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This museletter can now be found in blog format. Visit the ACTIVEenergy BLOG and join the conversation. The Aspen Ideas Festival II – The Good Guys In my last museletter, I quoted speakers on the dark side of the Ideas Festival spectrum. I saved the brighter side for this chapter. Two things gave me hope: a notable absence of normally omnipresent American Hubris and Heroism – there was an abundant crop of bold people willing to speak the obvious but previously unspeakable truth, and Social Entrepreneurs. The people who impressed most were the king of philanthrocapitalism, a truly remarkable Social Entrepreneur who became a #1 New York Times best selling author, a pioneering educator, and a way-out-front journalist. All four are innovators, fascinating people plowing new ground for good. Here is my hero list: Bill Gates – Seemed such a natural easy-to-talk-to person in an interview with Walter Issacson. Linda said, “Look, he doesn’t even comb his hair.” Gates has a remarkable gift for getting to the very heart of multiple initiatives and driving relentlessly toward action solutions with measurable results. That is the difference between a policy wonk and an entrepreneur. He is playing with his own chips. Gates invented Microsoft from scratch and he is re-inventing philanthropy from scratch. Here is what I heard Gates say as he outlined how the U.S. could still lead in the world (paraphrased):
Gates was followed by a perfect example of his principles. Geoffrey Canada has been President and CEO of Harlem’s Children Zone for twenty years. His project covers one hundred blocks in Harlem and aims to serve more than 10,000 children with a comprehensive range of services by 2011. His basic idea is even simpler than Gates’: “No child will fail.” He will not give up on students. Canada instantly gives up on (fires) teachers who blame the kids’ domestic and economic circumstances for failure. Another way of saying what he does is “whatever it takes.” Canada is on a bunch of educational and advisory boards. 60 Minutes did a story not long ago.
The night Linda and I went to a packed hotel ballroom to hear Greg speak, he asked how many people had read his best seller, Three Cups Of Tea David Brooks, my favorite NYT columnist, did a very brave thing. He said in the beginning it might be a total failure because people never read talks at the Aspen Ideas Festival. Essentially a political columnist, Brooks has lately come to the conclusion that we are not primarily a product of our conscious decision making. Ninety percent of communication is not verbal. Love and attachment make a colossal difference. He did this by way of reading a touching story. Everybody in the audience understood that Brooks was going into a highly personal area that wasn’t often spoken of at the Ideas Festival. It was a brave thing for a columnist to do. Brooks received a standing ovation. He went for the heart and he succeeded.
A Truly Astonishing Quote from the Wall Street Journal: Apparently I am not the only one to be concerned about America’s continuing fiscal crisis. In my cable TV days, I felt the most brilliant Cable TV operator was John Malone. He was always three steps ahead of events. Here is what John Malone said at the end of an interview with Wall Street Journal (July 12, 2010, page B8). WSJ: What are the biggest risks for Liberty (his company) right now? Malone: I think the biggest concern I have for the next year or two would be … the macro conditions. … Is America going to make it? … It is pretty hard, if the country doesn’t make it, do any of us make it? WSJ: What are you doing to protect against the weak American economy? Malone: Well, my wife, who is very concerned about these things, moved all her personal cash to Australia and Canada. She wants to have a place to go if things blow up here. … We have a retreat that's right on the Quebec border. We own 18 miles on the border, so we can cross. Anytime we want to we can get away. It would probably be illegal but we could go. Actually our snowmobile trail goes right on the border.” Personal Footnote: To my Ideas Festival I Chapter. I vividly remember a dinner I had during the 1990’s with Peter Drucker. He said, “What we had in the 30’s was a healthy society sitting on a sick economy. What we have now is a sick society sitting on a healthy economy (the 90’s). My question now: “What do you do when you have a sick society sitting on a sick economy?” Oh, how I miss Peter’s wisdom in these turbulent times.
So What about You?
Feedback As always, I welcome your thoughts. You can e-mail me personally at bob.buford@ACTIVEenergy.net, |
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