Nature
is increasingly worried at the flagrant way businesses are going about depleting
everything they see for profit without little regard for a reciprocal responsibility
on their part. Everything man met on this earth has been reduced to numbers and
toggled ‘profitable’, including man himself. For centuries on, businesses have
made trillions of dollars on the back of the earth leaving in its wake horrors
of cloud hanging about our neck, and that of future generations. As if the
plunder is not enough, business leaders have shown little to no concern about
the environment, and the genocide they commit continues to pollute the air we
take in.
Erich
Fromm’s book ‘To have or To Be?’ — is
a master piece that delivers this message of man’s disregard for the
environment in a much radical way, yet powerful enough to be ignored. He
pointed out that the earth is being reduced to a rubble by man’s ambition to ‘have’
(possess) everything he wants, and not to ‘be’ (share). Everyone wants to have
this or that which comes with a bag of consequences for our planet. Though the
Industrial Age was necessary, it’s becoming the evil of our time creating what
Fromm referred to as, ‘marketing characters’ who are driven in the machine-like
fashion. Love for nature, oneself, neighbor, solidarity, community and the
environment have been traded for profit, individualism and survival. We need to
address the misfortunes that await us tomorrow if we would want to survive, and
this project of doing good for the planet has been a burning passion of Richard
Branson. This man, of Virgin Group fame, is inundating the world with his ideas
in many areas of concern: climate change, entrepreneurship, clean energy, and
world peace. His passion has given way to such projects as Branson Centers,
Virgin Unite, The Elders, Carbon War Room and the B-Team among others that have
all proven to be forces for good.
In
his book ‘Screw Business As Usual’ Branson
wrote that, “Writing a cheque might impact hundreds of people’s lives;
mobilizing your whole business to drive change can impact millions of lives,
and give a whole new life purpose to all the people who work in your company”. I
was struck reading this from his book. I have admired this man for his many
entrepreneurial endeavors, and for helping the youths of South Africa build
their, hitherto, broken lives from the ground up. However, there’s a funny look
on his face whenever he wore a smile. There’s this crack that appears signaling
the presence of a hidden agenda. What this agenda is about could best be
answered by him? He alone knows. Nonetheless, from the narrative perspective, Branson
has set for himself and his compatriot targets to meet which borders on doing
good while your business does good too. He’s partnering with statesmen’s,
entrepreneurs, and not-for-profit groups to get most of this project off the
books to the world.
He
wrote that, “How we treat our world is a reflection of our humanity, our
intelligence, our conscience and ultimately, our very survival. The way in
which we co-exist with our natural environment strengthen fragile societies,
and support vulnerable populations is the very foundation of a sustainable
future-business or otherwise”. I am pretty sure the world would have been much
safer, cleaner and fairer had Branson set about doing good when he first
started his many Virgin brands from rubble level up. We all have goodness
deposited in increasing measure in us. How we do what we do is because of what
we want and not what all of us including the earth want. The tone of his book
sounded mystic, the usual sound bite of the typical business guru who has
screwed the world including its many rich deposits for his fortunes. However,
the message he puts across that: doing good is good for one’s business is serious,
apt and timely. There could not be any right time. We need to raise the concern
for every business to be environmental and carbon conscious.
A
great man once said that, the good we do, we do not for ourselves, not for one
man, but for the great of all humanity. Nature will cry on us if we should
continue with our current indifferent behavior. We can do good.
1 comment:
Good one !!
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