Savory is truly profound. He highlights that the society does not follow the policy makers, but policy makers follow the society. It takes massive public awareness and demand for new directions to change institutional protectionism. This is the pathway to universal, holistic management. The society must become aware as a whole and then demand the new direction.
I certainly hope, that some day, people will understand what he is talking about, and demand it of our management structures. Right now, you cannot get anything done, because the political leadership context, is totally opposed to the electorate's context, all while paying lip service to the electorate's context, in order to garner the necessary votes, yet no one holds them accountable to being true to the context, certainly not the 4th estate.
True! The point Savory makes is that the public must become massively aware FIRST, then their outcry will be heard by the policy makers. Our efforts must be focused on public awareness before we can expect governmental change.
To change minds, you must change hearts. People will protect and save what they love. They must know it to love it and that "it" is love itself. Connect nature with love and success will follow. Then connect that with profitability and, done! There's your policy.
Savory has a lot of great abstract ideas, but after watching videos and listening to his talks for two days I've yet to find anywhere that he actually describes how to implement the thing he says can't fail. It can't fail because it can't be tested because it's both nothing and everything at once. If anyone knows where he actually details exactly what wholistic management is I would love to know.
Yes, its how it kills plants and the glyphosate-ready plants can still live and produce things like corn without those minerals....think of what isn't in GMO foods.
Savory is truly profound. He highlights that the society does not follow the policy makers, but policy makers follow the society. It takes massive public awareness and demand for new directions to change institutional protectionism. This is the pathway to universal, holistic management. The society must become aware as a whole and then demand the new direction.
I certainly hope, that some day, people will understand what he is talking about, and demand it of our management structures. Right now, you cannot get anything done, because the political leadership context, is totally opposed to the electorate's context, all while paying lip service to the electorate's context, in order to garner the necessary votes, yet no one holds them accountable to being true to the context, certainly not the 4th estate.
True! The point Savory makes is that the public must become massively aware FIRST, then their outcry will be heard by the policy makers. Our efforts must be focused on public awareness before we can expect governmental change.
The answer lies in the soil.- Fred Streeter
Thank You Margaret of Mar for that great quote in your introduction of Alan Savory
Saved to watch later.
***** I watched it about a year ago.
To change minds, you must change hearts. People will protect and save what they love. They must know it to love it and that "it" is love itself. Connect nature with love and success will follow. Then connect that with profitability and, done! There's your policy.
Great talk and very true... and on a different note, Mr. Pandya IS a looker (!!) that smile...
Savory has a lot of great abstract ideas, but after watching videos and listening to his talks for two days I've yet to find anywhere that he actually describes how to implement the thing he says can't fail. It can't fail because it can't be tested because it's both nothing and everything at once. If anyone knows where he actually details exactly what wholistic management is I would love to know.
Very good
I did not know that glyphosate chelates minerals. What an absurd invention.
Yes, its how it kills plants and the glyphosate-ready plants can still live and produce things like corn without those minerals....think of what isn't in GMO foods.
Club of Rome. Google it.
Club of Rome.
Savory was great. Introduction was new age, hippie fest. Stick to the science, leave the HR kumbaya speak for multi marketing sell jobs.
Very good