The world is changing.
It always is. It always will.
Despite the hopes and wishes of some, and all the organisational pull and muscle and power established institutions use to try and stop it.
Change will come.
Despite the Catholic Church clutching to mystical untruths during the Middle Ages, change came. Despite it denying the progress of science during the Renaissance and the social progress of the contemporary world, change came.
Despite today's Conservatives of all persuasions fighting for the dominance of fossil fuels over cleaner, more efficient, more abundant and way-cheaper energy derived from sun, wind and tides, change is coming.
And despite today's many many businesses which are hopelessly and utterly committed to their existing ways. They, who are too busy running on their various treadmills to take a look at the revolution occurring as we speak, for them too, change will wash away the old ways.
The word 'revolution' may have been overused recently. Marketing geniuses have been spruiking revolutions in everything from mattress technology to skin-care products: as a term it's admittedly a little shop-worn.
Still. It's aptly applied in this instance.
Because nothing really describes the processes of creative disruption across multiple industries like 'tech revolution'. It's a thing. And it's coming to a thing near you.
What I really like about this coming global tech revolution is that (for the moment at least) it seems that its really only the obstinately rich and powerful, those too stuck to look at the approaching waves of change, who will be left clutching to the old ways while the rest of the world moves on.
And do you know what?
I think I can live with that.
Picture courtesy of pixabay.com



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