The civil rights leaders of the past spring to mind as examples of people who stepped forward knowing that they would be met with tremendous resistance. But they stood up for what they knew was right and eventually got others to come together with them. It obviously wasn’t fast or easy but it did happen.
The civil rights leaders of the past spring to mind as examples of people who stepped forward knowing that they would be met with tremendous resistance. But they stood up for what they knew was right and eventually got others to come together with them. It obviously wasn’t fast or easy but it did happen.
This is a beautiful example, but I’m not sure it’s quite right for the current situation. It’s almost like we need a trust exercise in stepping BACK and hoping the other side will also step back and not forward into the space we’ve ceded. It’s the Overton window problem.
The civil rights leaders of the past spring to mind as examples of people who stepped forward knowing that they would be met with tremendous resistance. But they stood up for what they knew was right and eventually got others to come together with them. It obviously wasn’t fast or easy but it did happen.
This is a beautiful example, but I’m not sure it’s quite right for the current situation. It’s almost like we need a trust exercise in stepping BACK and hoping the other side will also step back and not forward into the space we’ve ceded. It’s the Overton window problem.