Standing on the Shoulders of a Wise and Notable Consul of Rome

I was re-reading Cicero’s De Officiis (On Moral Responsibility) after our recent Global Dialogue.  I trust you have received a copy of the statement of participants in those dialogue discussions on the immediate need to promote responsibility across cultures and sectors, from individuals to organizations.

Our Caux Round Table Principles for Government rest on a premise of responsibility using the concept of office as a trust.

I was reading Walter Miller’s translation from the Latin and was quite surprised to see, for the first time, that Cicero had advocated the same moral vision for those in government as does the Caux Round Table.

Cicero wrote:

For the administration of the government, like the office of a trustee, must be conducted for the benefit of those entrusted to one’s care, not of those to whom it is entrusted.  Now, those who care for the interests of a part of the citizens and neglect another part, introduce into the civil service a dangerous element—dissension and party strife (Book I, XXV, 85).

Our Principles for Government start with this standard of conduct:

Fundamental Principle: Public power is held in trust for the community.

Power brings responsibility.  Power is a necessary moral circumstance in that it binds the actions of one to the welfare of others.

Therefore, the power given by public office is held in trust for the benefit of the community and its citizens.  Officials are custodians only of the powers they hold.  They have no personal entitlement to office or the prerogatives thereof.

Holders of public office are accountable for their conduct while in office.  They are subject to removal for malfeasance, misfeasance or abuse of office.  The burden of proof that no malfeasance, misfeasance or abuse of office has occurred lies with the officeholder.

The state is the servant and agent of higher ends.  It is subordinate to society.  Public power is to be exercised within a framework of moral responsibility for the welfare of others.  Governments that abuse their trust shall lose their authority and may be removed from office.

It is reassuring to discover that our approach has an excellent precedent.

July Pegasus Now Available!

Here’s the July issue of Pegasus.

In this edition, we honor one of the leaders of the Caux Round Table, Frank Straub, by republishing ten essays from his book, Culture Time at BLANCO.

I would be most interested in your thoughts and feedback.

Please note: Because we were unable to edit the individual essays, we weren’t able to delete the original page numbers and add new ones.

And What about Air Conditioning?

I have forwarded, from time to time, mention of new technologies which can reduce the threat of excessive global warming.  My thought has been that there is a special genius in capitalism to seek out and scale-up in use technologies which meet human needs and aspirations.

I read recently of a new invention at Harvard to radically change the technology of air conditioning (I am a bit sheepish at touting something from Harvard, as I have two degrees from that university).

Current air conditioning technology uses a lot of energy and uses chemicals which have an amazing capacity – far more than CO2 – to warm up our atmosphere.  It is said by some that between now and 2050, installing air conditioning to keep pace with warming temperatures will require 10 new air conditioning units every second for the next 30 years.  It is also predicted that by 2050, countries such as Indonesia and India will use as much as 75% of their current energy consumption on cooling.  But a multi-disciplinary team at Harvard has thought up a very different approach.

Rather than shuttle a refrigerant between liquid and vapor modes in order to remove heat and moisture from incoming air, they built, as I understand it, a large flat device about the size of a window containing tubes inside a terracotta housing.  Some of the tubes are coated, but cooled by adjacent tubes, where water evaporation has lowered the temperature.  Fans blow air into the coated tubes to cool it down, but with no absorption of water moisture.  The room on the other side of the unit cools down with little use of electricity, no humidity to remove and no use of refrigerant (How the physics work is above my pay grade, but you have a general sense of how the inventors have, once again, put natural laws to work on our behalf).

Now, a pertinent question is: if this technology really works and can be manufactured at scale for a reasonable cost, who is most capable of turning a lab experiment into a viable consumer product?

Expanding the Global Dialogue: Please Join Us on the 29th on Zoom

Our 2023 Global Dialogue took place on July 26 and 27 in Caux, Switzerland.  A brief report has been sent to you.  The themes that emerged out of the Mountain House discussions are of such general importance that we would like to expand the discussion to include others in our network who might improve our thinking.

Thus, we would like to invite you to join us at 9:00 am (CDT) on Tuesday, August 29 on Zoom for you to contribute your thoughts and observations, drawing on your experiences and concerns for our global future.

To register, please email jed@cauxroundtable.net.

The event will last about an hour.

An Unconventional Perspective on the Indictment of Donald J. Trump

Donald Trump’s indictment is historic and implicates the Caux Round Table Principles for Government.  We should not remain on the sidelines of such a development with global implications.

But I’ve had trouble finding the right voice or context for linking the two.  When I saw the article on the Times/Siena poll on class antagonisms, I thought it provided sound understanding of what is going on in this country.

Here is my commentary for your review.

Statement of Conclusions: Caux Round Table 2023 Global Dialogue

Participants in the Caux Round Table’s 2023 Global Dialogue convened at Mountain House in Caux, Switzerland on July 26 and 27 for round table sessions on 1) where are we at as a global community, 2) where are we headed and 3) where are our leaders?

Participants from Asia, Europe and the U.S., rather quickly and agreeably, came to certain conclusions:

1) Our human community is at an inflection point: something is past and something different is coming.  We are in a juncture of developments, provoking dysfunctions, exacerbating differences, precipitating separations and bringing on anxiety-inducing uncertainties.
2) Leaders up to our challenges and worthy of our respect are in short supply everywhere.
3) A recovery of commitment to personal responsibility is most needed.

This statement, drafted by participants, sets forth their conclusions and recommendations.

Please feel free to share the statement with your friends, colleagues and networks.

Reflections on Immigration after Protests in France and New York City Running Out of Money to House Immigrants

I recently read two commentaries in the editorial pages of the Wall Street Journal that speak to a common, global conundrum: immigration.

The conundrum, as far as I can tell, is who needs to respect whom – the immigrants vis-à-vis their hosts or the hosts vis-à-vis the newcomers from different cultures?  Or both simultaneously?

What do good, civilized, human ethics require?

One commentary discussed the financial burden placed on the taxpayers of New York City to provide free housing and other services to those illegally in the U.S. and living in their city.  The second one, by the noted thinker Bernard-Henry Levi, spoke with passion about the “mad wind” of rage and intolerant destruction which drove the recent “counter-cultural” riots in France.

Antagonisms between normative collectives – religious communities, ethnic identities, races, higher and lower systemic group situations in a society’s structure of power and advantage – seem to have been the norm for humanity for eons.  In-groups and out-groups; my group and your group; your language and my language; my preferences and your preferences in belief, food, dress, behavior.  Which is better, more refined, more “true,” more deserving of respect?

For our 2018 Global Dialogue in St. Petersburg, Russia, I drafted a concept paper on the ethics of immigrants and host nationals.  Five years ago, I proposed:

From Tribe to Citizen: The Ethics of Participation in National Community

The calling of the human person is to community.  No one is an island unto themselves.  Each is part of the main.  Our special destiny, opportunities unlike those given to any other and our individual gifts is and are in relationship with others, from our birth until we leave this life.  Trust and responsibility set us apart as worthy of consideration.  Showing respect for others brings us respect and honor in return.

Our character reveals our values and our courage to live for ourselves and for others in the right proportions and with grace and dignity.  Citizenship in community makes justice triumph over evil.

This is especially true for democracies, societies that depend on the quality of their citizens for their success and prosperity.  George Washington concluded that “Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports. … It is substantially true that virtue or morality is a necessary spring of popular government.”

It is an insight common to all religions that we are called to rise above mean selfishness and act for higher purposes.  We always live by our values – be they good or bad – but it is better for us and for those whose lives we influence that we live by good values.

Sovereign nation states are inhabited by citizens and residents.  Citizens have a legal right to residence and other rights, privileges and benefits under the laws of the sovereign.  Residents either have permission from the sovereign to remain in the territory or they do not.  Immigrants to a nation state either have permission to reside in the territory or they are trespassers.  Immigrants may choose to become citizens under the nationality laws of the nation state or they may choose not to or do not qualify for becoming citizens.

The laws of citizenship and residency do not discuss the ethics of living in a national community. Ethics references how we use our powers and authority with respect to others.  Ethics arise from the moral sense and conditions how we act freely.  The ethics of community within a nation state are not ordered by law, international or domestic, but are habits of the heart for both citizens and residents.

The Ethics of Citizens

Not every citizen shares commonalities of language, ethnicity, religion, gender, sexual orientation, political views, social status and more attributes ascriptive or achieved, with other citizens.  Some nations are very homogenous.  Others are very pluralistic and multicultural.  But the status of citizen is common to all, regardless of other identifications and personal preferences.

The primary ethical obligation of a citizen is to contribute to civil order by going beyond the letter of the law to build the social capital of a community.  In Christian terms, this reflects love of neighbor with neighbors to include all citizens, to some degree, and to do unto other citizens as we would have them do unto us.

Public power constitutes a civic order for the safety and common good of its members.  The civic order, as a moral order, protects and promotes the integrity, dignity and self-respect of its members in their capacity as citizens and therefore, avoids all measures, oppressive and other, whose tendency is to transform the citizen into a subject.  The state shall protect, give legitimacy to or restore all those principles and institutions which sustain the moral integrity, self-respect and civic identity of the individual citizen and which also serve to inhibit processes of civic estrangement, dissolution of the civic bond and civic disaggregation.  This effort by the civic order itself protects the citizen’s capacity to contribute to the well-being of the civic order.

Public power, however allocated by constitutions, referendums or laws, shall rest its legitimacy in processes of communication and discourse among autonomous moral agents who constitute the community to be served by the government.  Free and open discourse, embracing independent media, shall not be curtailed, except to protect legitimate expectations of personal privacy, sustain the confidentiality needed for the proper separation of powers or for the most dire of reasons relating to national security.

Therefore, citizenship is an office of service to the public weal.  The honor which comes from being a citizen lies in fidelity to duty and responsibility.  Entitlements may accrue to individuals for personal enjoyment, but duties are the price paid for membership in the national community. To hold a share of power in the civic order is to assume a status, to have the dignity of positional responsibility above and beyond personal preferences and desires, angers and delights.  As must any agent or other fiduciary, the citizen has an obligation to consider the good of others as a check on each and every personal interest or prejudice.

Accordingly, the first duty of every citizen is to use discourse ethics in the resolution of community difficulties and the promotion of community wellbeing. A citizen must not act from petulance or any other tyrannous instinct.

A citizen should make the following commitments:

I will learn.  I will read and study to know the past and plan the future.  I will find good values and seek to know the fundamental and the important as best I can.  Though I seek conviction, I will be open minded to new learning and experience.

I will reflect and deliberate on what I have learned.  I will not jump to conclusions, be hasty with others and give in to prejudice or emotions.  In this way, I will find where to best use my skills and abilities.

I will tell the truth about what I know.  Integrity and sincerity will be important to me in all my relationships.

I will not hide my ideas and feelings.  I will not be afraid of debate and discussion.  I can influence others with my opinions, just as others have a right to share their ideas and feelings with me.  What we all do together, many times, is more important than what I can do alone. Listening is a valuable skill that I will learn.

I will use my powers wisely.  I will try to leave the world a better place for my having been alive.

I will try hard to make the most of my life.  I am nobody’s fool and nobody’s victim.

I will not be afraid.  I will learn self-control and come to be self-reliant.

I will care about others.  There is already enough hurt in the world.  I will not add more, if I can help it.

I will find happiness not in money, but in doing what is right.  Money is only a convenience.  Doing what is right makes me a real person.

I will be thankful for all the good that I experience and brave in times of difficulty and frustration.  Happiness doesn’t come every day.  Bad things happen more than we want, but there is good to receive and to appreciate as a reminder that our lives are not lost or hopeless. Despair, however, undermines our ability to do good and to be happy.

Thus, a citizen is self-empowered to be a friend.  The office of a friend is most necessary for the well-being of community.  It is the bond that sustains relationships through strife and adversity. The capacity to be a friend provides for the internal moral vindication of each person and thereby sustains, in psychological comfort, each person, as they confront the ups and downs of fortune.  Aristotle considered that friendliness is the most robust form of justice, balancing judgment and grace.  The best friendships bring forth love and trust, which promote the highest quality of community, where simultaneously and reciprocally, individuals are honored for who they are and community efforts thrive.

For the self, forms of friendship which do not impose serious obligations of reciprocity and so are a lower form of office are based on the utility to one of the other as a friend and the pleasure one takes in being with another.  Friendships based on utility and pleasure are more easily dissolved.  Their partnerships are potentially very vulnerable to dissolution, as are friends on Facebook.

Aristotle advised that goodness comes from good people (Nicomachean Ethics, Books 8, 9).  He proposed that friendship is a kind of partnership, one with another, for better or worse.

Friendship is sustained by character.  When a friend’s character changes or the depths of that person’s character are revealed, the office of friendship may terminate.  Aristotle proposed that we each “ought to strain every nerve” to avoid wickedness and try to be a person of good character, “for in that way, one can both be on good terms with oneself and become the friends of somebody else.”

In addition, citizenship requires contributions to the common good, such as:

1. Using wealth to enhance other forms of capital: finance, physical, human, reputational and social.

First, wealth should be used to sustain and improve the institutions that permit the creation of wealth.  Accumulated over time, wealth can influence the future.  Wise use of wealth avoids immediate consumption and invests in the creation of better outcomes for future

2. Balancing the desires of owners for self-satisfaction against society’s need for robust accumulation of new capital in all forms.

Philanthropy is incumbent upon those who possess wealth.  The social function of wealth is to finance a greater good.  Those who are to inherit wealth should be expected to assume the fiduciary responsibilities of stewardship that accompany the possession of wealth.

3. Using wealth to support the creation of social capital.

Social capital – the reality of the social compact incubating successful wealth creation and permitting the actualization of human dignity – is created, over time, by governments and civil society.  From the rule of law to physical infrastructures, from the quality of a society’s moral integrity and transparency of its decision-making to the depth and vitality of its culture, social capital demands investment of time, money, imagination and leadership.  Wealth should pay its fair share in taxes to support public programs enhancing social capital and should invest in the private creation of social capital through philanthropy.

4. Investing one’s wealth in institutions enhancing human capital.

Education and culture can be funded from public budgets on a consumption basis, but wealth should shoulder the principal responsibility in a society of providing permanent endowments for institutions of education and culture.

5. Using private wealth to supplement public expenditures for the social safety net.

Private charity and philanthropy should respond to the health and human services needs of the less fortunate.

Thus, citizenship looks towards assumption of the office of being a good host to those who come to live in the national community.

With respect to non-citizens, the ethic of citizenship are those of a host, reciprocating the good will and respect of a guest who accepts the responsibility of honoring the customs and beliefs of the host family.  The office of a host is to provide hospitality, respect and welcome.

The Ethics of Residents

Residents (including immigrants) are subjects of the sovereignty.  Unlike citizens, they have no role in sovereign decision-making.  But as residents, they share in the fortunes of the national community.  Thus, as recipients of benefits and privileges provided by the government, society and culture, residents assume ethical obligations in return.  These obligations are to assume the office of a friend as much as possible and to be gracious and charitable in the office of a guest.

Resident as a Guest

The status of guest comes with its own special duties of showing goodwill and thanks of honoring the host with appreciation and never imposing on those who have welcomed us into their homes.

Here are some quite ordinary ethical recommendations for guests:

1. Arrive with a gift.

Your hosts have gone out of their way to prepare for your arrival — cleaning the house, making the beds, hiding their naughtiness — so the least you can do is arrive with a gift to show your gratitude.

2. Buy your own groceries or be responsible for your own needs.

When I’m staying with friends or family, I buy my own groceries for two reasons: 1) I’m a picky eater, so it’s unlikely that they’ll have much that I like and 2) it’s rude to eat your guests out of house and home.  Bring your own toiletries.  Make your bed and clean up after yourself.  Keep your bathroom clean: wipe up any ring in the tub, shaving cream residue in the basin, hair on any object or surface or dirt on soap.

3. Conserve linens and towels or be reasonable in what you demand from your hosts.

At home, I use only one towel a week.  When I’m done drying off after a shower, I hang it on the back of the bathroom door so it can dry properly.  When I’m traveling, I do the same.  A good host will provide you with a towel or two, which is plenty, so don’t abuse it.

4. Ask about house rules.

When guests come to my home, I have three rules: 1) don’t get locked up, 2) don’t get locked out and 3) don’t burn the place down.  Otherwise, my guests are free to come and go as they please and make themselves at home.  However, not every host is as lax as I am.  Some don’t want you making a frozen pizza at 3:00 am on a Sunday night, when you’ve just come home from the bar. To avoid offending your hosts, ask about general policies and rules.  Should the door be locked when you leave?  Is it OK to put silverware in the dishwasher?  Would you like me to let the dog out if you’re not home?  Most people have certain ways they like and do things, so it’s best to ask before you step on any toes.

5. Give the host personal space.

While your hosts are happy to see you (hopefully), they don’t want to spend every minute of every day with you.  Respect that.

6. Lend a hand where necessary.

Is your host slaving away in the kitchen preparing a delicious feast?  Ask if he or she needs a hand.  Does the dog need a walk?  Volunteer to take the pooch for a stroll.  Does somebody need to go on a beer run?  Offer your excellent (and sober) driving skills to accomplish the task. Whatever the case, let your guests know that you’re happy to help out where you can.

7. Keep common areas clean.

Mind your Ps and Qs when staying with friends and family.  Whatever you would do in your own home, don’t do it at your hosts’ home.  Put the toilet seat down.  Wash your dishes by hand or put them in the dishwasher.  Make the bed.  Turn out the lights when you leave a room.  There’s nothing worse than following guests around the house, picking up after them.  Your hosts probably won’t say anything to you regarding your messiness or lack of consideration, but you can be sure that you won’t be invited back because of it.

8. Treat the hosts to a nice meal.

If you’re a whiz in the kitchen, prepare your signature dish (and wash the dishes afterward).  If you’re not so hot at culinary art, ask your hosts what their favorite restaurant is and treat them to a nice meal.  This is a time when you can all be at the same place at the same time to catch up. Conflicting schedules considered, this might be the only chance you have.

Here are things a good houseguest should never do:

1. Expect their host’s undivided attention 24/7.

2. Expect their host to be their daily tour guide.

3. Assume that room comes with board.

4. Expect their host to accommodate their picky eating.

Whatever diet you adhere to is your business.  But if you aren’t prepared to eat what’s served, ask where the nearest supermarket is and go pick up the things that you want to eat. A guest who proselytizes about “their” diet is rarely attractive.

5. Open drawers to find things or start helping themselves to food in the pantry without asking first.

Some hosts have a “make yourself at home” attitude.  But think twice before you start poking around in the medicine cabinet, looking for the aspirin.  Respect your host’s privacy.  And do not use your host’s phone, computer or any other equipment without asking, says the Emily Post Institute.

6. Hog the shower when your host needs to leave for work.

Be proactive and ask about the best time to use the bathroom for showering.  It’s a small thing, but it ranks high on the stress-o-meter.

7. Ignore basic common sense.

We all do things differently and as a guest, the rules you should be following are those of your host.  If you are given a key, don’t forget to use it.  Lock the door when you leave.  Don’t make a lot of noise when you get home and if your host is asleep, maybe heating up smelly leftovers at 2:00 am isn’t such a great idea.  Ask before you assume where the fragile wine glasses go in the dishwasher and yes, you probably should use your towels more than once.

Oh, and practice the rule made popular by Benjamin Franklin: “Guests, like fish, begin to smell after three days.”  Don’t push your expiration date.

Resident as Friend

The ethics of friendship, noted above for citizens, are not limited to those who already have citizenship.  Residents are participants in the national community.  They too, therefore, should carry out the office of friend towards citizens and others alike.

Resident as Prospective Citizen

Some residents intend to become citizens and thus assume the duties of citizenship.  They may prepare for enjoyment of this status with its privileges and obligations by incorporating into their behaviors the traits of good citizens, as noted above.

Immigrant as Prospective Citizens, Friends and Guests

Immigrants – refugee, asylum seeker, worker, student, retiree, etc. – become residents of a nation state with the intention of making a life as part of that community.  As such, they have the status of prospective citizen, learning how to assume the privileges and obligations of citizenship and the status of friend, obligated to perform the office of friend in their new homeland.

In gratitude for receiving permission to become a resident and then, perhaps, a citizen, immigrants should be particularly alert to being a gracious guest.

Conclusion

These ethical standards for the offices of citizen, friend and guest can be placed in the context of great wisdom traditions.  They invoke the principles of human dignity, solidarity and subsidiarity of Catholic social teachings.  Under Protestant social teachings, they stand on the moral goodness of finding a vocation for self to sustain God’s created realm of common grace.  They embody the paramitas of Buddhist teachings: generosity, proper conduct, renunciation, insightful wisdom, effort, forbearance, truthfulness, resolution, goodwill, equanimity.  They reflect Qur’anic guidance to make of yourselves a community that seeks righteousness and enjoins justice and to follow the counsels of only those who enjoin charity, kindness and peace among men.  These ethical standards fully comply with the wisdom of Confucius that “reciprocity” is an ideal which will serve us all life long and the commitment of Mencius to only guide us towards humanness and mutual engagement.  The relationships of citizen, friend and guest embody the Japanese ethic of kyoseior symbiosis.

Participants at the Global Dialogue then drafted a statement on comity between immigrants and host nationals.  This statement is still quite applicable to the contradictions facing many in the U.S., France and other countries.  You may find the statement here.

Preliminary Summary of Key Conclusions from Global Dialogue

The Caux Round Table 2023 Global Dialogue concluded last Thursday with participant agreement on two observations and one recommendation:

First, our global community systemically lacks leaders.  Many have power over others in government, business and civil society, but too few use their power to advance the common good.

Secondly, our global community is in a disorderly transition from a past coherence to an uncertain future.  We are experiencing aggressions and potential aggressions, dissolutions and divisiveness, all leading to a global disempowering anxiety arising from worrisome uncertainty and mistrust of institutional authority.

Thirdly, our global community can rise about our time of troubles with a re-commitment to comprehensive personal responsibility.

Personal responsibility implies relationship – with those to whom we are responsible or for whom we are responsible.  Responsibility is at the apex of social capital.  It balances individuality with collective well-being.  Taken to extremes, assertion of our personal rights encourages egocentricity and so can undermine the common weal.  Where we impose on others and they on us, there is no justice.

But when responsibility gives moral guidance to rights, society can achieve balance and equilibrium conducive to justice and happiness for all.

Where Confucius advocated “reciprocity” as the most important word of all, Aristotle advocated following the “mean,” Jesus spoke of each doing unto others as if they were ourselves, the Qur’an advises that we should keep the balance (mizan) and the Buddha advocated following a middle path, we should listen and accordingly assume our due responsibilities.  Doing so will naturally position us to do well for ourselves and good to others.

Being responsible implies that there should be limits to our self-seeking.  When responsibility is associated with leadership, stewardship results.  The leader assumes fiduciary duties to serve the community.

Therefore, to enjoy social justice and happiness, we need a balance of responsible leadership in government, business and civil society.  Each sector has its particular responsibilities, all of which contribute to a wholesome community as follows:

I want to send you this preliminary report of my personal takeaways from our global dialogue discussions. Our fellow, John Dalla Costa, is preparing a more comprehensive documentation of the many most interesting points raised in our sessions.

On the Social Duty of Validating Human Agency

We have, in recent months, responded, as best we can, to the current levels of distemper in our world, thinking more about social and human capitals as foundations for moral outcomes – social, political and economic.

The outcome of better social and human capitals, on an individual level, is more effective agency for individuals.  Agency, we might say, is the manifestation of human dignity, moving it from norm to fact.  It also provides each of us with the capacity for freedom.  Without agency, how inert would we be?

Individual agency, in fact, is the cosmos’ way of bridging between norms and facts.  Human agency possesses norms and thoughts and at the same time, lives with facts.

I recently read that in the state of Mississippi – long derided for having the lowest achievements in education and the most child poverty among all the 50 American states – over the past decade has committed its educational system to having every child able to read by the end of third grade.  As a result of this community effort, Mississippi children no longer test at the bottom of all American children.  They now demonstrate abilities closer to the average, no matter their family’s economic circumstances.  Among poor families, Mississippi children are now tied for best performers in the nation on one standard test for reading, while ranking second in math.

The abilities of high school graduates have also grown.  In 2011, only 75% of students graduated, 4% below the national average graduation rate, but in 2022, 88% of Mississippi students graduated high school, when the national average for graduation was 87%.

The lesson to be learned from this is that poverty is not an insurmountable obstacle to developing our agency capabilities.  It is the person incubating the divine spark, not life circumstances, which can make all the difference for the quality of our life outcomes.

Does that fact not argue for setting high standards for ourselves and others and persevering in living by them?

Robert Browning insisted that a person’s “reach should exceed his grasp, or what’s a heaven for?”

Update from Global Dialogue

The 2023 Caux Round Table Global Dialogue at Mountain House in Caux, Switzerland, opened with notable cross-cultural discussions.

The theme of the dialogue is to begin anew, as our times are new.

Here is a picture of participants and two views from Mountain House:

You may find here my opening remarks on why our time demands new thinking about our responsibilities.

We were joined by Yukihisa Fujita from Japan, who attended the first meeting of the Caux Round Table in 1986, also at Mountain House, and by Bob MacGregor, who was the prime mover of our Principles for Business back in 1994.