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Passing through the golden gate on my way north!  (Taken with instagram)
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Passing through the golden gate on my way north! (Taken with instagram)

  • 19 hours ago
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I’m going to Dublin!!! It’s actually happening!  (Taken with instagram)
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I’m going to Dublin!!! It’s actually happening! (Taken with instagram)

  • 1 week ago
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How am I ever going to leave? #santacruz (Taken with Instagram at Santa Cruz Municipal Wharf)
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How am I ever going to leave? #santacruz (Taken with Instagram at Santa Cruz Municipal Wharf)

    • #santacruz
  • 1 week ago
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Beautiful broccoli at the Santa Cruz farmer’s market  (Taken with instagram)
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Beautiful broccoli at the Santa Cruz farmer’s market (Taken with instagram)

  • 2 weeks ago
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Oh hey Weatherveins!  (Taken with instagram)
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Oh hey Weatherveins! (Taken with instagram)

  • 3 weeks ago
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Enjoying this fine day with good food and great friends.  (Taken with instagram)
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Enjoying this fine day with good food and great friends. (Taken with instagram)

  • 3 weeks ago
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Going to be a CREPE night! ;)  (Taken with Instagram at The Crepe Place)
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Going to be a CREPE night! ;) (Taken with Instagram at The Crepe Place)

  • 4 weeks ago
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A Complete Guide to 'Hipster Racism'

“Modern racism lives in entrenched de facto inequalities, in coded language about ‘work ethic’ and ‘states’ rights,’ in silent negative spaces like absence and invisibility….”

 Awesome article about the modern forms of “hipster” AKA yuppie racism.

    • #jezebel
    • #lindy west
    • #race
    • #racism
  • 1 month ago
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:) (Taken with instagram)
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:) (Taken with instagram)

    • #personal
  • 1 month ago
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Cramming  (Taken with instagram)
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Cramming (Taken with instagram)

  • 1 month ago
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It’s a mighty foggy Earth Day! (Taken with instagram)
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It’s a mighty foggy Earth Day! (Taken with instagram)

    • #ucsc
    • #santa cruz
    • #fog
  • 1 month ago
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Band breakfast!  (Taken with instagram)
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Band breakfast! (Taken with instagram)

  • 1 month ago
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civinomics:

paulmdavis:


Despite reports that suggest the economy and employment are on an upswing, the situation remains dire for many American cities and those who live within them. Cities across the South and the Midwest whose economies were built on what are now long-dormant factories are beset by bankrupt or corrupt government institutions, while many of their residents live inextreme poverty. In the nation’s metropolitan centers for culture and commerce,a tech-savvy generation of precarious workers face uncertain employment prospects and mounting debt. Meanwhile, American citizens’ faith in municipal, state and federal government is dispiritingly low.
It’s a recipe for a systemic failure of civic institutions—or an opportunity to rebuild cities as more representative and peer-to-peer entities.
It’s an imposing task. With cities still weathering the effects of the recession, making the pitch for innovation and transparency to budget-conscious city officials can be difficult. Compounding the issue is that citizens embittered toward civic institutions may not see or understand the benefit of such initiatives.
(snip)
Among the many civic hackers I’ve met and chatted with over the past month—the policy wonks, data hackers, IT managers, civic-minded app developers, data journalists and civic-minded designers who populate theflourishing community—I’ve observed a recurring set of intertwined challenges, articulated in slightly different ways depending on the speaker’s background:
How can these efforts become more effective by increasing citizen engagement?
How do the privileged individuals who largely comprise the community connect with and empower those from different racial, cultural, and socioeconomic backgrounds, and ensure that these efforts address social inequality rather than perpetuate it?
How do you energize, inspire, and include the many citizens who consider all government institutions to be ineffective, corrupt, and** **irrevocably broken?
As with all questions of governance, civic engagement, and social justice, there are no easy answers. But addressing them will require a more diverse representation of citizens, people who can hack at much more than just civic data and code. The hacker ethos must be applied to community outreach, grassroots organizing, public policy, and how we tell and understand the stories of our cities.

Shareable: Hacking As A Civic Duty
Wildly discursive piece on the topics that have been preoccupying me for the past month, in which I try to weave together the threads connecting open gov, civic hacking, Code for America, Data Without Borders, Chicago’s Read/Write Library, social justice, access, precarity, the digital divide, and god knows what else. This is all still pretty embryonic in my brain. Would love to hear your thoughts in the comments!

This is a great look at how technology and legislation can work collectively. Cheers to Paul at Shareable!
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civinomics:

paulmdavis:

Despite reports that suggest the economy and employment are on an upswing, the situation remains dire for many American cities and those who live within them. Cities across the South and the Midwest whose economies were built on what are now long-dormant factories are beset by bankrupt or corrupt government institutions, while many of their residents live inextreme poverty. In the nation’s metropolitan centers for culture and commerce,a tech-savvy generation of precarious workers face uncertain employment prospects and mounting debt. Meanwhile, American citizens’ faith in municipal, state and federal government is dispiritingly low.

It’s a recipe for a systemic failure of civic institutions—or an opportunity to rebuild cities as more representative and peer-to-peer entities.

It’s an imposing task. With cities still weathering the effects of the recession, making the pitch for innovation and transparency to budget-conscious city officials can be difficult. Compounding the issue is that citizens embittered toward civic institutions may not see or understand the benefit of such initiatives.

(snip)

Among the many civic hackers I’ve met and chatted with over the past month—the policy wonks, data hackers, IT managers, civic-minded app developers, data journalists and civic-minded designers who populate theflourishing community—I’ve observed a recurring set of intertwined challenges, articulated in slightly different ways depending on the speaker’s background:

  • How can these efforts become more effective by increasing citizen engagement?
  • How do the privileged individuals who largely comprise the community connect with and empower those from different racial, cultural, and socioeconomic backgrounds, and ensure that these efforts address social inequality rather than perpetuate it?
  • How do you energize, inspire, and include the many citizens who consider all government institutions to be ineffective, corrupt, and** **irrevocably broken?

As with all questions of governance, civic engagement, and social justice, there are no easy answers. But addressing them will require a more diverse representation of citizens, people who can hack at much more than just civic data and code. The hacker ethos must be applied to community outreach, grassroots organizing, public policy, and how we tell and understand the stories of our cities.

Shareable: Hacking As A Civic Duty

Wildly discursive piece on the topics that have been preoccupying me for the past month, in which I try to weave together the threads connecting open gov, civic hacking, Code for America, Data Without Borders, Chicago’s Read/Write Library, social justice, access, precarity, the digital divide, and god knows what else. This is all still pretty embryonic in my brain. Would love to hear your thoughts in the comments!

This is a great look at how technology and legislation can work collectively. Cheers to Paul at Shareable!

Source: shareable.net

    • #technology
    • #hacking
    • #government
    • #gov 2.0
  • 1 month ago > paulmdavis
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Taken with instagram
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Taken with instagram

    • #ucsc
    • #santa cruz
    • #california
    • #biking
  • 1 month ago
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Wenderz in the east remote  (Taken with instagram)
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Wenderz in the east remote (Taken with instagram)

  • 1 month ago
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