Posted on 07/18/2020 4:39:35 PM PDT by madison10
The worst of the pandemic is yet to come and the world has reached a defining moment.We must get the Great Reset right. The challenges are greater than previously imagined, but our capacity to reset is also greater than we had previously dared to hope.
This article accompanies the launch of COVID-19: The Great Reset, the new book by Klaus Schwab and Thierry Malleret on the COVID crisis and its impacts. It can be ordered here, and you can leave a review here.
The worst of the pandemic is yet to come. To date, only a few countries are effectively containing the virus, while in a majority of nations, COVID-19 is either raging or resurfacing with local outbreaks, limited or not so.
Already, in barely six months, the COVID-19 pandemic has plunged our world in its entirety - and each of us individually - into the most challenging times weve faced in generations. It is a defining moment we will be dealing with its fallout for years, and many things will change forever. It has wrought (and will continue to do so) economic disruption of monumental proportions, creating risk and volatility on multiple fronts political, social, geopolitical while exacerbating deep concerns about the environment and also extending the reach (pernicious or otherwise) of technology into our lives.
No industry or business will be spared from the impact of these changes. Millions of companies risk disappearing and many industries face an uncertain future; a few will thrive.
On an individual basis, for many, life as theyve always known it is unravelling at alarming speed. This said, acute crises favour introspection and foster the potential for transformation.
The fault lines of todays world most notably: social divides, lack of fairness, absence of cooperation, failure of global governance and leadership and the critical degradation of our natural assets lie exposed as never before, and many now feel the time for reinvention may have dawned.
A new world could emerge, the contours of which it is incumbent on us to re-imagine and to re-draw.
The sudden and violent nature of the shock the pandemic is inflicting can make the scale of this challenge seem overwhelming. This impression is due in no small measure to the fact that in todays interdependent and hyper-connected world, risks amplify each other: individual risks or issues harbour the potential to create ricochet effects by provoking others (like unemployment potentially fuelling social unrest and impoverishment triggering involuntary mass migration).
The defining feature of todays world is systemic connectivity: in such a world, silo-doing and silo-thinking have no place because risks converge. All the macro issues that exert direct and daily impacts on our societies, the global economy, geopolitics, the environment and technology do not evolve in a linear fashion.
They play out as complex adaptive systems, and as such share a fundamental attribute: susceptibility to matters cascading out of control and in so doing producing extreme consequences that often come as a surprise and for which we are ill prepared. COVID-19 has already given us a foretaste of this.
To a considerable extent, occurrences as different as the sharp and dramatic rise in unemployment (an economic risk), the global wave of social unrest unleashed by the Black Lives Matter protests (a societal issue) and the growing fracture between China and the US (a geopolitical risk) wouldnt have taken place without the pandemic. At the very least, they were exacerbated by it.
The concurrence and severity of these fault lines mean that we are now at a critical juncture: the potential for change is unlimited and bound only by our imagination for better or for worse. Societies could be poised to become either more equitable or the opposite; geared towards more solidarity or greater individualism; favouring the interests of the few or looking to the needs of the many; economies, when they recover, could be characterized by greater inclusivity and more attuned to our global commons, or they could simply return to business as usual now revealed to be (in so many ways) an untenable status quo.
Will there be enough collective will to take advantage of this unprecedented opportunity to reimagine our world, in a bid to make it a better and more resilient one as it emerges on the other side of this crisis?
There is more at link...
It they are gonna take over the world they better pick up the pace or make up a newer set of phony counting rules, deaths are already trending down again.
Fourth Graph down.
Daily Cases & Deaths
7-day moving average
https://coronavirusbellcurve.com/
.
Is it? Is it really? FOUR MONTHS after 15 days to flatten the curve, and THREE MONTHS after the peak in COVID deaths?!
Just shut up already.
TRANSLATION: “We have you where we want you at last, and there is nothing you can do about.”
I think that is their hope and plan, that is the reason for the “new,” ridiculous mask orders from some governors.
They are trying to scare up/keep the fear going.
Start by thanking all your local democrats for it.
Remember them in the voting booth in November..not a one for anything..not even for dog catcher.
I’m guessing that the epidemic will eventually result in fewer people with APD in positions of influence.
Collective will is socialism.
My God. Demonic world government. I guess we really are living in the last days before triumphant return of Jesus Christ.
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