We’re witnessing capitalism’s predicted downward slide. Just as Copiosis gains more awareness and support. More [smart] people and organizations are beginning to look at how that slide is affecting people and how those effects further threaten the global economy.
This confluence will see humanity snatch victory from the ruins of capitalism. Out of its ashes, and the ashes of communism and socialism, will rise the shining light that is real freedom born from Copiosis.
McKinsey & CO. published a report not long ago called POORER THAN THEIR PARENTS? FLAT OR FALLING INCOMES IN ADVANCED ECONOMIES. Data in this report illustrates really good news: as more people realize capitalism is in trouble (if not doomed), more people seek alternatives. As said above, many think Copiosis offers a compelling replacement.
Back to the report: According to research, in the United States, where I live, single mothers are 20 times more represented among the lowest-income households as they are in the highest-income ones. For many readers this probably is a no brainier. But implications of this statistic are far reaching.
The poor are coal mine canaries
Another group hard hit by flagging capitalism are the less educated and less skilled people. According to this report, these people are “…more likely than those who [are economically] advancing, to support nationalist political parties [and policies] such as France’s National Front…[and the United Kingdom’s BREXIT and Trumpism.]”
Indeed, unrest among the poor, less educated and unskilled indicate problems politicians usually ignore until said problems are acute. In the last few years though, such problems have gone epidemic, affecting even the middle class.
In other words, the canaries are dead.
This is good news for Copiosis
So we have the virtuous cycle of people hard hit by eroding capitalism, choosing ideologies which further erode the system, which further affects people, which creates a greater need for an alternative, an alternative called Copiosis.
I call that a virtuous cycle because this cycle is birthing a better societal system. So it’s ok the poor, single mothers and others are struggling. Their struggle is part of that birthing process. It’s also temporary, just like giving birth.
And like good obstetricians, we’re facilitating that birth. The baby is coming. It brings a compelling narrative we at Copiosis call Real Freedom and Fundamental Change.
We’ve talked about real freedom a lot in this blog, but if you missed it, it’s a hallmark of what Copiosis offers. We describe it here:
That’s a compelling narrative, especially once one understands how Copiosis creates this situation.
Other compelling narratives sparking cries for better and more are surfacing nearly every quarter these days. 2020 was a year of many compelling narratives: COVID-19, Trump, food lines, unemployment, businesses shuttering…these all compel some people to ask “can we do better?”, while it compels others to demand “we CAN do better!”
We see the latter in BLM and other similar protests.
Copiosis will benefit the poor…everyone else too
Some wonder why it is people can’t rise out of poverty today. They often point to poverty-stricken people as a point-of-blame for their trouble.
What isn’t as often acknowledged are the systemic challenges creating lack of opportunity for many of these folk. This lack of opportunity often creates a malaise among those in poverty, leading to a sense of hopelessness, helplessness and efficacy-deficits middle class and rich people don’t face.
As I’ve pointed out elsewhere though, these symptoms of the poverty-stricken are now being increasingly being felt by middle class people the world over as they face a litany of undesirable outcomes in their collective “what is”, a “what is” fueled by capitalism’s downfall. That’s the compelling narrative: bringing experiences of the poor to the rest of us.
This is all good news.
Back to single mothers and the poverty stricken
In response to a well-thought-out critique of Copiosis, I describe the origin of most crime in the world as a feeling-condition made up of efficacy-deficits and how they arise. I believe these efficacy-deficits are passed from generation to generation, giving rise to a large amount of crime today.
Because Copiosis solves this efficacy-deficit directly and from a number of directions, we can make the claim that we eliminate most crime in the world once Copiosis becomes the dominant economic system. Want more detail than that? Download the critique and turn to page 11. There I detail eight sources of crime and how Copiosis eliminates all of them.
Unless we understand where and why crime happens, it can’t be eliminated. But that doesn’t mean its elimination is impossible. Crime can be eliminated. But not while capitalism, communism and socialism still exist.
Some think capitalism’s decline foretells an empire’s collapse. We think it foretells humanity’s victory. Copiosis is that victory.