{"version":"1.0","type":"rich","provider_name":"Acast","provider_url":"https://acast.com","height":250,"width":700,"html":"<iframe src=\"https://embed.acast.com/$/5a481aca95dfbf9d13d4dc6f/5d084f7424604a78587fab6d?\" frameBorder=\"0\" width=\"700\" height=\"250\"></iframe>","title":"189: Nadya Zhexembayeva, part 1: Sustainability is not enough","thumbnail_width":200,"thumbnail_height":200,"thumbnail_url":"https://open-images.acast.com/shows/5a481aca95dfbf9d13d4dc6f/1560825553354-aa741456711b1b0301388371162d4ec1.jpeg?height=200","description":"<p>Nadya and I mostly talk about business and sustainability. She describes what she saw growing up in the dissolution of Kazakhstan, where she saw the opposite of sustainability.</p><p>I can't describe what she saw, but you'll hear the craziness of collusion, economic collapse, political collapse, and so on.</p><p>She talks about how business works best when sustainable. I tend to agree. Tangential to what Nadya and I covered, when companies influence government to distort a market -- say with subsidies for fossil fuels, paying for a military to maintain supply lines that everyone pays for, roads that I agree I benefit from but don't use nearly as much as others yet I pay for, and farm subsidies for meat, I could go on -- unsustainable companies can profit.</p><p>So companies that pollute but the public pays to clean up, or for other reasons we don't accurately account for their costs, can sustain themselves profitably while not have a sustainable business model.</p><p>As a matter of accurate accounting, a prerequisite for capitalism, I support taxing pollution and extraction. I can't believe people who support capitalism aren't clamoring for these taxes, while relieving taxes in other places -- I'm not saying more taxes: accurate taxes.</p><p>Anyway, Nadya <em>loves</em> business, as she describes and she cares about environmental sustainability.</p><p>We talk about this sort of thing: accurately, mutually beneficially, creating value.</p><p><br></p><p>I'm glad she values meaning and how we can create it for each other in the style of Victor Frankl. She talks about how we treat sustainability as a chore. It's not enough.</p><p>She talks about he we need to create meaning in everything, certainly our environmental action. I agree. That's why I name this the <em>Leadership and Environment</em> podcast, where leadership means involving meaning, value, purpose, passion, joy -- missing from the conversation, crowded out by coercion, compliance, doom, and gloom.</p>","author_name":"Joshua Spodek: Author, Speaker, Professor"}