YouTube: “Volunteers count homeless in SEPTA concourse “:
Story at newsworks.org.
YouTube: “Volunteers count homeless in SEPTA concourse “:
Story at newsworks.org.
The Inquirer recently wrapped up a series about the struggles faced in Kensington and Philadelphia’s First Congressional District – the 2nd hungriest in the nation: “Hunger in the First”:
Following this series, no doubt brought on by the horror of the Kensington strangler, was a greater spotlight cast by the papers on the neighborhood that included a great set of independent articles:
All are worth reading.
An article that introduces us to a new news effort coming *from* Kensington deserves a special shout out because it is efforts like this that point us towards the future or news and maybe the neighborhood itself: “Philadelphia duo bring Internet attention to Kensington’s woes”. That duo is Richie Antipuna and Heather Barton and their video series can be found on Blip.tv.
I just had to round up these articles and post them to one page since the subject matter was so related. Now if there was a place to discuss these stories collectively. Reddit’s Philadelphia sub-reddit perhaps? That feels wrong. The stories need an official home someplace where people from the neighborhood and outside the neighborhood can discuss them collectively. Why do I care about that? Because when people connect over subject matter that is when ideas can take shape and action can take place.
Combine mapping, with participation, and a subject matter that needs attention, and you can create some powerful, useful tools. Google Maps APIs and various mashup techniques made it easy for technologists to build services that pulled together these concepts, but now hosted services like Ushahidi’s CrowdMap and SeeClickFix are opening up the possibilities to more.
NYTimes: “Phone Apps Aim to Fight Harassment”
Observer: “Want to Help Dig Out Some Police Cars? Site Crowdsources Snow Cleanup in NYC”
Snowmageddon Clean-Up: New York
StreetCorner.com.au: “Police and public turn to social media & maps in the Queensland flood crisis”
EveryMap and ABC Qld Flood Crisis Map
Mercury News: “O’Brien: What Haiti tells us about the promise and limitations of digital media”
GigaOm: “How Social Networks and Mobile Tech Helped in Haiti”
CNN: “Ushahidi: How to ‘crowdmap’ a disaster”
O’Reilly Radar: Alex Howard: “The role of the Internet as a platform for collective action grows”
Related:
slacktivist: “The terror of knowing what this world is about”:
Nothing new here — nothing novel or innovative or unusual. But worth repeating, I think. In any case, it was something I needed to repeat after firing up the computer this morning to find that the artists and the saints had conspired against me, teaming up to remind me what this world is about.
Love dares you. Mm ba ba de.
Related:
Greater Good: Philip Zimbardo: “What Makes a Hero?”
Both good reads.
Emma came home from school with a pamphlet and homework assignment on Dr. King the other day and it gave me the opportunity to speak a little about someone I consider a hero and what he challenged us to do.
Wish I was well enough to take part in Martin Luther King Jr. volunteer efforts tomorrow, but at least I can root them on. Kick ass tomorrow folks and have fun.
Via dangerousmeta.com came the following clip of Robert Kennedy announcing the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr.
YouTube: “Robert Kennedy Announcing the Assasination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in Indiana 1968”:
A Star Trek clip with a lesson straight out of “To Kill a Mockingbird” (one of my favorite books BTW).
YouTube: “Lessons in Humanity: Habeas Corpus”
Viktor E. Frankl’s “Man’s Search for Meaning” is now one of those select books that friends and family can expect me to be sending them for gifts over the next few years. For those not familiar it, it comprises of two parts: his harrowing account of survival in concentration camps during WWII, the concepts he gleamed from the experience; and a short description of “Logotherapy”, the form of therapy he pioneered that was influenced by it.
It is a short book, however, it took a long time to read because every page had something to think about and reflect upon. There are lessons for anyone, in any stage of life. Lessons for how we conduct ourselves under the best and worst of conditions, and finding the light in ourselves during the world’s darkest moments.
Quotes:
Related:
Wikipedia: “Viktor Frankl”
Wikipedia: “Logotherapy”
Wikiquote: “Man’s Search for Meaning”
Also related:
Frankl was a huge influence on Stepen Covey’s “Seven Habits of Highly Effective People”.
Read this thought provoking essay by Marshall Poe.
Then read Scott Berkun’s thoughts.
Then make up your own mind, because this story is still being written isn’t it?
Scientific American: “College Students Are Less Empathic Than Generations Past”
reddit.com: conversation
metafilter.com: conversation
And while the survey is focused on the young, could we see the same shift in older generations if asked today?
Tonight comes news of another murder in Kensington. Philadelphia Inquirer: “Police find woman’s body in Kensington”.
While Center City Philadelphia is continuing a Renaissance that started in the 90s, for those living in many neighborhoods in Philly, life has not improved and in many respects, has gotten worst. Philadelphia’s challenge over the next decade is to keep growing the positive momentum that is taking place here and making sure it reaches all its neighborhoods, all its people. This is going to have to happen in a city whose state no longer has advocates in its assembly. It will be more difficult than people imagine.
newsworks.org: “Former prostitute talks about streets of Kensington”
Many who are politically motivated try and summarize the problems that neighborhoods like Kensington are soaked in to simple catch phrases and causes, but the problems are many fold. Just follow some of the terrible comments posted in this great, nuanced piece from the Inquirer “The Drugs Dilemma”.
There are some that doubt Philly has made all that much progress over the last 15 or so years. There is more than enough evidence it has (see the thoughts of Kristen Lee, and there was no way you could walk away from attending TEDXPhilly and know otherwise).
You could always describe Philly, accurately, as a city of neighborhoods. Each with its own character, accent, customs, and peoples. What we need to work to avoid is a far greater and in this case tragic divide. One of hope.
Related:
Lyrics: Kensington
“Alternative journalism documenting Fishtown and Kensington”
David Kessler: “Shadow World”
Daily Beast: “The Kensington Avenue Strangler”