![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I think a lot of times people mistake support of the status quo for practicality when there are many times these things couldn't be more different.
And if we're talking about the geopolitical situation of the world today, this is absolutely the case. The current state of affairs is entirely unsustainable. Continuation of current trends ensures an inevitable collapse. Even if we just look at the situation with climate change alone, we can see this.
Rapid change is inevitable and unpreventable. The best way to find both hope and practical answers lies not in digging our heads in the sand and ignoring that fact, but in accepting the necessity of change and helping to move that change in a more positive direction. Each of our contributions individually may be small, but together they can add up to more than the sum of their parts.
And if we're talking about the geopolitical situation of the world today, this is absolutely the case. The current state of affairs is entirely unsustainable. Continuation of current trends ensures an inevitable collapse. Even if we just look at the situation with climate change alone, we can see this.
Rapid change is inevitable and unpreventable. The best way to find both hope and practical answers lies not in digging our heads in the sand and ignoring that fact, but in accepting the necessity of change and helping to move that change in a more positive direction. Each of our contributions individually may be small, but together they can add up to more than the sum of their parts.