Sunday, November 18: Part 2 of Stand up! Speak up! Shut up! A Workshop on Public Speaking and Leadership with Dexter Gordon
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Dear Conversation Member,
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The model Petra has shared with the Conversation states that the skills necessary to start and keep a business running are the very same skills that each of us have in our own personal stories. We have skills that we use to keep our households running that can be directly transferred to building a sustainable business once combined with social capital.
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On October 28, we will be cataloging thefinancial tools we use, the ones we need to learn, and examine personal financial literacy in the larger context of business literacy and then we will be using business literacy as a tool for local social justice efforts.
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On October 21, we will be using the story maps we started in the first workshop to describe the elements of the entrepreneurial mindset which we can build on and to examine the relative strength of our social capital.
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Last week, our discussion was opened with the question, "Can the President talk about race?"
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Petra Perkins is a serial entrepreneur, who is working on her third start-up. She is also a licensed life & health insurance professional, and teaches at in the Business programs at Seattle Central Community College and Tacoma Community College. She holds the Group Benefits Associate designation from the International Society of Certified Employee Benefits Specialists.
She is dedicated to demystifying entrepreneurship and entrepreneurial education. She believes that if we teach everyone how to start and run a business, we will have better employees and better businesses.
This is Sunday Petra is presenting the first of a 3 part series.
Here are the dates for the next workshops.
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Hello everyone,
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Hello everyone,
The Conversation has moved to a new location. We are meeting for the first time at The Tacoma Urban league today June 17 It is up the hill from REACH at 2550 S. Yakima Ave. Please arrive at 11:45 for the 12:00 meeting.
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Today we will be doing a Writing Workshop that focuses on Ira Progoff's text At a Journal Workshop. We will be focusing on Time Stretching exercises--Steppingstones--to do the work of analyzing who we are today and who we have been during the various circumstances of our lives which led us to this point.
We spend a lot of time in the Conversation discussing the world as it acts upon us and we will be using the time today to discuss in depth the impact this has on our internal existence. The talk back and discussion between writing sessions will allow members to have a conversation about these experiences.
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As a small suppliment to the discussion we are having today in The Conversation surrounding the 2010 documentary Forks over Knives. Please check out The New York Times article Rethinking Meat.
Fork Over Knives discusses the contributions of animal protein to some of the world's most life threatening and debilitating diseases like coronary disease, diabetes, cancer, and obesity. Please return for follow up conversation on the related discussion we will be having today in our meeting.
Thank you.
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During The Coversation's 2nd reading of Martin Luther King Jr.'s Why We Can't Wait this February, Members participated in discussions and activities that demonstrated their experience with issues of race and class. Over the next several weeks The Conversation blog will post aspects of these discussions and the reading for you to view and comment on. Our hope is to demonstrate that there is still hard work to be done for true equality to exist in our country's psyche and involvement with her own diverse (rich/poor; black-brown-red-yellow/white; queer/straight) citizenry and that this text provides guidance and a blueprint of social movement and change that can adjust this violent and oppressive syndrome of power.
Here is some commentary from one of the Conversation meetings during our reading of this text.
"Racial injustice is complex and difficult and it is going to require strategy and resources to change it. It is not going to come by quickly because, as Dr. King says, "400 years of sinning takes time to repair". It needs to be done urgently but not in a rush. That is it has to be thought through. It cannot maintain the status quo.
Wherever you work if you find yourself on the side of those telling people who face injustice to wait longer--CHANGE SIDES, for God's sake, because the status quo will not give anybody justice. The status quo has to be challenged and transformed from people who are outside of it.
It should be ended. Planned gradualism and planned spontaneity will not work. There has to be a structure." -Conversation Member
The following are letters that Conversation members drafted in response to this prompt:
Write a letter stating what you would say to the White moderate and to the Black activist of today.
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As a follow up to our discussion today, check this out
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The Conversation is a group of Tacoma and South Sound residents committed to the building of a diverse, critically engaged, social justice community for the task of procuring for ourselves and our communities a better life. With "Justice for All" as its foundational principle, the group has two primary foci; providing encouragement and support for social justice activists and promoting justice in such areas as legal system, wages, housing, healthcare, and education.