You process the desires you have to change situations by tapping into the latent potential within your own consciousness to appeal to, if not directly, manipulate the mastermind of a group or egregore of a corporate body. As this is a fractal model, you'll discover that there are iterations of each process. Being conscious of these iterations, these cycles, helps you allow for corrections along the way to reinforce the improvements. The most important factor in success is whether you were able to make a habit of these practices and thereby to compound the light improvements into a large change. The more tightly networked our world becomes, the more powerful a clearly defined, easily communicated objective.
What appears to be occurring is that there is now a creation of two classes, those for whom the information glut is liberating, and those for whom it is controlling47. But while the signals teaching people how to empower themselves exist, the messages of conformity and limitation are more plentiful and, subsequently, more adapted toward hegemony. For those who dive in and navigate the information can see the structures that manipulate it, while those who would drown if they went below the surface remain the 'led'. Lest this be a new iteration of the old feudal forms, a renewal of feudalism, what we are seeing now is that while the ability to process information is not universal, information of all types is rapidly becoming ubiquitous. This ubiquity is triggering adaptation by the children of those who cannot dive beneath the surface. As novelist William Gibson has said, "The future is here, it's just not evenly distributed." All of society is changing faster than we are acknowledging, and, in fact, faster than we are actually capable of acknowledging.
We're witnessing the shift from media consumer to media producer thanks to the internet and universal access to technological know-how. Creative end-users, adapting to the digital age, are producing works that cohesively build community beyond geopolitical space. Virtual space is a radicalizing area, and experiencing it has already altered human society permanently. For too long the meme space has been only flowing in one direction, it has remained the tool of the few to broadcast to the many. Now, tools such as blogs, podcasts, and video are allowing individuals to redress the imbalance between their media intake and output. The character of the discourse changes as well, to reflect the concerns of these individuals rather than those of the corporate-owned media conglomerates.