Diversity, Borders and Logic

Then I land in Switzerland and I wonder why women are paid less than men?

At @kessel_solar we are building a “one-world” company. An organism that is both hyper local, borderless, embraces differences and connected across regions.

#human #logic and #diverse.

Borderless does not mean regionless.

Borderless means getting rid of old constructions of borders while embracing regional differences and love for local heritage and traditions.

Borders come in many forms. Some are even masked as ceilings. Meant to keep people down or out. People in their right place. Things in their right place. Attempting to keep the web within the walls.

Countries are outdated.

Borders are a component of cave building and wall constructions. Borders between countries and people do not seem logic or obvious in a world where 1,7bn people are connected on their phones and Mark Zuckerberg is the defacto president.

In Kessel we operate in regions, areas or markets. Each region with a unique and important component for our company.

We also break ceilings.

We try to be as diverse as we can. Nationalities, gender, upbringing, education, mindset etc. Both inherent and acquired diversity.

But is “diverse” the wrong word, if we wanna build a company that embraces and logically treats people equal? Why are we even focusing on it. Shouldn’t it be pure logic? Shouldn’t it be obvious?

Does diversity imply and focus on difference? Does it it divide or include. Why not talk about one human?

We are not there yet.

Then I land in Switzerland and I wonder why women are paid less than men? #zurich #whyzurich #switzerland #forward #women #diversity

In a very near future I assume they will be. Right?

What is inevitable should be immediate.

The borders are still all over — constructions and systems to uphold and prolong status quo are very much in place and being protected.

Across the planet, some people are still prolonging status quo instead of moving into the future.

“We are not there” and what seems logic and obvious to us might seem like utopia to others.

We are not there yet.

We will get there.