i eane: We do need a lot more people actually in things. Do you have any suggestions for how women, especially can cope with the influence of direction that scotus has been taking regards choice, environment and immigration? How can women handle the understandable rage, but also the feeling of hopelessness? What do you think? Well, it leads me to a place i don't like to go, because it's not the way i'm wired. I meanh there're many other things that i'd like to do, feel i'm good at it's sort of politics or what, sort of guerilla warfare. But is, is possible?
On this episode we meet with Executive Director of Stanford University’s Millennium Alliance for Humanity and the Biosphere, Joan Diamond.
Diamond helps us imagine the future in an uncertain time. How can we create robust strategies to help us plan? How can we avoid thinking only of worst-case scenarios?
Further, Diamond offers suggestions for how people can handle their hopelessness and rage following recent Supreme Court rulings. What options exist for people to change systems?
About Joan Diamond
Joan Diamond has executive background in private and nonprofit sectors, including Fortune 500 energy enterprises such as executive VP of Hawaiian Electric Company, vice president and corporate secretary of a Silicon Valley telecommunications company, and COO of the Nautilus Institute for Security and Sustainability. She is the Executive Director of Stanford University’s Millennium Alliance for Humanity and the Biosphere (MAHB) and of the Crans Foresight Analysis Nexus (FAN).
For Show Notes and Transcript visit: https://www.thegreatsimplification.com/episode/29-josh-farley