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If you only have 2.5 minutes go to the last 2.5; if you have more time you my want to read the new book (1000 bookclub begins 14 may 2010) and our networkers shared web site www.worldcitizen.tv

Download Obama Millennium Goals Priortities for Collaboration USA

Databank of Yunus Social Business Action - some dates approximate; rsvp info@worldcitizen.tv if you have addition or editing suggestion- project codes:
  • M micro social business - usually already verified as many times more economical for communities
  • 3M Global Social Business (connecting Micro*Media*Macro Partner
  • U: University Partner also known as CP9 at http://erworld.tv  where we feature Collaboration Partner gameboards for 2010s most exciting worldwide goals
  • CP1-CP12 - see http://erworld.tv  for definitions of Collaboration Partners which are also discussed in Dr Yunus 2010 book Building Social Business
2010 
 3M10.1 Grameen Social Business Industrial Park in Dhaka includes 3M10.2 and 3M9.1,2,6  
 3M10.2 Grameen Fibreglass - major new corporate partnership with MidEast corporation  IES Alliance
 U10.1 Glasgow University MOU as Institute of Social Business 
 3M10.3 Journal of Social Business
 3M10.4 Uniqlo Grameen UNIQLO -first asian corporate partner of Grameen Bank Group : Fast Retailing Company Ltd that owns Japan 's casual-clothing chain Uniqlo. "On the retail front, we will use the Grameen Bank Group's borrower network of eight million people to help those living in poverty to develop job skills and provide them with opportunities to sell clothes door-to-door," said Fast Retailing. "In the first year, we plan to generate work for 250 people and to increase this figure to 1,500 within three years.""Grameen ladies will become their own business owners by selling the clothing products in visits to neighbours' houses,"
 3m10.5 extension of Uni Kyushu to include Fukuoka city as social business hub - Mayor of Fukuoka City Hiroshi Yoshida, Nobel Laureate Professor Muhammad Yunus, Sususu Ishihara,Chairman, Kyushu Railway Company, and Setuo Arikawa, President of Kyushu University after signing the Joint Declaration for the launch of the Social Business Hub in Asia in Fukuoka City, Japan on July 16
 CP 10.3.1 Obama convenes first annual 60 country presidents summit of entrepreneurship citing Dr Yunus as the kind of entreprenur every country cn learn from
 CP10.4.1 Japanese royal family
 CP10.10.1  Twelve students from the ShARE student network of asian universities visited the Yunus Centre to follow up from their earlier social business research  in January 2010. 
 CP10.7.1 Brazil's Ministry of Planning, Budget, and Management sends delegation to learn about social business principles
 CP 10.10.2  University of Pennsylvania, Syracuse University, University of VirginiaUniversity of Hawaii, and the University of Alabama students and professors came to learn about social business activities in Bangladesh and abroad.  These visits were also opportunities for the universities to bring social businesses to their campuses. 
 2009

 3M9.1 Otto Grameen Factory of Future - garments (with a focus on disabled staff)

 3M9.2 Grameen BASF Mosquito Net Manufacturing (also vitamin schets but not manufactired locally?) 
 3M9.3 Grameen Nursing College (GNC) - a multipartner venture - core staff training provided by Glasgow Caledonian Yunus Centre
 U9.1 Glasgow Caledonian Yunus Centre : Social Business Professorhsip Health; Prooftesting Grameen microcredit Scotland; training for GNC 
 U9.2 Grameen Yunus Centre- Asian Insitute of Technology, Bangkok
 U9.3  Grameen Kyushu Japan - Development of digital equipment 
 U9.4  MoU CSUCU CA state University Institute of Social Business
 CP79.1 Social Business Zone, Caldas , Columbia
 3M9.4 concept testing of $1 shoe Grameen Adidas - probably to be marketed Reebok
 3M9.5 Cure 2 Children
 3m9.10.1 Islamic Development Bank
 U 9.5 Zayed Univesrity Dubai
 2008
 3M8.1 Grameen Danone
 3M8.2 DanoneCommunities SB Fund and PanFrance New media Network
 3M8.3 Grameen Credit Agricole
 3M8.4 GrameenVeolia
 U8.1 Grameen HEC SMBA includes Danone Social Business Chair
 3M8.5 Grameen Intel - first project pregnanvy continuous mobile diagnostocs screening
 3M8.6 various healthcare partnerships include Mayo Clinic, GE, Pfeizer
 3M8.7 Grameen America launches bank for unbanked -branch 1 queens ny, branch 2 omaha
 3M8.8 Grameen Carlos Slim microcredit Mexico  
 3M8.9 Green Children Eyecare 2 Bangladesh replictions Aravind model
 3M8.10 Monaco Yunus Social Business Fund 
 3m 8.11 wholeplanetfoundation partnership with wholefoods
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

invitation 1 of 2 to CHI U to discuss projects arising from yunus 69th birthday dialogue

invitation 2 of 2 to CGI U on Yunus 69th year forum projects

download - preview of book - trillion dollar audit -how to map future exponentials of trillion dollar local-global market sectors

gf1.jpg

In talking to 12 year olds, I am joyfully able to report that a simple pattern rule for understanding how to respect systems is - a system is like a game where there are certain rules that if you change them the whole game will change often to be compound tragically opposite consequences of the goodwilled ones the games founder intended people to action learn around

A corollary is that any system designer who wants to open source the system needs to both make it clear what rules must not be changed and find a way that sufficient  networkers around the world are there to devalue anyone who falsifiues the game.  Please tell us (chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk) if there is a hot discussion space for sharing this idea -eg 1

7 billion beings have breached humanity's biggest system crisis -what's it all about? quite simply how we make and take things from each other, our societes and nature through our lives-

There's nothing mysterious about the S-word: SYSTEM MAPS DEFINE WHATS INTERCONNECTED 
So 2010's system crisis is NOT to analyse any problem the way that many global professions sadly do - as just economic/financial , or just social, or just ecological; it is all three.  Doing triple bottom line analyses separately -as most responsibility audits do - misleads everyone communally dependent  on interconnected systems- healthy societies sustain strong economies not vice versa; clean air and water are the greatest developers of healthy brains and bodies
This web site chose 4 of the great system experienced people of our era - Obama, Yunus, Mandela and Clinton - now we welcome other knowledge but let's start with some simple questions:
1 what do these people say they stand for in system terms? what are their wishes?
2 when they talk to each other, what do they say or what do you wish they would say -eg 1 between early July and Aug12 Dr Yunus talked to all ;ways citizens can help with Yes We Can 1 2
3 can we form a catalogue of pattern rules that become a curriculum of all ages from 12 up so that we never get so muddeled by system problems as we clearly are today

Can you blog micro's good news with us? on schools or on energy

 

examples of patterm rules that interest me include:

a system however important powerful human beings make it out to be is very blunt - it will spin one of 2 ways - exponentially sustainably up, or expoentially crashing down (it doesnt balance in some steady middle)

unfortunately or fortunatley depending on how risk-competent and collaborative we all are, this generation alive today is the first to become more globally connected than separated- so that means this generation will be responsible for exponential consequences for all future time - sustainably up or expoentially extinguishing (in case you need maths to ward off naysayers on this one go to both einstein and von neumann, it is clearly there)

(my father and I wrote a book on this nack in 1984- it forecast 10 times difference in worldwide wealth*health between compounding best and worst by 2024 - there is absolutely no evidence yet that this forecast was wrong and it is absolutely clear from wall street, healthcare, energy, and darn wars/arm trades etc between big goverments that we are exponentially tracking to 10 time less health and wealth unless we intervene so that the system integrates a wholly opposite pattern to the one it is both currently ruled by and maps flows around)

more shockingly in terms of lack of preparedness - it is the case that if a new system (or one previously interconnected) interfaces with an old system you will get the worst of both systems unless a lot of forward thinking care has been openly/transparently worked on to get the best of both systems from the bottom up - as one example we will get the worst of mass media and interactive media unless enough of us connect the best


.

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Sunday, February 8, 2009

Dear Lauren and David


Mostofa brought back 8 sets of leaflets wriiten at various time our of grameen betrween 1974-2008 including my favourite that I gave rachel the morning she and alexis represented 19-25 year old's concerns to dr yunus - growing up with 2 giants - the national collaboration strategy of bangladesh as world collaboration leader of micro replication and sustainability solutions with regards to future free marketing  with china and india


we gave a set to peter ryan today- and he recommended I post you each a set - could you provide me with a snailmail for that purpose and so we can accelerate boston-region as the replicvable franbchise that schools and unergrads can co-edit anywhere


if possible please share with marriah -boston having 2 sets will already me it has more access to these booklets than any city than dhaka


chris macrae

5801 nicholson lane suite 404 rockville md 20852

tel 301 881 1655

http://yunusuni.com http://obamauni.com

5:33 pm est 

Friday, February 6, 2009

Muhammad Yunus speaks at George Washington University (transcript)

Last night Mohammad Yunus spoke to a sold-out crowd of 1400 at George Washington University. Earlier in the day he visited visited with the Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and the International Monetary Fund. He spoke about those visits as well as his recent trip to the World Economic Forum at Davos.

Yunus spoke for about 30 minutes then took questions from the audience. The event was hosted by the university and Hooks Books. Yunus' newest book, Creating a World Without Poverty: Social Business and the Future of Capitalism, was just republished in paperback with new material and he stayed to sign copies.

The following are my notes from his speech and the question and answer period which followed. It is not an exact transcript. I paraphrased some and couldn't hear everything, but this should give you a pretty good idea of the tone and content of his message. Tom Tolman, GWU



Good evening.

I didn’t think there would be such a big audience here.

I thought everyone in this town was busy doing the bailout package. (laughter)

They wouldn’t have time to come here.

I had a good day today. I spent the whole day today here starting out with a meeting with Fed Chairman Bernake. I did that to update him about the work we have been doing in this country.

This is my second visit with him. I met him in October 2007 and at that time I was trying to explain the importance of microcredit to him in the USA. He knew all about microcredit. I thought we should start a microcredit program in this country – a prototype which could be expanded later. And he gave all his support. Go right ahead. Any support you need from us we will give it to you. We talked about creating a legal home so that we can use that legal home to create an organization. It is important that we have the legal ability to take deposits. If we can take deposits then it becomes easy to raise money.

We created a program in Queens last January. [see Jessica's recent report about Grameen America] At the inauguration of the program there were lots of journalists. One journalist asked why we chose New York City instead of the villages like in Bangladesh. My answer was we deliberately choose New York City because it is the capital of world banking. New York City does not, however, bank with its neighbors. The people that live there do not have access to financial services. It is important to have a small example to break fear. We follow the same principles – five women forming a group, weekly meetings. The average loan size is $2200. Repayment is 99.3%. This provides an interesting contrast. The women in New York take loans, without collateral, without any lawyers and they pay back every week. For one year they have been doing it.

Then the big banks. (laughter)

I remember my first encounter in 1976 with the bank manager. He kept trying to convince me the bank couldn’t loan money to the poor because they were not credit worthy. Now I think it is a good time to ask the question – who is credit worthy? (applause)

And then I went to IMF [after visiting with Ben Bernake today]. I also recently went to [the World Economic Forum] at Davos…I took the same message to IMF. The deep [economic] crisis is also exciting. It is an exciting opportunity to create a new normalcy. When we get out of this crisis what kind of normalcy will we have – the old normalcy or something new? Please make sure, today, right now, that we create a new normalcy. People wonder what this new normalcy will be. The financial system will be built in such a way that in this country there will be no payday loans. (applause) People can go to the bank and borrow money without paying 500%, 700%, 1000% interest. It is such a disgrace to see payday loans all over the cities in the United States. What a gaping hole the banking system has left behind.

The new normalcy will be that everyone in this country will have the right to open a bank account. There are millions of people without a banking account. To get a check cashed you have to go to a checking company which takes a large percentage of the check…nobody should be denied service.

There will no longer be a financial apartheid where people are denied service. You cannot say anymore that it cannot be done. Why not create a financial system that works for everyone?

We deliberately created a system that is focused on the beggars. We have 100,000 beggars in the program. It is not complicated. All we do is go to the beggars, talk to them, and see how they make their livelihood. We suggest to them –as you go from house to house will you carry some merchandise with you? Some food, candy or toys for the kids. Give people options – let them buy from you. We make it sound very easy – you are going there anyway. They immediately see the point. And we started giving money to them. We started four years ago. In those 4 years more than 11,000 have stopped begging. (applause) They are now successful door-to-door salesman. Some are personal shoppers…the other 90,000 are part-time beggars mixing begging and sales. They are very smart. When you talk to them they explain which houses are good for selling and which are good for begging. They never went to business school but they understand market segmentation. (laughter and applause)

Everyone has an ability. It doesn’t matter if you are a beggar or a big businessman – everyone has an ability. The one who starts at the bottom struggles and cannot move up. Some do not even know they have ability. Everyone carries such wonderful gifts inside of them – gift of creativity, gift of innovation, gift of entrepreneurship…

I talk about this when I see the differences in the families of Grameen members. We give them loans to continue with higher education. We have students in medical and engineering schools. Students whose parents never went to school…

Who creates poverty? The poor do not create poverty. Poverty is created by the system. The system we designed. The system we work with. That’s what creates poverty. It is not nature. It is the exact opposite. It is artificial. People have unlimited potential but we don’t go that way. All these policies and concepts that we promote [create poverty].

Why should financial institutions make up their mind they cannot do business with you? It doesn’t make sense. Let us now decide who is creditworthy.

One concept I try to explain in the book is the concept of business. One interpretation of business is profit maximization. We interpret human beings in such a narrow way, as if human beings are money making robots. Human beings are so much more than that. There is selfishness in us but we also have selflessness.

…Why cannot we create another kind of business? A social business. A business where our goal is to change the world, not to make money. If we give money to charity the money goes and never comes back. With a social business the money recycles and with each iteration produces more benefit at every turn.

We have created several social businesses. We created a plan to create yogurt – a social business. We put the nutrients children need in the yogurt and make it very cheap so everyone can buy it. Experts say if a child eats two cups of yogurt each week for 8-9 months a malnourished child will become a healthy child. In a profit making yogurt company, the CEO would ask how much money we made this year and how we can make more money next year. In a social business the CEO will ask how many children got out of malnutrition this year and how many more children can get out of malnutrition next year.

Another social business [we created is] a water company. Bangladesh has a serious water problem. Almost half the water is poison. We created a company to create safe bottled water. It costs one penny for four liters so everyone can afford it and everyone has safe water. The social objective is to bring safe water to the people.

We recently had a discussion with a major shoe company about how to create a social business. You create a motto. And you believe in it. That motto is that nobody in the world should go without shoes. And make it happen. Yes, you can make shoes for the poorest at a low price. Keep the cost under a dollar with your brand name. That would send a big message. And continue to go down [in price] and never come up again. And make it a green shoe so that no material in the shoe will make any kind of pollution problem.

And another company [that came to us] is a car company. They want to do a social business. We gave them a challenge – why don’t you make a very cheap car. And not only that – base it on a green engine. It will be a multi-purpose engine. You can take it off and use it for irrigation or to generate electricity or to use for a boat. They are working with designers and engineers to see if they can do that.

Health is a big problem – not only in this country but in every country. The bottom half do not have access to health care – private or public. Medical science can be applied to help people have good health. A health care social business could be created to give everyone access to health care.

So, if you change your concepts there is no reason people should be poor. If we block that road it cannot come. Then, no poor.

Poverty does not belong in human society. Poverty belongs in a museum. And that is where we should put it and it will stay there. (applause)



Questions:

Is it harder to implement microcredit in the United States than in Bangladesh?

It is harder in the United States due to the legal structure. Welfare laws require the poor to report each dollar they earn so it can be deducted from their check. It does not make sense. If you make a dollar the government should match you with a dollar.

How do you approach poor women who are reluctant to become involved in microcredit because they do not believe they have the skills or potential to become entrepreneurs?

The real trick is to create an example. You cannot change their mind right away. If you can create one example to break the fear then the others see that. Then everyone becomes curious – how did she do it? I can do better than her.

What advice would you give to a group of George Washington students here who are trying to create a social business?

Young people like you can start a business. If you cannot start one, then design one. Look at the problems and decide which one you want to solve. For example, set a goal to bring 100 people out of welfare. And design a solution to the problem. At first it may seem impossible but you can do it. Microcredit seemed impossible but now it looks easy. If you can get 100 people out of poverty then you can get millions out of poverty by planting that seed.

What abuses do you see in the microfinance system?

You can say microfinance and not do microfinance. Some require collateral. Some due not target the poor. Some microfinance organizations charge exorbitant interest rates – rates similar to loan sharks. Loans should be for income generating activity. Some give loans for consumer goods such as refrigerators and televisions. This is not microfinance.

In your book you propose a rating system to determine which ones help the poor and which ones don’t. In the year since you wrote the book has anyone come up with such a system? [note: this is my question]

Oh yes. A big organization is coming up with that very system. It will tell you exactly what interest rate is charged, conditional fees and so on. Yes, we will start seeing the results of that from this organization.

What is the best way right now to determine the best organizations to contribute money? [my follow-up question]

One way would be to contact that organization to choose which one you want and they will give you the results and then you decide which ones you want to give your money to.

I run a microfinance organization here in DC. It seems the lack of transparency is one of the biggest challenges in our financial industry and particularity in microfinance. I understand Grameen has a very high repayment rate. How does Grameen calculate repayment rate?

If you do not pay back your loan in the period in which it is due then you are overdue. This is all explained on our website. The definition which we use to define overdue is explained there.

What are the edges between commerce and the ecosystem?

We need to figure out how much of our resources are for our generation and how much is for future generations. We need to spread our resources over as many generations as possible.
The real objective is to make the world safer than we found it. And the next generation will make it safer.

Grameen Dannon is a small company. The total investment is less than $500,000. We designed it as a social business. When we started I asked what kind of container we would be using. They showed me. It was plastic. I told them we did not want plastic in a social business. They were surprised. They told me they use plastic all over the world. I told them we want a biodegradable material. They said they did not have a biodegradable material. I told them they better find it. (laughter and applause)

So, about three months later they came back. They were very happy they found a biodegradable material to use in the cups. I asked what it was. They said it was cornstarch and they found it in China. It looks beautiful. I asked if I could eat it. They said why would you want to eat it? I said because poor people are spending money on it. They don’t want to waste money. Why can’t you make edible cups? And put nutrition in it? People will eat the yogurt and then eat the cup. And they could not figure out how that could be. I told them when I get ice cream I get an ice cream cone. I eat the cone. They said this is not ice cream. I told them the scientists need to work on it. They told me it will take a year. I told them they have six months. So, they are working on it.

You have to raise the question. The scientists in Paris are very happy to have the challenge.

Additional coverage: The GW Hatchet
5:50 pm est 

Dear Alex and Nalini -may I start with you two and Nalin'is son A as i always most confident to start sustainable maps up with triangles of human connections
can I introduce you
-alex is 19 year old at GWU who I wholly endorse to linkiin all 18-25s in DC universities inspired by yunus or true microcredit up and anyhwre that DC can unite other colaboration youth cities - alex is a veteran of having started microcredit in schools and coopting elder networks such as young presidents towards that- he's off to clinton uni network but asap it would be fantastic if he can meet you Nalini and Abhi your son at GWU
I understand Nalini your particular love and career is in development is connecting health especially in Indian region and across to GWU in -perhaps you could share a bio if you wish
health is very much the number 1 worldwide future capitalism partnering connections search among grameen leadership at the moment (and what the head of www.grameenamerica.com career has been about connecting) as well as an area where Dhaka wants interns who may become lifelong knowledge connecting ambassadors between :
1 bangladesh what it knows or needs
2 other developong countries that need health franchises to replicate
3 rich world resourced medical systems that have knowhow or could collaborate in future capitalism innovations
mostofa in london works on connecting this back through everyone on grameen involved in making helath connections with dr yunus; also in london modjtab sadria mentors mostofa and me- he is at the aga khan university - while the london branch doesnt specialise in medicine I believe it is mainly a medical university and cross-cultural network
up in boston, marriah who is encouraging 10000 youth is married to a doctor who works and studies at harvard medical school; peter ryan has several hundred mit youth championing micro investment when we all met on tedsay of this week; in new york alewis and rachel were the first under 25s to help research what the missing links are between yunus and empowering youth in north west hemispheres to choose smba instead of mba, as well as being women who spent their summer interning for ASA in Bangladesh and in Rachel's case now representing ASA across USA; they helped launch the youth yes we can competition that us cities will catalogue 1000 social businesses for dr yunus to browase through one web before end of june http://socialbusiness.tv - we are  looking for similar collaboration challenges that can connect youth and bangladeshi micro-up as  per attachment- I hope it will become a student uniting booklet -launching the genre of Innovating Collaboration -  in time to mobilse yes we can micro waves of youthful energy across usa and www
nina down in florida is one of the interns for health that mostofa has been in touch with for several months now
peter burgess wishes to end malaria from the community up- his discussion of that last year with dr yunus is in the 10000 dvd sprobably about video 13 or at http://yunus10000.com
first actions are if nina and leax and abhi can meet when diaries permit and see if health-yout microclubs can be networked across dc and then out to any other micro-youtch cities and through mostofa to colaboration dhaka
second connecting actions are for everyone else to choose
if I have left out somone on health i should have circulated please go
perhaps one day we can set a huge audacious goal for health and start up http://microhealthsummit.com I know obama has already declared his - end malaria deaths by 2015 at clinton global 08 (as attached) and expect this will only happen if kenya's jamii bora test markets how to interate all bottom-up franchises that need to be weaved together if humans are to turn out smarter than mosquitos at networking
chris macrae dc bureau http://obamauni.com  301 881 1655
12:48 pm est 


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World Citizen Guide

Yunus 1000 Bookclub UK Edition

Social Business: Future Capitalism

Public Celebrations UK 2008: LSE Feb 15, St James’s Church Feb 16, St Georges Bristol Feb 17

Connect with Dhaka yunussocialactiongroup.org  - world #1 web for actions of community rising teams

___________________________________________________________________________________________

It is the endless capability of human beings. It just doesn’t have limits: if human beings can’s solve these (millennial rights) challenges- what good is human being any way? We are created to solve problems .. not to create problems. Conventional wisdom tells us very little; conventional wisdom hides conventional blunders; we have to go and hit the blunders and make whole circle so much bigger so that we create the world we want to live in. Yunus, Oxford 07

Yunus Celebration Lunch is first 20 inter-city project, wiki http://apps.facebook.com/wikimono/page?page_gid=2547

 In our survey of world’s most trusted people, Yunus came top. Here are 20 most valued connections among those who have met Yunus and heard his future goals.

Grameen’s networking of microcredit (summit)

The Book (s) - reviews

100 million women sustain community where no support structure had  previously been

Interface BRAC national partner in village’s essential services

30000 employees: 30 years grassroots service

At least 25 national scale social business models

10  meta-social business by 2012 – eg 10000 rural solutions telecentres

Social Business as simplest model for purpose-led valuation

You can hear me now: upvalue service from buy  cow to mobile kiosk lady

Bangladesh:  world’s sustainability internship university?

With Gates, benchmarks Creative Capitalism’s Community up healthcare

Social Action teams : what 21st C do youth and educators wish to  make

Next  Poverty-ending Capitalists Gates 1: ...;

Which city first to social business stockmarket

Why not peer train as many SBA’s as MBAs? Why not Free Universities shared by twin cities?

What bank betters Grameen’s repayments

21st Singapore at Cox’ Bazar with social business type 2 : not owned by .gov but nation’s poorest women

Poverty & sustainability crises caused by 20th century’s big systems not being measurable to compound purpose

Photosynthesise energy before Bangladesh is deluged

Bangladesh - first country with Poverty Museum

10 minutes with Dr Yunus in New York on the day his book became a national bestseller
yunussocialactiongroup.org

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London, February 2008. Citizens were graced by 2 public performances within 24 hours - the likes of which I have never seen before: 1) 2 standing ovations at the London School of Economics was followed by one of the most poignant climate crisis speeches heard in a city renowned for Stern warnings


Yunus St James Feb 16

Climate Capitalism : Dr Yunus offers noted speech of 21st C

St James, Piccadilly, 16 February 2008:  The church used by Londoners to bury its richest men was taken over for an afternoon by climate activists – a surprise setting for the last public appearance of Muhammad Yunus on his 3 day tour of London for his new book “Creating a world without poverty- social business, the future of capitalism.”

This speech was unlike any other offered by the man whose faith celebrates humanity in every corner of our earth. For the first 15 minutes, the audience participated in a requiem to Bangladesh...  In recent years Bangladeshi’s have had the storm of the decade, then a worse one our people named storm of the century, then the worst of our history- we have run out of names on the scale of bad storms. So while climate crisis may be a subject for debating in London, in Bangladesh it is a population killer- and in our low lying nation of over 150 million people, it is the unnatural weapon of mass destruction we truly ask the world to help prevent

We are a people determined to celebrate humanity. On every other crisis: ending poverty, improving communal healthcare, other millennial rights we wish to open source with the world solutions that the Grameen way perfects at the grassroots before scaling up. Looking at climate, we have already passed a magic number of 100,000 solar homes- and if the price of the photoelectric cells could come down by a half, I feel we could commit to making every Bangladeshi home solar.  But that will not be enough to turn the tide on climate given our geographic lot. Only a worldwide collaboration can save us.

Then from minute 16, Yunus walks aside from the pulpit towards the audience to explain how his new book shows how to practice communal collaboration systems. Each major invitation in the book is meticulously designed and tested purposefully to serve vital needs. Much service detailing is contextual, but the common denominators are compounding the end of poverty over time and  empowering people to love being their communally most productive through peer to peer action learning circles.

Uniquely, Dr Yunus’ style is both simple and modest. He urges you dare see with him that if this is what one being can do, what could 6.5 billion of us achieve. Why not unite now by prioritising design of social businesses - the future capitalism game that all our generations will depend on. Proposer: Dr Yunus. Seconder: Bill Gates...

Ironically, as the Banker for the Poor moves on to another city, after 3 joyous days in his inspiring company, it is London’s banks that feel very poor indeed.

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