Corporations wield extraordinary influence over modern life. Their decisions shape economies, environments, labor conditions, and political priorities. With such power comes moral responsibility—yet too often, profit is treated as justification for harm. When success is measured only in financial terms, humanity becomes expendable. Workers become replaceable. Communities become costs. The environment becomes collateral damage. Kindness is not the enemy of business. Irresponsibility is. The most resilient organizations are those that recognize long-term success depends on trust, fairness, and sustainability. Ethical business is not idealism—it is realism with foresight. A future economy must be built on conscience as well as capital.
How Monte Cook III tapped Into a Universal Frequency: How the Kindness Revolution Was Born
Five years ago, without formal training, without a college degree in philosophy or psychology, and without studying ancient wisdom traditions, Monte Cook—known to many as