This is why everyone is afraid of major sudden changes. We know that our industrial and commerce systems are nicely oiled to deliver constant outputs, and people like me are afraid that changing any part of it may trigger a cascade of bankruptcies of companies of a certain type, which in turn could provoke a famine somewhere else.
Imagine if all those grains stayed on their fields, it would trigger both parasites to develop where those fields are, corrupting entire valleys for years, while not either being able to feed the people they were aimed for. Which is the food equivalent of your car example.
If anything, the Covid proved to me that the world is much less oiled and tuned for some constant economic circuits than I feared. It is in fact quite reliable, if we don’t mention the debt we’ve put our children in.
Early in the pandemic there was a massive potato surplus. Potato farms in my state were literally giving away potatoes.
Unfortunately, I didn't find out about it until too late. Which is unfortunate; that could have been the perfect opportunity to create a baked potato delivery startup. I would have called it "Tuber".
Imagine if all those grains stayed on their fields, it would trigger both parasites to develop where those fields are, corrupting entire valleys for years, while not either being able to feed the people they were aimed for. Which is the food equivalent of your car example.
If anything, the Covid proved to me that the world is much less oiled and tuned for some constant economic circuits than I feared. It is in fact quite reliable, if we don’t mention the debt we’ve put our children in.