Hey Harlem dudes, even the young people
realize that the time comes to grow up.
Well, from the discussion today, from the lunch
discussion, it became very clear that what you had said two days
ago, about the nixing of the youth movement, and the opportunity
for the folks who used to consider themselves part of the youth
movement, the opportunity we now have to become a force to be
reckoned with, in this country, but also across the planet. What
was discussed today, was the perfect complement to that, because
it has never been more clear that -- yes, we're in discussion
with important people, blah, blah, blah. The fact of the matter
is, they're in discussion with important people, because they're
in discussion with us, to the degree that we take ourselves that
seriously. And I think that one's importance is really only
defined to the degree to which they want to understand the
reality that we're in, 'cause it's not very good, and the few
opportunities we have take a helluva lot of courage and
imagination, and playfulness, but seriousness at the same time.
So this abolition of the youth movement really shouldn't
come as a great surprise to anybody: If you're serious about
what you're doing every day, you're serious about what you're
organizing around, it kind of strikes you as, "Oh, yeah! Right,
of course!" We would be in this position now, to be
mass-educating governments and people around the planet on what
it means to have a human economy, and people shouldn't think of
themselves as anything less than that.
Showing posts with label human economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label human economy. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)