A fast start to the year makes it important to find time to make sense of events and what they mean for us.
Headlines scream chaos at us. Donald Trump’s statements this week alone – on Greenland, threats of increased tariffs, slurs against NATO troops and peace boards with Putin – are enough to make the head spin. And maybe that’s the point.
We can’t know what this means for the global economy, security and the values that many world leaders seemed to share until recently.
Canadian PM Mark Carney’s incredible speech at Davos highlights a ‘rupture’ in these values. His call to other ‘middle countries’ to become beacons in ‘a world that’s at sea’ resonates. Canada’s response to Trump’s aggression – on taxes, investment, defence spending, and closer partnerships with Europe – seem hugely impressive set against the trivia served up here.
Could it be a defining moment? If you have 15 minutes, I’d recommend watching it.
The rupture Carney speaks of has been a long time in coming. Now it’s here, addressing it feels like the biggest collaboration challenge of my lifetime.
Continue reading “The collaboration challenge: how places can keep moving through chaos”



