Rob Hanna
Rob Hanna
Jul 25, 2017 · 1 min read

Food scarcity is a red herring solely to compromise intelligent investigation of the many systemic problems caused by Big Ag and Big Pharma. These problems begin with the vested interests who have been antithetical to any recognition of benefits gained through local, distributive economics of food and medicine and continue through to the regulatory capture and carpet bombing of skewed science to support largely incumbent profit margins and barriers to competitors.

A myriad of open source technologies and communities have well proven that distributive systems work at producing significant value to the commons AND a multitude of businesses that survive by the shared improvements in commonwealth goods created.

However, old school industries ruled by corporate giants can not drive consolidated growth or profit margins to their investors by welcoming distributed production systems that create spontaneous diversity at all levels of vertical integration; so the old-school models of top-down command and control prevail… until they are disintermediated by consumer preferences, innovations and the local supply behaviors needed to present them better options.

And those are already coming and more will come…

    Rob Hanna

    Written by

    Rob Hanna

    I’m an Innovation Adoption Architect—meaning I help others improve social and environmental baselines with impacts at scale. Let’s all improve the world!