Outsider


I grew up in Northern Ireland and have been a teacher and lived in England, Ghana, Ireland, Northern Ireland, Malawi, Mexico, Colombia, The United Arab Emirates, Australia, Brunei Darussalam and Malaysia.

These are my memoirs which are arranged chronologically by year. Much is social commentary.

Aside from narrative recount, the style is often anecdotal, aphoristic and ironical. I try to soften the heavy social commentary with humour. Some friends have said I tend to 'rant' at times. I don't deny it! Perhaps it is the Irish in me. I apologise in advance then, if that is your impression too.

I do not intend to stereotype various nationalities but inevitably I will generalise for dramatic effect.

In a globalised multicultural world there is an urgent need to identify and face up to our national idiosyncracies and shortcomings. Nationalism has always seemed to me to be a bogus substitute for a genuine sense of connectedness and community. It is a highly dangerous concept when manipulated by politicians to get citizens to do things that are unpalatable to them-like going to war for instance.

If we don't begin to see ourselves as others perceive us - and not as we would like to see ourselves, then catastrophe looms.

I contend we can be comfortable with our heritage and still be able to criticize and even laugh at ourselves at the same time.


The two are not mutually exclusive.

Outsiders are in a unique position to show us our shortcomings because we simply cannot see them ourselves.

I believe that no culture has found the ideal 'solutions' to the challenges of life. Every culture I have lived in has both positive and disturbing characteristics.

In which cultures do people appear happiest? (notwithstanding natural and man-made disasters such as war and famine)

What question can be more profound than that?

The results may be surprising. In my experience, the happiest cultures were Ghana, Malawi, Mexico and Colombia. At the bottom of the list would be England, Ireland and Australia.

I think we need to learn from each other-not try to 'teach' each other...there is a big difference.

Please send me an E-mail if you would like to comment on anything.


Outsider


Outsider1952@gmail.com









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Thursday, July 16, 2009

The Modern Volunteer and corporatism

I got an E-mail from the Australian Refugee Association (A.R.A.) today advertising for two part time positions in Adelaide.

People are being required to fill in forms and 'address criteria' and all the other corporate crap such as role play interviews (with teenagers as judges no doubt) that come from the failed corporate business model.

How totally ridiculous!

The A.R.A. should be begging people on their hands and knees to do these jobs-not requiring them to complete some competitive obstacle race in a  neo-Darwininan struggle for the job

Haven't A.R.A got the message yet?

Corporates and the Corporate business model are redundant?

Kaput!

We don't want the corporate model any more.

Education is not a business: health is not a business: Neither are art nor drama. Leisure is not a business. Recreation is not a business. The environment is not a bussiness. Unemployment is not a business.

Life is not a business.

Get it?

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