The Great Green Reset of Global Economies: A Golden Opportunity for
Environmental Change and Social Rehabilitation
Abstract
A globally interactive geo-socioeconomic revolution will be necessary in
order to sustainably resource our continued our ways of life and be able
to expand beyond to the next giant leap of human progression and
evolution. Applied comprehensive integrated changes coupled with a
global collaboration invested in over-reaching environmental goals
incorporating both the public and private sectors are at the crux of
properly upgrading infrastructures and societies. Positive non-biased
re-engineering of our societies and their governing laws, policies and
economies must include two underlying principles- transparency and
environmental transformation. These two founding principles are the
Great Green Reset’s scaffolding meant to address a lexicon of constantly
revolving and evolving socioeconomic, political, and environmental
issues. By integrating environmental sustainability and reclamation in
conjunction with promoting biodiversity, We, being a socially accepting,
fair, safe and healthy Peoples, can progress confidently into the Fourth
Industrial Revolution knowing that at this juncture in human history and
time, “We actively took a global stance choosing to make the correct
decisions for the successful continuation and advancement of our species
and its way of life so our future generations may experience the same
lush biodiversity on Earth that we so heavily rely on for our
existence”. To gain the public trust, transparency and environmental
transformation are the core underlying principles that create a
scaffolding of sound, logical, common-sense science policies that
legislative decisions are built around. Along with developing national
and international science policy frameworks centered around a healthier,
greener, smarter future, legislators should reap the deep benefits of
having a highly qualified transdisciplinary science team dedicated to
consulting with indigenous peoples, local communities, and key experts
to provide unbiased opportunity to re-imagine and re-engineer science
policy promoting fair socioeconomic equitable equality at all levels of
interaction on local, national, and international framework scales. All
this must be envisioned within a circular economy.