The Left is Seldom Right: New book challenges old Right-Left terminology in politics
Posted: September 12, 2011 Filed under: Centroids 1 CommentCanadian Free Press – This is indeed a book that suits the times with the approaching American presidential election of 2012 in which a large segment of the public may be expected to follow the same trajectory of political thinking by rejecting the ‘glamour appeals’ of the Left with its penchant for identifying itself with so called ‘progressive’ policies.
The Left is Seldom Right, Norman Berdichevsky
To all Conservative and Independent friends tired of the constant Right-Left invective in politics…..If you would like to stage an exciting event with a dynamic speaker….I believe your members will find my new book ‘The Left is Seldom Right’ challenging conventional wisdom and both novel and insightful. I would be pleased to speak about the book before your group.
- THE ANDREA SHEA KING SHOW -Right vs Left and A Troublemaker 08/23 by Andrea Shea King | Blog Talk Radio
- http://www.blogtalkradio.com/askshow/2011/08/24/the-andrea-shea-king-show
Both interviews begin about ten minutes into the program.
I argue that the political terms Left and Right, have often become stale clichés but that the Left has a vested interest in maintaining use of this terminology due to the pronounced left/liberal slant of the media, Hollywood, and many “celebrities”, artists and writers. My book also alerts the public to the imminent dangers of militant Islam and how Jihad has been tactically endorsed by both the Far Right and Far Left in the past
With best wishes,
Dr. Norman Berdichevsky
p.s. You can find my website at nberdichevsky.com. More details about my book below…
Steve Denning on Radical Management & Consumer Capitalism
Posted: September 8, 2011 Filed under: Governance Reform Leave a commentI’ve been enjoying a series of blog posts by Steve Denning about the reinvention of modern management, not least because they mirror my own thinking about Sustainable Capitalism (2.0). Although he focuses on corporations, I believe the same kind of outside-in, human-centric thinking is essential for revitalizing both politics and government.
While much of the information from his blog is presumably collected in his book Radical management | Reinventing the workplace for the 21st Century, there isn’t a good index of what I consider his key themes. To that end, I’ve collected them in outline form here.
The Death—and Reinvention—of Management
- The Death—and Reinvention—of Management: Part 1
- Reinventing Management: Part 2: Delighting the client
- Reinventing Management: Part 3: From controller to enabler
- Reinventing Management: Part 4: From bureaucracy to dynamic linking
- Reinventing Management: Part 5: From value to values
- Reinventing Management: Part 6: From command to conversation
- “Do we really have to do all five shifts at once?”
Measuring Business’s New Bottom Line: Customer Delight
Christian discussion of Radical Centrism –2009
Posted: August 14, 2011 Filed under: Centroids Leave a commentfrom the site : Jesus CreedJanuary 9, 2009
Third Way as the Radical Center
Adam Hamilton’s Seeing Gray in a World of Black and White: Thoughts on Religion, Morality, and Politics
is a perfect blog book. I would love to see a host of evangelical churches using this book for group studies and discussions. It will surely bring out how it is that many think about various topics; it will also reveal what folks think.
What Hamilton makes clear to me is that the Third Way is not the way of compromise; instead, it is the way working out a Christian view of things regardless of which “party” prefers that option. It is a refusal to be an ideologue, a refusal to say “liberal is always right” or “conservative is always right.”
Do you think the middle is expanding? Do you see a trend for those on the right to move to the middle? Is a radical center attractive to you? Both politically and theologically? Overall, what do you think of this book?
Read the rest of this entry »
Radical Centrist Politics from Pragmatic Necessity –in Israel
Posted: August 14, 2011 Filed under: News Leave a commentThere is no need, however, for Israel to wait on the PM’s panel. The process of reform can be undertaken immediately, and on a non-partisan basis. At this very moment, a viable right-left social justice bloc already exists in the Knesset. It would be composed of the major opposition parties Kadima and Labor, along with large sections of the Likud and the religious parties.
Because of their small size and multi-party system, Israel would have a much easier time forming a Radical Centrist political movement than most other countries. But who will step up and make it happen? Read the rest of this entry »
Radical Centrist Economics
Posted: August 4, 2011 Filed under: News Leave a commentFiscal Reform From the Radical Center
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/will-marshall/fiscal-reform-from-the-ra_b_769532.html
October 20, 2010
It’s crazy, I know, but imagine that U.S. political leaders after the midterm election called a truce in the partisan tong wars to work out a compromise solution to the nation’s fiscal dilemmas. The result would probably look a lot like a new fiscal reform blueprinted rawn up by two canny policy veterans, Bill Galston and Maya MacGuineas.
Americans Elect launches centrist third-party bid amid Washington dysfunction – CSMonitor.com
Posted: August 1, 2011 Filed under: News 1 CommentAmericans Elect, which is inviting the public to a virtual primary, faces daunting hurdles. But dissatisfaction with the partisan gridlock in Washington creates a favorable political climate.
Atlanta
With the dysfunction of Washington on full display as the nation inches toward defaulting on its debt, a coalition of American centrists has launched a bold gambit to nominate a third-party ticket for the 2012 presidential election.
Make Way for the Radical Center – NYTimes.com
Posted: July 25, 2011 Filed under: News 1 Commenthttp://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/24/opinion/sunday/24friedman.html?_r=1
Make Way for the Radical Center
DID I mention that I’ve signed a pledge — just like those Republican congressmen who have signed written promises to different political enforcers not to raise taxes or permit same-sex marriage? My pledge is to never vote for anyone stupid enough to sign a pledge — thereby abdicating their governing responsibilities in a period of incredibly rapid change and financial stress. Sorry, I’ve signed it. Nothing more I can do.
If this kind of idiocy by elected officials sends you into a hair-pulling rage and leaves you wishing that we had more options today than our two-party system is putting forward — for instance, a party that would have offered a grand bargain on the deficit two years ago, not on the eve of a Treasury default — not only are you not alone, but help may be on the way.
Thanks to a quiet political start-up that is now ready to show its hand, a viable, centrist, third presidential ticket, elected by an Internet convention, is going to emerge in 2012. I know it sounds gimmicky — an Internet convention — but an impressive group of frustrated Democrats, Republicans and independents, called Americans Elect, is really serious, and they have thought out this process well. In a few days, Americans Elect will formally submit the 1.6 million signatures it has gathered to get on the presidential ballot in California as part of its unfolding national effort to get on the ballots of all 50 states for 2012.
A Political Theory of the Protestant Mainline
Posted: July 22, 2011 Filed under: News Leave a commentFirst Things
Aug / Sept 2008
The Death of Protestant America: A Political Theory of the Protestant Mainline
Joseph BottumI
America was Methodist, once upon a time—Methodist, or Baptist, or Presbyterian, or Congregationalist, or Episcopalian. A little light Unitarianism on one side, a lot of stern Calvinism on the other, and the Easter Parade running right down the middle: our annual Spring epiphany, crowned in bright new bonnets.
The average American these days would have trouble recalling the dogmas that once defined all the jarring sects, but their names remain at least half alive: a kind of verbal remembrance of the nation’s religious history, a taste on the tongue of native speakers. Think, for instance, of the old Anabaptist congregations—how a residual memory of America’s social geography still lingers in the words: the Hutterites, Mennonites, and Amish, set here and there on the checkerboard of the nation’s farmland. The Quakers in their quiet meetinghouses, the Shakers in their tiny communes, and the Pentecostals, born in the Azusa Street revivals, like blooms forced in the hothouse of the inner city.
And yet, even while we may remember the names of the old denominations, we tend to forget that it all made a kind of sense, back in the day, and it came with a kind of order. The genteel Episcopalians, high on the hill, and the all-over Baptists, down by the river. Oh, and the innumerable independent Bible churches, tangled out across the prairie like brambles: Through most of the nation’s history, these endless divisions and revisions of Protestantism renounced one another and sermonized against one another. They squabbled, sneered, and fought. But they had something in common, for all that. Together they formed a vague but vast unity. Together they formed America.
Article: Citizen Legislators can End the California Crisis
Posted: July 12, 2011 Filed under: News Leave a commentSome nice thinking here, similar to some of my own ideas.
Citizen Legislators can End the California Crisis
http://foxandhoundsdaily.com/blog/john-cox/9191-citizen-legislators-can-end-california-crisis
Exclusive !!! Poltical Typology Charts
Posted: July 9, 2011 Filed under: News Leave a comment
Political Typology Project
There is much more to this than the following charts, but these are fundamental.Picture quality is less than optimal inasmuch as each visual is a literal exampleof cut and paste –with actual paper and actual cutting and pasting of labels.
For optimal viewing it is advisable to open up your e-mail window,that is, make it “taller” than usual by using the blue bar at the top of thewindow to expand its size.





