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Daily Archives: March 9, 2017
Karur Vysya Bank to leverage on technology – The Hindu
Posted: March 9, 2017 at 3:11 am
The Hindu | Karur Vysya Bank to leverage on technology The Hindu Karur Vysya Bank, which has invested about 80 crore a year on technology for the last two years, will leverage on technology for its next phase of growth. Next five to seven years, will be exciting as we are investing heavily on technology, K ... |
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JCCs to Sessions: We’re ‘frustrated’ with progress on bomb threats – Jerusalem Post Israel News
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Donald Trump sits with Jeff Sessions at Trump Tower in Manhattan, New York. (photo credit:REUTERS)
Executives from 141 Jewish community centers signed a letter to Attorney General Jeff Sessions expressing frustration with efforts combating a rash of bomb threats.
The letter, sent Wednesday by the JCC Association of North America, the national organization of Jewish community centers, requested a meeting with Sessions and urged the Justice Department to do more to stop the threats.
It also praised local law enforcements response to the incidents and recognized President Donald Trumps condemnation of them.
Still, we are frustrated with the progress in resolving this situation, the letter said. We insist that all relevant federal agencies, including your own, apply all the resources available to identify and bring the perpetrator or perpetrators, who are trying to instill anxiety and fear in communities across the country, to justice.
More than 100 bomb threats have hit JCCs and other Jewish sites across the country since the beginning of the year. The latest wave, on Tuesday and Wednesday, targeted 20 JCCs, day schools and offices of the Anti-Defamation League.
The Department of Homeland Security has made its regional experts available to JCCs, and leaders of major Jewish groups met with FBI Director James Comey on March 3. Local JCC directors have repeatedly praised the response of area law enforcement.
Local law enforcement have represented a beacon of responsiveness and professionalism as our communities have endured dozens of anti-Semitic threats in past weeks, the letter said. We respectfully ask that federal agencies, including your own, do the same.
Authorities have yet to identify the person or people behind most of the threats. Juan Thompson, a St. Louis resident charged with making eight of the threats to avenge a former romantic partner, appears to have been a copycat.
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Progress for Children with Equity in the Middle East and North … – ReliefWeb
Posted: at 3:11 am
Children in the countries of the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region1 have witnessed remarkable progress in development during the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) era. Starting from comparatively advanced levels, many countries made further progress in implementation of their childrens rights agenda since the beginning of the 21st century. However, progress has been uneven among countries as well as within countries. The uprisings, which started in 2011, and the on-going humanitarian conflicts affected significant numbers of people, including children and women, and caused stagnation or even reversal in what had been achieved until then in some MENA countries. The Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) agenda, adopted in 2015, sets new more ambitious targets globally and calls for nations to develop their own country-specific agendas for the post-2015 period based on achieved progress to date.
In the MENA region, there is no consolidated source of information presenting achievements and existing disparities in the implementation of childrens rights. This publication is a first attempt to consolidate available statistical evidence, for the period 1990 - 2015 which demonstrates progress and achievements of MENA countries in the realization of the rights of their children. But it is not merely about numbers and percentages, because behind any statistics are the lives and well-being of thousands or millions of children.
By focusing on MDG and SDG indicators relevant to children, the publication serves as a basis for assessing the achievement of the global MDG targets and for the setting of national SDG targets. Some additional variables, which can explain trends and most recent status vs-a-vs the targets, are also examined at a national or sub-national level where possible. Rather than presenting regional averages, this report uses data at the national and sub-national level. Inter-country and in certain instances intra-country comparisons, building upon available data, help identify disparities between countries as well as in-country inequalities, thus pointing to the most deprived children. There are emerging patterns revealed through some specific indicators, which would at times require further, more in-depth analysis to explain causes and identify possible ways to address gaps. Such evidence-substantiated knowledge can in turn serve as a good reference when setting national targets and designing tailored policies and programmes, focused on the most marginalized people including children.
This publication identifies some data gaps in a number of areas relevant to children, particularly in the context of the SDG agenda and its indicators framework. Therefore, the publication can serve to substantiate in-country dialogues and inform specific commitments to strengthen national statistical systems. This can be done through further expansion of both administrative and household-based data collection and analysis, filling in these gaps and ensuring production of data necessary to report on progress towards set national SDG-related targets.
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Watch live: ‘Slow and steady’ progress for April the Giraffe – wnep.com
Posted: at 3:11 am
HARPURSVILLE, N.Y. Things continue to be slow and steady for April the giraffe as she progresses toward giving birth to a fourth calf, park officials said Wednesday.
April remains in great condition with no concerns from keepers or our vet team, officials with Animal Adventure Park said on Facebook. Activity in the belly remains very visible to the eye even through the web cam! Slow and steady mother nature has everything timed right. Keepers will be in shortly and any change will warrant an update!
The live camera feed was down for a time on Wednesday. Park officials said high winds caused problems with the feed.
The zoo has been streaming a view of the giraffes pen since February, and since then, hundreds of thousands of people have been tuningin to the live stream, waiting for the baby giraffe to be born.
Newswatch 16s Peggy Lee evenvisited the expectant mom.
The zoo has also launched a GoFundMe campaign to offset theannual care of the giraffes.
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Illinois Football: Lovie’s rebuild a work in progress – Galesburg Register-Mail
Posted: at 3:11 am
Lovie Smith's culture change at Illinois a work in progress
CHAMPAIGN Ten months ago, fans swarmed around Lovie Smith after his team's open practice, eager to get an autograph from the former NFL coach who had just been hired to turn around the moribund football program at Illinois.
Over the weekend was a much calmer scene with about 150 fans at Saturday's practice and a line of about 40 waiting for his signature.
After athletic director Josh Whitman fired Bill Cubit and then hired Smith on March 7, there has been the realization that it will take time to fix things. The 3-9 season spelled that out, too, but players say it is happening.
"(The culture change is) on the rise, for sure. It's definitely changed since the last coaching staff left," senior running back Kendrick Foster said. "We're definitely meaner and tougher, our mentality to compete is more fierce, I can say that. It's a work in progress and you have to trust the process."
A year ago, Smith had little time to assemble a staff and moved spring practice to April. He didn't even know his players' names. He knows them now and they know him.
"We're not scrambling to get in and get things installed with the players and trying to get everything done," defensive coordinator Hardy Nickerson said. "We've had a little more time to meet with the players, get things installed so we have a better understanding of what we want to do on the field."
Many of the players here a year ago were either recruited by Cubit or former coach Tim Beckman, who was fired amid allegations of player mistreatment. Cubit didn't last long, either, and the hope was that Smith would at least bring some stability.
"We're trying for a huge change in culture. We didn't have a great culture in the past," junior offensive lineman Nick Allegretti said. "All we're trying to do is change the culture, make it tougher, stronger program in general that can make it through a Big Ten season."
The key is accountability, coaches and players agreed, and the staff has built a personal relationship with each player based on honesty. Players say they see Smith as a player's coach: When they need something from him, he is there to help. When they are not doing well, he will let them know.
"It's been about looking yourself in the mirror," senior wide receiver Malik Turner said. "If everyone's doing that, then we're moving in the right direction, because it starts with us."
Smith already had success in his first recruiting class despite questions whether he could land talent after spending nearly 20 years in the NFL. But his first class was ranked No. 34 by Scout.com and No. 45 by 247sports.com, and recruits have raved about Smith, who knows that he's set to start building a Big Ten power for years to come.
"We hopefully set a foundation that will help us win championships one day, that's been the plan all along," Smith said.
Coaches like offensive coordinator Garrick McGee don't think Smith has changed at all, though he has had to change the things he does compared to what he did while leading the Chicago Bears and Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
He's become accustomed to visiting families around the nation, making his pitch for why parents should send their sons to Illinois. Twitter has become a norm for the 58-year-old coach, tweeting at celebrities like Chance the Rapper, trying to get everyone involved in the Illini rebuild.
He's become a regular at men's basketball games, sitting behind the basket and watching his favorite sport.
It's been part of a change that coaches and players know isn't close to being done. It will take a few years to assess Smith's progress, assuming he remains in place, but he and his players know it starts with workouts on those cool February and March days. The players have become accustomed to seeing Smith on the field, but there are still moments where they can't believe that he is their leader.
"Sometimes I do sit back and see how blessed I am to have this coaching staff that believes in me, and just believes in this team and program," Foster said. "They just continue to surprise me with how much they care about us, that's what you want from a coaching staff, just caring about the person, not the football player, they care about both, and that's the amazing thing about this staff."
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Johns Hopkins touts progress of local hiring, contracting push … – Baltimore Business Journal
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Baltimore Business Journal | Johns Hopkins touts progress of local hiring, contracting push ... Baltimore Business Journal Johns Hopkins University and Johns Hopkins Health System say they have hired 304 workers from distressed neighborhoods since September 2015, part of an ... |
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The Awolowo Legacy And Its Message For Nigerian Youths | The … – The News
Posted: at 3:08 am
Banji Akintoye
Obafemi Awolowo
By Banji Akintoye
We gather today, the 6th day of March 2017, as we have done unfailingly and dutifully every year for decades, to celebrate the birthday of our father and benefactor, Chief Obafemi Awolowo. Each celebration is our way of thanking him for the glistering heritage which he bequeathed to us; it also a way of reminding ourselves that we possess a great heritage, and that we can achieve whatever we set our hearts and minds upon to achieve.
Todays lecture is a message to our youths in these terrible times in the life and history of Nigeria. I will try to keep it as simple and brief as possible. Indeed, I want it to be as close as possible to a university classroom lecture, because I want my chosen audience, the youths of our country, to benefit fully from it.
Our father, Obafemi Awolowo, was an unrelenting searcher for information and knowledge about his society, country and world, a philosopher, a man of consistent efficiency and steadily high ideals in his private and public life, a man of titanic courage, an accomplished development planner, an endowed nation builder, an astute administrator, a great motivator, a wonderful leader of men and, above all, an inspired and inspiring teacher. It is one of the greatest joys of my life that, in my generation of Nigerian youths, I belonged to the select group of youths who were privileged to be close to Chief Awolowo as to a father, who were fortunate to learn at his feet, and who were called upon, under his leadership, to attempt great exploits towards the improvement of the quality of the lives of our people, and towards the prosperity and greatness of our country.
Chief Awolowo remains very much alive today, because his legacy continues to impact the lives of millions of his countrymen for good. I was in a get-together of old friends some weeks ago in a town in our Southwest. In the course of the evening, we in the gathering got into recounting our memories and reminiscences about our childhood lives. The few of us who were in our eighties told stories about how, when we were children, only a few of us in our towns and villages were going to school while the vast majority of our friends, brothers and cousins were not going, mostly because their parents could not afford to send them. But most of us in the gathering who were in our seventies and below told stories of how life suddenly changed for all children in their towns and villages in 1955, the year in which Chief Awolowo introduced Free Primary Education in the Western Region.
Most of the men and women who are senior professors, senior administrators, senior statesmen, senior engineers, senior architects, senior lawyers and so on in our Southwest today, are so because Chief Awolowo opened the door of schools to all children from 1955 on in our Western Region. All these senior citizens are parents of highly educated families that today occupy very important places in the life of our region, our country, and other countries in the wide world families that will, probably many centuries from now, continue to be important in the lives of our communities and of the world.
Some years ago, while traveling in some countries of Southeast Asia, I met a Yoruba man who was Dean of Technology in his university there. He told me that his place of origin was a small village in a remote part of our Southwest. I jokingly asked him how he had managed to come from his remote village to the position of Dean in a university so far across the world, and he laughed and answered in one single word, Awolowo. What he meant is that it was Chief Awolowo that had made it possible for his poor parents to send him to the small school in his small village home, and that it was Chief Awolowo that thereby opened the paths across the world before him.
Chief Awolowo changed the life, the capabilities and the prospects of the whole Yoruba nation in Nigeria, a nation that now numbers about 50 million in population. I returned home a few months ago, after many years of living and working as a professor abroad, mostly in the United States of America. America is a country of thousands of universities; and there is hardly any one of those universities that does not have some Yoruba professors. These days, since my return home from abroad, when I wake up in the morning, I love to stand at a discreet street corner and watch streams of our children going to school. Many of the children are so young that their older sisters or brothers have to hold their hands or even carry them.
The one sure thing that every Yoruba mother does for a child of school age today is to send him or her to school. Unknown to those mothers, they are building the Yoruba nation into a mighty nation in the world. In all the future, whenever the story of the greatness is written or told, it will always be remembered that it all started when Obafemi Awolowo opened the door to schools to all the children of his people. Free Education in our Western Region under Chief Awolowo was the very first in all of Africa.
The gift of Free Education was the greatest single gift given by Chief Awolowo to us his people, but it was not the only gift. Under his leadership, the Western Region stood out as the number one Region, the pace setter in development, in Nigeria. The wide-ranging development achievements included many miles of solidly surfaced roads all over our Region, pipe-borne clean water to many of our towns, the first television station on the African continent, the first public-owned sports stadium, the first industrial estate, imaginative support systems for our cocoa farmers (as a result of which our cocoa farmers became the most productive African farmers on the African continent), farm centres training our youths in modern farming, technical training centres teaching modern job skills to our youths, a broad-based investment corporation with investments in industries, commerce, banking, and real estate (the largest agglomeration of African-owned investment capital in Africa). Very importantly too, our Region was the leader in Nigeria in the development of a democratic society, and a government responsive to its people. On the whole, we in the Western Region were led to dream dreams of greatness in the world, we began to see ourselves as soon able to catch up with industrial world leaders like Japan. And we gave our Region the name First in Africa.
I need to add that Chief Awolowo did not intend to limit all these to the Western Region. No. When parents from other Regions brought their children across Regional borders to our free schools, Chief Awolowos government did not try to stop them. Moreover, he made dedicated efforts to give these goods to the whole of Nigeria. First and foremost in this regard, he was the leader who promoted most clearly and most consistently the idea that a country like Nigeria, comprising many different nationalities, in order to be able to live in harmony and make progress, needs to establish a rational federal system based on respect for the various nationalities. Other Nigerian leaders resisted this, and some castigated him for it, but he never gave up. His words have proved true in the course of the nearly sixty years of Nigerias independence. By concocting Nigeria into a country with an all-controlling central government, those who reject Chief Awolowos federalist ideas have led Nigeria into evil times times so evil that Nigeria may ultimately, or may even soon, break up.
Moreover, from 1959, Chief Awolowo embarked on efforts to take his development ideas to the Nigerian federal government and thereby to the whole of Nigeria. He fought titanic election campaigns, and reached the hearts of ordinary Nigerians far and wide. But, as we all know, most elections are won in Nigeria not through the votes of the common people but through the manipulations of powerful and influential citizens, especially powerful and influential citizens holding the machinery of the federal government. At federal election after federal election, Chief Awolowo won the majority of votes and lost the elections.
Unfortunately, in the midst of the rubble into which Nigeria has been reduced, the quality of the education which Chief Awolowo established for us is suffering today. Our children are not learning as much or as well as they should be learning in their schools. Most of the old school environments are run down and depressing and do not inspire the children to learn. Support for schools are generally poor across Nigeria, teachers are irregularly paid their salaries and are demoralized, and many teachers are forced to seek survival in all sorts of side ventures. Therefore, our youths are graduating from our schools, colleges and universities with very low levels of educational competence. The reasons for this sad state of affairs is well known. The persons who have been controlling most of the affairs of Nigeria through the Federal Government since independence are apathetic or even downright hostile to modern education. And, unhappily, the Federal Government which these people control has been gradually turned into the controller of all of Nigeria, with power and influence to determine what states may or may not do. The United Nations agency, UNESCO, estimates that a country that would have an efficient, effective and result-yielding educational system needs to be spending at least 26% of its GDP (or annual budget) on education. Nigeria spends only about 8% on education. Moreover, federal policies, and federal dictation of the nature, contents, and direction of education at all levels throughout Nigeria, have had disastrous effects on education in all parts of Nigeria.
But I must hurry to add that, happily, we are beginning to see welcome changes in our educational system. Some of the school premises being built today for primary schools in some of our states deserve our commendation and our gratitude. While thanking our elected public officials for these, however, we must also urge them to venture into deeper changes in the education of our children. What we Yoruba people want for ourselves is to belong in the ranks of the most educationally, scientifically and technologically advanced peoples of the world. In addition, we want our children to learn, and become proficient in, our language and our history. Chief Awolowo put our feet on the path to all these; we must now resume the journey with all the vigour at our command.
Obafemi Awolowo
But, as we gather here today, we are living in a Nigeria that has declined to its lowest levels of societal disorder, immorality, and hopelessness. All the negative inputs that have been fed into our countrys life since independence, all the crookedness, all the hatred and vileness and viciousness, all the involvement of the darkness of the occult and of Satanism into the affairs of Nigeria, all the murderous intent and the mass murdering of the weak and vulnerable, all the religious and inter-ethnic violence, all the sub-human greed and corruption in the ranks of the political and bureaucratic elite, all the impunity in the management of Nigerian affairs all have now converged and concatenated to make Nigeria a land of utter hopelessness for the vast majority of Nigerians, a land of poverty, hunger, disease and destitution, a land of desperation, fear and terror, a land in which rivers of human blood flow day by day, a land in which human life has become pitifully discounted.
A recent report by a United Nations agency described Nigeria as one of the poorest and most unequal countries in the world. Another UN report warned that if certain situations in Nigeria were not urgently changed, as many as 140 thousand children could die in a certain part of Nigeria in the next few months. Various reports are informing Nigeria and the world that the charitable money and other items sent by international organizations and individuals from across the world for the care of Nigerians internally displaced by Boko Haram violence are being stolen and shared by Nigerian officials, and that the camps where the internally displaced persons are being kept has become a horrible place of mass starvation and mass deaths. A report in the news media about two weeks ago alerted Nigeria to the fact that instances of mental sickness have risen to frightening heights, and are rising more and more sharply, in our country, and indicated that the cause of this is the condition of our country the hopeless poverty that reigns over the lives of masses of Nigerians, and the insensitive and utterly immoral governance of our country.
Instances of the vilest and most grotesque crimes, and of the most shockingly inhuman treatments of man by man, are reported daily from various parts of our country. The whole world has been watching videos of Nigerians calmly cutting the throats of hundreds of fellow Nigerians, and of Nigerians gathering groups of other living Nigerians together, dousing them with gasoline, and setting them on fire. Nigeria is becoming a strangely barbarous and repulsive spectacle in the world.
Not surprisingly, the outside world is already showing signs of rejecting Nigeria and Nigerians. About two weeks ago, towards the end of last January, some countries of the world issued warnings and advisories to their citizens, some urging their citizens to desist from going to Nigeria, some advising their citizens who are already in Nigeria to watch out for danger, and some advising their citizens to stay clear of certain parts of Nigeria. In the Union of South Africa, a member country of the African Union, the people are showing very definitely that they no longer want Nigerians in their country. In town after town in that country, crowds of citizens are rising up, attacking Nigerians, chasing Nigerians from their communities, killing some Nigerians in the process, and destroying the businesses and properties of Nigerians. This has been going on for some time, but it has reached a peak in recent months. And similar developments have occurred in some other African countries such as Kenya. Thousands of Nigerians regularly try to reach Europe through the Sahara Desert country of Libya in North Africa, another member of the African Union. According to official reports in recent months, Libyan citizens now commonly attack the arriving Nigerians, steal their money and other belongings, and then kill them.
As we all know, it is the youths of Nigeria that suffer the most from all these rot and ruin of Nigeria. By our youths I mean those Nigerians who belong to the age bracket of 18 to 40. As I said recently in a lecture which I delivered to Igbo Youths in Enugu, the people aged 18 to 40 are always the most dynamic sector of the population of every nation in the world. People below 18 are still children, mostly still schooling or learning in some other way. People in the age bracket 18 to 40 are usually graduates of schools, colleges and universities. In Nigeria, they constitute a majority of our countrys total population they are believed to be about 55% of our population. Even more importantly, they are the most educated and most skilled sector of our adult population. They produce and raise most of the children that are being born into our population. They dream up most ideas in business; and they are the starters of most business ventures. They lead in all fields of adventure, sports, and arts. In short, they bear the biggest share of the burden of pushing our country forward in economic, business, professional, intellectual, cultural, social and artistic pursuits.
But since independence, planning for the empowerment of our youths has never been a serious and sustained feature of Nigerias national development. Even the programmes for youth empowerment started in the Western Region under Chief Awolowos Regional government in the 1950s have not survived in the era of federal control and federal fiats. For decades now, the rate of unemployment among our youths has been one of the highest in the world. It has often been estimated as ranging between 54% and 70% among our educated youths, and even higher among the uneducated ones. For even the best university graduates, working the streets for years without a job is the common experience all over Nigeria. Most of our educated youths are unemployable partly because their basic education is grossly defective, partly because they lack modern job skills, and partly because the overwhelming majority lack acceptable job ethics.
At the same time, poor infrastructures, poor public administrative services, and insensitive financial services, drastically inhibit the spirit of entrepreneurship among our youths. In most countries in the world, a youth can sit at his mothers kitchen table or in his fathers garage and put together a business idea that can develop into a big winner in the market place; he does not have to fear for lack of electricity, lack of water, lack of good roads, lack of a supportive public administration, or lack of sensitive and helpful banking services. In Nigeria, even the most creative youth is deterred by such fears from going forward with his ideas; for those who choose to go forward, failure and drop-out are the very common outcomes.
However, even in these terrible times, I bring the message that any youth who chooses to learn from Chief Awolowos legacy stands a very good chance of acquiring for himself or herself a purpose-driven life, a life of success, and a life that impacts society, country and world in very positive ways. That is the central purpose of this lecture to invite and motivate our youths to benefit from the Awolowo legacy and use it to enrich, strengthen and beautify their lives and if possible, to use it to earn for themselves an image as bright and as enviable as Chief Awolowos in the world and for a long time in the future.
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I used to love the working-class nihilism of Sleaford Mods no longer – Spectator.co.uk
Posted: at 3:07 am
Its all beginning to wear very thin indeed. Ten years ago this already addled Nottinghamshire duo captured the attention with bellowed, caustic and often astute observations delivered in an ur-rap monotone above cheapo punky laptop beats. The message then, humorously enough, was: everything is shit. Total shit. Youre shit, Im shit, the countrys shit.
This briefly entertaining and frequently obscene working-class nihilism was gratefully received by a music press that, desperately looking for something edgy, found itself confronted by the mimsy and anodyne public-school folk of Mumford & Sons and Stornoway and Laura Marling. Fair enough: it was, for a while, enlivening and a certain kind of antidote. But, you have to say, with a rapidly diminishing sense of return over the following eight albums.
On their latest, English Tapas, the message is the same as it was in 2009: everythings shit. And so indeed it is, not least this album, which sounds tired, uninspiring, boring and curiously child-like, even as its progenitors approach their fifties. The beats have not got any more inventive and musically one of the few highlights is the bassline ripped off Cameos Word Up on Just Like We Do.
There are, of course, no tunes, just that incessant monotone barking, but the nastiness of the lyrics now seems targeted more at their own fanbase, for daring to get drunk or to smoke, for being dead in the head. When the best track on the album is called Dull, you know youve got a dog on your hands. A fairly shit dog.
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How to Use Imagination to Grow Your Business – Business 2 Community
Posted: at 3:06 am
In a 1929 interview, Albert Einstein said:
Imagination is more important than knowledge. For knowledge is limited, whereas imagination embraces the entire world, stimulating progress, giving birth to evolution.
Do you think he was correct?
Einstein was voicing his opinion regarding scientific research, an area traditionally dominated by pure rationalism.
How about in business? Do you value imagination more than (or as much as) what you know?
Its unlikely. We favor knowledge over imagination, reason over intuition.
But its imagination that creates the new, the better, the unforeseen. Imagination fuels all great visions.
All inspired leaders can envision a future that doesnt yet exist.
When we understand the source of creativity, we are better positioned to access it more freely.
When Einstein says knowledge, hes referring to our conscious, rational minds. It is from our conscious minds we operate each day.
We mainly use our intellect or reason to evaluate our surroundings, make decisions, and communicate.
Modern science, however, continues to reveal that most of our behavior, attitudes, and decisions are influenced, even ruled, by unconscious processes.
The source of our imagination lies in what we can call the unconscious mind. This unconscious mind is a storehouse of every memory, image, thought, feeling, and experience weve ever had.
More interestingly, in The Archetypes and The Collective Unconscious, Carl Jung illustrates how this unconscious has a collective or universal element that accesses the memories, images, thoughts, feelings, and experiences of all humanity throughout time.
Its as if, deep inside each of us, untold imaginative treasures, insights, and ideas are just waiting for us to discover.
Living strictly conscious lives, most of us rarely tap into these imaginative capacities. Those who do, we call artists.
Ancient traditions and modern integrative therapies suggest theres a mediating factor that enables our conscious mind (or ego) to access, communicate, and even befriend the forces of the unconscious.
The Egyptians called it the Ba-Soul. Ancient Greeks called the inner daimon. The Romans saw it as genius in everyone.
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Western religions call it our guardian angel or soul. Eastern philosophies and transpersonal psychologies call it the Self (capital S).
Many artists call it the Muse. William Blake called it Poetic Genius.
By whatever name, it is this Inner Guide that we tap into when our imagination flows.
Just as our conscious mind is providing us with a constant stream of thought, our unconscious mind is perpetually trying to express itself.
Only, we havent learned how to give it attention, relate to it, and understand it.
Using our conscious mind, humans communicate with one another through language.
Language is a process of the rational mind (or cerebral cortex).
The difficulty in approaching the unconscious is that it doesnt communicate to us in words. It expresses itself as images and symbols.
Only a select few have learned to access these images and symbols that come to us in dreams, fantasies, visions, and daydreams.
Accessing and paying attention to these images is the first step; learning to interpret them is the second.
To balance out our bias toward rationalism, we need to create space for the imagination.
Disney uses a method for producing creative work that any business can emulate.
They differentiate three roles necessary for generating creative ideas and actualizing them: the Dreamer, the Realist, and the Critic.
The Dreamer accesses the unconscious by allowing the mind to wander without bounds. Daydreaming isnt just allowed; its encouraged.
The Realist accesses the conscious mind that organizes ideas, develops plans, sets forth strategies for execution.
The Critic tests the plan, plays the role of Devils Advocate, and looks out for what could go wrong.
A process such as this gives the Dreamer its rightful place in business that might otherwise treat humans as purely rational beings that need to be at their desks working at all times.
See this guide for a comprehensive look at the creative process.
Its difficult to access your creativity when your body is holding unnecessary tension or anxiety.
Start by taking a few slow, steady, deep breaths. Breathe into the bottom of your belly and exhale, allowing an imaginary balloon in your belly to deflate. (See, were already using our imagination.)
Close your eyes.
Visualize yourself at work. See the faces of your team. Notice what they are doing. Feel the overall energy in your environment.
How are they relating to each other? How do they perceive you? Try to get a realistic picture of the average day at work.
Now, imagine how you want it to be. Imagine the potential of your people. See them collaborating earnestly with each other.
Feel the energy, playfulness, openness, and creativity in the air. Notice the positive and passionate attitude of your people.
Can you see the untapped potential within your business?
Can you envision new and better ways of serving your customers?
Your Inner Guide can. Trust that this is true and look and listen within yourself.
Steve Jobs never saw Apple as a business that sells computers. In his imagination, Apple made products that unleashed peoples creativity.
Imagination is vital to creating a bold, inspiring vision.
Never underestimate the power of such an image. It can rally your people around a common goal. It can fuel the creation of something that will have a positive impact on humanity.
Adapted from an article originally published on scottjeffrey.com.
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How to Use Imagination to Grow Your Business - Business 2 Community
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Junk restrictive faith-based laws: Mumbai atheists – Daily News & Analysis
Posted: at 3:06 am
The Atheists community from Mumbai will be coming together in a conference to demand abolition of the Indian Penal Code Sections 295 (hurting religious sentiments), 295A (deliberate act intended to outrage religious feelings) and 298 (Uttering, words, etc., with deliberate intent to wound the religious feelings of any person). The community will also demand that an elected leader should not take an oath in Gods name to maintain the sovereignty of the state.
The fourth atheist conference which will be organised by The Brights will have speakers who promote rationalism. Advocate Asim Sarode will talk about the IPC Sections 295, 295A and 298 which were written during the British era.
When the President of our country is elected, the person is subjected to say I, (name), do swear in the name of God (or solemnly affirm), which should not happen. We will also demand change in the swearing-in the court witness box in which people are forced to take oath under a holy book, said Kumar Nage, Country Head for a multinational company and founder of The Brights.
The Sections 295, 295A and 298 are draconian which were established to control the colonies in which the Brits ruled. Even today we follow these laws in case if we speak against god in our democratic country, said Nage.
The group of atheists who reject the fiction called God want civil equality and development. In the name of God and religion people are now indulging in anti-social activities, says Nitin Worlikar, a banker and co-founder of The Brights.
On March 19, the conference will be held in Pune, in Nashik on March 26, and in Mumbai on April 9 in Yashwantrao Chavan Centre at Nariman Point.
Our motto is to spread awareness among the countrymen that they should not believe in any fanaticism which disturbs peace and harmony, said Worlikar.
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Junk restrictive faith-based laws: Mumbai atheists - Daily News & Analysis
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