100% agree Rob. I love that you write with such clarity about the systemic nature of the problem we face. Our challenge now, I think, is to create a positive vision of the future and more importantly explain in detail what that transition looks like for individuals, for communities and for countries. Especially those of us in the developed world.
If the future is not simply what we do today, with batteries, then we need to help people see what the future really looks like. If Covid taught us anything (about humanity's response to a global emergency) it's that we were at our collective best when we knew exactly what the enemy was, when we were equally vulnerable before it, when we were united against it, when information flowed (daily) about the progress being made and the actions we ALL needed to take were simple and spelled out clearly (even if some chose to ignore them, Ahem!) so we each knew our role.
100% agree Rob. I love that you write with such clarity about the systemic nature of the problem we face. Our challenge now, I think, is to create a positive vision of the future and more importantly explain in detail what that transition looks like for individuals, for communities and for countries. Especially those of us in the developed world.
If the future is not simply what we do today, with batteries, then we need to help people see what the future really looks like. If Covid taught us anything (about humanity's response to a global emergency) it's that we were at our collective best when we knew exactly what the enemy was, when we were equally vulnerable before it, when we were united against it, when information flowed (daily) about the progress being made and the actions we ALL needed to take were simple and spelled out clearly (even if some chose to ignore them, Ahem!) so we each knew our role.