I think we have grown too large to be properly manageable and need to reduce sizes into manageable areas. Even states may be too large now, as for example California is simply too large and complex to manage - it is now like a country of its own - now claimed as 4th largest world economy!? Bigger than Britain and Germany!? and it needs to become several smaller microstates'. At minimum Nor Cal and So Cal but also Central Cal, and Nor Cal needs to split into Eastern Northern California and Bay Area/Northern Coast.
A second concern is that corporations have grown too large and in some cases are larger than parts of government. When an organization is too big, it can be unmanageable because the complications are just too much to understand and manage. Some of that is because the ripple effects of decisions may be hard to predict and it is easy to make expensive mistakes. Also, 'too big to fail' is a really bad thing, and when it happens you get bailouts that damage the economy. That should never be allowed to take place.
I think that when things get too big, failure is inevitable. Our greatest enemy is not The Great Reset but rather, uncontrolled growth beyond sustainability. Imagine an amoeba that eats everything, grows to mountain size, and it reaches a state where it cannot sustain itself because it has destroyed everything around it.
I think we have grown too large to be properly manageable and need to reduce sizes into manageable areas. Even states may be too large now, as for example California is simply too large and complex to manage - it is now like a country of its own - now claimed as 4th largest world economy!? Bigger than Britain and Germany!? and it needs to become several smaller microstates'. At minimum Nor Cal and So Cal but also Central Cal, and Nor Cal needs to split into Eastern Northern California and Bay Area/Northern Coast.
A second concern is that corporations have grown too large and in some cases are larger than parts of government. When an organization is too big, it can be unmanageable because the complications are just too much to understand and manage. Some of that is because the ripple effects of decisions may be hard to predict and it is easy to make expensive mistakes. Also, 'too big to fail' is a really bad thing, and when it happens you get bailouts that damage the economy. That should never be allowed to take place.
I think that when things get too big, failure is inevitable. Our greatest enemy is not The Great Reset but rather, uncontrolled growth beyond sustainability. Imagine an amoeba that eats everything, grows to mountain size, and it reaches a state where it cannot sustain itself because it has destroyed everything around it.