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Tuesday, July 23, 2019 - 1:15pm
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Rotary International as a model for statecraft

by Winslow Myers

1026 words

The established paradigm of nation-states formulating their policies on the basis of a limited vision of self-interest is dissolving on every level. Games of chicken test the limits of deterrence, any breakdown of which could be fatal in the nuclear age. Many of our challenges, the climate emergency first among equals, are no longer solvable by individual nations, no matter how powerful.

 

This radical interdependency points to the need for international laws which, even as they seem to challenge the sovereignty of all countries, will also strengthen the common good. Today nations go to war because we feel the menace of aggression along borders, pressure into spheres of influence, or threats against resource interests—leaving aside the many civil conflicts within nations. Tomorrow a more authentic cause for war might become a given nation failing to maintain ecological resources, like the rain forests which are the lungs of the planet, because that would become a security issue for all—though one might likely assume that a nation or nations inclined to so powerfully punish agents of climate chaos would also realize that war worsens our climate emergency and that might restrain the warmaker.

 

Indeed, war with such a radically different motivation could, like our ongoing wars today, end up costing more than any expected positive result. If all-out nuclear war is clearly obsolete, so is conventional war, not only because it is a step toward escalation into nuclear war, but also because the disintegration of war (viz. Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, Syria, Somalia, Sudan, Yemen) compounds social and ecological chaos, setting up the context for further war.

 

Are there other models for strengthening security? One is the Marshall Plan. The United States had the hindsight to realize that a second world war had emerged out of our harsh treatment of Germany at the end of World War I and the foresight to obviate that with a generous peace toward Germany. Might it be in the self-interest of nations not only to talk to adversaries, but to jiu-jitsu all parties out of the paradigm of threat and counter-threat by offering Marshall Plan equivalents as a substitute for war rather than something to follow a chimerical “victory”? 

 

Vast regions of Iran suffered major flooding back in April. How might it have changed the present dynamic of high tension if the U.S. had made aggressive offers to help rescue and feed the desperate across rural Iran? Our military represents an enormous logistical potentiality. My friend Adam Cote, a candidate for governor of Maine, managed to be a platoon leader while spearheading the "Adopt an Iraqi Village" program to distribute school supplies, kitchen and household items, toys, clothes and blankets to destitute Iraqis. Generating goodwill rather than fear changes responses, plans, and attitudes.

 

Another alternative is citizen initiatives. The vast majority of Iranians like and admire America, even as we continue to squeeze them mercilessly on the basis of the U.S. having bailed from a treaty the conditions of which Iran was by all accounts meeting. Iran writ large is not the Revolutionary Guard, just as the United States writ large is not the fever dreams of John Bolton. We desperately need to build relationships on the basis of common interests. It can be done. In the frigid depths of the Cold War, a small group of private citizens, working with the full knowledge of the State Department, successfully arranged a conference of leading Soviet and American scientific experts on accidental nuclear war. Much unforeseen good came out of this exercise, and it played a significant role in easing dangerous tensions. 

 

With the failure of our gigantic military forces to achieve the vaunted “full-spectrum dominance,” there is an urgent need to make much greater use of non-military structures to meet on-the-ground challenges like literacy, clean water, and peaceful understanding between tribal and religious adversaries. One obvious model is Rotary International. 

 

With 30,000 clubs distributed across 190 countries, Rotary is a planet-wide network of people who are building priceless relationships of friendship and mutual understanding on the basis of six crucial areas of focus: promoting peace, fighting disease, providing clean water, sanitation and hygiene, saving mothers and children, supporting education, and growing local economies.

 

It has for all practical purposes achieved its current goal number one, pursued doggedly for 20 years in cooperation with the Gates Foundation and others, of eliminating polio from the entire planet. Polio is now down to a few cases in rural Afghanistan, Pakistan and Nigeria. Through models like Rotary a world beyond war is assuming shape, step by slow step. 

 

The superpowers, blessed with apparently unlimited resources to spend on ships and submarines and missiles and bases around the world, irrelevantly jostle for dominance as the planet continues to wither ecologically. Surely a question worth asking is why the United States will not take on the Rotary model as primary, allowing military force to take its place as truly a last resort. Please don’t argue that we can’t afford it. We have explored the moons of Jupiter and the deepest depths of the Pacific, but the Pentagon budget remains a black hole that sucks into itself the very light that accountants try to shine upon it. If we could rewind the tape and could choose between giving the U.S. government the $5 trillion we have spent in Iraq and Afghanistan or giving it to Rotary, I would bet the latter could have provided massively more in real security. 

For thousands of years war has been rationalized as unavoidable, worth the risk, a necessary fallback if we don’t get our way or if attacked. War has been used to exploit, to dominate, to exterminate, to acquire, to defend, to expand, to impose, to preserve, to preempt, even as sages keep advocating for the realism and practicality of the golden rule. The United States is strong enough to lead the way into a new paradigm of self-interest, where dominance is replaced by a global network attuned directly to meeting human and ecosystem needs. Anything less threatens everyone’s survival. If we can offer help to our adversaries because we see it as self-interest, a different world is possible. 

–end–

Winslow Myers, the author of “Living Beyond War: A Citizen’s Guide,” serves on the Advisory Board of the War Preventive Initiative, and is a member of Rotary. The opinions expressed here are his own and do not represent official Rotary policy.

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Ethics Checkup: Do You Hold Yourself 

To A High Standard In The Workplace?

From minor moral breaches to major ones, the workplace can become an ethical quagmire if employees and their managers aren’t wary.

Maybe a boss demands that you cut corners by putting out a faulty product that cheats – or even endangers – consumers. Perhaps co-workers pad their expense accounts and ask you to cover for them, leaving you in the awkward position of lying for them or tattling on them.

While taking the ethical high road might sound simple in theory, it’s tougher in real-world situations, especially when your job, a promotion, or your relationships with co-workers could be threatened.

“Being ethical isn’t always easy because it requires a long-term commitment to do the right thing and consider the consequences of  your actions, even if it means doing something that you think harms you in the short run,” says Dr. Steven Mintz (www.stevenmintzethics.com), author of Beyond Happiness and Meaning: Transforming Your Life Through Ethical Behavior

Mintz says just a few of the common workplace ethical issues that can arise include:

  • Lying on a resume. Embellishing your work history or academic credentials even slightly puts you in the position of sliding down the ethical slippery slope, Mintz says. “If the prospective employer asks questions about something you exaggerated or made up, you either have to continue to be dishonest or you have to admit to lying,” he says. “You have a moral duty to be honest with the prospective employer and should not want to start an employment relationship with a lie. What if everyone lied on their résumé about dates of employment, adding a job they didn’t have, or embellishing their experience? This would put you in a weaker position in getting the job.” 
  • Taking credit for someone else’s work. Imagine you are leading a project that involves several other employees. You realize if you submit your report under your name, with the team acknowledged only as a footnote, you could increase your odds of getting a promotion. It might be tempting – but it also clearly would be wrong, Mintz says. “Your co-workers have an ethical right to be given credit and you have a duty to give them that credit,” he says. “Ask yourself how you would feel if your decision to take credit for the project was the headline of tomorrow’s newspaper. Would you be proud to defend your action?”
  • Spending company time on personal activities. Sometimes ethical lapses occur that people don’t immediately recognize as a problem, such as using company computers and time for surfing the web or checking in on social media. Mintz points to one survey that found the average office employee spends 56 minutes per day on their cell phones for non-work activity, and 42 minutes on personal tasks, such as errands. Attending to personal matters might be acceptable in emergency situations, Mintz says. But ethically, most personal tasks should be put off until a break or lunchtime, he says. 

 

“Committing to being an ethical person starts by treating others the way we wish they would treat us,” Mintz says. According to his book, being ethical can enhance personal relationships, workplace interactions and social networking.

“We can make a difference in the quality of our own life and the lives of others by being virtuous and doing what is right because it is the right thing to do.”

About Dr. Steven Mintz

Dr. Steven Mintz (www.stevenmintzethics.com), author of Beyond Happiness and Meaning: Transforming Your Life Through Ethical Behavior, has frequently commented on ethical issues in society and business ethics. His Workplace Ethics Advice blog has been recognized as one of the top 30 in corporate social responsibility. He also has served as an expert witness on ethics matters. Dr. Mintz spent almost 40 years of his life in academia. He has held positions as a chair in Accounting at San Francisco State University and Texas State University. He was the Dean of the College of Business and Public Administration at Cal State University, San Bernardino. He recently retired as a Professor Emeritus from Cal Poly State University in San Luis Obispo

 

SHIRAGIRL

EXCLUSIVELY STREAMS NEW EP ANDI UNDERGROUND

VIA KERRANG!

 

LISTEN HERE

Photo by Max Aria

 

EP OUT OFFICIALLY THIS FRIDAY

 

"Shiragirl's new EP Andi Underground will suck you into its infectious revolution" -Kerrang!

 

"The iconic Warped Tour punkers radiate with nothing but girl power." -Alternative Press

 

July 23, 2019 - Los Angeles, CA - Punk rock artist and women's empowerment activist, Shiragirl, is streaming her new concept EP, Andi Underground, exclusively today via Kerrang! Listen HERE. Co-written with Tim Armstrong (Rancid, Transplants, Pink) and mixed by Cameron Webb (Motorhead, Sum 41, Kelly Clarkson), Andi Underground is a dystopian punk rock musical described as Black Mirror meets The Runaways. "Within the six songs on Andi Underground lies an entire extravagant, unruly musical punk rock musical", Kerrang! Notes. "[The EP] will suck you into its infectious revolution." Andi Underground officially releases this Friday, 7/26. For more information on Shiragirl, please visit: https://shiragirl.com/.

 

The Andi Underground EP proves that Shiragirl is much more than just a Warped Tour icon. Drawing inspiration from the infamous story of Alice, the EP takes place in a dark future world, where no one can leave their house without putting on their mandatory, government-controlled "filter" glasses. "One night, Tim and I were brainstorming ideas for a concept record," Shiragirl elaborates. "Together we organically built the storyline around a girl who wanted to run away from an apocalyptic digital dystopia to an underground world, and the narrative just slowly grew from there."

 

Shiragirl is the "punk rock Madonna" who forever changed the Vans Warped Tour. As the story goes, a determined Shira Yevin showed up to the 2004 tour in her iconic pink RV, created her own stage and performed atop it with her band. After receiving a rousing crowd response, Warped Tour founder Kevin Lyman invited Shira to return the following summer to host an official Shiragirl Stage. The stage went on to host over 200 female-fronted bands, many making their Warped debuts, including Paramore on their first ever tour, and the legendary Joan Jett. 

With the Shiragirl Stage, Shira broke into the boys club, accomplished her mission to inspire and empower women and made punk rock history. In addition to having her story featured in the book 'Misfit Summer Camp: 20 Years On The Road With The Vans Warped Tour', Shira earned an MTV Warpie Award and a spot in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Forever Warped exhibit. She also went on to rock support slots with Rancid, NOFX and Juliette Lewis, shot a music video for her single "RESIST" at the 2017 Women's March and released her critically acclaimed EP Brooklyn Goes Hollywood last year, which received attention from Billboard, Alternative Press and HelloGiggles among others.

Andi Underground, the new EP from Shiragirl, will be available on all online platforms this Friday, 7/26.

For more information, please visit:

https://shiragirl.com/

http://facebook.com/shiragirl

http://twitter.com/shiragirl

http://youtube.com/shiragirl

http://instagram.com/shira_girl

Andi Underground

1. Controlled

2. Wake Up Face Up

3. Nothin to Lose

4. We are the Underground

5. Cobrasnake

6. Creepin

Tour Dates:

8/06 - 710 Beach Club - San Diego CA

 

8/07 - Satellite - Los Angeles, CA

 

Hi-Res Photo:

 

https://www.dropbox.com/s/b360ehgkvu3s6ft/by%20Max%20Aria%203.JPG?dl=0