Tag Archive: world


With the World Cup over, all that’s really left to do is resume the drudgery of waking up every day to try to make the world a better place. Bo-ring. If we have to do it though, may as well be as informed as possible. Start with these important reads from the last week.

How Experience in Foreign Cultures Facilitates Creativity: Most of the folks I know who have spent significant time of broad probably would have argued this point before they had any data to back it up, but it’s very cool to see some significant research suggesting that being exposed to foreign cultures has significant, measurable positive impacts on people’s ability to think creatively and solve problems. Importantly, however, the study also shows that the attitude you have going in — the desire to actually engage with that foreign culture — is key to actually getting these benefits.

Revitalizing the American Dream: Inc magazine put together this awesome list of tips for revitalizing the American Dream, and it’s all about making it easier for people to start, join, and succeed in startups. This means teaching entrepreneurship across disciplines (not just in B-School), changing our general approach and disposition towards immigration (and immigrant entrepreneurs), and even some legal ideas like to stop enforcing “noncompete” agreements that force former employees of companies not to work for (or start) competing companies after leaving. Total must read.

Microfinance Group Unitus Shuts Down, Eyes ‘Reinvention’: This is one of those confounding stories that could be incredibly significant or totally irrelevant, depending on what’s behind it. Basically, one of microfinance’s leading institutions has shut its doors and laid off its staff, saying that it’s exploring a reinvention, without saying much of anything about what that is. If this is due to a lack of confidence in microfinance, it’s significant. If it’s a real-life example of a nonprofit actually “putting itself out of business” because it feels it has accomplished what it set out to do, it’s significant. If, more likely, the root of this is just difference in opinion about future direction within the leadership, it’s just internal politics and doesn’t much matter. A story worth watching, though, for sure.

Start-Up Chile: Putting some of the ideas from the Inc story above into practice, this new program from the government of Chile is offering $40,000 in startup grants for companies that are willing to relocate to Chile for a time. The goal is to welcome the global entrepreneurship community to the country and hope that some people decide to invest in Chile as a primary or secondary home for their companies. Few strings attached money is definitely a good way to grab an entrepreneurs’ attention.

Photo credit: Gonzalo Baeza Hernández

Weekend Entrepreneur Links: American Dreams and Foreign Cultures

Pledge to Care

Please sign and pledge to care about humans, animals and plants. Think about what your actions and words do to people and the enviroment.? If we all show respect, love and kindness towards all living things the world will be a better place.

Pledge to Care

teaching Wisdom in our Schools

Imagine our country (the world) in two generations time when the people now in power have been developing and practising Wisdom in their personal and professional lives since kindergarten .
Tell our government and schools that we want a better future for our kids.
The prevailing influences on our kids now are to feel more and spend more and to kill if you get frustrated.
To balance this we have to discover another way of relating to daily life.
Teaching Wisdom from kindergarten onwards sounds like a wise thing to consider.
teaching Wisdom in our Schools

There’s a rash of shark attacks happening throughout the world’s oceans. But here’s the real problem: It’s the sharks who are the victims.

Due to an increased global demand for the fish’s meat, shark populations have seriously plummeted in recent years. According to Oceana, more than 100 million sharks are killed every year for their meat, oftentimes through “finning,” a brutal process where fishermen cut off sharks’ fins and throw their bodies into the ocean to die. In other cases, sharks get trapped and killed as bycatch during longline tuna fishing. Some species of shark have declined by as much as 99 percent. Sharks may reign at the top of the ocean’s food chain, but the fish’s survival is nothing short of precarious.

The severity of the shark situation is well-documented, yet stores and restaurants across the world still serve up shark meat. Even Henry’s Farmers Markets, a grocery store chain, sells shark meat, despite the store’s supposed commitment to providing products that “support a healthy lifestyle.” I’ve got news for you, Henry’s: Shark meat isn’t healthy for people, and it sure as heck isn’t healthy for ocean ecosystems.

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Save the forests!

Do you enjoy the fact of knowing hundreds of animals are dying every minute by eating the poisonous plants in forests? Every second of the day somewhere in the world, lumberjacks are cutting down good wood and plants that are healthy and natural to the animals, when, trhey could be cutting down poisonous plants to animals yet not humans. FOR THE GOOD OF HEALTHY PLANTS!
Save the forests!

Save the forests!

Do you enjoy the fact of knowing hundreds of animals are dying every minute by eating the poisonous plants in forests? Every second of the day somewhere in the world, lumberjacks are cutting down good wood and plants that are healthy and natural to the animals, when, trhey could be cutting down poisonous plants to animals yet not humans. FOR THE GOOD OF HEALTHY PLANTS!
Save the forests!

Obama: Keep Your Promises to End Hunger!

Every day, over 25,000 people die from hunger-related causes. This is simply unconscionable. This week, the leaders of G8 and G20 countries will meet in Canada to discuss issues including global hunger and food security.

At last year’s G8 Summit, world leaders pledged decisive action to fight the increase in world hunger that resulted from the sharp rise in food prices and the economic crisis. Now is our chance to ensure that world leaders, specifically President Obama, keep their promises.

Urge President Obama to keep his promises and work closely with Congress to ensure that the world’s vulnerable communities don’t get left behind.
Obama: Keep Your Promises to End Hunger!

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