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Progressive Values Stories: Zeus Yiamouyiannis on Innovation and Caring
Linked to groups: East Bay for Democracy, Oakland DFA Meetup, Lake Park, San Francisco for Democracy, Alameda for Democracy, California for Democracy, Courage Campaign, Take Back Red California, Capitol Area Progressives (CAP) , What are Progressive Values? Study Group, DFA-Link Organizers, Walnut Creek DFA, Blog For America, Blogs United, DFA Film Club, DFA-Marin, DFA Night School, Silicon Valley DFA, brought to you by Dean Democratic Club of Silicon Valley, Framing Committee, Florida DFA, NJ for Democracy, Democracy for Florida, Democracy for New York, Democracy for Texas, Democracy for NYC, PA for Democracy, Democracy for Washington, Sacramento For Democracy, Democracy for Illinois, Democracy for Maryland, Philly for Change, Democracy for Ohio (DFO), Democracy for America Miami-Dade (DFAM), Washington Fair Elections, Michigan Democracy for America, DFALA, DFA at Netroots Nation (formerly YearlyKos) July 17-20
Linked to campaigns: Obama for America
“Innovation is the ability to see change as an opportunity - not a threat”
In this interview Zeus Yiamouyiannis talks about how innovation is a progressive value. He also sees caring and nurture as progressive values and talks about having learned these values growing up on an organic farm and tending to the animals. On one hand, conservatives talk about their traditional values of self interest and selfishness, on the other hand, innovation, caring and nurture are some of the traditional progressive values.
Progressive Values Stories: Zeus Yiamouyiannis on Innovation and Caring
My name is Zeus Yiamouyiannis. I'm a progressive person. I'm actually a progressive at heart, who worked on the Dean campaign. Part of being a progressive is not just innovation and new ideas, and this pragmatism, fiscal responsibility, along with idealism, this ability to be creative, to believe in the goodness of the human spirit, innovate with regard to being able to collaborate. These kinds of skills tend to go beyond the typical traditions. But I think part of being a progressive is really collecting and honoring the best of both of those traditions as we go forward.
I like to tell people I'm an old-school conservative, with personal responsibility in the sense of honoring traditions, the wisdom that's gone before you -- particularly during the depression era generation -- incredible wisdom around sticking together, in terms of getting by on very little.
And I think these kinds of values help give you a good foundation. If you take the best of the different traditions, a good progressive isn't so much balancing, but integrating. They've been made the opposites, but they ought not be. But by bringing them together, and the thing that makes a progressive distinct from either a liberal or a conservative in my opinion, is their ability to take the wisdom before them, but integrate it and go forward in a new, imaginative and innovative way. That's to me what makes a progressive progressive. The founding father were progressive because they did take a lot of ancient Greek and even took Iroquois Nation principles and a variety of principles, brought them together and integrated them and used it to found these incredible innovations in democracy. The balance of powers, this sort of thing. That's what I would like to see progressives today be able to do, and I believe that's what's happening. Part of a deep wisdom, build a people-centered democracy, create innovations about how we communicate, and an emphasis on the public sphere using developing technologies.
If you're looking for personal stories, I can tell a little about my background. I grew up on a farm a little north of Columbus, Ohio. A small, organic family farm, which is not typical. I mean people in California sometimes see that, but what I learned there were values of hard work and self-sufficiency, but also how much my own being and survival depended upon nature, upon the different aspects of the farm coming together, on me doing my part.
And so it gave me a great grasp of how important the natural world was, how important it was to fit together, to be able to care. For instance, we had about 40 head of sheep, about 10 cattle, and we would raise them. And sometimes the mother would reject their lambs, just decide they didn't want to bother raising them. So we would raise them. And bringing them down to the house, putting them next to a heater, and nurturing and feeding them. And that was really important for me in terms of developing a sense of nurturing and care for others.
Innovation is not the product of logical thought,
although the result is tied to logical structure. Albert Einstein
The term innovation may refer to both radical and incremental changes in thinking, in things, in processes or in services. Invention that gets out in to the world is innovation. In many fields, something new must be substantially different to be innovative, not an insignificant change, e.g., in the arts, economics, business and government policy. In economics the change must increase value, customer value, or producer value. The goal of innovation is positive change, to make someone or something better. Innovation leading to increased productivity is the fundamental source of increasing wealth in an economy......
Some Questions To Ponder:
- How can progressives be more creative and innovative?
- What is personally the most important progressive value to you?
- Do you have a personal story or anecdote of how you learned some insight into this value?
- How does this progressive value differ from conservative values?
- How have conservative values failed?
I'm glad to give you innovative thinking. What are the guidelines?
More Progressive Values Stories:
I am working on a documentary to answer the question, What are Progressive Values? So far, I have interviewed over 100 progressives and have placed over 350 video clips on YouTube with the various replies. This is part of a continuing series of interviews of progressives telling their personal stories about their progressive values.
Edwin Rutsch
What Are Progressive Values? Documentary Project
http://ProgressiveSpirit.com
and Study Group

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Growing up in Sacramento, we lived in the suburbs but had chickens, rabbits, pigeons, guinea pigs, and other little animals. Was a real learning experience..

Me in the cage with the rabbits. I'd move the cage on the lawn and they'd cut (eat) the grass.. So, in a sense, it's me with the lawn mower.
Growing up in Sacramento, we lived in the suburbs but had chickens, rabbits, pigeons, guinea pigs, and other little animals. Was a real learning experience..

Me in the cage with the rabbits. I'd move the cage on the lawn and they'd cut (eat) the grass.. So, in a sense, it's me with the lawn mower.
be innovative and creative ;-) Honestly HuJo, I hope on day you'll get outta the rut. It's been ages since you put it in drive, took a step forward, and said anything remotely positive.
The goal of innovation is positive change, to make someone or something better.
Maybe the path taken isn't as the crow flies and meanders farther off the compass than we would like, but getting from point a to point b is rarely a direct route. One foot at a time, not backwards, not in place, but *forwards*.
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I love the this story. I'm sure those are some very happy and healthy rabbits.
We have a lot of the wild ones around here. I call them all bugs bunny.
Good question, Huron.
How about only one wc a day. that way maybe we could get up to 8 posts!!!!
Huron, let's head for the wc and post some articles.
heard a good one about mcsame. can't comb his hair and he smells like urine.
and hasn't been to the senate since early april.
why doesn't the new yorker who I thought was a great read put that out there? he has a whore wife that has to be put in each frame of the media? and if michelle was there, oh my god.
mcsame is the granpa who pees in his pants.
so get the lysol.
the thread is ok so can I stay?????????????
put that out there. how many meds does he take???????????///////
LMAO lindab. The pee factor. He needs.dribble pull ups
- We've had a few volunteers at the office who we had to politely asked to go home a shower a few times.
By Susan Rowe on Jul 14, 2008 7:52 PM EDT- There was an older man who I brought some clean clothes in the office for. He was very nice and did a good job but he was in need of a few more shirts. Sometimes I thought he came in to get a meal (we always had food for the volunteers) but he was always willing to do whatever was asked of him to do.
- We had a few special needs folks who want to help out too.
By Susan Rowe on Jul 14, 2008 8:01 PM EDTThe social interaction was good for them. We always kept a careful eye out for what they were saying. Sometimes their meds weren't working correctly. I would offer them a ride home if they were disturbing the other volunteers.
- Susan you are the angel of Madera county
By Denise in San Mateo County on Jul 14, 2008 8:12 PM EDT- Our voluteer office is in Fresno. I worked there for four years as volunteer Trustee.
By Susan Rowe on Jul 14, 2008 8:18 PM EDTegalitarianism is my number one progressive value, treating all people as valuable
Phil
I added up the interviews by stories and values a while back and the top 4 progressive values were. caring, community, equality, justice, - so your in googd company
| 10. Progressive Values Stories: John on Equality | ||
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I interviewed John at his house in Oakland, California. John says progressives are looking for equality, for fairness and for justice and that these are the same values that most Americans have. He went to Berkeley schools in the 60's and 70's, and was excited about the overall cultural search at that time of really trying to understand what equality might be. View @:DemocracyforAmerica.com - Opednews.com - Dailykos.com |
I would like to report the success of the emergency pet shelter at Kirkwood college that saved over a thousand pets from the flooded out people who couldn't take them to the human shelters and was closed yesterday with only 50-60 left reclaimed when the shelter closed.
Thank you to all who donated to the link I provided here as it was a forgotten charity and local budgets normally supportive overwhelmed with other needs.
The next wave of need will be for mental health as the reality sets in that FEMA doesn't wave a magic wand and new homes appear. I feel for those fifty people who are in circumstances where they can't have their pet with them to help them cope.
all but fifty reclaimed that is, and they will be moved to other shelters for adoption or "foster homes" where appropriate (the owner will soon be able to reclaim them)
So do the McC comments stay here or are they banished?
Ok,animal stuff.
You can read excerpts from the editorial at the end of this message.
Read the full editorial here
I think a alternative simultaneous open thread that could be toggled to, would work fine if it changed whenever the main post did. the current situation stifles good humor and joke telling, which is at the heart of watercooler talk.
Good idea, Phil, but where do we post links to off-topic articles? At the wc?
There's international news going on in the world that isn't here or at the wc to my knowledge...and why should write
since I'm just five years younger than McCain, I really dislike this line of "reasoning" ~~ ALL babies pee as they wish, and poop liberally, too. And we seldom make comments about *them* stinking to high heaven. . . .
McCain has real problems and drawbacks simply because he's who he is. Do we *have* to use the ageism arrow?
depends
- Some Questions To Ponder:How can progressives be more creative and innovative?
By Phil Specht on Jul 14, 2008 8:19 PM EDTJuly is the month we locally gather biographies of all of the candidates on the ticket with two or three points of emphasis of their platform, to print on a single tabloid newsprint lit drop piece that we use for our full ticket team door knocking actions, lit drops, and the copy for an edited down version that works for our full page full ticket newspaper ads near election. We try to get everyone who votes to have at least seen the full slate somewhere, and it is a way to help down ticket races. With Obama opting out of the public financing I'm guessing we will be able to include him as well, but I will need to check before our next meeting which is to be held out on the river on a big party pontoon.
- Now that's an innovative meeting place!
By Denise in San Mateo County on Jul 14, 2008 8:32 PM EDT- A pontoon! Haven't been on one of those in years. Not since we moved from Indiana.
By Susan Rowe on Jul 14, 2008 8:45 PM EDTFolks like to go sailing out here.
I love the slate newspaper idea. Does it look like a daily? Do folks look foward to getting it?
- the tabloid idea came about as an insert to the local shopper so we could have some outreach to rural voters besides the booth at the county fair
By Phil Specht on Jul 14, 2008 8:57 PM EDTa single folded sheet gives ample room for eight half page ads printed at the local paper for 7-8 cents each, this is a small county so we spend less than a thousand dollars to get all of our candidates into every home
since doing this we have gone from all red to all blue in a red rural area
and you have to do some fun stuff together like going out on the river so you can buckle down and work when it is crunch time in a couple of months
with all the damage in the county some won't have any time for it
- If possible, please mail me an old one of those. I'd like to take a look at it.
By Susan Rowe on Jul 14, 2008 9:35 PM EDTMy address is on my profile page.
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By Huron John on Jul 14, 2008 6:38 PM EDTHow the hell are we supposed to comment on this drivel?