It's not unusual to find stories or writing on the side of bags. However, it is unusual when the story is something that makes you think. Chipotle did just that to me one Wednesday night. While digging into my delicious steak bowl, I looked at my bag and saw a story on the side of it. Of course, I brushed it off thinking that it was just some same-old Chipotle story about how they use fresh ingredients and they are awesome (which they are!). But then, I glanced at the title and decided to read it over:
A Two-Minute Case for Optimism
By Steven Pinker
It's easy to get discouraged by the ceaseless news of violence, poverty, and disease. But the news presents a distorted view of the world. News is about things that happen, not things that don't happen. You never see a TV crew reporting that a country isn't at war; or that a city hasn't had a mass shooting that day, or that millions of 80 year-olds are alive and well.
The only way to appreciate the state of the world is to count. How many incidents of violence, or starvation, or disease are there as a proportion of the number of people in the world? And the only way to know whether things are getting better or worse is to compare those numbers at different times: over the centuries and decades, do the trend lines go up or down?
As it happens, the numbers tell a surprisingly happy story. Violent crime has fallen by half since 1992, and fiftyfold since the Middle Ages. Over the past 60 years the number of wars and number of people killed in wars have plummeted. Worldwide, fewer babies die, more children go to school, more people live in democracies, more can afford simple luxuries, fewer get sick, and more live to old age.
"Better" does not mean "perfect." Too many people still live in misery and die prematurely, and new challenges, such as climate change, comfort us. But measuring the progress we've made in the past emboldens us to strive for more in the future. Problems that look hopeless may not be; human ingenuity can chip away at them. We will never have a perfect world, but it's not romantic or naive to work towards a better one.
I found this both thought provoking and inspiring- I like what they're trying to do at Chipotle!
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