If you or I have a vision, we can be accused of "hearing voices from God" and locked up as schizophrenics!
Yet we are all waiting / hanging on with bated breath for Gordon's vision for Britain.
He obviously hasn't got a new economic plan or we'd have heard about that by now. That's what worries me…
Supposing he isn't a visionary?
Supposing, because of that, he get's Britain's future wrong?
What if his plans / and the Conservatives plans are doomed because all the Parties plans are so heavily dependent
on 'the great car economy', and they fail to formulate an alternative?
Free help found here:
http:www.the-alternative.org.uk
The chances of Gordon Brown being a visionary are undoubtedly approximately the same as the Green Party etc. winning the general election. At the end of the day, Britain's future lies in the hands of the major parties whether we like it or not.
Of course, there is nothing wrong with another's view, but realism dictates we also need to see that stopping Globalisation, stopping the use of cars etc. is not going to happen (although I would suggest that the use of aircraft is probably a bigger problem.) Sane use of technology available to us needs to be implemented … after all, why do we all drag ourselves into "The Office" when a large percentage could easily work from home over the internet ?
USA’s car importer Visionary Auto’s ambitious plan to import Chinese built car Chery to USA market.
Life in the early days of the Internet, the fear of being left behind, and why planning for change rather than changing our plan is the only way we can plan for technology.
Jonathon Reynolds, Deputy Convener of ACT Light Rail, a peak Light Rail public transport advocacy group in the ACT responded on WIN TV News Canberra to the transport provisions of the ACT budget.
The infamous introduction to Ed Wood’s ‘Plan 9 From Outer Space’ narrated by Criswell.
AXIS Dance Company in Foregone by Kate Weare.
Bishop John Shelby Spong presented two public lectures as the 2005 - 2006 Kritikos Professor in the Humanities. On May 24th he spoke on “Who is the Popular God in Public Life in the 21st Century?” in Columbia Hall at the University of Oregon campus. Bishop Spong, whose books have sold more than a million copies, was the Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Newark for 24 years before his retirement in 2001. His admirers acclaim his legacy as a teaching bishop who makes contemporary theology accessible to the ordinary lay person—he’s considered a champion of an inclusive faith by many, both inside and outside the Christian church. In his latest book, “The Sins of Scripture: Exposing the Bible’s Texts of Hate to Discover the God of Love” (Harper San Francisco, April 2005), this visionary thinker seeks to introduce people to a proper way to engage the holy book of the Judeo-Christian tradition.
echoes of R321n8R - BIS!~
John Lennon - Mind Games