Monday, July 25, 2011

Methods to reduce your utility costs at home R2


Methods to reduce your utility costs at home R2
Well, we’re all reeling from our utility bills. We are all aware of the rising costs of utilities. So, what can you do to cut energy/utility consumption and costs?
Obviously, the best way to cut your utility bill is to go with a non-utility company source of energy. Solar power or Wind power can be used to warm your house, it is known that geothermal can be used to cool and heat the home. While these are great choices, there are a few simple steps you can take to cut that monstrous utility bill.
Vent Covers – In most homes, there are rooms that rarely get used. A very simple and very cheap way to cut your heating costs is to isolate those rooms from the rest of your home. To do this, you should close the vents in the room. The vents, however, rarely close well. To make the strategy effective, you should buy vent covers and place them over the vents. The covers are a form of plastic and keep heat from coming out of the vents. Next, close the door to the room in question and leave it. By using this strategy, you can effectively make your home smaller by excluding the square footage that has to be heated. The smaller the area, the less energy you will use and save money to heat the home. (for safety reasons use carbon monoxide detectors..
Windows – Windows are the single biggest energy wasters in your home. Your windows must seal tightly. If they don’t, heat will escape out of them causing your heater to fire up over and over. If you make sure your window fit tightly into the frame when closed, you can significant cut the utility bill. It sounds like a small thing, but it really ads up. (it also reduces wind and increases comfort level). During the summer shade you windows with landscaping or owning. (window shades or curtains)
Insulation – proper insulation in your attic and attic fans. For sound insulation use wool insulation.
Programmable Thermostat – Heating your home accounts for fifty percent of your utility bill. While a warm home is necessary for basic living in the winter, the home doesn’t need to be heated all of the time. If there are periods during the day where nobody is home because of work or school, a programmable thermostat can be used to slash your heating costs. Simply program the thermostat to turn off during the relevant time and turn back on before anyone gets home. Cutting four to eight hours off of your heating needs each day will add up quickly on your utility bill, you can also lower the temperature a few degrees. Adding a humidifier can also increase the comfort level and save energy during the winter heating season.
Furnace filter should be checked and changed regularly. Reduce drafts and insulate your air ducts. Wrap your hot water heater to maintain the heat. Insulate your attic and install attic fan(s). Utilize energy efficient light bulbs indoor and outdoor (CFL/LED). Shut off lights and appliances when not in use. Use photocell to turn on and off outdoor lighting. Utilize rebates and tax credits minimize the costs of implementing energy saving methods and supplies/equipment.
During Summer in geographical areas where temperature at night drops bellow 65 degrees, open windows and bring in fresh air with a fan (which is healthier) and shut down the Air conditioning system. (add ceiling fans, install ERV –Energy Recovery Vetilation)
Utilize water saver aerators for you faucets and shower, repair all leaky faucets and toilets, and reduce toilet tank capacity.
Review your telecom/cellphone/internet/cable bill quarterly and modify the service according to your current requirements and available programs.
If your utility bills are completely out of control, there is something fundamentally wrong with your home. You need to go ahead and get an Energy Audit. An auditor will come out and inspect your home. They can then identify the problem, what should be done and provide other tips and methods to slash your bill. Depending on how bad your situation is, an energy audit can cut your utility bill by 50 percent or more and utility bill audit may get you a refund.
Power costs are high and expected to continue to increase for the foreseeable future. Take proper steps to cut your utility bill now and you will reap the benefits for years.
YJ Draiman, Energy Consultant
July. 18,
PS
As a homeowner you are faced with only 3 options:
1. Continue to open your wallet and let the utility companies take whatever they want in ever increasing amounts forever!
As the years go by you'll have nothing to show for your money except cancelled checks.
2. Reduce your energy usage by reducing your standard of
living - sweat when it's hot, wear extra clothing and shiver
when it's cold.
3. Cut your energy consumption for Air Conditioning and Heating dramatically by making your home energy efficient. This will increase your home's resale value, and make it quieter and more comfortable.
Reallocate some of the money you saved which you would have normally paid to the power company to cover the cost of making your home energy efficient. (utilizing rebates and tax credits)
The object is to cut your home energy consumption for heating and cooling in half.  To do this the transfer of heat between the outside and inside of your home must be reduced to a minimum by effectively insulating the envelope of the home.  If the Air Conditioning/Heating system doesn't continuously have to come on to maintain the desired temperature inside your home, your electric and gas bill will drop dramatically.  It's that simple.
Under insulated attic space, would be brought up to today's energy efficiency standards, air infiltration rates on exterior doors would be reduced with weather stripping, inaccurate analog thermostats would be replaced with accurate programmable digital thermostats, and poorly insulated single pane windows/doors with aluminum or wood frames-would be replaced with the super energy efficient windows/glass, high performance Low-E glass.  Plus, suspended between the two layers of glass, microscopically thin, transparent, high tech membrane that controls the solar energy in the summer that would normally enter your home.  During the winter, the heat is reflected back inside the home.
Because of the extreme high energy efficiency level the Window obtains, the factory issues each Homeowner a written "Fuel Savings Pledge" which guarantees over 40 percent MINIMUM reduction in energy consumption for cooling and heating.
The vast majority of the money a homeowner pays on a utility bill is for cooling and heating.  The savings generated by cutting energy consumption for heating and cooling in half (combined with Rebates and tax saving offers) can more than cover the cost of the retrofit.
Making your home more energy efficient by properly insulating your attic, reducing air infiltration rates, accurately managing your Air Conditioning and Heating system, and installing the high-tech, super insulating windows with Specialized Glass, your family and your home can get more - much more while your energy/utility provider gets less.
Why would I need an energy-recovery ventilator in my home?
As houses become more and more airtight, it will become more and more common to see energy-recovery ventilators in homes. Air-tightness follows from the use of improved building practices and products, like air barriers, better seals on windows and doors, panelized construction, air-sealing procedures, and sealed-combustion furnaces and water heaters.
People like the benefits of air-tightness in their homes, including improved energy efficiency, fewer uncomfortable drafts, and the exclusion of noise and dust from the outside. What is lost, however, is the natural infiltration that used to carry away the indoor pollutants: carbon dioxide, formaldehyde, cool-weather moisture, cooking odors, and other gases coming from building materials and cleaning compounds.
In old houses, natural infiltration was so effective in removing these pollutants that often, more water was carried away than was generated in the home by the breathing, washing, and cooking of the occupants (thus the need for additional humidification in older homes). Nowadays, that water isn't removed from the new, tighter houses, unless a ventilation system is in use, so windows can be damaged by the moisture build-up. With "run-away humidity" insulation loses its effectiveness, and in severe cases, structural damage can occur.
Even though we do not know everything about pollutants in homes yet, there is real concern. Formaldehyde originating in various board products and insulations caused significant problems in the building products industry. Changes in product formulations to try and reduce the amount of formaldehyde because of possible health concerns have only been partially successful. There are other pollutants that may be of concern. A common one is carbon dioxide, which in excess concentrations can cause lethargy and lack of alertness. We all generate carbon dioxide by breathing, but it can be very effectively controlled by air-to-air heat exchangers. A ventilation system provides better indoor air quality..

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Trust democracy?



Trust democracy?

Comment about those who trust democracy enough to offer themselves up to its abuses in every election cycle. His comment lauded those who put themselves on the line for the opportunity to serve the public. I found much to agree with in what he said, and a good deal to differ with as well.
While those who trust democracy in offering themselves for public service are to be praised, not everyone running for office trusts democracy to that extent, and many display a decided distrust of democracy. They are easy enough to pick out.
A candidate's trust in democracy is measurable by the way that their campaign is conducted. When they are running their campaign on a shoestring without professional campaign staff, it tells you that their level of trust is high, both in democracy and democratic principles and in their confidence in their own ideas. Often the value of their ideas can be measured by the number of volunteers who are willing to offer their own time and effort to see that those ideas get a hearing in governance.
This is not to say that a well-funded campaign cannot evince a trust in democracy, but the idealist's campaign nearly always does.
Conversely, there are candidates whose level of distrust in democracy is clearly evident. The symptoms of that condition are as easily picked out, because in spite of the candidate's efforts, they are almost impossible to conceal from anyone who is looking for them.
Those symptoms include inordinate amounts of cash, to be used in an effort to buy the election. In this election cycle, the first since the Supreme Court edict regarding the Citizens United case, we have hundreds of millions of dollars in contributions being funneled through money laundering operations such as American Crossroads, Americans for Prosperity, and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
The sources of these funds are jealously guarded from public disclosure, but you can bet your bottom billion that the candidates receiving those funds know exactly where they came from. The candidate being in the dark about those facts would defeat the object of the exercise, which is to buy a candidate and make sure that he stays bought. If he didn't know who his new owner was, he might cast an errant vote, and that's not what he was purchased for in the first place.
There is also the ultimate in cynical distrust of democracy that is demonstrated by efforts to manipulate the electorate in casting its votes. These are mostly techniques to reduce turnout for the opponent by voter caging, leading to illegitimate challenges to individual voters at the polls, or, as we see happening in Nevada this year, cynical campaign commercials featuring appeals to the opponent's supporters to stay home on Election Day.
Other ways to depress turnout require confederates in control of the voting apparatus so that the allotment of facilities to conduct the election can be skewed to reduce availability of those facilities in selected areas to make voting more difficult and increased in those areas that the fraudulent candidate sees as more solidly in his favor.
Then there is good old-fashioned election fraud. In this age, the intention to engage in election fraud is frequently telegraphed by the dishonest candidate's admonishments against, or intention to oppose, voter fraud, a crime that is astonishingly rare, but played up by those who wish to deceive the electorate
The methods for election fraud are many, but in this day the most common is the manipulation of data streams from those eminently hack able electronic voting machines, especially those without a paper trail to provide a check on the electronic results. Of course, election fraud has always been with us, sometimes elevated to an art form as in the electoral depredations of Tammany Hall.
It's what inspired Josef Stalin to say, "It's not the people who vote that counts, and it’s who counts the votes." We may safely conclude from this that Josef Stalin didn't have much trust in democracy.
Up to now, I have been leaving it to the reader to conclude who does and who does not trust democracy, understanding that they are well capable of rendering that judgment, but to refrain from naming names seems like an act of ignoring the elephant in the room. We all know that these various cheats and frauds are those that are predominantly employed by Republicans in this century, so I might as well make the general statement, Republicans do not trust democracy, and they have good reason not to.
They understand as well as anyone that the direction in which they intend to move the country is one that is unacceptable to a free and open society. To trust in democracy is to take part in their own destruction, and they will not countenance that without employing every dirty trick, telling every lie and violating every public trust and every applicable law to advance their narrowly selfish aims.
It is up to us, the People of the United States, to perpetuate our democracy, our values and our society by stepping into a voting booth and choosing candidates who do trust democracy. By doing so we can make our democracy worthy of the trust that we all place in it.

By: Draiman

Monday, April 4, 2011

Leadership obligation and responsibility


Leadership obligation and responsibility  

Many words in the English language give definition to our conduct as individuals or to the conduct of organizations and agencies of government. Among these words are four that have special importance to those of us who care, have values and are interested in becoming men and women of character. The words are honesty, responsibility, leadership and public trust.
The world we have known has changed rapidly in the last 50 years. The changes were driven by the advent of high technology, instant media coverage and communications which changed the way our society earns its living. The evolution from an industrial society characterized by the blue collar worker, to a society that now makes money by managing information or providing service to others has produced rapid changes more profound than in any other time in human history. These economic/technological changes have also prodded our society to examine virtually every traditionally held belief and custom. In addition every organization, including government, continues to be scrutinized for its relevancy to this new way of earning a living.
I presume who, or what, is to blame for the confusion in today's society. I think it fair to say, however, that we have all had a hand in trashing our traditional values and institutions. It is paradoxical that high technology with all of its great promise to improve our lives, in fact, has been used as the reason for us to create a society that by any historical standard is troubled! Crime in all of its forms, including violence, is at epidemic proportions and the personal conduct of almost a majority of our citizens leaves much to be desired. Our basic institutions such as the family, school, religious institutions and government not only often fail to achieve their objectives, but sometimes, through their muddling, make the problems we face much worse!
In today’s environment it is difficult to overcome the temptations of self-indulgence and overcome the cynicism we have developed and the almost constant challenges to our integrity. Yet, for our own good and the good of our families, we have to examine some fundamental aspects of our lives. Corporate America must behave as highly-principled and socially responsible in all of its business practices.
In today’s society we must look beneath the surface of this simple question and throw out answers that suggest material wealth or power. These achievements tend to corrupt and in the final analysis, are meaningless. Instead think of your life as a statement to your children and others of what you learned is most important and enduring about yourself. Integrity, honesty, courage, compassion, fairness, justice, ethical behavior and kindness are the virtues by which you will always be judged as a leader, a parent, or a neighbor.
As a leader you must constantly be on the lookout, not to feel as if you become power itself, and think of yourself as invincible. You are in this position of leadership to serve the people honestly and with integrity. You have to serve as an example of true virtues. Do not let your position of leadership get to your head. People have nothing to fear but fear itself. We must overcome it.
In a world where the competition for economic success has blinded humanity to our values and the cost of economic success has blinded us from adhering to the true precepts of honesty and integrity.
When we are accountable for something within our power or control we are said to be responsible. Since humans have the capacity to make moral decisions, we also have the obligation to make correct decisions or face some consequence.
The concept of responsibility is universal. It is found throughout our human history and is prominent in the thinking of every tribe, village or nation that has ever existed. Responsibility became the anvil that society used to forge acceptable social behavior on the part of its members. It also became a yardstick used by individuals to decide whether their actual behavior matched what they knew was the right thing. This is called conscience.
All societies fashion laws, customs, rituals, religions and taboos to quantify and qualify levels of responsibility for each member or group. A child is not held to the same level of responsibility as an adult. An individual employed by the public is held to a higher standard of behavior than someone employed by a private concern. Although these groups must be held responsible as well, fashioning similar standards for corporations and governments has been more difficult. When people form a group, like they do in building an organizational entity, many of the usual social norms used to pressure individuals will not apply. The social pressure generated by peers, parents, neighbors, religion, and law do not have the same effect on an organization's behavior as they do on an individual. An organization, per se, does not have a conscience. The leaders of the organization provide the conscience of the organization.
Unfortunately, some leaders have concluded that the organization is immune from the usual social pressures, or that they can ignore these pressures while their questionable behavior continues. While this may be expedient or profitable in the short term, eventually most organizations that operate in this fashion lose the trust of the public and are eventually reformed or forced out of existence. This is part of the problem currently facing the corporate structure of our society today.
If the concept of responsibility is to work for nations, individuals or organizations, then appropriate actions must be rewarded and inappropriate behavior corrected or punished. Throughout history, understanding and accepting individual responsibility has been one objective of the legal system, child rearing and the teaching of the religious and education system. Individual responsibility was honored while individuals who did not act in a responsible manner were punished. Depending on the time frame, society used methods for compliance that were Draconian, such as hanging or shunning, forcing an acceptable level of compliance. Society has also used the similar disciplinary measures with rulers who were not responsible. In the case of the king, it was rebellion and beheading. More recently, in the case of Nazi Germany and Japan, it was virtual destruction. In regard to current standards of responsibility, one could argue the nations of Iran, Iraq and Libya are walking on thin ice!
While this degree of punishment on the part of our society might not meet the fainthearted standards of justice held by some "enlightened liberals," harsh measures have always made the point to individuals, organizations and nations that acts have their consequences. Responsibility in behavior is a concept that has certainly stood the test of time.
In North America, currently our different societies are having more difficulty with people, corporations and governmental organizations accepting, evading or denying responsibility. A recent survey by the Ethics Associations suggests that more than half of the present work force commits a serious ethical or criminal violation each year in response to what it claims is pressure on the job. I would not suggest this data, or the voluminous newspaper accounts of the unethical behavior of politicians, sports figures, movie stars, corporate executives and a whole lot of other people who ought to know better, indicate the problem has reached epidemic proportions. But, it has become a problem that needs to be addressed.
What makes the problem more vexing is that it seems more fashionable these days to find someone or something else to blame for our personal and organizational misdeeds. Wouldn't it be refreshing if someone at the White House, the Pentagon, the Congress, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, or the movie industry stood up and said, "I am responsible for that blunder, I am sorry and I'll try a bit harder." This would require character.
What makes the problem more vexing is that it seems more fashionable these days to find someone or something else to blame for our personal and organizational misdeeds. Wouldn't it be refreshing if someone at the White House, the Pentagon, the Congress, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, or the movie industry stood up and said, "I am responsible for that blunder, I am sorry and I'll try a bit harder." This would require character.
It could be argued that blaming others is perfectly normal. After all we are human, not angels! However, the good character we try to achieve cannot be attained by blaming others for our shortcomings, nor can individuals achieve lasting success in their personal or organizational lives by using unethical and expedient means while avoiding responsibility when they do wrong.
"The end never justifies the means" is an old cliché several generations seem not to have learned.
Responsibility is not something each individual has a choice. Shortly after birth you get it! You will continue to have more placed upon your shoulders as you grow older, smarter and more reliable. This will continue until your behavior indicates you cannot accept anymore. I hope when taking the oath as a leader you realized you were asking for double or triple the amount of responsibility carried by most other people.
We all know people who try to evade their responsibilities. Few ever fully succeed and most are eventually exposed and punished. Much of the punishment is self-inflicted. Other people may be denied employment, promotions, or fired from their positions. In areas where responsibility is impossible to deny, such as in a school or the athletic field, people who do not accept responsibility usually do poorly. In marriage, a lack of responsibility often leads to divorce, poor parenting and an overall miserable existence.
As a member of the leadership community, we accept additional responsibilities by the nature of our work. We also accept double the consequences if we fail. Responsibility is a pervasive, all-encompassing aspect of our lives. We must face that it is virtually impossible to escape responsibility as a leader – (be it government, corporate or religious, etc.) both on and off the job, particularly if we aspire to a position that requires a significant amount of leadership.
Wouldn't it be easier for us to say to ourselves, "I will be responsible, and I will accept responsibility no matter what the consequences? Period."? It doesn't take any more energy to accept responsibility than to evade it. By accepting responsibility for your character and behavior you must have the courage to be held accountable for your actions. You won't be able to blame mom or dad, the environment, your lack of money, your ignorant supervisor, or other people who just do not understand you. You will have to say, "It is my fault, and I'll try and do better next time." These are tough words to say. Nonetheless, once you are honest with yourself, there is a freedom that comes over you that is exhilarating! No more energy wasted in trying to convince other people you are something you know you are not! No more fear that someone will expose you as a phony. No more time wasted trying to find someone else to blame. No more shopping for the most impressive labels to help bolster your feelings of self-worth.
While this is simple advice, it often is hard to follow. Hell, we are human and we all make mistakes. Shake your head at your own stupidity; laugh at yourself if you can. Decide to try and do better tomorrow. The good Lord knows when I make these mistakes, the first thing I do is to look for the wife, kids, close family and friends. But as we get older and wiser, we realize that we are the problem, not them. Things are better now (but the damage has been done!). This is called being honest with yourself. It is healthy thing to do.
Just remember that individuals who want to be known throughout the leadership and community as people of good character always keep trying to improve themselves. You have to realize, and accept, that to be committed to a higher standard of conduct you will often be called upon lower your values to a more common denominator. You have to be willing to risk all that you have to maintain your commitment to a higher standard. If you are looking for an example of a "tough leader" this would be the type of individual who would best fit the bill.
There have been many articles and books written on the subject of leadership. Personally, I don't think the subject of leadership is that difficult or complex to understand? A leader provides direction, makes decisions, is at times inspiring or insightful, and most importantly, sets a good example for others to follow. To do this entire well an individual needs a commanding knowledge of the job, a strong commitment to the values of honesty, courage, compassion, truth and self-discipline. The leader also needs to be respected. Respect need not arise from fear, but rather from the fact that the leader has the sense to do the right thing and the will to make things happen. All of these personality characteristics allow an individual to objectively gather the facts at hand and make the right decision. Hindsight may later indicate it wasn't the best decision, but given the circumstances at the time of the event, it still was a decision made for the right reasons. This is all we can ask of a leader!
Leaders are made, not born! Leadership is not a gift of genetics, it is a combination of knowledge, personality, and habit--all of which we learn from parents, brothers and sisters, schoolwork, teachers, peers and from the other educational experiences during our lives. Leaders have moral courage, strong wills and an understanding of the concept of responsibility. They have a great deal of self-discipline, confidence in the ability of others and the self-assurance to let others participate in the decision-making process. It is quite possible that a leader not occupy a high position in life.
By contrast, the worst leaders I observed during my career were those who lacked self-confidence, didn't trust anyone and tried to micro-manage every situation. They considered themselves experts in every field and were fonder of talking than listening. Depending on their personalities, they either couldn't delegate or delegated everything. In either case, their strategy was designed to protect themselves above all else. These were not individuals with strong character traits. On the contrary, they were shallow people either hiding behind their rank, their Gucci loafers or their stylized hair cut. When something went wrong they looked for an excuse, a scapegoat or a cover-up to avoid being held responsible.
Yes, many lousy leaders we have all known did not realize that leaders have to take responsibility, sometimes for something they had no control over. Leaders, like ducks, get shot at and sometimes hit. The good ones accept this as part of the territory. The others usually claim they were in the restroom at the time of the incident!
Public trust, is defined as the faith the public has in organizations that are created to protect our basic freedoms. Examples of some of these organizations would be our courts, the military, the legislative and executive branches of government at all levels: public health, social services, and fire and rescue services, as weak as law enforcement organizations. Each citizen has an expectation that public organizations, and each member of the organization, will discharge their duties in a competent manner and not abuse authority granted to them by law. Not only does the citizen pay for these services, but they have relinquished some of their individual freedoms to ensure that the government has the ability to look after their well-being. Consequently, a sworn member of a law enforcement organization is held to a far higher standard of conduct than other public employees because they have been entrusted with great power. An abuse of this power always is a betrayal of the public trust and is seldom tolerated in a democratic society. Hence, the punishment of cops, FBI agents, DEA agents, prosecutors and judges who abuse the powers and privileges granted them by the public is always harsh!
Public trust is a precious commodity not only to organizations in the public sector, but to organizations in the private sector. To be successful in the private sector a corporation has to have the public's trust in the products it sells or the services it provides. Should this trust waver, or be lost, the corporation encounters a serious problem that may include being forced out of business. Why many well-known corporations would jeopardize public trust through their questionable business practices is very hard to understand. Was it demand to show greater profits? Ignorance? Or was it that they all thought the corporation was above the law and the scrutiny of the public? Squandering a company's reputation to make a quick buck is a very high price to pay for a lack of some employee's ethical standards and the lack of oversight of these individuals. Similar problems beset the public sector. Unfortunately, some government organizations do not treat taxpayers as if they were customers. Disrespect, rudeness, inefficiency and abuses of power by government employees are well-documented and not uncommon. Virtually every public organization has employees who abuse the power of their position at the expense of others. However, you can bet that the public, tiring of inefficiency and insensitive behavior of these individuals, will call for heads to roll.
Assuming responsibility for wrongful acts. My sense is that the best damage control is the truth. I would argue that truth is what has always worked best and is what the public wants to hear. Most of the population understand that leaders often run into difficult, demanding and complex situations. Occasionally, government personnel  will make a mistake and do something that may be a violation of policy or law, or perhaps, just a failure to use common sense. All the public requires to sustain its faith in the organization is that reasonable people within the organization give the matter serious consideration and take whatever corrective steps are required.
This takes moral courage on the part of the leader to operate an organization in this fashion. You have given up some of your control of the situation. You have possibly put your job on the line and the troops or the union may initially criticize you for not immediately and vigorously defending them. It is quite probable that a minority of the public will never accept your explanations or actions and will continue their criticism for a long time.
The bottom line is that taking responsibility is what leaders, and directors get paid to do. This is what being a leader, or a duck, is all about.
Tough words -- responsibility, honesty, leadership and public trust and accountability. They are even tougher to put into practice and blend into your own character. But if we are successful in building our character into a reflection of what those words mean, the personal reward is worth far more than the effort required. Peace of mind, respect, admiration and the ability to withstand life's curve balls are a few of the benefits of being a person of character. I am still working on my character, and believe me, I still have a long way to go. I hope you also think it is a worthwhile, lifelong endeavor.
PS
The media has the responsibility and obligation to tell the truth and the facts as they are, it must not panic the public and cause havoc. It must not divulge national secrets that can jeopardize our nation and our soldiers.
Men inhumanity to men – We must learn to respect each other, to pursue true peace and justice.
Compiled by: YJ Draiman

Awareness leads to action, action leads to results


Awareness leads to action, action leads to results

Rethinking the Relationship between Awareness and Action
Ask activists in the U.S. how they see the process of social change, and most will describe a linear relationship: i.e., social change occurs when people become aware of important issues and then act upon this awareness to change society. Thus, working from this assumption, activist’s first focus on education, so that people armed with new knowledge can act to transform society.
The above relationship between awareness and action is deeply ingrained in our thinking.
However, in many ways, this approach to the process of social change is promoted by a distinctly Western view of our world — i.e., conceptualizing awareness and action as distinct steps rather than as part of a single process, seeing social change as a rigid linear procedure (i.e., awareness leads to action but not vice-versa), defining social change as largely dependent on thinking and cognition, seeing human beings as naturally passive and needing to be acted upon by something outside of them (i.e., education) in order to gain awareness, and focusing on the individual human being as the center of social change. In other words, a Western worldview sees social change as beginning with individuals who become politically conscious through education and then acting on this awareness to change society.
Is there a different way to conceptualize the process of social change? Is there a different way to see the process involving awareness and action that can better enable us to educate, mobilize, organize, and transform society and ourselves?
Perhaps the best starting point is to reexamine our fundamental assumptions by creating a vision of social change around all the points that are missing from the Western viewpoint. Specifically:
• Awareness and action are not two distinct and separate stages but integrally related and part of the same process;
• Social change is not a rigid linear relationship between awareness and action but a dialectical process in which awareness and action constantly interact;
• Awareness and action are not simply cognitive processes but also involve values and emotions; moreover, emotions related to awareness and action are not simply anger and fear but “higher” emotions such as love and compassion; values associated with awareness and action include the commitment to social justice, equality, and fairness;
• People are naturally active and constantly searching for meaning, and the most effective forms of education tap into this aspect of human nature
• Education is not a process of “putting ideas into people” but rather a process of “drawing ideas of out them”;
• Social change is by its very definition social, not individual; thus, the focal point of social change is social interaction and not the individual human being;
• An individual human being becomes aware through social interactions and through the process of self-reflection based on these interactions; in the words of sociologist C. Wright Mills, individuals become conscious when they are able to connect their autobiographies with history and to see themselves as historical agents able to change the present and future.
Based on these points, we can begin to re-conceptualize the process of social change, not simply as a linear, one-way relationship between awareness and action but as a dynamic interrelationship revolving around social interactions. Of course, there is nothing new about this approach; it has long characterized the thinking of indigenous peoples worldwide and many past civilizations before the advent of colonialism and imperialism. It is also similar to the understanding of the learning and teaching process developed by educators who use the latest findings from brain-compatible learning and critical pedagogy.
But how can we depict this alternative approach to social change, so that activists raised under the legacy of Western colonialism can understand it and use it in their organizing work?
Below is a quick and crude diagram; I invite others who are more creative and artistic than me to develop a better diagram. The diagram shows the process of social change as not a single straight line linking awareness and action but rather as a circle — or a rolling wheel — revolving around social interactions (at the center of the circle). Spokes on the wheel represent awareness, action, self-reflection, and values and emotions — and all are interconnected. Thus, the process of social change can begin anywhere on the wheel. Moreover, as the wheel “rolls,” it is transformed and constantly becomes a “new” wheel, in much the same way that social change transforms both social structure and individual lives simultaneously.
Social Interaction
Awareness Action
Self-reflection
Connecting autobiography to history
Seeing oneself as an active agent to change the present and the future
Values and emotions

Awareness Leads to Action, Action Leads to Achievement

I have learned from experience that behavioral change always begins with awareness, because awareness leads to new choices. People will always choose to change when they are aware that the change will serve their best interest. Awareness of the dramatic impact of apathy and how it works to keep us where we are is the key to next level of achievement.
Now before you roll your eyes and ask, "What does apathy has to do with anything?" allow me to share my working definition of apathy:
A natural, human instinct, common to us all, that consistently encourages us to seek a comfort zone in which nothing ever changes.   
If you really look at your business with an objective eye, you will probably find areas where apathy has set in. After all, it is only natural. In your organization, apathy may look more like burnout, stagnation, indecision, lack of creativity, lack of motivation, and lack of productivity.
Sound more familiar now?
According to Maslow's famous book, A Theory of Human Motivation, most all human behavior can be traced back to the basic motivation of self-preservation and security. Some may be motivated by higher-level needs, but as soon as their security is threatened, they quickly revert to self-preservation. This process of seeking security and building unproductive comfort zones, if left unchecked, leads to behaviors that are usually described as the causes of people problems and ineffectiveness.
Consider the example of a significant international company in the lighting industry that I worked with. It had been operational since the 1960's and had grown revenues to a high of over 300 million dollars, but had leveled off four years prior and was in the beginning stages of decline. When I began to talk to the company leaders about becoming aware of the forces of apathy, the CEO responded "We are debt free with six years of operating capital in the bank. Why should we be concerned with growth? We're doing just fine."
The truth that this previously successful CEO had not yet embraced is this: the only alternative to growth is decline, and every organization must choose growth if they want to achieve sustainability.
This company and its leaders were clearly in the beginning stages of apathy with all its declining effects. My first step was to generate a new level of awareness of the available untapped potential existing among the leadership team. From this new level of awareness among the leadership team, I started a proactive leadership development process for everyone from the top leaders to every level of the organization.
So what was the result of this new-found awareness? A new action. The company began a new phase of growth within 30 months and has never looked back!
The same thing can happen with your business. Take a moment to identify key areas where apathy has set in and you are not experiencing growth. Remember – if you are not growing, you are declining. There is no in-between position in life. Your human instincts will always direct you toward safety by consistently encouraging you to stay where you are and to not change.
Achievement begins with awareness, and continues with effective choices and actions. You can achieve by simply doing the right things consistently over a sustained period of time. But as you strive to achieve, guard against apathy at every turn.
It takes constant diligence and focus to stay on track, but don't give up. With continued awareness and dedicated focus, achievement is right around the corner!
This very same scenario applies to the voting public. We must make the voters aware of the deteriorating government, loss of services and bring about action to change the government if the public wants to maintain the quality of life and services.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

YJ Draiman officially running for mayor of LA - 2013

YJ Draiman officially running for mayor of LA - 2013


Press release – January 25, 2011



YJ Draiman officially running for mayor of Los Angeles - 2013
"I want to fight for a better future for all the people of Los Angeles, and that's why today I'm announcing my candidacy for mayor," Draiman said.
I decided to run for Mayor of Los Angeles. Before I could make that commitment, I needed to free up the time required to do the job right.  Therefore, I decided to devote full time to the job of Mayor.
I am motivated by the wish to serve the Los Angeles community and protect our quality of life.  I have the skill, experience, long time community involvement and personal commitment to lead the city.  I will work hard to preserve residents’ priorities and the city’s coffers, during the difficult financial times ahead.  Some of my more specific goals are encouraging economic vitality, preserving and improving the City infrastructure, protecting the quality of our neighborhoods, supporting our open space and bicycle trails programs, working with the Neighborhood Councils and the Chamber to encourage local, innovative green businesses, and proper Urban Planning for Los Angeles, among others.
I previously ran for City Council in District 12.
I decided that to do the job right I must run for Mayor.
I am an Energy/Utility Auditor/Consultant for over 20 years.
I am married to a darling wife, we have two grown children – my oldest son is David Draiman a famous Rock Star with a Band by the name Disturbed, my younger son is a Psychologist doing research.
I am looking forward to being elected and serving the people of the City of Los Angeles.
We must work together as a cohesive force to improve our city.
“Transparency and accountability is my motto”

YJ Draiman for Mayor – 2013