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Cities
Name: Jedimike
Location: Berkeley, California, USA
I always imagine Berkeley to be some sort of utopian away from hum-drum America, always doing the same boring thing. Walk down Telegraph... street kids, musicians with instruments unknown. Street kids and urban poverty. Food. Indian-Pakistani, Korean, American, Ethiopean, French Italian, Mexican, Arabic, Chinese, Spanish, Afghani, Japanese. Food and people, languages and culture. The streets are dirty, sometimes. Rasputin's on haste and Telegraph - 4 floors of music and DVDs. Moes and Cody's - books, books and more books. College avenue, Elmwood and it's quaint little shops and silly cross walks around one way streets that dead end. University avenue - always busy until the street lights flash on and off at 3AM. So many cars even then. So slow and yet fast, free way approaching. Shattuck avenue and its pomp and circumstance. Here is where the corporations are. Ever eat a power bar? Their home is in Berkeley. The blockbusters and Barnes and Noble mix-match with independent stores. Starbucks meets Intermetzo and Milano. There is almost a balance. The streets, walls, fences and occasionally the Berkeley University campus are all canvases for art. Some call it vandalism. Maybe it is. In Berkeley, the cops probably smoke weed. They certainly don't seem to mind that everyone else does. Cool. The bicyclists almost number as many cars... on a slow day. Anthems and slogans, cause after cause. Some hate cops. Some want us to live in trees. Others want to stop war and feed the children. Berkeley fits well with the moto: Opinions are like ass holes, everyone has one. But the opinions are more interesting than ass holes. Generally. Farmers markets, locally grown food. Conscious consumerism... but not conscious about classism. Right next door to Berkeley is Oakland. Poor, murder, crime, run down, some rich, mostly poor. Oakland. Where is the class consciousness, the willingness to change things? Fake liberals. Berkeley? Sometimes, yes. Once in a while there is a 'naked parade' where a group of hippies dawn their nakedness and decry war and violence, being symbols of innosence - or shame as most of us might consider being naked in public to be- but they do it with pride. Pride in being born the way we are. But after a year of music on every street, sweet flowers, beautiful weather, expensive housing, protests and pantheons of praise to all sorts of things... well... I wanted to imagine Berkeley was different. And sometimes it is.. but most of the time. Most of the time, it's just Berkeley. When you live in any place for a while... even the unusual becomes dullingly familiar.
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A City is...
More than the sum of its parts: more than the number of people, more than the number of buildings, more than the number of roads.

More than the smog of its skies: more than the impatient cars, more than the buildings that block out the sun, more than the starless nights.

More than the infernal whirl of monetary transactions: more than the neon-bright billboards, more than the salesmen with loudspeakers, more than the suits and the cell phones.

More than the poverty of its slums: more than the fingers worked to the bone, more than the gnawing hunger, more than the empty gutters.

More than all this, and amidst all this: collisions of minds and spirits, one bouncing off another, taking something and giving something away, a continuous chain of energy transfer, transforming potential into culture. At its best, a city is a place that enables social creativity, allowing people of diverse backgrounds to come together and be more than the sum of their parts.

However, cities today face problems that threaten to strip them of their creative potential. Pollution, commercialization, and poverty are making it hard to "breathe" in cities, literally and metaphorically. To combat these issues, we must make spaces where the positive energy between people can be kept alive, where creativity to solve these larger problems can thrive. This month, we take a look at "breathing spaces" in the city.

Member Stories
TIG Magazine
electricities is a creative magazine. electricities is a city we dreamt. A timeless dream that reveals all dreams. Freezing collisions. Time put on pause giving the time to observe this dream. Time for time to fuse with space. Cultural fusion. Metropolis, a pleasant nightmare. A compendium of the best in artwork and creative writing from the Global Gallery and Panorama Online Publication. Through this magazine we hope to be an incubator for fine, fresh, young talent worldwide. Learn more...
Open Forums
A new initiative of TIG, designed to bring together young people from a particular country to discuss real and relevant issues that they deal with in their communities, open forums are a form of "breathing space" for youth. A space that gives an offline platform for safe, open discussion to reflect and express what they face in their every day lives, and provides youth with the opportunity to share possible ideas on how to effect change. This month, Open Forums are happening around the important issues in Cities. Learn more about ways to participate!
Panorama
In this issue of Panorama, we explore the concept of Cities in all its variety. From histories of cities to personal histories to interviews with inspiring youth, our members delve into issues that make cities what they are: centres where everything and everyone lives side by side. Read more, and contribute your opinions!
Global Gallery
Thousands of cities. Millions of streets. Billions of people. Similar fragments reveal "The City", unveiling its stretching skyscrapers all alike to the eye. Wherever we go a street is connecting us to people and places. Some choose the street to take, the place to go. For others a street is a home, not a choice. Both have a unique story to tell. This contest hopes to capture the intimate meaning of life on the streets. May the sidewalk be the vector on which you move or may it be a home. Global Gallery
Discussions
What are the most important issues that face your city today? What means can young people use to have their ideas taken seriously in city planning processes? Do you think young people's ideas have been taken seriously in your city in the past? Discuss all these questions and more on our discussion boards!