Wednesday, 30 March 2016

Technology- Is the application of scientific knowledge for practical purposes, especially in industry technologist

Science- the intellectual and practical activity encompassing the systematic study of the structure and behavior of the physical and natural world through observation and experiment

Reflexivity refers to circular relationships between cause and effect. A reflective relationship is bidirectional with both the cause and the effect affecting one another in a relationship in which neither can be assigned as causes or effects.


Technicism- is a philosophical, socio-economic and political system that refers to a predominant reliance on technology and technical knowledge as primary benefactors to society as a whole. This is associated directly with the scientific method and applied science, broadly both are essential tools for the development of current technology and vice versa.

Technology is a big part of life looking at how the world is advancing each and everyday. The ones that I picked play a big role in that I use them each and everyday. So looking at everyday life and not just one day in life. Time is very important because its needed each and everyday, the phone is an essential because its important for communication. Transportation is also important as it is a means of travelling I use everyday



Monday, 14 March 2016

Out of the Ten Search Engines done for both Utopian and Zeitgeist

Information found was mostly on the definitions of both the words Utopia and Zeitgeist. Some of the information found relates to the words how they are being used in the modern world which is now and how they are differentiated from the previous centuries and where the words derived from and also movies associated with the word Zeitgeist. 

Search Engine selection

There was great focus on the information that is more helpful to the  assignment which was researched on and the other information was mostly repetitions 


Relevance

Most of the information and the searches were relevant in terms of what is required by the assignment and the differences are that some of the results were movies which may speak or have a focus on the topics of Zeitgeist and utopia

IMAGES FOR ZEITGEIST



IMAGES FOR UTOPIA




The site that i found more interesting above others is the one on Zeitgeist (www.zeitgeistminds.com)
which is opening to the eye and showing how one can see other beliefs and not just be close minded but to see that there are other beliefs out there which got me very curious and wanting to know more about other beliefs and spirits in the rheums of the world. How people have different views and opinions in the different talks.





Zeitgeist

Self Definition: For a certain period of time there are certain beliefs that are led on by different moods and spirits

Utopia

Self Definition: The feeling of how certain things and ways are supposed to be perfect and how life is meant to be what people want it to be 

Relating to Design


Zeitgeist: these are the ways in which design in that there are certain design trends or fashions that are being followed and the certain beliefs behind those designs stick in peoples minds as a way to influence a particular design period, time or era.

Utopia: when design was done relating to utopia everything was meant to be done perfectly. Things were meant to be seen as all good and nothing wrong with them and no fault with them.

TEN SEARCHES

1.
https://www.zeitgeistminds.com/

About

Zeitgeist events are a series of intimate gatherings of top global thinkers and leaders. ZeitgeistMinds is a collection of inspiring videos from these events.
Dive in to explore the ideas that affect our social, economic, political and cultural surroundings. Hear perspectives from industry pioneers and states people, renowned writers and bloggers, scientists and artists, activists and musicians. Learn from progressive minds, and discuss topics that influence the world around us.
Listen. Join in. Be part of the Zeitgeist.



2.
http://www.zeitgeistartsprojects.com/exhibitions.html

 

Website by Michaela Nettell
© ZeitgeistArtsProjects 2012-14

3.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeitgeist

Zeitgeist

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For other uses, see Zeitgeist (disambiguation).
The Zeitgeist (spirit of the age or spirit of the time) is the intellectual fashion or dominant school of thought that typifies and influences the culture of a particular period in time. For example, the Zeitgeist of modernism typified and influenced architecture, art, and fashion during much of the 20th century.[1]
The German word Zeitgeist is often attributed to the philosopher Georg Hegel, but he never actually used the word. In his works such as Lectures on the Philosophy of History, he uses the phrase der Geist seiner Zeit (the spirit of his time)—for example, "no man can surpass his own time, for the spirit of his time is also his own spirit."[2]
Other philosophers who were associated with such ideas include Herder and Spencer and Voltaire.[1] The concept contrasts with the Great Man theory popularized by Thomas Carlyle, which sees history as the result of the actions of heroes and geniuses.
Hegel believed that art reflected, by its very nature, the culture of the time in which it is created. Culture and art are inextricable because an individual artist is a product of his or her time and therefore brings that culture to any given work of art. Furthermore, he believed that in the modern world it was impossible to produce classical art, which he believed represented a "free and ethical culture", which depended more on the philosophy of art and theory of art, rather than a reflection of the social construct, or Zeitgeist in which a given artist lives.[3]
In the analysis of the arts and culture, the concept of a "spirit of the age" or zeitgeist may be problematic as a tool for analysis of periods which are socially or culturally fragmented and diverse.[4]

Theory and leadership[edit]

As mentioned, zeitgeist theory of leadership is often contrasted with Thomas Carlyle’s great man theory.[5] In his theory, Carlyle stresses that leaders do not become leaders by fate or accident. Instead, these individuals possess characteristics of great leaders and these characteristics allow them to obtain positions of power.
However, Russian novelist Leo Tolstoy disagreed with Carlyle’s perspective.[5] Tolstoy believed that leadership, like other things, was a "zeitgeist" and was a product of the social circumstances at the time. Thus, it was not the characteristics of the individual that resulted in a leadership, but societal factors of the time that are out of the individuals’ control.
Great man theory and zeitgeist theory can be included in two main areas of thought in psychology.[5] For instance, great man theory is very similar to the trait approach. Trait researchers are interested in identifying the various personality traits that underline human behaviors such as conformity, leadership or other social behaviors. Thus, they agree that leadership is primarily a quality of an individual and that some people are pre-dispositioned to be a leader whereas others are born to follow these leaders. In contrast, situationistresearchers believe that social behavior is a product of society. That is, social influence is what determines human behaviors. Therefore, situationism is of the same opinion as zeitgeist theory—leaders are created from the social environment and are molded from the situation. The concept of zeitgeist also relates to the sociological tradition that stems from Ã‰mile Durkheim and recently developed into social capital theory as exemplified by the work of Patrick Hunout.
These two perspectives have been combined to create what is known as the interactional approach to leadership.[5] This approach asserts that leadership is developed through the mixing of personality traits and the situation. Further, this approach was expressed by social psychologist, Kurt Lewin, by the equation B = f(P, E) where behavior (B) is a function (f) of the person (P) and the environment (E).

Examples in psychology[edit]

  • Errors of illusion are not readily apparent because the shared beliefs and assumptions of a particular era that support them come from the zeitgeist. An example can be seen with Henry H. Goddard and Lewis Terman. The consensus in the 20th century was that existing psychology tests adequately measured basic intelligence in diverse groups of people. The more recent consensus is that "culture-fair" tests need to be developed - which may or may not be true. But because of the zeitgeist, in those times, the cross-cultural validity of existing tests was not questioned.[6]
  • Failure to question research findings that agree with prevailing political and philosophical ideology represents one of the effects of the zeitgeist.[6]
  • The zeitgeist does not always have negative effects. It can stimulate new ideas and creative solutions to problems. An example is seen in the different models and metaphors chosen to describe behavior and consciousness.[6]
  • If Charles Darwin had not lived, his theory of evolution would still have been published. The British naturalist, Alfred Wallace, had come to almost exactly the same theory as Darwin concerning natural selection. They jointly presented their idea to the public. If Darwin had not lived there still would have been advocates for evolution produced simply by the zeitgeist of the time period and the spurring of new thoughts and ideas outside of the usual biblical explanations for differential species existence. The zeitgeist of the time shows that natural selection would still have been introduced to the public.[6]
  • The zeitgeist of the 1920s revolved around logical positivism. Due to this, the great men of that time were able to impact psychology, such as Watson, Tolman, and Guthrie. This is important because their work on behavioral psychology was able to work against eugenics. Before this time behavioral psychology was not able to impact the field since it did not fit with the spirit of the times. For example, Twitmeyer wrote a paper on knee-jerk in 1902, but it came too early to have the impact it deserved.[6]
  • B F Skinner being unseated during the cognitive revolution is another example of the zeitgeist in psychology. The zeitgeist was changing during this time, people wanted to show more interest in humans, and more people were becoming interested in personality psychology. However, in the 1950s his new experimental approach to psychology using inductive reasoning and descriptive behaviorism was seen as novel and practical. Especially in contrast with psychoanalysts, whose assertions and interpretations were largely immune to rigorous, empirical inquiry, thus making validation a rather problematic task.[6]

Examples of models in business[edit]

Executives, venture capitalists, journalists and authors have argued that the idea of a zeitgeist is useful in understanding the emergence of industries, simultaneous invention and evaluating the relative value of innovations. Malcolm Gladwell argued in his book Outliersthat entrepreneurs who succeeded often share similar characteristics—early personal or significant exposure to knowledge and skills in the early stages of a nascent industry. He proposed that the timing of involvement in an industry and often in sports as well affected the probability of success. In Silicon Valley, a number of people (Peter Thiel, Alistair Davidson, Mac Levchin, Nicholas G. CarrVinod Khosla[7]) have argued that much of the current (2014) innovation has been shaped by easy access to the Internet, open source software, component technologies for both hardware and software (e.g., software libraries, SaaS), and the ability to reach narrow markets across a global market. Peter Thiel has commented: "There is so much incrementalism now."[8]
In a zeitgeist market, the number of new entrants is high, differentiation in high value products (the strongest predictor of new product success) is more difficult to achieve, and business models emphasizing service and solution over product and process will enhance success. Examples include innovation in product experience, legal rights and bundling, privacy rights, and agency (where businesses act on behalf of customers).[9][10][11][12]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. Jump up to:a b Eero Saarinen (2006), Shaping the FutureYale University Press, p. 15, ISBN 9780972488129
  2. Jump up^ Glenn Alexander Magee (2011), "Zeitgeist", The Hegel Dictionary, Continuum International Publishing Group, p. 262, ISBN 9781847065919
  3. Jump up^ Hendrix, John Shannon. Aesthetics & The Philosophy Of Spirit. New York: Peter Lang. (2005). 4, 11.
  4. Jump up^ Mike Chopra-Gant Hollywood Genres and Postwar America: Masculinity, Family and Nation in Popular Movies and Film Noir 2006 "The idea of zeitgeist as the spirit of the age demands a unanimity that is inconsistent with the fragmentation and contradiction that characterized American society and culture during the early postwar years. The concept of Zeitgeist, therefore, is a problematic tool for analyzing the films and culture of the period: the idea of the spirit of the age is an impediment to the production of a reliable impression of an age that possessed no singular, dominant spirit."
  5. Jump up to:a b c d Forsyth, D. R. (2009). Group dynamics: New York: Wadsworth. [Chapter 9]
  6. Jump up to:a b c d e f Hothersall, D., "History of Psychology", 2004
  7. Jump up^ "Silicon Valley's Trouble with Innovation"MIT Technology Review.
  8. Jump up^ "Peter Thiel"Bloomberg.
  9. Jump up^ "Max Levchin"MIT Technology Review.
  10. Jump up^ Nicholas Carr (6 July 2012). "Why Modern Innovation Traffics in Trifles - WSJ"WSJ.
  11. Jump up^ Vinod Khosla. "Vinod Khosla: Maintain the Silicon Valley Vision"The New York Times.
  12. Jump up^ "The Book - Innovation Zeitgeist"eclicktick.com.

4.
http://zeitgeist-art.com/

Now at Zeitgeist

Paul Collins | Ward Schumaker March-April 2016
opening March 5, 6-9pm

Upcoming

Kevin Cooley and Philip Andrew Lewis May-June 2016
opens May 7, 6-9pm

5.
http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Zeitgeist

Zeitgeist

Some dare call it
Icon conspiracy alt.svg
What they don't want you to know!
Sheeple wakers
Zeitgeist[1] is an amateurishly-produced made-for-the-Internet conspiracy-mongering film. It combines some discussion of Jesus mythicism (the position that Jesus was a myth forged from the ideas of previous religions and Gods like Isis, Osiris etc.) with a double-barreled shotgun blast of crazy: income tax denial, the Federal Reserve being an elaborate plot by the international bankers to take over the world, 9/11 being a conspiracy, and we are all going to have barcodes tattooed onto us and get chipped with RFID tags. All fairly standard conspiracy stuff put together in an ultimately disjointed way. The whole movie is a ripoff of Jordan Maxwell's research.[2]
If you enjoy watching other people's paranoid delusions with cheap CGI graphics interspersed, you can watch the whole thing online.

[edit]See also

[edit]External links

Reviews

[edit]Footnotes

  1.  The name comes from a German expression that literally means "time-spirit" or "spirit of [the] time[s]" - the cultural, ethical and social ethos of an era. It would also be a pretty good name for a superhero -- particularly one who is a time-travelling ghost.
  2.  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p4_YkG-QJK8

6.
http://www.zeitgeistaddendum.com/

Welcome to "Zeitgeist: Addendum"
Official Website


Watch Full Movie Online
Zeitgeist: the MOvie, Companion Source Guide, PDF download
[Pending]

Zeitgeist DVDs

Order DVD

7.
http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/zeitgeist

zeitgeist

play
noun  zeit·geist  \ˈtsÄ«t-ËŒgÄ«st, ˈzÄ«t-\
Popularity: Top 20% of words

Simple Definition of zeitgeist

  • : the general beliefs, ideas, and spirit of a time and place

Full Definition of zeitgeist

  1. :  the general intellectual, moral, and cultural climate of an era
  1. His songs perfectly captured the zeitgeist of 1960s America

Did You Know?

Scholars have long maintained that each era has a unique spirit, a nature or climate that sets it apart from all other epochs. In German, such a spirit is known as "Zeitgeist," from the German words Zeit, meaning "time," and Geist, meaning "spirit" or "ghost." Some writers and artists assert that the true zeitgeist of an era cannot be known until it is over, and several have declared that only artists or philosophers can adequately explain it. We don’t know if that’s true, but we do know that "zeitgeist" has been a useful addition to the English language since at least 1835.

Origin of zeitgeist

German, from Zeit + Geist spirit

First Known Use: 1835


Seen and Heard

What made you want to look up zeitgeist? Please tell us where you read or heard it (including the quote, if possible).

8.
http://www.dictionary.com/browse/zeitgeist?s=t


Examples from the Web for Zeitgeist
Contemporary Examples
Historical Examples
  • No music rooted in bookish ideas, in literary or artistic movements, will survive the mutations of the Zeitgeist.
    Old Fogy James Huneker 
  • The authors and thinkers themselves have been the first to feel theZeitgeist.
    The Arena Various 
  • Have the Zeitgeist and the Weltschmerz and the other things compared to which ‘le spleen’ was gay, done so much for us?
    The Rhythm of Life Alice Meynell 
  • That the young are the only bridge to the promised land of the Zeitgeist of capitalism.
    After the Rain Sam Vaknin 
  • Where should I go for tea and for news of the workings of the Zeitgeist?'
    The Convert Elizabeth Robins 
British Dictionary definitions for Zeitgeist

zeitgeist

/ˈzaɪtˌɡaɪst/

noun
1.
the spirit, attitude, or general outlook of a specific time or period, esp as it is reflected in literature, philosophy, etc
Word Origin
C20: from German, literally: time spirit; see tide1ghost
Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
Cite This Source
Word Origin and History for Zeitgeist

zeitgeist


n.
1848, from German Zeitgeist, literally "spirit of the age," from Zeit "time" (see tide) + Geist "spirit" (see ghost).
Online Etymology Dictionary, © 2010 Douglas Harper
Cite This Source
Zeitgeist in Medicine
Zeitgeist Zeit·geist (tsÄ«t'gÄ«st', zÄ«t'-)
n.
The taste, outlook, and spirit characteristic of a period or generation.
The American Heritage® Stedman's Medical Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Cite This Source
Zeitgeist in Culture
Zeitgeist [(tseyt-geyst, zeyt-geyst)]

The general moral, intellectual, and cultural climate of an era; Zeitgeist is German for “time-spirit.” For example, the Zeitgeist of England in theVictorian period included a belief in industrial progress, and the Zeitgeist of the 1980s in the United States was a belief in the power of money and the many ways in which to spend it.
The American Heritage® New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition
Copyright © 2005 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Cite This Source



9.
http://thezeitgeistmovement.co.za/

no electricity water pump.

pompa
http://www.hithenews.com/eco-friendly-water-pumps-without-electricity-273.html

Do you know what a ‘trompe’ is? check out how to make compressed gas without using electricity.
Posted in Uncategorized

My drop in the ocean

David Mitchell
“My life amounts to no more than one drop in a limitless ocean. Yet what is any ocean, but a multitude of drops?”
― David Mitchell, Cloud Atlas
Flat-Ocean
In order to bring about effective change, we need a collective onslaught against old paradigms, ritualistic and religious beliefs that have been used to manipulate and enslave humankind with a disregard to other creatures and our environment. I educate myself and others while doing something practical to change the world. My lecture theatre is my lounge and sometimes my vegetable garden. I mostly educate myself but from time to time people cross my path and I have the opportunity to plant a seed so to speak. Sometimes I get to water it but mostly I hope that it will germinate and sprout a revolution.

MY RESISTANCE IS FERTILE

Banksy fertile
Starting my revolution from the ground up. Actually from below the ground if you take into account that Im making my own compost. I reused old coffee tins to collect all vegetable scraps and fruit peels and I collect grass clippings from neighbours. After a few weeks I have a heap of compost aka black gold aka ‘gun powder’ with which to arm my revolution.
lettuce
I didnt know that purple cauliflower existed. Colonising my yard and my mind since December 2014
purple cauliflower
Cabbages looking awesome.
cabbage
LEEKS
Leeks
Every week a group of volunteers get together after spending the week getting donations of clothes and ingredients for a soup kitchen organised by Ephemera.org.za for Phumlani informal settlement in Lotus River Cape Town
Whenever TZMSA Cape Town has an event, we encourage attendees to bring along a donation for Ephemera’s Food share project. We create a master blend of veggie soup thats nutritious and wholesome. For R350 we make 70L of soup and serve approxiately 500g portions of soup plus 2 slices of bread to 100 people which amounts to R3,50 per portion and that includes the gas used for fuel
pot of soup
Next phase in our war strategy is to start vegetable gardens wherever there’s a piece of unused ground in Phumlani.
Phumlani1
Phumlani2
Phumlani3

VIVA FREE FOOD REVOLUTION

Tagged with: 
Posted in Uncategorized

An intro to political corruption

Does corruption work the same here in South Africa? Is it ok, if it is, then the majority dont have the money to bribe political parties and government. If it isn’t right then what can be done about it.
I think Buckminster Fuller said, ‘design a far superior system that renders the present system obsolete.
Posted in Uncategorized

Z-day Cape Town 2015

green-recycling-icon
The Zeitgeist Movement Cape Town chapter will be hosting a Z-day event on Saturday 14 March 2015 at 4pm. We will be hosting a few speakers, covering topics on sustainability. Seating is limited so please send me an email to let me know if you will be joining us so that we can prepare if numbers exceed the available resources.
Thank you
TZM Cape Town co ordinating team
address: 12 Polaris road Nerissa Estate Lansdowne Cape Town
email: michael@tzmsa.co.za
tel: 0827233780
GPS co ordinates: 33.994 S, 18.515 EGPS co ordinates: 33.994 S, 18.515 E
Tagged with: 
Posted in Opinion

Radical new economic system will emerge from collapse of capitalism


Current economic system is headed for collapse says Jeremy Rifkin. Photograph: Linda Nylind/Linda Nylind
At the very moment of its ultimate triumph, capitalism will experience the most exquisite of deaths.
This is the belief of political adviser and author Jeremy Rifkin, who argues the current economic system has become so successful at lowering the costs of production that it has created the very conditions for the destruction of the traditional vertically integrated corporation.
Tagged with: 
Posted in ArticlesTransition

The Real Reason For The 40-Hour Workweek

DAVID CAIN, RAPTITUDE
JUN. 27, 2014, 11:56 AM 182,614 33
I’ve only been back at work for a few days, but already I’m noticing that the more wholesome activities are quickly dropping out of my life: walking, exercising, reading, meditating, and extra writing.
The one conspicuous similarity between Read more ›
Posted in Articles

This Mandela Day, I Pray For Global Lucidity

10547821_10154395435950271_8937010793869728018_o
Men like Mandela are my last vestige of hope.
Yesterday saw a tragic death of 4 Palestinian children who were killed in the crossfire of war… and the world is up in arms while…  Read more ›
Tagged with: 
Posted in ArticlesOpinionUncategorized

Be your own leader

You need to stop looking to man for leadership and get off your behind and become your own leader. The problem with looking to others for leadership is that you then have someone to blame when things go wrong whereas most people dont or wont blame themselves for their ignorance. Man is fallable and we always place an unjust, high expection on our fellow man. When he fails, then we are disappointed, not because he failed, that possibility is a reality, its because we expect him to do everything for us. Your knowledge affects me and my knowledge affects you. Your ignorance affects me and my ignorance affects you. We need to take responsibility for our own education and then those around us. With increased knowledge comes confidence and power and a simmering in your spirit. A fire will be ignited inside of you that will compel you to change and in so doing, change your environment which collectvely, ultimately changes the world.
Posted in Uncategorized

Cape Town beach clean up

Cape Town beach clean up 2014I joined the Cape Town beach cleanup group at Eden on the Bay Saturday morning 7 June at 10 am. We were given gloves and a bag and asked to pick up any rubbish on the beach especially the plastic pieces like the little rings that are found at the bottom of plastic bottle caps. We were told that the birds eat this plastic and this results in their demise in some instances. Read more ›
Tagged with: 
Posted in CommunityEvents

documentary screening Cinema Nouveau

Marikana
miners-shot-down.660.440.sThree Free tickets available for the screening of a documentary called Miners Shot Down by Rehad Desai produced by Uhuru Productions at Cinema Nouveau Waterfront Cape Town on Tuesday 27 May 2014. starts at 7pm email michael@tzmsa.co.za
Posted in Uncategorized

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10.

http://www.thezeitgeistmovement.com/



"We must become the change we want to see in the world." -Gandhi


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  • Apr 15, 2015 Host: James Phillips

    This week’s episode of TZM global is hosted by James Phillips from TZM education and the UK chapter of TZM. Along with some brief news from the movement James will be reading the next two articles from the minds in the making section of www.tzmeducation.org entitled 'Building a learning environment' and 'Building a new paradigm from the inside out'.
    These articles outline educational and transitional models/methods that could help to shape the mindset required for a sustainable socio-economic system to emerge.
  • Apr 11, 2015 Host: James Phillips

    TZM Global Ep. 171 with Jim Phillips: Education as a tool for Social Change [ The Zeitgeist Movement ]
    This weeks episode of TZM global is hosted by TZM Education co-ordinator and UK chapter member James Phillips.
    Along with a ZDAY Berlin round up and some other news, James will be reading the next two articles from the TZME website: www.tzmeducation.org regarding the link between educational and societal structure and how we will need a radical change in both if we are to start to see a shift in our overall cultural values towards the adoption of a sustainable socio-economic system.
  • Apr 08, 2015 Host: Peter Joseph

    TZM Global Ep. 170 with Peter Joseph, Ep 170 April 8th 2015, Zeitgeist Day 2015Lectures, Cont.
    Featured talks: Brandon Kristy / Eva Omori, ZDay 2015, Berlin Germany
  • Apr 01, 2015 Host: Peter Joseph

    TZM Global Ep. 169 with Peter Joseph, April 1st 2015
    Featured ZDay Berlin 2015 talks:
    1) Lee Camp
    2) Jim Phillips
    James Phillips, United Kingdom James Phillips is the co-coordinator of TZM Education: A global initiative to enable TZM members to go into educational institutions and deliver the movement’s train of thought to the next generation. He is a regular host of the movement’s global radio show and a regular speaker at several events in the UK pertaining to sustainability and societal structure for both TZM and 3rd party organizations. He also helps to co-ordinate the London chapter of the movement in the UK and goes into Schools on a regular basis to talk to the younger generations about various topics ranging from human behaviour to sustainable technology. Presentation: TZM Education: Launchpad Sustainability Regarding a strategic and effective approach to activism. What works, what doesn’t and what even counts as a metric when trying to measure such a thing. I will be elucidating why much of what we currently do as a movement could potentially be nowhere near as effective as what could be achieved by going into Schools and talking to kids in a joint and strategic effort. Lee Camp, United States*
    Lee Camp is the head writer and host of the weekly comedy news show ‘Redacted Tonight with Lee Camp’ on RT America. He’s a former contributor to The Onion, former staff humor writer for the Huffington Post, and his web series “Moment of Clarity” has been viewed by millions. He’s toured the country and the world with his fierce brand of political stand-up comedy, and George Carlin’s daughter Kelly said he’s one of the few comics keeping her father’s torch lit. His TV show and podcast can be found at LeeCamp.net, as can his comedy albums and books.
  • Mar 25, 2015 Host: Peter Joseph

    LIKE The Zeitgeist Movement @ https://www.facebook.com/tzmglobal FOLLOW The Zeitgeist Movement @ https://twitter.com/tzmglobal JOIN THE MAILING LIST: http://www.thezeitgeistmovement.com/
    Peter Joseph plays audio from Zeitgeist Day 2015, Berlin Germany. Ben McLeish: "The Zeitgeist WorldView" Peter Joseph: "Origins and Adaptations P3"
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