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Category: Sustainability

Podcast with Jack Soto – Native Mindsets and the Future

Wednesday, 29 April 2009 09:37 Written by Eric Garland 0 Comments

It is impossible to fix any problem while continuing to use the mindset that created that problem. This is an old saw, used to extoll the virtues of examining your assumptions.

Naturally, if you want the opposite of the Wall Street-speculator-growth-at-all-costs model, you need to talk to people who remember lots of past and have been around to see lots of future – Native Americans. I have the great honor of working with Mr. Jack Soto, director of the Washington Internship for Native Students (WINS) program at American University on issues of tribal leadership and the future. Jack’s program brings native students from around the continent to Washington to connect them with the mechanistic workings of Washington.

In this podcast, we go deep into the difference in perspective between US corporate, suburban culture and the constant rebirth going on in the native communities, what it means for their nations, and what we can learn from each other about the recreation of communities.

And we’re not diving into the typical, “Native Peoples Are More Holistic” claptrap. During the hour, we get into the deep background in complex business transactions that most tribes have, their process of constantly recreating nations and governments to suit evolving reality, casinos and their effect, Jack Abramoff (“Live and Learn“), why natives aren’t really environmentalists, and much more.

Enjoy.

Competitive Futures Podcast with Jack Soto, Washington Internship for Native Students Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

Chris Jordan: Picturing excess – great for a world printing trillions of dollars

Monday, 20 April 2009 08:02 Written by Eric Garland 0 Comments

A photographer compares statistics about American consumption with photographs to help us understand just how much, how big, or how tragic this just might be.

The talk dates from 2008, but I find it fitting for today. In my travels, I am constantly explaining to speakers of French, Spanish and Portuguese just what a “trillion” dollars means. Their language usually stops at billion, and must only proceed to thousand billion, which is instantly nonsensical. To properly understand our future, we must wrap our collective heads around our true impact.

Douglas Rushkoff on the future of value creation- why the web broke everything (but it’s a good thing)

Saturday, 18 April 2009 08:15 Written by Eric Garland 0 Comments

I am glad to see Douglas Ruskoff weigh in on our current situation. He’s a fantastic thinker, humanistic and often contrarian, the author of many books including the recent Get Back in the Box: Innovation from the Inside Out, which is about the foolishness of senseless innovation. If I read Rushkoff correctly, he sees economics as a distinctly human, connected enterprise, and the absolute opposite of where our commercial leadership has taken us.

He presents some major, major ideas:

  • The recent goal of business has been to make every company a holding company, one whose purpose is the acquisition and/or management of debt as opposed to a group of competent people who do things for other people
  • People at all levels have become more interested in the perceived value of assets (homes, shares of companies, CDOs) than the actual value that they might ever produce
  • Most of these ideas are supporting people who may not even be in the system – long-gone investors, maybe even dead guys
  • The monetary system is not about encouraging trade, but often preventing trade
  • The American Revolution came about because England forbid people from providing each other with services
  • LOCAL CURRENCIES used to be very popular and could be again
  • We were probably better off economically in the Late Middle Ages (the Black Death notwithstanding)

We need to revisit our total concept of value creation. It’s great that Rushkoff is lending a hand.

2009: The Status Quo versus The Long Emergency

Wednesday, 31 December 2008 15:15 Written by Eric Garland 0 Comments

Again, stop whatever elese you were doing, like reading things I wrote about 2009, and read Jim Kunstler’s forecasts about 2009. The author of The Long Emergency is experiencing the unenviable task of seeing dire structural change ahead, change that won’t be mollified by new gadgets, and being right about its consequences.

Some highlights:

He’s not a fan of techno-solutions. (not unlike yours truly)

The various tech industries are full of MIT-certified, high-achiever Status Quo techno-triumphalists who are convinced that electric cars or diesel-flavored algae excreta will save suburbia, the three thousand mile Caesar salad, and the theme park vacation. The environmental movement, especially at the elite levels found in places like Aspen, is full of Harvard graduates who believe that all the drive-in espresso stations in America can be run on a combination of solar and wind power. I quarrel with these people incessantly. It seems especially tragic to me that some of the brightest people I meet are bent on mounting the tragic campaign to sustain the unsustainable in one way or another.

He sees Dow 4000:

A consensus in the blogoshpere says that the stock markets will rebound strongly during the first Obama months. This is possible just on the basis of pure “animal spirits,” but the Obama Bounce will occur against a background of continued dismal business and financial news. It will appear to defy that news. By May of 2009, the stock markets will resume crashing with the ultimate destination of a Dow 4000 before the end of the year.

He believes that you’ll actually need positive cash flow to make a business run (old-fashioned, but radical!):

We’ll turn around early in 2009 and discover that we are a much poorer nation than we thought because from now on credit will be extremely hard to get for anyone for anything. The businesses that survive will have to keep going on the basis of accounts receivable…Giant enterprises requiring giant loans to get from quarter to quarter will tend to not make it. Borrowing from the future will become a practical impossibility as past bad debts from previous borrowings continue to unwind, cease performing, and get written off.

Real change. Not new technologies for old philosophies. Nobody will save the day. We’ll need to make workable solutions for many different types of people.

And still – people will need things. Goods and services will be required, perhaps just different types.

Business development will need to be on its toes! Are you ready?

Future brightspots will result from this mess

Wednesday, 24 September 2008 14:44 Written by Eric Garland 0 Comments

Here at Competitive Futures we regularly tell clients, “Just because something is a disaster doesn’t mean it will be a disaster for everyone.” History is filled with stories of leaders who perceived danger early, acted appropriately, and profited.

I’m a bit fatigued of straining about this financial mess, and naturally began to ask, “OK, what’s going to be positive out of this?” Despite the ugliness here, there will likely be many positive developments resulting from this crisis of business and governance. One example is quite close to home for me.

My father is in his 28th year running the Rutland Agway, a store dedicated to farm, home, and garden in Central Vermont. Recent economic trends have sent both farming and manufacturing to far-flung states or countries. Giant retailers like Home Depot came to take a piece of the diminishing supply of disposable income in the state. For local stores, things got pretty tight for a moment.

Fleeing jobs and rocketing fuel oil prices are putting a massive financial strain on rural households. How are they responding? By going local – planting gardens like never before. Staying at home, avoiding pricey vacations – and sprucing up the backyard with fertilizer and lawn mowers. And suddenly, times are better in the home and garden business. (On top of it, Vermonters are back to eating their own delicious local foods!)

What else could be positive about this? Think it through – there will plenty of time to think about disaster soon enough.

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About the blog

This is the official trend blog of Competitive Futures, a management consultancy that provides trend research and analysis for business and government around the world. Here, we update you on interesting trends we see as part of our work for our clients.


For managing partner Eric Garland's new author and speaker blog, please consult and bookmark http://www.ericgarland.co

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