Systems designed to marginalise, victimise and discriminate

Christine McDougall
2 min readDec 6, 2022

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For many years I thought that I was the problem. Why was it so hard to be seen, heard and given as many opportunities as the other?

I watch the news today.

Indonesia makes sex outside of marriage criminal.

A woman who blocked traffic for 25 minutes in NSW was sent to prison for 15 months. While politicians in her own state get away with corruption time and again. And the climate is once again delegated to the back door, as we elevate our haste to get to work as the greater priority.

Women who speak out about sexual assault being turned in the perpetrators because a criminal justice system says the accused is innocent until guilty so they put the accuser on the stand, accessing all of their mobile data and history while the accused doesn’t have to speak, share data, or any previous similar accusations made against them cannot be made public. The women get relentlessly harassed and trolled as the media profit from their exposure. It is no wonder women stay silent.

The people of Iran, brave beyond measure, protesting for rights of women, for freedom.

The billionaire class living in laws designed to protect them from being exposed for perpetrations against humanity’s future, wage theft, and corruption, all the while owning the political class and dictating actions.

I could go on.

We must know the system we live in.

Only then can we change it.

Photo taken December 7th 2022

#worldwithafuture #businessreimagined #syntropicworld #syntropicenterprise #syntropy #newbusinessmodels #businessandsustainability #regenerativeenterprise #buckminsterfuller

#humancoordination #emergentstrategy #daretocare #regenerativebusiness

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Christine McDougall
Christine McDougall

Written by Christine McDougall

Committed to supporting those in business who strive to leave the world better. syntropic.world

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