The Bold Urban Future Starts Now

Stephan:  Here is a second positive report for today. In the midst of all the problems that plague cities there is still growth and compassionate socially progressive activity. Local action is proving yet again, that this is the way we are going to have to go.

America doesn’t do big projects anymore - we’re too broke, no one can agree on our priorities, that era of bold thinking is over.

That canard has been repeated so many times that it’s now accepted as gospel. Except it’s not true. In cities in every region of the country, pie-in-the-sky ideas are moving from brainstorm to blueprint to groundbreaking - and 2012 will prove it. From a massive re-imagining of a postindustrial Chicago landscape to the rebirth of the Los Angeles River, these seven ventures point the way to a brave urban future.

Chicago Goes Wild

There aren’t a lot of urban parks that you’d get on a plane to visit, but if Chicago’s plan for its Calumet region succeeds, we’ll be on the first flight to O’Hare. Calling it ambitious would be like calling the Sears Tower tall. At 140,000 acres, the Millennium Reserve Initiative would be the biggest open-space project in the country, transforming a huge swath of underused, postindustrial land into a playground of wildlife corridors, parks, gardens, organic farms and more than 50 miles of hiking trails. The city is hoping it’ll be a boon to tourism and build on Chicago’s already well-deserved reputation as a leader in […]

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Meditation, The Controlled Psychophysical Self-Regulation Process That Works

Stephan: 

The sense of spiritual consciousness, connecting to something greater than oneself, is one of the most intoxicating realms a human can enter. Across the millennia such experiences have shaped the lives of individuals and, upon occasion, whole cultures. The experiences and their effects are historical fact. The question for science is not to deny them, but to seek to understand the processes by which they occur, and the domain into which they lead us. Central to these true stories is a special state of mindfulness, what the psychologist Charles Tart described in his classic 1972 Science paper as a state of consciousness.1

Whether it is a physicist achieving understanding of a physical principle, a spiritual pilgrim having an epiphany, a great painter or composer creating a masterpiece, or a remote viewer describing a teacup hidden in a closet, all report that when the experience is happening, when they feel that they are ‘in the zone

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Montana High Court Upholds Ban on Election Spending by Corporations

Stephan:  This is potentially momentous. It is the first judicial rejection of the Citizens United view on direct political spending by corporations. It will inevitably go to the U.S. Supreme Court where there will be a chance to correct the horrendous Citizens United decision.

HELENA – The Montana Supreme Court restored the state’s century-old ban on direct spending by corporations on political candidates or committees in a ruling Friday that interest groups say bucks a high-profile U.S. Supreme Court decision granting political speech rights to corporations.

The decision grants a big win to Attorney General Steve Bullock, who personally represented the state in defending its ban that came under fire after the ‘Citizens United’ decision last year from the U.S. Supreme court.

‘The Citizens United decision dealt with federal laws and elections – like those contests for president and Congress,’ said Bullock, who is now running for governor. ‘But the vast majority of elections are held at the state or local level, and this is the first case I am aware of that examines state laws and elections.’

The corporation that brought the case and is also fighting accusations that it illegally gathers anonymous donations to fuel political attacks, said the state Supreme Court got it wrong. The group argues that the 1912 Corrupt Practices Act, passed as a citizen’s ballot initiative, unconstitutionally blocks political speech by corporations.

‘We feel Montanans do not forfeit their freedoms of speech and association simply because they associate as a corporation,’ said […]

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