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http://leapofreason.org - Download book for free, free to copy for your staff
or request the book via mail
Leap of Reason
- Managing Outcomes in an Era of Scarcity Authored and compiled by Mario Morino, 440-895-2950 This resource provides a framwork for non-profit, social services and other organizations to manage
their mission to successful endings. (For a summary of Mario Morino credentials, search under his name or Leap of Reason) Leap of Reason helps all in their managing and strategic planning efforts. Helps frame the outcome of
their objectives in serving others. It shows the best ways to assess peformance and manage systems. It is also
a resource fordevelopment of staffs and leadership. It is used in management classesat universities across the country
and across the globe.
An Age of Diminishing Possibilities
Leap of Reason provides a framework of concepts and procedures for organizations to refine
the way they do things. If focuses on strategies that can measure performance and the development of leaders and staffs. It
is used in management classes in universities across the country and abroad. Users are shown ways to check information and
practices to assess outcomes.
Simply put, the book helps you,
your organization and your staff to re-define what you are all about. It is about accepting a wake up call and “walking
the talk” with direct involvement. It is about doing all this as funding becomes scarcer. Mario Marino says he has an
inherent need to first ask “Why?” before “What” and “How.” I was part of all computer
generations and in the beginning our main question was “What if.” This opens the door to a flow chart of ideas
with all possibilities knowing that every action has a reaction. There is always a need to see what is lurking at the end
of any answer. It also helps to find ways to streamline whatever you intend to accomplish.
Mario Marino says adjustments have to be made as we are now living in an era of scarcity. I see this more than
just a problem of funding. We are now also living in an era of diminishing possibilities in a world with a surplus of workers
and labor. At least a billion people in the world are willing to work for practically nothing. In this setting the value of
labor and workers are deflated and degraded. This value is most likely a greater value and money standard than paper money
itself. This fiat money has to be manipulated to grow values and with the money changers trying to invent money products out
of it. Now our economies based on making money on money instead of making things and adding value to them and workers who
make the things are burning out. The trade deficits is a major indicator showing how much value is has been lost. It totals
in the trillion of dollars. It is no wonder, that we are living in an era of scarcity. It is full of contradictions. Federal
Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told Congress during the debates about President Bush's stimulus package that the best way
to stimulate the economy was to buy “domestically produced” goods. He was ignored. This is why we will continue
to have money problems and all the non-profit organizations in the world will waste their energies until we get back to the
real world and really do the walk before we talk.
We need to
define the causes and effects behind our economic problems before trying to resolve them. Alan Greenspan said he thought equity
loans were a good money product and was surprise when things did work out. The trillion dollar bail out is an equity loan
on future generations as we wait for the next economic bubble to burst. It won't be a surprise.
Judging the outcome probabilities knowing every
action has a reaction
Leap of Reason gave me a wake up call about my advocacy for
workers dignity, fair play and local value added economies. Only local value added economies work. Free trade
and globalization does not. After the first reading of the book I was able to refresh my reasons for doing
what I do. Mario Morino says he has an inherent need to ask "Why?" before "What" and "How."
I being part of every computer generation first ask "What if" which opens the door to all
possibilities. There is an ingrained flow chart somewhere inside me that tests all actions knowing
all actions have a reaction. They can not be counter productive.
I am a point of no return having fought
the good fight for the last computers and components made in the USA. My biggest business mistake was thinking America would wake up and would not shop their way out of their jobs and their businesses. They did and still
continue to do it. All the non-profit services in the world can not help restore the American Dream as long as
this is going on.
Workers have no voice in the process of free trade and globalization and
if they did I am sure none of the free trade agreements would have passed. Occupy Wall Street protesters
represent a new generation of activists who some call the bottom up generation. They want all decisions be made
at the lowest possible level from the bottom to the top and not vice versa. They should note that Leap
to Reason can help them in their mission and in defining their objectives. Even while they were protesting,
President Obama passed three free trade agreements and he has the gaul to call them "job bills."
I have been online since 1998 and now have thousands of resources online. Search under Tapsearch.com, Tapart
News, Ray Tapajna Pages, Arkline art and tapsearcher. Search under the title of my most popular topical artwork and you will find millions of results. Yahoo has the most. Search under Clinton Years American Dream Reversed.
I made sure history would be kept intact about the betrayal of workers everywhere.
Here is what guides
me now ..... It is by Thomas Merton Do not depend on the hope or results, When you are doing he sort of
work you have taken on, you may have to face the fact that your work will be apparently worthless and
even achieve no worth at all, if not perhaps, results opposite to what you expect.
As you get used to this
idea, you will start more and more to concentrate not on the results, but on the value, the rightness, the truth
of the work itself.....Thomas Merton
At the end of my journey, I will tell the Lord, I tried
to just do what there was to do following your lead.... Do unto others as you would have them do to you. This is the practical solution to my quest in restoring the American Dream for not only American
but for everyone in the world...
Here are some of the experts and data that showed me the way. You
can search under Tapsearch and add any of the names or terms...... Sir James Goldsmith who wrote The Trap and
led populist movements in both France and England. Manuel Castells who wrote many books about globalization and free trade and predicted the coming of the Bewildered New World years ago. Rerum Novarum, Pope Leo's encyclical
that stood the test of time for more than a 100 years about the social contract being worker and owner. Pope
Benedict's new economic encylical that suggests the use of Subsidiarity which means all decisions should be made
at the lowest level possible. Katherine Newman who wrote about the decline of the middle class years ago. Catholic Workers - Dorothy Day and Peter Maurin's teachings Jacque Maritain who wrote about the responsibiities
of people of good will in maintaining the common good in society. Others include Dr Pat Choate, Economist and VP
Candidate for Ross Perot. Chuck Harder, Host of For the People, Rep March Kaptur who Ross Perot asked to be his
VP running mate. My father who taught me business ethics for the real world by doing the walk instead of
the talk. John Perkins who wrote the must read book - Confessions of an Economic Hit Man. My foreman in the
factory that I worked while going to college full time. He perhaps is one of the greatest men I have ever known
and I have had dealing with many of the top corporate leaders in the business world.
If the factory jobs
I enjoyed while going to college were still available, there would be millions standing in line across America to
get them including college graduates.
Others include Thomas Merton and five great Jesuit Professors who I
had in college.
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