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Writer's pictureRichard Lipscombe

Systems versus people...


Systems-led change places individuals into a box.

Understanding the changes occurring around us has been my quest all my life. To better comprehend what is going on in our world note "the focus of change"and "the speed of change".


The focus of change today is "the system" [see photo]. Today we are caught-up in a top-down process of change. This means that"the speed of change" depends upon the structural flexibility of the system that is driving the new agenda. The drag on system-driven change is always the people who do not fit into this new structure. For instance, labour shortages have become the universal pressure point in Britain, America, European Union, China, Australia, etc as each of these entities proceeds to drive system change. Labour is still needed to run these emergent energy systems as the change agents focus on delivering a new carbon-free economic structure.


Clearly the efficiency and efficacy of the systems that run our world today will determine how much, and how fast, these structures change. The emergent system in China is the result of government-led structural change; meanwhile the equivalent in the West is a corporate-led system revolution. Similarities between these two forces for change are apparent if, and only if, we ingest the common language used to describe these very very different phenomena. People are being educated to fit into the CCP system [social credit scores are being used to control individual behaviours] or to comply with the Davos corporate structure [use diversity-equity-inclusion to generate global profits]. The CCP and the Davos system are alike in that both seek to dictate the composition of individual thought, habit, and belief.


Top-down change always leads to structural rigidities. This occurs because the system is allowed to dominate the people. This feature is also a bug. Centralised power leads to less and less individual freedom. Centralised power lasts for around five years before it becomes corrupt, inefficient, big data dependent, etc. Centralised power is always the enemy of individual freedom. Centralised power is dominant across the world today. Centralised power should start to dim by 2030 because of its inherent flaws and bugs.


Richard


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