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C hristian
08-10-2007, 03:59 PM
i know, I know, I've touted the other EHM related books by Perkins , but I just finished this one, and YOU MUST READ THIS BOOK!

http://www.johnperkins.org/Secret75.jpg


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(from his website: www.johnperkins.com)

What You Can Do…



We have arrived at the end of this book, and also at a beginning. You are probably wondering where to go next, what you can do to stop the corporatocracy and to end this insane and self-destructive march to global empire. You are ready to leave the book behind and pounce on the world.

You want ideas, and I could offer you some.

I could point out that the chapter you just read, about Bechtel and Halliburton in Iraq, is old news. By the time you read it, it may seem redundant. However, the significance of those newspaper articles goes far beyond the timeliness of their content. That chapter, l hope, will change the way you view the news, help you to read between the lines of every newspaper article that comes before you and to question the deeper implications of every radio and television report you tune in to.

Things are not as they appear. NBC is owned by General Electric, ABC by Disney, CBS by Viacom, and CNN is part of the huge AOL Time Warner conglomerate. Most of our newspapers, magazines, and publishing houses are owned - and manipulated- by gigantic international corporations. Our media is part of the corporatocracy. The officers and directors who control nearly all our communications outlets know their places; they are taught throughout life that one of their most important jobs is to perpetuate, strengthen, and expand the system they have inherited. They are very efficient at doing so, and when opposed, they can be ruthless. So the burden falls on you to see the truth beneath the veneer and to expose it. Speak it to your family and friends; spread the word.

I could give you a list of practical things to do. For instance, cut back on your oil consumption. In 1990, before we first invaded Iraq, we imported 8 million barrels of oil; by 2003 and the second invasion, this had increased more than 50 percent, to over 12 million barrels. The next time you are tempted to go shopping, read a book instead, exercise, or meditate. Downsize your home, wardrobe, car, once, and most everything else in your life. Protest against “free” trade agreements and against companies that exploit desperate people in sweatshops or that pillage the environment.

I could tell you that there is great hope within the current system, that there is nothing inherently wrong with banks, corporations, and governments - or with the people who manage them - and that they certainly do not have to compose a corporatocracy. I could go into detail about how the problems confronting us today are not the result of malicious institutions; rather, they stem from fallacious concepts about economic development. The fault lies not in the institutions themselves, but in our perceptions of the manner in which they function and interact with one another, and of the role their managers play in that process.

In fact, those highly effective worldwide communications and distribution networks could be used to bring about positive and compassionate changes. Imagine if the Nike swoosh, MacDonald's arches, and Coca-Cola logo became symbols of companies whose primary goals were to clothe and feed the world's poor in environ- mentally beneficial ways. This is no more unrealistic than putting a man on the moon, breaking up the Soviet Union, or creating the infrastructure that allows those companies to reach every corner of the planet. We need a revolution in our approach to education, to empower ourselves and our children to think, to question, and to dare to act. You can set an example. Be a teacher and a student; inspire everyone around you through your example.

I could encourage you to take specific actions that will impact the institutions in your life. Speak out whenever any forum presents itself write letters and e-mails, phone in questions and concerns, vote for enlightened school boards, county commissions, and local ordinances. When you must shop, do it consciously; get personally involved.

I could remind you of what the Shuars told me in 1990, that the world is as you dream it, and that we can trade in that old nightmare of polluting industries, clogged highways, and overcrowded cities for a new dream based on Earth-honoring and socially responsible principles of sustainability and equality. It is within our power to transform ourselves, to change the paradigm.

I could enumerate the amazing opportunities we have available to us for creating a better world, right now: enough food and water for everyone; medicines to cure diseases and to prevent epidemics that needlessly plague millions of people today; transportation systems that can deliver life's essentials to even the most remote corners of the planet; the ability to raise literacy levels and to provide Internet services that could make it possible for every person on the planet to communicate with every other person; tools for conflict resolution that could render wars obsolete; technologies that explore both the vastness of space and the most minute, subatomic energy, which could then be applied to developing more ecologic and efficient homes for everyone; sufficient resources to accomplish all of the above; and much more.

I could suggest steps for you to take immediately, to help others understand the crises and the opportunities.

*

Offer study groups about Confessions of an Economic Hit Man at your local bookstore or library, or both (a guideline for doing this is available at www.dreamchange.org).
*

Develop a presentation for a nearby elementary school on your favorite subject (sports, cooking, ants - almost anything), and use it to help students wake up to the true nature of the society they are inheriting.
*

Send e-mails to all the addresses in your file, expressing feelings triggered by this and other books you read.

But I suspect you have already thought of most of these things. You just need to pick a couple that most appeal to you and do them, and to realize that all of these are part of a much greater commitment that you and I must make. We must commit ourselves absolutely and unequivocally to shaking ourselves and everyone around us awake. We must hear the wisdom of the prophecies, open our hearts and minds to the possibilities, become conscious, and then take action.

However, this book is not a prescription; it is a confession, pure and simple. It is the confession of a man who allowed himself to become a pawn, an economic hit man; a man who bought into a corrupt system because it opened so many perks, and because buying in was easy to justify; a man who knew better but who could always find excuses for his own greed, for exploiting desperate people and pillaging the planet; a man who took full advantage of the fact that he was born into one of the wealthiest societies history has ever known, and who also could pity himself because his parents were not at the top of the pyramid; a man who listened to his teachers, read the textbooks on economic development, and then followed the example of other men and women who legitimatize every action that promotes global empire, even if that action result in murder, genocide, and environmental destruction; a man who trained others to follow in his footsteps. It is my confession.

The fact that you have read this far indicates that you can relate on some personal level to my confession, that you and I share a lot in common. We may have traveled different roads, but we have driven similar vehicles, used the same fuels, and stopped to eat at restaurants owned by the same corporations.

For me, confessing was an essential part of my personal wake-up call. Like all confessions, it is the just step toward redemption.

Now it is your turn. You need to make your own confession. When you come clean on who you are, why you are here during this time in history, why you have done the things you have -the ones you are proud of and those others - and where you intend to go next, you will experience an immediate sense of relief. It may be nothing less than euphoric.

Believe me when I say that writing this book has been deeply emotional, and often a painful and humiliating experience. It has been frightening in a way nothing I ever faced before has been frightening. But it has opened me to a sense of relief I have never known until now, a feeling I can only describe as ecstatic.

Ask yourself these questions. What do I need to confess? How have I deceived myself and others? Where have I deferred? Why have I allowed myself to be sucked into a system that I know is unbalanced? What will I do to make sure our children, and all children everywhere, are able to fulfill the dream of our Founding Fathers, the dream of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness? What course will I take to end the needless starvation, and make sure there is never again a day like September 11? How can I help our children understand that people who live gluttonous, unbalanced lives should be pitied but never, ever emulated, even if those people present them- selves, through the media they control, as cultural icons and try to convince us that penthouses and yachts bring happiness? What changes will I commit to making in my attitudes and perceptions? What forums will I use to teach others and to learn more on my own?

These are the essential questions of our time. Each of us needs to answer them in our own way and to express our answers clearly, unequivocally. Paine and Jefferson and all the other patriots are watching over our shoulders. Their words continue to inspire us today. The spirits of those men and women who left their farms and fishing boats and headed out to confront the mighty British Empire, and of those who fought to emancipate the slaves during the Civil War, and of those who sacrificed their lives to protect the world from fascism, speak to us. As do the spirits of the ones who stayed at home and produced the food and clothes and gave their moral support, and of all the men and women who have defended what was won on those battlefields: the teachers, poets, artists, entrepreneurs, health workers, the manual laborers... you and me.

The hour is ours. It is now time for each and every one of us to step up to the battle line, to ask the important questions, to search our souls for our own answers, and to take action.

The coincidences of your life, and the choices you have made in response to them, have brought you to this point...

C hristian
08-10-2007, 04:00 PM
More Information on What You Can Do...
(also from his website)


After attending one of John's presentations, Steve Cooperman followed John's suggestion to think about what actions people can take to create a more socially and environmentally responsible world. He developed a list that is summarized below and he suggests the following: "If you don't know where to start, start small. Pick a couple of items that most appeal to you. For lifestyle and product purchase changes, be sensitive to those affected by your decisions, such as family and friends. Share your new habits with others. Avoid turning them off -- don't be dogmatic; instead, share information with them about why you are taking actions, then let them decide for themselves what changes they want to make."



1. Educate yourself.

Read, watch documentaries, go to talks, and ask lots of questions. Knowledge will help motivate you to take action, and will help you with educating others.

For recommended sources of news, reading material, viewing, and more, see “Recommended Sources of Information” below.



2. Educate others.

Help others understand the issues and the opportunities.

The most powerful way of educating and influencing others is to set an example. As Perkins says at the end of Confessions of an Economic Hit Man:

We need a revolution in our approach to education, to empower ourselves and our children to think, to question, and to dare to act. You can set an example. Be a teacher and a student; inspire everyone around you through your example.

Speak about what you have read and learned and what you see going on, to your family and friends.

Send e-mails to all the addresses in your contact list, expressing feelings triggered by what you have read and learned.

Speak out whenever any forum presents itself.

Write letters and e-mails, e.g., to your local newspaper, government officials, business leaders, etc.
Phone in questions and concerns.
Vote for enlightened school boards, county commissions, and local ordinances.

Start a study group, e.g., about Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, at your local bookstore or library.

Arrange for showings of films like The Corporation in your community.



3. Practice conscious, socially responsible living.

Cut down on your consumption, and live more simply.

Shop less. The next time you are tempted to go shopping, read a book instead, exercise, or meditate.

Downsize your home, wardrobe, car, and most everything else in your life.

Make socially responsible transportation decisions:

* Cut back on your gas consumption.
* Whenever possible, walk, ride a bike, take public transportation, or carpool.
* Avoid unnecessary car trips.
* Drive a fuel-efficient low polluting car.

Electric Vehicles UK - a UK non-profit campaign website promoting Zero-Emission Electric Vehicles and Related Renewable Energy Technologies. www.EVUK.co.uk

Keep your house as energy-efficient as possible:

* Use as little electricity, heat and hot water as possible.
* Install energy-efficient lighting and appliances.
* Choose an electricity supplier that offers renewable energy.

For tips on social responsible living, see:

New American Dream www.newdream.org

The Consumer’s Guide to Effective Environmental Choices: Practical Advice from the Union of Concerned Scientists, Michael Brower and Warren Leon

For more information on living simply, see:

Simple Living Network, www.simpleliving.net
Simplicity Resource Guide, www.gallagherpress.com/pierce
Simplicity Lessons: A 12-Step Guide to Living Simply, Linda Breen Pierce

You also may be interested in exploring the possibility of joining or forming an “intentional community,” a group of people who have chosen to live together with a common purpose, working cooperatively to create a lifestyle that reflects their shared core values. For more information, see:

Intentional Communities, www.ic.org



4. Make conscious, socially responsible economic decisions.

When you must shop, do it consciously; get personally involved.

For general recommendations, go to:

Co-op America www.coopamerica.org, whose mission is “to harness economic power—the strength of consumers, investors, businesses, and the marketplace—to create a socially just and environmentally sustainable society.”

New American Dream www.newdream.org, offers resources that “make it easier to live consciously, buy wisely, and join with others in the New Dream Community trying to make a difference.”

The Green Guide www.thegreenguide.com, a source for green homes tips, product reviews, environmental health and wellness products information, and green living advice.

For more information, see “Recommended Sources of Information,” below.

Do not purchase products and services from companies that make harmful products, exploit workers, destroy communities, or devastate the environment.

For more info, see Co-op America's Responsible Shopper, which reports on the social and environmental performance of some of the largest consumer product companies in the market today. Go to www.responsibleshopper.org

See also Dolphin Blue www.dolphinblue.com: which sells environmental responsible office supplies.

Buy clothes and goods that are not made in sweat shops:

For ecologically responsible jewelry - A marriage of values - log into http://www.greenkarat.com

For information, go to www.coopamerica.org

For outerwear, please log onto www.llbean.com

For clothes made in downtown LA, log onto www.americanapparel.net

Drink tap water, not bottled water.

Here are some facts:

According to the United Nations, if we took half of what is currently spent on bottled water (approximately $100 billion annually) and invested it in water infrastructure and treatment, everyone in the world could have access to clean drinking water.

The U.S. EPA sets more stringent quality standards for tap water than the FDA does for bottled water.

Approximately 40% of bottled water is actually tap water.

It takes 1.5 billion barrels of oil to produce the plastic for water bottles.

According to the Container Recycling Institute, only 14% of plastic water bottles are recycled.

A water bottle in a landfill will take more than 1000 years to biodegrade.

(add fact on cost to deliver water)

For more information: Organic Consumers Association, www.organicconsumers.org

Buy from local businesses over corporate chains.

Buy locally grown, organic, non-genetically modified (GM) food

Agribusiness and supermarket corporations are increasingly gaining control over the world’s food supply. This shift to a centralized model of food production and distribution requires more chemicals, more transportation, and large-scale monocultures, and has had disastrous consequences on local communities, economies and ecosystems. Local food production, on the other hand, has environmental, economic, and health benefits.

The International Society for Ecology and Culture has a Local Food Kit that details the hidden costs of the global food system and the many benefits of more diversified, localized food systems. Go to www.isec.org.uk

For the freshest, healthiest, most flavorful organic food that's grown closest to you. Go to http://www.localharvest.org

For more info, see also:

FoodRoutes Network www.foodroutes.org: Provides resources to organizations working to rebuild local, community-based food systems through “Buy Fresh, Buy Local” campaigns.

National Farm to School Network www.farmtoschool.org: Connecting schools with local farms with the goal of improving student nutrition, educating students on health and nutrition, and supporting local farmers.

Community Food Security Coalition www.foodsecurity.org: Mission is “to develop self-reliance among all communities in obtaining their food and to create a system of growing, manufacturing, processing, making available, and selling food that is regionally based and grounded in the principles of justice, democracy, and sustainability.”

Genetic Engineering Action Network www.geaction.org: A network of almost 100 organizations from across the US working to resist genetic engineering in agriculture.

Organic Consumers Association www.organicconsumers.org: Deals with issues of food safety, industrial agriculture, genetic engineering, children's health, corporate accountability, Fair Trade, environmental sustainability and other key topics.

Institute for Responsible Technology www.responsibletechnology.org: Information on the health and environmental dangers of genetically modified (GM) foods, and actions you can take to help stop the production of GM foods and crops.

True Food Network www.truefoodnow.org: Calling on food companies and supermarkets to stop using GE ingredients in our food. True Food Shopping Guide.

Buy from “green companies.”

For more info: www.coopamerica.org

For a national directory of green companies, go to www.coopamerica.org

Practice energy conservation, and use renewable energy sources.
For more info: www.coopamerica.org

Protect our forests from unwanted waste.
Stop receiving catalogs and junk mail.
Get your mail, magazines, etc. online.
Purchase from companies that promote only responsibly-produced wood and paper products.

Invest in socially responsible companies.

For more info:
http://www.coopamerica.org/socialinvesting/

See also:

Co-op America has a Financial Planning Handbook at http://www.coopamerica.org/pubs/fph

Co-America also has a bimonthly newsletter, Real Money, with tips on green living, purchasing, and investing. www.coopamerica.org/pubs/realmoney



5. Get involved in organizations working to raise consciousness and create a better world.

Explore the possibility of donating time or money to organizations whose mission inspires you.

Here’s one example. Dream Change www.dreamchange.org grew out of Perkin’s work with indigenous communities. One of its projects, WOW! (Waking Our World) was created to “empower individuals to consciously channel their energies into actions that create a more compassionate and just world.” Consider the possibility of setting up a regular WOW (Waking Our World) community group in your area.

Organizations focused on corporate social and environmental responsibility:

Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, www.iccr.org

The Coalition for Environmentally Responsible Economies (CERES), www.ceres.org, promotes greater corporate responsibility on environmental issues. It was formed out of a partnership between some of America's largest institutional investors and environmental groups.

World Business Council for Sustainable Development www.wbcsd.org

Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development: www.oecd.org
Bench Marks Foundation of Southern Africa for Corporate Social Responsibility, www.benchmarks.org/befsa/

ROP is a statewide organization of locally-based groups that work to create communities accountable to a standard of human dignity: the belief in the equal worth of all people, the need for equal access to justice, and the right to self-determination. ROP

An organization that encourages socially responsible investing:

Foundation Partnership for Corporate Responsibility www.foundationpartnership.org

For other organizations:

See “Recommended Sources of Information” below.



6. Take specific actions that will impact your community and the institutions in your life.

Encourage local retailers to sell only clothes that are non-sweat-shop manufactured.

Organize a Clean Clothes Campaign in your community (for more information, see www.pica.ws

Encourage local retailers (grocery stores, restaurants) to sell or use locally grown, organic, non-genetically modified food.

Advocate for locally grown food and family farms (for more info, go to www.foodroutes.org.

Encourage the place you work, and other local institutions, to make environmentally conscious purchasing decisions. Sources of information:

Purchasing Power: Harnessing Institutional Procurement for People and the Planet, by Lisa Mastny for the Worldwatch Institute. The book (printed on recycled, post-consumer waste, process chlorine-free paper) provides compelling, accessible, fact-based analysis and describes the power of conscious institutional procurement decisions to address critical global issues, help solve the world's problems, and protect its future.

Interface www.interfacesustainability.com: Interface, Inc. Founder and Chairman Ray Anderson is an industry champion of sustainability. This site, which includes articles and video clips of Anderson speaking on the subject, is an invaluable resource to educate and inspire businesspeople. Anderson has also written two books of interest:

Mid-Course Correction: Toward a Sustainable Enterprise: The Interface Model

The Journey from There to Here: The Eco-Odyssey of a CEO

Dolphin Blue www.dolphinblue.com: environmental responsible office supplies.

Introduce the place you work, and other companies, to the Global Principles Network’s Bench Marks www.bench-marks.org, a set of social and environmental criteria and business performance indicators designed to promote positive corporate social responsibility.

Organize a boycott against a local corporation or organization with irresponsible practices. Boycotts can be a powerful tool for raising awareness about the impact of corporate practices on workers, communities, and the environment and getting corporations to change their behavior. For more info: www.coopamerica.org

Protest against “free” trade agreements and against companies that exploit desperate people in sweatshops or that pillage the environment.



7. Believe that it can be done.

The world is as you dream it; we can trade in that old nightmare of polluting industries, clogged highways, and overcrowded cities for a new dream based on Earth-honoring and socially responsible principles of sustainability and equality. It is within our power to transform ourselves, to change the paradigm.

As John says in “…Economic Hit Man,”

We must commit ourselves absolutely and unequivocally to shaking ourselves and everyone around us awake. We must hear the wisdom of the prophecies, open our hearts and minds to the possibilities, become conscious, and then take action.



Recommended Sources of Information

General:

Co-op America www.coopamerica.org has information on living green, green energy, sweatshops, fair trade, social investing and more, also publications like Co-op America Quarterly, National Green Pages, and Real Money

New American Dream www.newdream.org, offers resources that “make it easier to live consciously, buy wisely, and join with others in the New Dream Community trying to make a difference.”

OneWorld.net www.oneworld.net, is a global community of over 1600 organizations working together for human rights and sustainable development.

Dream Change www.dreamchange.org, is a “world wide grass roots movement of people from diverse cultures and backgrounds dedicated to shifting consciousness and promoting sustainable lifestyles for the individual and global community.”

EnviroLink www.envirolink.org is an Internet clearinghouse of environmental information and news. Site Map Resource Topics include: Sustainable Business, Sustainable Development, Sustainable Living, and more.

Interface www.interfacesustainability.com: Interface, Inc. Founder and Chairman Ray Anderson is an industry champion of sustainability. This site, which includes articles and video clips of Anderson speaking on the subject, is an invaluable resource to educate and inspire businesspeople.

Sierra Club, www.sierraclub.org

Organic Consumers Association, www.organicconsumers.org

Sustainable Living Network, www.sustainableliving.org

Friends of the Earth www.foe.org

Buckminster Fuller Institute, www.bfi.org

Worldwatch Institute, www.worldwatch.org

National Resources Defense Council, www.nrdc.org

Rainforest Action Network, www.ran.org

Union of Concerned Scientists, www.ucsusa.org

Campus Greens, www.campusgreens.org



Sources of current news:

TruthOut, www.truthout.org

BuzzFlash, www.buzzflash.com

Common Dreams, www.commondreams.org

Mother Jones magazine, www.motherjones.com

Utne Reader magazine, www.utne.com

Business Ethics magazine, www.business-ethics.com



Sustainability/environmental publishers:

Island Press, www.islandpress.org

New Society Publishers, www.newsociety.com

Chelsea Green, www.chelseagreen.com



Recommended reading:

The Better World Handbook, www.betterworldhandbook.com/

The People’s Business: Controlling Corporations and Restoring Democracy, Lee Drutman and Charlie Cray

The Consumer’s Guide to Effective Environmental Choices: Practical Advice from the Union of Concerned Scientists, Michael Brower and Warren Leon

The Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power, Joel Bakan

The Ecology of Commerce, Paul Hawken

Natural Capitalism: Creating the Next Industrial Revolution, Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins, and L. Hunter Lovins

Unequal Protection: The Rise of Corporate Dominance and the Theft of Human Rights, Thom Hartmann

The Last Hours of Ancient Sunlight, Thom Hartman

When Corporations Rule the World, David Korten

One Market Under God: Extreme Capitalism, Market Populism, and the End of Economic Democracy, Thomas Frank

For the Common Good: Redirecting the Economy toward Community, the Environment, and a Sustainable Future, Herman Daly

Corporation Nation: How Corporations Are Taking Over Our Lives and What We Can Do About It, Ralph Nader

The Myth of Free Trade, Ravi Batra

Divine Right of Capital: Dethroning the Corporate Aristocracy, Marjorie Kelly

The Soul of Capitalism: Opening Paths to a Moral Economy, William Greider

Mid-Course Correction: Toward a Sustainable Enterprise: The Interface Model, Ray Anderson

The Journey from There to Here: The Eco-Odyssey of a CEO, Ray Anderson

Soul of a Citizen: Living with Conviction in a Cynical Time, Paul Loeb



Recommended viewing:

The Corporation: Based on the book by the same name, this documentary that looks at the concept of the corporation throughout recent history up to its present-day dominance, the threat it has for our world and our future, and what people with courage, intelligence and determination can do to stop it.

The Big One: Michael Moore exposes wrongdoing by greedy big businesses and callous politicians around America.

Manufacturing Consent: A film about noted American linguist/political dissident Noam Chomsky and his warning about corporate media's role in modern propaganda.

C hristian
08-12-2007, 02:03 PM
The first Economic Hitman: Kermit Roosevelt Jr. , grandson of Teddy Roosevelt

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kermit_Roosevelt%2C_Jr.

dirtie blonde
05-27-2008, 02:21 PM
I am currently reading Confessions of an Economic Hitman and it is absolutely insane. I can't wait to read all of his books. Pretty scary shit though.

It really helps you put current events into perspective.

dirtie blonde
07-23-2008, 02:53 PM
Just finished this. Wow. You have to read Confessions first though, he makes a lot of references to it.

I am really going to start setting some goals for myself and get more involved in some of those organizations he mentions.

C hristian
07-31-2008, 09:49 AM
absolutely! !!

:thumbsup:


It's easy to forget all this stuff once learned, but always worthy to come back to and to realaign and refocus our efforts. in the end, it's only the long-term changes that we put forth, and the relationships that we form, and our health and personal development, that matter.

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