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John Mcknight on government morality

From Al Etmanski and John McKnight at Community: Programs and Policies · · The Tamarack Institute

“Governments are not moral; they're able. So the real question is how do we keep them moral? And I think we'll never do it internally. What we mean by democracy is the possibility that in combination citizens might keep the government moral.”

John Mcknight
President of Heavy Duty, DORMAN PRODUCTS INC
Controversial government moralitydemocracycitizenship

On , John Mcknight, President of Heavy Duty at DORMAN PRODUCTS INC, spoke about government morality during Al Etmanski and John McKnight at Community: Programs and Policies on The Tamarack Institute.

Al Etmanski and John McKnight at Community: Programs and Policies
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Al Etmanski and John McKnight at Community: Programs and Policies
The Tamarack Institute
Watch on YouTube
Al Etmanski: Al is an author, advocate, and social entrepreneur. President and co-founder of Planned Lifetime Advocacy Network ...
John Mcknight

About John Mcknight

President of Heavy Duty · DORMAN PRODUCTS INC

John McKnight has been discussing asset-based community development (ABCD), an approach he helped develop that focuses on identifying and investing in the strengths and capacities of local neighborhoods rather than focusing on their problems and deficits. In a 2014 appearance, he described neighborhoods as having "a huge invisible set of possibilities" that are often overlooked by institutions. He argued that the "basic experiential base for democracy" is knowing what a neighbor means, and that democracy depends on citizens working together locally to keep government moral, stating that "if locally people don't have the experience of working together to make their society more livable... the democracy's on the way out." McKnight has also reflected on the role of government, expressing respect for its power to enact policies like affirmative action, which he said changed employment for African-Americans "more in three years than it happened in all of history." He described governments as "able" rather than moral, and said the key question is how citizens can keep them moral. He has characterized the future of community and democracy as a resistance to "professionalism, technology, and big systems," advocating instead for local, associational action. He noted that great movements are not organized from the top but are ignited when local action "sweep[s] the consciousness and the policy of your country."

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