics though these may have revolutionary elements; the prominent exception is in the United States where some consider radicalism to include both political extremes of the radical left and the "radical right". In traditional labels of the spectrum of political thought, the opposite of radical on the "right" of the political spectrum is termed reactionary.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_radicalism