'Dear Humanity, We Have a Systems Problem': New Project Aims to Promote Deep Solutions
'Dear Humanity, We Have a Systems Problem': New Project Aims to Promote Deep Solutions, Radical Transformation'It's time to talk about alternatives,' says team of th"It's time to talk about what's next."
"It is time for Americans to think boldly about ... what it will take to move our country to a very different place, one where outcomes that are truly sustainable, equitable, and democratic are commonplace."
Those are the words of academic and author Gar Alperovitz, founder of the Democracy Collaborative, whoalongside veteran environmentalist Gus Speththis week launched a new initiative called the "Next Systems Project" which seeks to address the interrelated threats of financial inequality, planetary climate disruption, and money-saturated democracies by advocating for deep, heretofore radical transformations of the current systems that govern the world's economies, energy systems, and political institutions.
According to the project's website, the effort is a response to a tangible and widespread "hunger for a new way forward" capable of addressing various social problems by injecting "the central idea of system change" into the public discourse. The goal of the projectdescribed as an ambitious multi-year initiativewould be to formulate, refine, and publicize "comprehensive alternative political-economic system models" that would, in practice, prove that achieving "superior social, economic and ecological outcomes" is not just desirable, but possible.
"By defining issues systemically," the project organizers explain, "we believe we can begin to move the political conversation beyond current limits with the aim of catalyzing a substantive debate about the need for a radically different system and how we might go about its construction. Despite the scale of the difficulties, a cautious and paradoxical optimism is warranted. There are real alternatives. Arising from the unforgiving logic of dead ends, the steadily building array of promising new proposals and alternative institutions and experiments, together with an explosion of ideas and new activism, offer a powerful basis for hope."
The mission statement of the projectarticulated in a short document titled It's Time to Face the Depth of the Systemic Crisis We Confront (pdf)has been endorsed by an impressive list of more than 350 contemporary journalists, activists, academics, and thought leaders from various disciplines who all agree the current political and economic system is serving the interests of "corporate profits, the growth of GDP, and the projection of national power" while ignoring the needs and wellbeing of people, communities, ecosystems and the planet as a whole.
The statement addresses the dire crisis that now confronts humanity, but also marks the important element of optimism which undergirds the project. It reads, in part:
The good news is that the inability of traditional politics and policies to address fundamental challenges has fueled an extraordinary amount of experimentation in communities across the United Statesand around the world. It has also generated an increasing number of sophisticated and thoughtful proposals for transformative change. Together these developments suggest that it is possible to build a new and better America beyond the failed systems of the past and present. [...]
It is time for Americans to think boldly about what is required to deal with the systemic difficulties facing the United States. It is time to explore genuine alternatives and new models"the next system." It is time to debate what it will take to move our country to a very different place, one where outcomes that are truly sustainable, equitable, and democratic are commonplace.
As part of the official launch, the team behind the project published a kick-off reporttitled The New System Project: New Political-Economic Possibilities for the 21st Century (pdf)which lays out the problems and the proposed set of solutions in more detail. Key goals of the project, as listed in the report, include:
To crack through the national media silence and to radically shift the national dialogue about the future away from narrow debates about policies that do not alter any significant decaying trend to awareness that what must be changed is the nature of the political-economic system itself.
To stimulate national debate about how best to conceive different possible models of a radically different system based on genuine democracy, equality, ecological sustainability, a peaceful global foreign policy, and a thorough-going culture of cooperative community based on non-violence and respect for differences of race, gender, and sexual preference.
To give publicity to the many next system models and approaches now being developed and refined in many parts of the nation and around the world.
To engage committed academics, on the one hand, and activist organizers and thinkers, on the other, in an ongoing process of close collaborative work and common development in furtherance of such work.
To help develop concrete elements that will likely be required to deal with the structural reorganization of any next system design and, at the same time, to invest in and work with others to help nurture a rising generation of young scholars who can carry the work forward over the coming decades.
Next month, as part of the project's public engagement strategy, key members and supportersincluding Alperovitz and Spethwill participate in an online webinar in order to expand the conversation about these ideas with people across the country.
According to Alperovitz and Speth, bringing people together around these ideas is one of the key aspects of the new project. As they note in an essay published on Common Dreams, "If we can roll up our sleeves and get organized and serious about really tackling the system question, about building a new system of political economy, there are grounds for optimism that deep and far-reaching change is possible."
Let the conversation begin.
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http://www.commondreams.org/news/2015/04/02/dear-humanity-we-have-systems-problem-new-project-aims-promote-deep-solutions
F4lconF16
(3,747 posts)I understand why they don't come out and say it. Glad they're at least doing this. Thank you!
druidity33
(6,555 posts)it's more about a focus on Bio-regionalism, local economies, alternative currencies, and inter-reliant communities...
K&R
brett_jv
(1,245 posts)With my Divine Right as a 'Murkan to drive my SUV to a Supermarket that's stocked to the rafters with inexpensive and attractively packaged animal meat, and every conceivable fresh fruit and vegetable, no matter the season.
I can still do all that, right, even if I sign on?
DeSwiss
(27,137 posts)''We'' are the problem. No matter how many solutions you have they are worthless unless they can be brought to fruition. And in so doing, ''existing interests are threatened.'' Those interests control our government and so therefore no solutions will be allowed that threaten them.
- This. We. Know.
K&R
Solutions are answers, and we don't even know all the questions yet.......
Enthusiast
(50,983 posts)Even the suggestion that the financial sector be reined in is met with screams of, "Radical socialism!"
"Radical socialism!"
fasttense
(17,301 posts)It is so true.
But if you look at from another way. The systems are working as they are suppose to work in a capitalist society.