Tao of Democracy by Tom Atlee
The Tao of Democracy: Using Co-Intelligence to Create a World That Works for All
I've read this book a few times and think that it's required reading for any revolutionary seeking to really take back the power from the government!!!
With such ideas as Citizen's Deliberative Councils, Wise Democracy, and a Culture of Dialogue you'll certainly find some things to keep you busy and getting everyday people involved in creating decisions in their community in a way that would have allowed the original Republic to continue as envisioned!!!
Part of review by Robert David Steele:
"This book is better than all of ours, for the simple reason that it speaks directly to the possibilities of deliberative democracy through citizen study circles and wisdom councils.
The book is also helpful as a pointer to a number of web sites, all of them very immature at this point, but also emergent in a most constructive way--web sites focused on public issues, public agendas, new forms of democratic organization, and so on.
Still lacking--and I plan to encourage special organizations such as the Center for American Progress to implement something like this--is a central hub where a citizen can go, type in their zip code, and immediately be in touch with the following (as illustrated on page 133 of New Craft):
1) a weekly report on the state of any issue (disease, water, security, whatever);
2) distance learning on that issue;
3) an expert forum on that issue;
4) a virtual library on that issue including links to the deep web substance on that issue, not just to home pages of sponsoring organizations;
5) a global calendar of all events scheduled on that issue, including legislation and conferences or hearings;
6) a Rolodex or who's who at every level for that issue;
7) a virtual budget showing what is being spent on that issue at every level; and
8) an active map showing the status of that issue in time and space terms, with links to people, documents, etc.
I cannot say enough good things about this book. If the authors cited above have been coming at the same challenge from a "top down" perspective, then Tom Atlee, the author of this book, gets credit for defining a "bottom up" approach that is sensible and implementable. This book focuses on what comes next, after everyone gets tired of just "meeting up" or "just blogging." This book is about collective intelligence for the common good, and it is a very fine book. "




















