EXODUS II: NEW FRONTIER 2 Corporate Leadership Workshop & Narrative Framework

EXODUS II: NEW FRONTIER 2

Corporate Leadership Workshop & Narrative Framework

Draft Study Booklet

Ted Hayes
Justiceville Initiative
Los Angeles, California


TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction

The Central Principle: In Your Interest (IYI)

Speaking Truth to Power

From Partnership to Mutualship

Corporate Context and the Social Crisis

Why EXODUS II Is in the Interest of Corporations

Financial Benefits for Corporate Leadership

Spiritual and Human Benefits for Corporate Leadership

The Corporate Soul: Soul Power of Transformation

The IYI Doctrine — The Five Laws of In Your Interest Leadership

Executive Speech to Corporate Leaders

Five-Minute Story: Why EXODUS II Exists

Media Narrative (Interview Version)

TED-Style Talk

Corporate Awakening Moment

Moment of Silence Story

EXODUS II Workshop Framework

The EXODUS II Story Map

The EXODUS II Framework Diagram

One-Page Executive Leave-Behind

The 90-Second Opening Pitch

Questions Executives Will Ask

Closing Sentence for Meetings

Common Mistakes When Speaking with Corporate Leaders


Introduction

EXODUS II: New Frontier 2 proposes a framework through which corporate leadership, communities, and public institutions can collaborate in transforming the homelessness crisis into an opportunity for national renewal.

The initiative emerges from more than two decades of lived experience among homeless communities in Los Angeles.

From January 1985 through November 1993, eight years were spent living among sidewalk encampments on Skid Row in a community known as Justiceville.

From November 1993 through November 2007, thirteen additional years were spent living among formerly homeless residents in a transitional community known as Dome Village.

Altogether this represents twenty-one years living directly among homeless communities.

These years revealed patterns that are often invisible to society at large.

Homelessness rarely results from a single cause.

Instead it emerges when multiple social systems fail simultaneously.

Housing systems
Economic systems
Health systems
Family structures
Community networks

EXODUS II proposes that the same systems capable of producing prosperity also possess the capacity to rebuild opportunity.


The Central Principle: In Your Interest (IYI)

The core framework of EXODUS II is built upon the principle of In Your Interest (IYI).

Rather than appealing primarily to guilt, obligation, or charity, EXODUS II recognizes that when those who hold the greatest responsibility within the systems shaping modern civilization experience renewal of purpose and vision, that renewal naturally extends outward through every level of society.

Corporate leadership represents one of the most influential human systems ever created.

When the individuals within these systems rediscover meaning and moral clarity within their leadership roles, the effects cascade throughout institutions and communities.

Employees rediscover purpose.

Communities gain stability.

And individuals who once lived in homelessness find pathways back into participation in society.

Thus the well-being of corporate leadership becomes a catalyst for the well-being of society itself.


Speaking Truth to Power

Throughout history meaningful change has required individuals willing to speak truth to power.

Yet speaking truth to power requires wisdom.

First, one must understand the nature of the power being addressed.

Second, one must understand how much truth power is capable of receiving.

Third, the attitude in which truth is spoken must be respectful rather than antagonistic.

Fourth, the truth must reveal that the matter being discussed is genuinely in the interest of those who hold power.

EXODUS II follows this approach.

Rather than confronting corporate leadership with accusations or demands, the initiative invites leaders to rediscover the deeper meaning embedded within their own positions of influence.


From Partnership to Mutualship

Traditional language surrounding social initiatives often relies on phrases such as partnerships or coalitions.

Over time such language has become overused and often lacks meaning.

EXODUS II introduces a different concept: Mutualship.

Mutualship recognizes that every human being shares common dignity regardless of economic status.

Within this framework:

Corporations become mutual investors in social stability.

Communities become mutual stakeholders in economic prosperity.

Individuals across society become mutual shareholders in the future of civilization.

Through mutualship, prosperity and dignity advance together.


Corporate Context and the Social Crisis

National and international corporations operate in environments defined by competition, innovation, and responsibility to shareholders.

These institutions generate extraordinary prosperity and technological advancement.

However, intense corporate environments can also produce social consequences.

Employees often experience exhaustion, pressure, and loss of meaning.

The phenomenon known as quiet quitting reflects deeper dissatisfaction within many workplaces.

At the same time, the most visible manifestation of societal distress appears in homelessness.

Homeless communities exist in the same cities where enormous prosperity is generated.

These realities are interconnected expressions of the same social system.


Why EXODUS II Is in the Interest of Corporations

EXODUS II reframes homelessness as an opportunity for societal renewal.

Corporations possess unique capabilities that can help address complex societal challenges.

These capabilities include:

organizational leadership
innovation systems
long-term strategic planning
resource coordination

Corporate participation in EXODUS II allows companies to contribute to the rebuilding of social stability in the communities where they operate.

This engagement strengthens both society and the institutions that participate in its renewal.


Financial Benefits for Corporate Leadership

Corporate involvement in societal renewal produces multiple financial benefits.

Stronger communities produce stronger economies.

When homelessness declines and community stability improves, corporations benefit through:

expanded workforce participation
reduced social instability
stronger consumer confidence
improved economic environments

Companies that demonstrate leadership in social responsibility also strengthen their public reputation and brand trust.


Spiritual and Human Benefits for Corporate Leadership

Human beings seek meaning beyond material success.

Corporate leaders often reach positions of great achievement only to discover that the next stage of fulfillment lies in legacy.

Participation in initiatives that restore human dignity allows leaders to rediscover purpose.

“The rich and the poor meet together.”

EXODUS II proposes that prosperity and responsibility can meet together in ways that strengthen both society and leadership itself.


The Corporate Soul: Soul Power of Transformation

Within every human institution there exists something deeper than policy, profit, or procedure.

There exists the soul of the institution.

Corporations are communities of human beings working together within systems of purpose and responsibility.

When the corporate soul reconnects with purpose, institutions become powerful forces for societal renewal.

This is the Soul Power of Transformation.


The IYI Doctrine — The Five Laws of In Your Interest Leadership

Law One — Leadership Health Determines System Health

Law Two — Purpose Is the Fuel of Human Systems

Law Three — Responsibility Follows Power

Law Four — Mutualship Strengthens Civilization

Law Five — Vision Awakens Strength


Executive Speech to Corporate Leaders

For generations society has repeated a discouraging phrase:

“The rich get richer and the poor get poorer.”

Yet ancient wisdom offers a different perspective.

“The rich and the poor meet together.”

EXODUS II invites corporate leadership to apply the same innovation and organizational excellence that built great companies toward rebuilding opportunity for those who have fallen through society’s cracks.


Five-Minute Story: Why EXODUS II Exists

In 1985 a decision was made to live among homeless communities in Los Angeles.

Eight years were spent in sidewalk encampments on Skid Row.

Later thirteen years were spent in the community known as Dome Village.

Twenty-one years living among homeless communities revealed systemic patterns behind homelessness.

These insights led to the development of EXODUS II.


Media Narrative (Interview Version)

Homelessness reflects deeper structural issues within modern society involving economic instability, mental health challenges, and community breakdown.

EXODUS II proposes that modern institutions possess the capability to address these challenges through collaborative leadership.


TED-Style Talk

What if one of the most painful problems in society is pointing toward one of its greatest opportunities?

After twenty-one years living among homeless communities, it became clear that homelessness is not simply a housing problem.

It is a signal revealing deeper societal systems.

EXODUS II proposes that by bringing prosperity and responsibility together, societies can rebuild opportunity.


Corporate Awakening Moment

Inside corporate towers many individuals quietly struggle with exhaustion and loss of purpose.

When corporate leadership participates in solving real human challenges, individuals rediscover the satisfaction of building something meaningful.


Moment of Silence Story

A man once said the hardest part of homelessness was not hunger or cold.

The hardest part was when people stopped seeing him.

After a while he felt invisible.

Homelessness is not only the loss of housing.

It is the loss of connection to society.


EXODUS II Workshop Framework

Workshop Purpose:

To explore how corporate leadership can participate in societal renewal through the EXODUS II framework.


The EXODUS II Story Map

Skid Row Experience
Justiceville

Dome Village

Systemic Insight

EXODUS II Vision

Corporate Leadership Engagement

National Renewal


The EXODUS II Framework Diagram

America’s 250th Anniversary

Moral Compass
“The Rich and the Poor Meet Together”

The Table of Brotherhood

Corporate Leadership
Communities
Government
Civic Institutions

Outcome:

EXODUS II
New Frontier 2


One-Page Executive Leave-Behind

EXODUS II proposes a collaborative framework through which corporations, communities, and public institutions transform homelessness from a crisis into an opportunity for renewal.


The 90-Second Opening Pitch

For more than forty years I’ve worked on homelessness.

But what makes my experience unusual is that I lived among homeless communities for twenty-one years.

Those experiences revealed systemic patterns behind homelessness and led to the development of EXODUS II.


Questions Executives Will Ask

What are you asking us to do?

How would corporations participate?

What makes your perspective unique?

What would success look like?


Closing Sentence for Meetings

If this idea resonates with you, I would welcome the opportunity to explore together how corporate leadership might help open this new frontier of opportunity.


Common Mistakes When Speaking with Corporate Leaders

Avoid problem overload.

Avoid sounding accusatory.

Avoid trying to explain everything in one conversation.

Focus on the opportunity for leadership and renewal.

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