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Date: 2024-12-21 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00017675

Thinking
Michelle Holliday

Where Do We Go From Here?

Burgess COMMENTARY

Peter Burgess
Michelle Holliday THRIVABILITY MAVEN PERCEPTIVE GUIDE CREATIVE STRATEGIST VISIONARY AUTHOR CAPTIVATING SPEAKER SEARCH … Where Do We Go From Here? RECOGNIZING THE CONTEXT AND THE NEED Where Do We Go From Here?

Just as communism fell in Russia, capitalism and Western-style democracy are not immune to the same fate. In fact, the US election, the global rise of nationalism and the worldwide persistence of poverty, social unrest and environmental degradation are all signals that capitalism may be about to hit a wall.

The difference is that the communists had capitalism to turn to. But what do we turn to next?

To answer that question, we have to understand the worldviews that underlie communism and capitalism and that render both unsustainable.

In simplified terms, communism values the collective more than the individual, whereas capitalism values the individual over the collective. As practiced, each in their own way, the two systems see the world and its institutions as machines to be managed and engineered. With these limited lenses, neither has been able to create the conditions for widespread personal and societal thrivability.

What’s needed instead is a worldview – an overarching narrative – that is elegantly able to integrate individual and collective needs. Only a narrative grounded in the self-organizing, self-integrating processes of life meets that requirement. After all, nature never settles for the false dichotomy of part versus whole.

The good news is: paradigm pioneers around the world are blazing an enticing trail, with innovative approaches to business, ownership and community. Grounded in the language and logic of living systems, these new options invite each of us to find our greatest personal reward by making our best contributions to the collective good. The early results are extremely promising.

The bad news is: the individualist, mechanistic worldview won’t hand over sole control without a fight. Donald Trump is the most extreme product of this worldview and its duly appointed spokesperson. Indeed, the entire US election can be understood as the individualist worldview having a massive temper tantrum.

So, how do we put this unruly brat of a worldview (and a president-elect) to bed?

Certainly, we must resist and block the unreasonable demands and abuses of the tantrum.

Equally, though, we need to tell the emerging story, recognizing the values of individualism and also weaving them into a more complete view. We have to imagine together a society in which individuals can be honored even as they honor all life.

If we look beyond the dogma of communism and capitalism, beyond the dichotomy of individual versus collective, or of republican versus democrat, we can see that the expanded story is all around us, in everything that is alive and in the most vibrant parts of our communities. “You don’t start with the corporation and ask how to redesign it,” advised author Marjorie Kelly in a recent essay. “You start with life, with human life and the life of the planet, and ask, how do we generate the conditions for life’s flourishing?” The same is true of our societies and their governing structures.

“To change something,” said Buckminster Fuller, “build a new model that makes the old model obsolete.” That is our most urgent task.
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Tim Gieseke Tim Gieseke 1st degree connection1st President, AgRS, LLC

2h Of the two economic models, capitalism seems to have more emergent qualities than communism, and so, that seems to be more fertile ground. What capitalism appears to lack are processes to cycle value back into living capitals; particularly social and natural capitals.

Of the two, natural capital is far more tangible to me than social capital, so others may be of more help with social capital. At this point in history, we are poised to add an ecological dimension to the economy in a way that the individual benefits by improving natural capital for the collective. Capitalism, as currently functioning, does not just have the side effect of the “tragedy of the commons”, our economic system model is thee ToC. The “tragedy of the economy” is that capitalism is currently ill-equipped to value other important capitals. Two weeks ago, EcoCommerce as a Service was introduced as the next first step to add an ecological dimension to the economy. It has been planted and it will emerge as a tiny seedling. I agree with Majorie, we aren’t going to solve this by building a giant corporate machine, but with a tiny seed and the faith to nurture it.
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