#55: Generations Podcast Broadly Discusses SCI and System Change

Frank Dixon, co-founder of System Change Investing (SCI), was recently interviewed on the father-daughter Generations Podcast by Jeff and McKenzie Wilson. The wide-ranging discussion addressed many system change-related issues, including the following:

Practical system change investment strategies. How to use corporate system change ratings to reduce investment risk and increase returns.

US political climate. Dismantling environmental and social protections are like waves on the ocean. The far more relevant factors are the deeper systemic forces creating the current turmoil.

Conflict between short-term investment returns and the long-term survival of humanity. Cumulative negative environmental social impacts are accelerating system change. Economic and political systems that compel companies to harm the environment and society inevitably will change. Can we voluntarily change them before they collapse further and greatly disrupt investors, business and society?

Emulating nature. Humanity has been violating the laws of nature since the Industrial Revolution. Rapidly growing problems show that nature is reining us in. To survive and prosper on Earth, we must align our systems and ways of life with the laws and limits of nature.

Unity consciousness. Nature implicitly operates as one interconnected system, achieving nearly infinite levels of sophistication, coordination, and prosperity. We humans are nature. We have the innate potential to achieve the same results. The foundation of this change is higher-level thinking that sees humans as interconnected parts of the whole Earth system.

Ranging from practical system change investment strategies to whole system, nature-based frameworks for guiding human evolution, this podcast provides a foundation for system change understanding and action.

For more information about SCI, visit our website SystemChangeInvesting.com or listen to the Generations Podcast.

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#54: Dismantling Environmental and Social Protections – Why It Hurts Investors and What Can Be Done About It