Al Gore made an intriguing comment about the presidential election at the recent Web 2.0 Summit: "One of the reasons we were all thrilled Tuesday night is it was pretty obvious this was a collectively intelligent decision."
See my reply in the "Obama, collective intelligence, and Current TV" entry of the Blog of Collective Intelligence.
I wrote about why I think that giving our shared attention to boost our collective IQ will be helpful to win the White House. Here, in this post, I want to share some of my fave resources that I believe can help with that not so easy but vital task. They include social technologies, centers, initiatives, websites, books, articles and various social practices, designed to take collective intelligence and wisdom to scale:
"collective intelligence" in Wikipedia
social technologies for boosting collective intelligence and wisdom in groups of any size:
“Open up government decision-making and involve the public in the work of agencies, not simply by soliciting opinions, but by tapping into the vast and distributed expertise of the American citizenry to help government make more informed decisions.” Create a Transparent and Connected Democracy -- Barack ObamaObama’s innovation and tech agenda enables a new kind of surge – the surge of the social creativity and collective intelligence needed to solve our toughest problems, and move the US in the world from being part of the problem to being part of the solution.As another bloger noted, “The Plan calls for citizen engagement in the work of federal agencies and demonstrates respect for the intelligence and expertise of the American people.” I would add:“Yes, we can” because Yes, we know and care!