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Sarah Savory: Why Business Must Evolve

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The discoveries you will make in the book by Sarah Savory, a leading force in Holistic Management,  were born of a deep passion and love of the wildlife and the people of Africa.
But it is for all wildlife and all people. Everywhere.
“I wrote the book because I wanted to share exciting new management and ecological insights which will help us to understand and address our mounting global problem.”
Right now the world is in an increasingly terrible mess and we have ground-breaking new information which proves that an inherited process is causing our decisions and policies to result in a steady decline in our social, economic and environmental stability.
And we’ve discovered that we can solve the problem by learning to broaden our perspective at the point of making a decision to guarantee our decisions and policies will result in a steady increase in our social, economic and environmental stability.
The book will help us to understand and ‘unlearn’ a genetically inherited (but outdated) decision-making process and adapt to a new one…one that brings us back into balance with each other, and with the natural world, by reflecting that our individual and collective social and economic well-being is inseparable from the health of our environment.
The book shows us how to make decisions in a way that will have a consistently positive impact on the world around us.
Today, we live in a technology-obsessed world, which we manage in a disconnected, mechanistic way.
We seem to have forgotten that we owe our entire existence to the simple, biological process of a plant’s ability to harness the sun’s energy.
“The management change we need to make cannot be a robotic, unemotional one because we are sentient, social beings. We thrive through personal relationships – with family, friends and partners to business relationships.”
Adjusting the way we make decisions is most urgent at policy level because that is where big organizations and governments make impersonal decisions about our lives (our societies, economies and Nature) at scale.
The workbook helps us move from an isolated, disconnected perspective to one of wholeness and connection.
Because, despite our personal circumstances and differences, our existence as a species hinges entirely on a collective shift in the way we view and manage ourselves in relation to the natural world…
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Real Power is in the Hands of the People: Here’s Why

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How Music Unites Us: Farm Aid at 40

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Willie Nelson: “We’ve stood with our partners all these years to give farmers — the hardest working people in America — the support they need to survive against impossible odds. Their willingness to keep going is why we have to keep going.” (Farm Aid)

Lukas Nelson, Willie’s son, backstage during the event, remembering hard lessons from farm life:

“Growing up working with the land, picking cotton, helped inform [Dad’s] worldview. As a child, the elder Nelson learned what it meant to ‘get his food straight from the land.’” (Statesman)

Local Minnesota farmers, speaking at the Farmer Forum and HOMEGROWN Village, shared both concern and pride:

Concern over high input costs, climate disruptions, shrinking global markets, corporate consolidation — the pressures threatening family farms. (Farm Aid)

Pride in seeing the community and public gathering around sustainable agriculture, in seeing fair-price markets for local food, and in the hands-on learning happening in soil health, food justice, water protection. (Farm Aid)

2. Audience & Fan Reactions

  • A post-in-festival comment (via a livestream discussion) captures the emotional effect of seeing the crowd together:

    “Like, see how everyone is just standing there peacefully in awe and with love? It’s just so relaxing to see Willie.” (Reddit)

  • Another audience member reflected on discovering or re-discovering artists:

    “I’m pretty knocked out by Nathaniel Rateliff. I haven’t heard anything that interested me before but they have a great live show. He can really sing.” (Reddit)

  • From local media review: The crowd’s energy during Willie’s performances of “Whiskey River,” “Angel Flying Too Close to the Ground” was described as “a communal sing-along” where people leaned into enduring love, loss, hope — emotional chords that transcended headlines. (Statesman)

 Artist / Performer Moments that Brought Meaning Backstage & on Stage

  • John Mellencamp using songs like “Rain on the Scarecrow” not just as performance pieces, but as statements about rural struggle and economic distress in farming communities. (Statesman)
  • Billy Strings dedicating “Gild the Lily” to his wife, a former flower farmer — weaving personal life, agriculture, and love into the performance. (Statesman)
  • During backstage interviews (per the official release) artists and organizers emphasized that Farm Aid is more than music: it’s activism, connection, awareness raising. They spoke of policy, climate, fairness in agriculture, the need for systemic support. (Farm Aid)

Emotional Undercurrents: Unity Amidst Challenge

  • The tension of a potential cancellation due to a labor dispute threatened to mar the anniversary—but the resolution sparked relief and showed the depth of commitment from so many stakeholders: farmers, workers, fans. (AP News)
  • There was recurring mention of resilience — literally, how farmers keep going “when the odds seem impossible,” and metaphorically, how the event itself stood firm in the face of logistical, economic, environmental challenges. (Farm Aid)
  • At the end, the closing sing-along (“Will the Circle Be Unbroken,” “I Saw the Light”) wasn’t just a set closer. For many fans and farmers, it felt like a ritual: a reminder that we are connected — to heritage, the land, and each other. The crowd standing together in rain, voices lifted: those moments cut through distraction. (Statesman)
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Improving our Activism

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