Social Mood and Environmentalism
Free Report on the real origin of the
Green Movement: Social Mood
A housing meltdown, credit crisis, skyrocketing fuel prices,
and a spate of new reports about the dangers of global warming; these are
all headlines seen just this year.
Would you believe there's an explanation for that? It's called socionomics,
and it's the study of the wax and wane of social mood, from optimism to
pessimism. Socionomics explains why the only constant we can expect is dynamic
change in the human experience.
You'll read about some fascinating examples of social mood's ebb and flow
in this FREE report on the relationship between social mood and environmentalism
In this fact-filled article by Socionomist and EWI Market Analyst Alan
Hall, you'll discover:
• Why the changes in social mood that drive commodity prices higher also
lead to spikes in pro-environmental legislation.
• Why the environmental concerns of the current decade mirror the 1970's.
• What Al Gore's Nobel Peace Prize means for the environmentalist movement.
• Why anxious social mood conditions have reawakened the survivalist initiative
— which is now experiencing its largest resurgence since the 1970's.
• The common thread that weaves together the war on terror, environmental
fear, worries about energy, and the rising prices of food.
• Why a change in social mood towards the negative results in fear, bear
markets for stocks, and bull markets for commodities.
• And more!
When you sign-up on socionomics.net, you’ll also get access to the documentary,
History’s
Hidden Engine, the
Conversations in Socionomics series and our quarterly newsletter, Progress
in Socionomics.
