“An absolutely new idea is one of the rarest things known to man.” - Thomas More

Wednesday, 27 February 2013

"Steal" this blog!

This post will serve as a terms and conditions for this blog, in that I encourage any- and every- one to "steal" "my" ideas: to share them, spread them, whatever, just please don't sell them.
---
I thought I'd take some time to explain the irony of the opening quotation of this blog and its purpose.

If your platform or browser can't format it, then know that I've deliberately noted that “an absolutely new idea is one of the rarest things known to man.” - Thomas More

I quote More because I acknowledge that none of the information posted here is "my" property. (Even More probably "stole" that quotation from someone else).  Everything I've stated (and most of what I will argue next) has probably already been said before in some form or another in writing or otherwise.  As such, I fully acknowledge that these are not my ideas nor should they be credited to me.  I am, after all, a creature of experientialism.  To even suggest that I own these ideas is an arrogance and an egotism of a high order.

I personally loathe the way information is currently handled, and I'm not alone in this regard, as SoaD's album demonstrated.  Like them, I want to contribute to conscientization, not impede it, or worse: restrict it to some, marginalizing others.

Two years ago, when I was in the process of formulating the method by which I could do the most good in this life, in a fit of incendiary fury, I posted to Facebook "[politically correct] it, M Ed. then march on high school; the greatest tragedy of modern civilization is that we put a price tag on edification."  As of now, I'm still living those words to the best of my ability.  I firmly believe that the marketization of education and of edification contributes to the repression of information and impedes the development of critical consciousnesses.

But, the professional intellectuals that stumble across this blog will undoubtedly argue that education costs resources to produce.  And I absolutely agree; there's an economics behind the institutionalized creation and proliferation of information.  But those economics should not inhibit the welfare of the planet and/or of its denizens, which it tends to do currently through restricting or constraining consciousnesses.  People can be uninformed because information isn't readily, equally, and equitably accessible.  Even the internet is restricted to the privileged with the resources, infrastructures, and capacities to acquire, maintain, understand, and interpret a computer.

As such, let this blog serve as evidence that I will never charge people to see, share, or "steal" "my" ideas.  But please don't sell them, because that will just exacerbate already institutionalized intellectual and social inequalities.  Please share information the same way that you'd want it shared with you.

Thursday, 14 February 2013

The Importance of Empathy: or more specifically, Love

I'm struck with something of a premonition, regarding my future, as I spend Valentine's Day night at home alone eating peanuts while writing about empathy and love.  "Forever alone" comments notwithstanding, given the commercial holy-day, I thought this was ironic a time as ever to write to publish this post.

Empathy's a reoccurring theme in this blog and I thought it deserved a post of its own, if for no other reason than to highlight its singular importance.

First, what do I mean by "empathy"?

Well, Wikipedia currently has empathy pegged as "the capacity to recognize emotions that are being experienced by another sentient or fictional being."  I actually like their definition; it's almost identical to my own.  In experiential terms, empathy is the capacity to understand a person's values: where they come from and how they affect the person.

In other words, empathy is the crystallization of experientialism: it's the end result of an education of how we experience things and how these experiences affect us.  Empathy is a product of increased self-awareness; it's a tool to help understand human behaviour,

And it's incredibly important to changing the world, especially putting an end to violence in all its forms and manifestations.  After all, as I've stated before, it's the essence and logic of the Golden Rule: "do unto others as you'd have done to you." Without empathy there's no reason to follow the rule, because if you can't perceive how and why other people feel things, you have no reason to treat them kindly.  The Wikipedia article actually covers this point as it suggests, immediately following the previously cited quotation, that "one may need to have a certain amount of empathy before being able to experience compassion."

And here's some of my gushiest writing yet.  Love depends on empathy.  A healthy relationship is founded on empathy.  Our potential for intimacy as a species lay in our capacity to feel others' feelings: to share them.

Empathy's the reason people can delight in other people's happiness.  Empathy is the reason I write this blog and fight for critical consciousnesses.  Whenever I cite the lives of the future, I'm empathizing with their existences.  Without empathy, I would not be writing this.

I write this post, because as of yet the majority of the people in my life take empathy for granted, or lack the capacities to even exercise it in the first place.  If you want people to care about any and all causes and individuals you have to teach them empathy, because otherwise they have no reason to care.  I was extremely fortunate to stumble upon the skill myself, but so many flounder in self-flagellation and victimization because they don't yet have it.

For teaching empathy is to teach love.  If you want a world of love, teach empathy.

Tuesday, 12 February 2013

On "the New World Order"

There's a grand narrative proliferating in more and more circles these days, especially those of conspiracy theorists.  It goes something like this: corporate, government, and more generally: power interests, are conspiring, colluding, and consolidating to establish one world government: and depending on who you talk to and where and when you talk to them, some kind of global fascist totalitarian dictatorship.  Individuals, mostly conspiracy theorists, attempt to substantiate this reality citing everything from the clandestine operations of the Bilderberg Group, to the consolidation of the European Union (EU), the United Nations, to the implied yet overly sensationalized North American Union (NAU).

As demonstrated by the last paragraph, I have a tentative, yet dated, knowledge of the literature and media peddled by conspiracy theorists who make a profit off the fear generated by such thoughts and potentialities.  I have this knowledge because I myself could temporarily claim to have been among their ranks.  Now, I never really believed their vision to be the true case, but I was, and still am, suspicious and cynical of the power invested in certain positions and individuals.

I set this post aside to discuss "the New World Order."  If you have never come across the term, I invite you to Google it.  Although often lacking credibility and good conscience, there's a significant literature and media surrounding the term.  While briefly researching for this post, I found the Wikipedia page for the concept greatly updated and expanded; it's actually pretty good.

---

First off, have we as a global society made progress towards "the New World Order"?

In some ways, yes.  Economically, the globe operates as one messy, yet consolidated bloc.  Information is basically universally available if you have the privilege and resources to access it.  Politically, superpower countries including the United States have a limited imperial stranglehold over much of the planet.

But in many ways, no.  Religiously, ethnically, and culturally we as a global society remain greatly divided.  Our values on a global scale are heterogeneous to such a degree that a man can freely behave hyper-sexually with another man in public in some geographies and get punished capitally for the same behavior, in the same public contexts, in others.  As such, politically the globe remains largely conflicted.

However, although there's much diversity preventing political assimilation, conspiracy theorists often argue that economic interests will establish governance.  They have argued, and continue to argue, that political consolidation can and will occur by force.  To which, I am compelled to contend that people aren't that stupid, nor that cowardly to let that happen lying down.

But I readily admit that I still believe in one world government; that it will happen, eventually.  However, I strongly contend the average conspiracy theorist's vision of this society.  Most conspiracy theorists make a taken for granted assumption that such a society would be fundamentally "bad."  After reviewing a good chunk of their literature in public circulation, I concluded that it just wouldn't happen that way.  In order to establish the fascist society they envision there would have to be a near complete control and regulation of the creation and circulation of information.  I just don't see anyone or group accomplishing this feat.  There's some precedence for such an occurrence, like North Korea and to some extent China, but there's too many institutions and infrastructures that would have to be transformed, sometimes to their destruction, in order to have that control over the planet.  A global fascist dictatorship or kyriarchy/aristocracy would require a control over societal consciousness, and that's nearly impossible for any individual or group at this juncture.

However, I honestly believe that we're approaching the consolidation and terminus of a united planet: a cosmopolitic consisting of a citizenry of the world.  Based on my current knowledge and understanding, the coming society will be some kind of global republican democracy, with former nations serving as districts under a mostly decentralized government, similar to the United States but on a global scale.  I note my own objections to the development of such a cosmopolitic, especially the current global diversity of values.  However, everywhere there are signs of value assimilation, especially the development of fundamentally human morals, such as those I've discussed before.  The ongoing secularization of Islam serving as a shining example.

As such, I welcome "the New World Order."  One world government would put an end to numberless systemic problems.  And could provide humanity with numberless benefits including universal recognition of the dignity of life, universally protected human rights, and, more or less, an end to violent conflict.  I know this may sound madly idealistic, but these are the potentialities of such a society.  For them.

Wednesday, 6 February 2013

On women's violence against women

So I had a class on young girls' violence against other girls today.  We have to write reflections for this class, and at some point while writing the reflection I basically had an instance of "fuck it, I'm going to write what I actually think."  As basically all the posts on this blog are some semblance of the former, I felt it was well suited to be posted here.  As I submitted it to my professor: [with names and class number eliminated for confidentiality]



Adam Hill – Reflection #4 –[class number]
            Reflecting on the readings and on the class presentation and discussion, I’ve concluded several ways to reduce young girls’ violence against other girls.  Change hinges on their ability to deconstruct their gender, visual culture, and most importantly, their values.
            As with pornography, the violence and cruelty enacted by, and against, women, depends on the gendered constructs of femininity and masculinity.  Most girls take these constructs for granted, and, as a result, are often subject to, and manipulated, by them.  As [anonymous] and [anonymous]’s presentation demonstrated, young girls have a wide range of diverse medias influencing how they think they should look and feel.  As such, in order to deconstruct the gendered paradigm of femininity, educators need to critically disassemble visual culture.
            Women assimilate the morality of weighing under 110 pounds and having a Victoria Secret stomach because there’s nothing stopping this assimilation.  They often have no reason, nor the tools, to critically assess the origins and implications of such suggestive media.  That’s why not a single woman in my North American Women’s History class last year ever mentioned women’s relationship with visual culture, because it’s almost universally taken for granted by women.  The earlier we provide young girls with the capacity to understand and criticize how institutions and the media act upon them, the better.
            And this deconstruction of gender and visual culture ultimately amounts to a deconstruction of values.  We need to ask young girls, “why do you need to look like that?”  “Why do you need to be sexualized?”  Women’s need to feel and look a certain way almost always rests on accumulated and consolidated values.  Therefore, if you truly want to eliminate the motivation and justification for women to abuse other women, they need to understand how these values affect how they feel and act.  Specifically, educators need to help young women identify the connection between what they see, think, hear and feel.  Women are currently awash in a superficial culture that values impossible ideals; their angst and feelings of inadequacy are completely justified given the circumstances.  In order to eliminate that angst and feeling of inadequacy, educators need to make it clear to those girls that these values and ideals are often truly impossible, and that therefore there’s nothing wrong if they can’t obtain them.
            As the readings demonstrated, young girls’ aggression against other girls is most often covert and indirect.  But as with bullying, if you conquer the motivations and justifications to enact harm, then there’s no reason to create complicated legislation and programs to punish bullying because it won’t happen.  If we as a society truly want to eliminate violence of women against women, it starts with the deconstruction of gender, visual culture, and values.

P.S.  Out of space, but to keep the Third Wave feminists happy, race [and class are] important too.

Tuesday, 29 January 2013

On Research

Today my new boss at the university told me that I should focus my research topic on something specific that I could build a career on.  I took those words with an affirming smile, but deep down I shook my head.

I recently became a research assistant for this professor, and to this date I've mostly transcribed for her and helped a bit with the technical know how regarding online data sharing.  I took the position because I valued the experience of working in research and I didn't want to betray the recommendation from the professor that essentially handed me the job in the first place.

The whole situation is rather ironic, because I'm notorious in the faculty of education for speaking of research pejoratively, even to the professor that recommended me for the job.  Succinctly, I feel, and have felt for many years, that at this juncture society needs great teachers far more than it needs great researchers.  What value is any research if next to no one cares to know about it?  In a disengaged society that largely hates to learn, research is basically futile.

However, my contempt for professional research lay mostly in the motivations of certain researchers.  On the first day of my compulsory research methodology course, I argued that research should always be a means, and never an ends in itself.  Numerous authors, philosophers, and professional researchers have argued, and continue to argue, that research should serve the common welfare of humanity.  However, the welfare of humanity remains a low, to no, priority for many researchers.  For many professionals, research is nothing more than a means of livelihood.  At worst, it merely serves to boost egos.

After all, contemporary professional research is first and foremost a business.  Believe it or not, many researchers have a bottom line, and scrutiny of their ethics as researchers often doesn't extend much further than Ethics Review Boards whose primary responsibility is to the research participants, not the general public.

Of course, I'm not condemning all research, just that which doesn't immediately serve the public welfare.  Every area of research "could" be valuable, but some areas are definitely more pertinent to our well being than others, at this time.  I myself am confronted with the issue of whether or not my own research will be a means to serve the public immediately.  I'm interested in the value of dialogical methods of teaching.  It seems contradictory to spend so much time writing about dialogue when I could just do it, through Students Teaching Students, and the like.  Here's hoping if and when I do a PhD, I don't rue the day I published this post.

Tuesday, 15 January 2013

On Methods: How Dialogue will Change the World, Part 1


Statue of Sir John A. MacDonald vandalized, Jan 10, 2013.
I knew my first new post to this blog would have "dialogue" in the title, but my recent struggles to understand and appreciate the Idle No More movement, currently engaged in Canada, galvanized me to broaden this post to discuss "methods" in general.

If I had to pinpoint the one thing that separates myself from almost all my peers currently enrolled in, and graduated from, the Social Justice and Peace Studies (SJPS) program, it would be methods.  In 4 years of study of social justice and peace, rarely if ever did discussions cross the threshold into debating how to actually affect change.  I argued throughout my time in the module, and continue to argue, that this remains one of the greatest failures of the program.  We spent 4 years investigating the superstructure of capitalism, neoliberalism, corporatism, and social injustice, but not once did we discuss the efficiency and ethics of actually doing anything about it.  So in the end, the program pumps out students with an unbridled morality and passion to affect change without the critical thinking, honesty, self-discipline, and understanding to actually wield these gifts effectively.  As a result, they end up perpetrating acts like those in the picture.

I've alluded to the former before, especially in this post: "Vacation"

Rather than reiterate what I've already written, I'd recommend reading from "If what I do is "Serve the Cause," then how do I serve it?" to the end and then come back here.
---
Honestly, I deeply desire to love activists' direct-action approaches.  But every time I come close to supporting such an approach to change, I've always found a lack of discipline or, even worse, a complete absence of self-criticism of methodology.

In fact, my self-criticism of my own methods has lead me to more or less abandon conventional direct-action approaches to change, in part for the reasons in my "Vacation" post, but also due to the experiential nature of reality.  If you haven't already, this post is basically a must-read for this blog: Experientialism - "What is the Matrix?"
---
Experientialism explains how activists participate in a war for peoples' minds, especially at this juncture when most people remain unaware of just how much of an impact their experiences and thus indoctrinations have on their actions and beliefs.  People are fighting for the minds of our children, and even our own minds.  After all, there's an economic interest in doing so - take mass marketing for example.

In this war, direct-action approaches: like waving signs, blocking traffic, and lighting yourself on fire, all have the potential to raise consciousness, and affect change.  However, some methods are more efficient and ethical  than others.
---
Although I may sometimes appear to idolize Socrates, I don't, because in Plato's Republic Socrates recommended that we essentially lie to the masses in order to establish a utopia.  In the context of Ancient Greece: e.g. small agrarian towns and cities, this might have worked, at least temporarily.  But today, this model just isn't feasible.

Rather, I believe the key to a self-actualizing civilization is the truth: the naked honest truth.  We require an education system that aims to make people conscious of the experiential nature of reality: to raise humanity above the war for peoples' minds: to make them conscious of the war itself.  Not to sound cliche, but an indirect goal of mine is to end this war.

And dialogue remains one of the best methods available to investigate and pursue the truth, regardless of whether there actually is one.  I've argued and continue to argue, that dialogue is one of the, if not the best, method of affecting change available, especially when it comes to stimulating conscientization (a critical consciousness for those of you that haven't come across Paulo Friere's works, and those of his interpreters).  
---
This wraps up the introduction and premise of the next post.  I wrote an essay for my Introduction to Curriculum class on dialogue and how it can and will change the world.  Rather than summarize it here, I'm going to publish it in it's entirety in the next post.

On Methods: How Dialogue will Change the World, Part 2

For those of you that haven't read the last post, I've dedicated this second part to an essay I wrote a little over a month ago for my Introduction to Curriculum class for my Master's of Education.  We had to create a model to represent a curriculum, and with me forever finding new excuses to write unmarkable essays, I decided to try to blow open the box yet again.  As such, not only did I write a paper that demonstrated how dialogue remains, next to, vital to systemic change; I wrote a song to go along with it in its entirety. (Note, this was after not touching a piano or singing for like 2 years, or writing music since high school)  Here it is as I submitted it; I hope you enjoy! (The lyrics, with chords added, are at the end.  P.S.  I took out the professor's name for confidentiality purposes)
---



“Let’s make our values/Our dialogue/Our course and/Our catalogue”

            Whether we like it or not, whatever curriculum we create will reflect our values.  Whether we value economic success, creativity, obedience, selflessness, knowledge for practice, knowledge for knowledge’s sake, etc., these values will inform and, at least in part, transmit through curriculum to students.  I created my model based on the former reality. 
I modeled my curriculum on a song, which I wrote to illustrate how values affect curriculum.  I chose to write it using jazz chord formulas to recall how curriculum studies consists of a constantly changing discourse, the same way jazz as a movement helped change the musical zeitgeist, by breaking many traditional rules and structures.  Most importantly, my lyrics denoted the core of my proposed curriculum: a consistent dialogue on values.
            Michael Apple (1979) noted in The Hidden Curriculum and the Nature of Conflict, “normative conceptions of legitimate culture and values enter into curriculum.”  Therefore, a kind of “covert” teaching takes place in the classroom.  As a result of their values, teachers selectively incorporate knowledge, ultimately emphasizing certain meanings and practices, and neglecting, excluding, diluting, or reinterpreting others (p. 77).
            My song demonstrates the same perspective, especially the chorus.  The chorus addressed both our class and my own struggle to develop a curriculum.  As I said in the song, and as Michael Apple maintained, regardless of how we design our curriculum model, we will enshrine out values.  Even when valuing a “dialogue on values” as the key component of a curriculum, I’m still merely enshrining my values.
            My curriculum model addresses the problems associated with Apple’s “hidden curriculum.”  Apple argued that some methods of teaching science and social studies demonstrate “explicit instances of […] hidden teaching” (Apple, 1979, p. 82). Specifically, Apple argued that science is often taught as if scientists never experience or confront conflict. However, “without disagreement and controversy science would not progress or would progress at a much slower pace” (Ibid, p. 83) .  Along with science, Apple determined that social studies classes often portray “’happy cooperation,’ as the normal if not the best way of life.” (Ibid, p. 86).  He argued that this understanding of social studies “is essentially a value orientation,” which helps shape the questions one asks or the educational experiences teachers create for students (Ibid, p. 87).
            My model addresses Apple’s criticisms of curriculum through its dialogical premise.  Gordon Wells and Rebeca Arauz (2006) argued in Dialogue in the Classroom, “learning is likely to be the most effective when students are actively involved in the dialogic coconstruction of meaning about topics that are of significance to them” (p. 379).  They argued that the premise of dialogue is to create “semiotically mediated joint activities.” Through dialogue participants persistently attempt to understand each other’s perspectives, in order to achieve a state of “intersubjectivity.”  They also maintained that dialogue is specifically human as it impels the development of both our species and its various cultural groups (p. 381).  Moreover, as long as the participants share a language: “a functionally based system of communication,” they can participate in dialogue.  They concluded that dialogue is the “tool of tools,” as it develops individuals’ abilities to participate effectively as members of their communities (p. 382).
            If values: “the topics […] of significance,” serve as the nuts and bolts that drive any dialogue, then my curriculum would encourage group conscientization of these values (Wells & Arauz, 2006, 379).  Dialogue functions as the tool and catalyst by which individuals become conscious of their own and others’ morals.  Further, dialogue can eventually cause individuals to begin to understand how values themselves develop.  Lev Vygotsky (1926) argued that “the individual is not only subjected to the influence of the environment, but […] he influences the environment in particular ways through each of his reactions, and also influences his own being through the environment.” Most people have two kinds of values, those that develop from the influences of the environment, and those that manifest from “the influence of one’s own body” (p. 53). In other words, people are subject to both their external nurture, and internal nature.  So our values are influenced, or even determined, by our innate desires, such as survival, and our exposure to our environments: to the entities and materials that compose them.
In sum, our experiences within and without our environment shape, and possibly even determine, certain values.  And these values ultimately prescribe our actions.  If values determine our behaviours, then a consistent dialogue on them could serve many valuable functions for humanity.  For example, a dialogue on values is both a self-affirming and community consolidating process, because as we begin to understand how values shape our actions, we gradually understand how values affect others’ actions. 
As a community consolidator, values discourse serves as an excellent method by which to mediate in conflicts.  A values dialogue serves as a tool of mediation because it culminates in an empathy that allows and sometimes encourages a unity amongst all people and ideas.  If parties in conflict participate in a respectable dialogue on values, it humanizes both parties, and eventually makes both parties conscious of how their environments have influenced their choices and behaviours.  Demonizing and dehumanizing your enemy becomes difficult once a party develops a consciousness that they are subject to the same kinds of influences on their behaviour as their enemy.  For example, if conflicting parties come together in dialogue, they may eventually realize that they are both fighting to defend their families.  As such, the mutuality that develops in a values discourse can transform conflicts.
Although a permanent dialogue on values plays the central role, other features of my curriculum not mentioned in the song include the development of skills.  Theodore Sizer (1992) argued that curriculum should focus on the development of “good intellectual habits” (p. 73). These habits include: perspective, analysis, imagination, empathy, communication, commitment, humility, and joy (p. 74).  He maintained that education should “convince an adolescent of the virtue of these skills” and “give opportunities to practice the skills [so] that they become almost second nature” (p. 74). He concluded that “good schools focus on habits, on what sorts of intellectual activities will and should inform their graduates’ lives” (p. 74).
When I first formulated my curriculum model, I was going to base it entirely on Sizer’s.  However, the more I thought about skills, especially Sizer’s prescribed skills, the more I realized that they consist of, or depend on, values.  Skills, as I define them, include values, as certain skills can require them.  For example, Sizer’s skill of “humility” completely depends on the person’s ability to devalue the self, or at least value the self for its true worth.  Also, humility relies on an appreciation of others, which ultimately amounts to valuing others, and their qualities.  Another skill, which can also be a value depending on the context: objectivity, has requisite values, such as honesty, integrity, and humility.  Without each of those three values, it is difficult, if impossible, for an individual to exercise true objectivity: to always keep a measure of doubt for all ideas and philosophies including their own and to be ready to change those ideas when presented new evidence.
            A permanent discourse on values actually encourages and concludes in certain skills.  For example, empathy, the skill with which to understand and accept other individuals’ feelings, values, and choices, is a direct requirement for the tolerance and acceptance of diverse others and for their mutually beneficial collaboration.
Ultimately, when constructing a curriculum model or any curriculum for that matter, as the chorus goes, “no matter what we choose we will enshrine our values.”  Rather than unconsciously allow values to shape curriculum, my model’s impetus is to bring the hidden curriculum to the fore.  Otherwise, many people could remain unconscious of values, or their development of their consciousness of values may lag, or ultimately, they could get manipulated by those who understand how values work.  In conclusion, a consistent dialogue on values has the potential to completely revolutionize curriculums and conflicts around the world.  [Blog Note: in the email submission of this essay I told the professor that the previous sentence was the "PG ending," and that I actually initially intended to finish with "In conclusion, STS4Life."

References

Apple, M.  (1979/2004).  The hidden curriculum and the nature of conflict.  In Ideology and
curriculum 3rd ed. (pp.77-97).  New York: Routledge.

Sizer, T. R. (1992) Horace’s School: Redesigning the American High School.  Boston: Houghton
Mifflin Company.

Vygotsky. L.S. (1926/1997). Educational Psychology.  Boca Raton, Florida: St. Lucie Pess.

Wells, G., & Arauz, R. M. (2006). Dialogue in the classroom.  The Journal of the Learning
Sciences, 15(3), 379–428.




Catalogue of Values



By: Adam Hill

---First Verse---

Cm                                 Aflat                        
So [prof's name], she asked us to construct

               Bflat                             G7              
Our own curriculum, how we’d instruct

                     Cm
Our own children

                    Aflat            
Well here it is,

     Bflat
A plan for change

                 G7           Cm
A plan to do, to rearrange

                              Aflat                   Bflat
Our resources and values in such a way

                        G7                   Cm
So that tomorrow’s a better day

---1st Chorus---
                          Cm7
Well here’s the catch

                  Fm7
For all the class

                  G7
No matter what

            Fm7
We choose

               C7
We will enshrine

           
F7
Our values

                        Cm7
So here’s the catch

                Fm7
My honesty

                             G7
Let’s make our values

                Fm7
Our dialogue

            G7
Our course and

            F7        C7
Our catalogue

*Bridge*

---Second verse---
Cm                                          Aflat               
So [prof's name], that’s how I’d deconstruct

Bflat                    G7  
My own curriculum, how I’d instruct

         Cm
My own children

                    Aflat            
What better way,

Bflat
to educate

G7                Cm
It’s my best shot, up to this date

                                    Aflat                Bflat
How I’d discuss our values in such a way



                        G7                   Cm
So that tomorrow’s a better day

-
--2nd Chorus---
                          Cm7
But here’s the catch

                  Fm7
For all the world

                  G7
No matter what

            Fm7
We choose

               C7
We will enshrine

            F7
Our values

                        Cm7
So take my catch

                Fm7
My honesty

                             G7
Let’s make our values

                Fm7
Our dialogue

            G7
Our course and

            F7        C7
Our catalogue