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The Betrayal of The Commons
The cornerstone of capitalism, it has been said, is a handshake.
The legal embellishments that constitute the law books lining the shelves of any lawyer, those laws are footnotes to the many ways people have betrayed trust, betrayed the letter of the law, the spirit of the contract, the meaning of the handshake.
Trust, not money, makes the world go around. Money is an emblem of the exchange of trust. It doesn't exist except as an invention.
And trust has been broken.
Yes, it's all smoke and mirrors, and everyone who looked already knew that. That isn't news. The news, as Alan Greenspan said pathetically in front of Congress, was that the moguls and bankers and investment gurus did not act according to their own self interest. They did not just risky things but insanely stupid risky things and thought they could hide from their karma. They betrayed the trust of one another when they made deals, invented bogus instruments or used good ones unwisely, and they betrayed the trust of all of us. Nor will they pay the penalty they should. They never do. They never do.
Every structure built to ensure trust of those people and their institutions is now suspect. Every one.
We trusted Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to keep good books and not take risks beyond their ability to manage risk or ours to understand what they were doing.
They betrayed that trust.
We trusted agencies like Standard and Poor's to rate corporations accurately so we had a clue when we saw AAA on a bond or note.
They betrayed that trust.
We trusted the wise old men of the Fed, sitting on their dais like judges, looking down on plain people, to think about their actions, follow out the implications, and heed voices of caution and alarm.
They betrayed that trust.
We trusted the SEC to ensure that a failure to open the books by a man with a charming smile and ties to many Wall Street friends, so easy with his lies and deceit, we trusted that his lack of transparency would raise red flags, we trusted the SEC to do their job and not sell us out because they were complicit, equally criminal in their acts, or just plain dumb.
They betrayed that trust.
The astonishing thing about this country, at the present moment, is that our rage took the form of lowering the approval rating of our leaders and voting them out of office in the belief, apparently, that we might rebuild trust. Is that good will, a belief in democracy and its processes that distinguishes Americans for the moment from rioting Greeks in the streets of Athens? Or are we simply stunned for the moment, trying to understand the enormity of what just happened?
That trusting attitude, that faith in the process to turn the tide, would certainly be commendable. It is good when people are high and dry and even better when we're wet. We are all wet, now, the showering spray of the waves hitting us all, but do we see that the sea is still coming in, higher and higher, not a tsunami but a rising tide going higher than anyone dared believe? Do we hear that glub glub glub as people try to make sane hopeful statements with their mouths already in the water?
Let's return for a moment to those thrilling days of yesteryear when the streets were not so quiet and the view of the Viet Nam war was not, as lately, seem through a telescope wrong way around, little distant people far away and tiny puffs of smoke as they explode.
I remember it well. Toward the end of the seventies and its ravages – the war that tore us apart, the assassinations, the corruption in the government from the president to the FBI to the CIA – some of the people then in power realized the danger of a populace betrayed and enraged by betrayal. The cost of the war was a million lives and grief for the dead was a constant wail, the breakdown of constitutional guarantees was nearly absolute. Looking at the broken glass and burned-out buildings, some came to the conclusion that "the excesses of democracy" as one called the demonstrations and organized resistance to that chaos, that insanity, must not be allowed to repeat.
This is not a conspiracy theory. That's a quote from one of the participants in the Bilderburg Conference at the end of that era. People of power from across the globe discussed with civility what must be done in a context of mutual self-interest. That's not a conspiracy, just because the conversations take place behind closed doors and the press doesn't cover them because the press are invited guests, embedded as it were, and sworn to be silent.
No, not a conspiracy at all. This is the essential nature of oligarchic structures at a new level of trans-global mutuality that converged into the foundation of the global financial networks we inhabit today.
"Trust us," our leaders have recently said even as they threaded the machinery of surveillance and social control through our lives. To an outside observer, it might looks indeed like the apparatus of a police state. But that sounds like "conspiracy" as they use the word to denigrate an opposing position, and I am not talking about conspiracy.
I am talking about history. I am talking about reality.
And the fact that they betrayed our trust.
Because of S&P, we dare not buy bonds, because who knows what they might be worth? Because of the SEC, we dare not invest in stocks or mutual funds or funds of funds because who knows what they might be worth? Because of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac and the investment banks with whom they slept and partied, who knows what those arcane and opaque investments might be worth?
After such knowledge, what forgiveness? Who will be the first to dare to believe the words of a leader or economist now? Who dares to pretend that the trauma that shocks us now is trivial or mild?
Fear and anxiety are thick in the air like cordite after a gunshot. That will not dissolve if we buy something shiny or big, go see a cartoon mouse or stay home and use the drugs that flood our lives, legitimate or not.
A "news anchor" said the other day, speaking of the sinking economy, it has gotten so bad that "people are only buying what they need."
Let that sink in. It is so bad that people are only buying what they need.
The world that collapsed was built on people buying things they didn't need. Then throwing them away and buying more.
That delusion is shredded into tatters and blows away in the wind ... this is a moment of clarity, in which like any recovering addict we can see that such a world was insane.
Reality hurts, it is abrasive, but it restores sanity and inner order.
The tide is rising and the waves are shooting spray.
The restoration of trust is not what we need. We need to create trust in new structures appropriate for a global society. We need to come to them like weeds coming through the sidewalk from the ground up. We need to make our own word good and act as if the fractured bonds of civil society still exist. We need to bootstrap ourselves and learn again how it feels to have a handshake we can trust.
Trust, but verify, the cold warrior said. And remember LBJ as well: trust is when you've got him by the balls.
To trust those people and their words unless we have their cojones in our tight little fists is like Charlie Brown running to kick the football again.
Let's not. Let us begin by affirming the vision we see when our heads are clear.
It is quiet in the streets right now. There is only the sound of newspapers blowing down dark alleys in the twilight. The excesses of democracy for the moment sleep in their coffins, waiting for the night. Like a good patient vampire should.
We are not doomed. The resiliency and strength that makes us human beings are alive in our blood.
But boy oh boy, O masters of society on your high dais, don't push your luck. You lied first to yourselves and then to us. You set up yourselves too to fall down. And the antidote, you say, is to set you up all over again?
Friends, as John McCain said to strangers, friends, the United States government owns banks, insurance companies, manufacturers of farm equipment, more, and will buy more. But conservatives still speak of "socialism" as if it's part of a democratic platform.
The old way of framing things is broken. What anyone might have meant by "capitalism" is not what we have. Not here, now now, and not in the world.
We need new skins for new wine. New frames for new ways of seeing. New words for new real things.
Trust, but verify. Use words as if they mean what they mean. If a talk show host or pundit doesn't, shut him off. Using words correctly is equal to a handshake now. We know how to do that. We have done it before. Humankind is built to self-transcend and turn transitions into triumphs. It is not a function of leadership, not alone, but a function of trust among people in the streets who are walking quietly now through canyons of broken glass, trying to get our minds around the extent of our peril, trying to understand what happened exactly while we played the game of life as if it were virtual reality, as if when cut we didn't bleed, as if when shot we didn't scream, as if when the screen went blank it would just reboot.



32 Comments so far
Show AllRevolutin is for drama queens, the only ones who have been fighting for our nation are the dirty anarchists getting pepper sprayed and tasered in the street. But they are only playing the martyr so thaet you might give them a sandwich. Really we do not need to smash the state, the state will smash itself.
love your children, while there is still time.
Betrayal is too kind a word. Rape is more to the point.
Hoa binh
Sioux Rose
RICHARD THIEME: Thank you for such eloquent words to define the quagmire the "leaders" of industry and U.S policy (as domestic warfare/homeland security BS and foreign "theaters" of war) have led us into. Indeed, the template is broken and like a crack in the not-so cosmic egg, what emerges will have to transcend what has been laid to waste. Buying only what we need, when earth is experiencing paroxysms of environmental collapse is a good thing.
Now Americans through karmic blowback learn "to live simply, that others may simply live." It's time.
We wanted representative government and we got representative government. The best money can buy.
http://ni4d.us/
I'm sorry, I just couldn't get past "the law books lining the shelves of any lawyer." Editor, please!
Ann: "I'm sorry, I just couldn't get past "the law books lining the shelves of any lawyer." Editor, please!"
Well, then you missed something very good and meaningful, Ann. Yes, some editing would make this essay more polished. But sometimes when we concentrate on the error/sin, we miss what is passionate and sincere, inspiring and truthful.
To err is human; to forgive [and overlook sometimes] is divine and yields all kinds of rewards such as not being a nit-picker and thus eliminating more creases and shriveled places in one's own mind and one's own heart.
Try it. You'll like it. ;-)
peace. /cm
Capitalism is all about love!
Love is tender. Love is bonds. Love is trusts. Love is shares. Love is trade. Love is equity. Love is goods. … And love is fines.
Our whole global economy is just one big love-fest!
Sioux Rose
CLASS ACT: Very clever!
Dystopia, like the faulty product it is, is in recall mode. It is based on denying integrity of 'utopia' which is nothing more than the human impulse to reciprocity in benign sustaining of memory from the past into the present. Memory is how we engage life. The long strong thread is kept active and alive through exercise like a good muscle.
There is a perspective among some Indigenous peoples that when the Sun shines, God/the divine/true being is overseeing the world. During the night it is the responsibility of humans to sustain the world. In this long dark night, we need to keep the song and rhythm of the clear light of day alive and generating what is needed for the creation.
It is time to not only connect the dots dreadfully skewed by all of the things cited here in this country, but abroad where massive 'development' investments are inverting the natural balances, creating new victims and fully in denial of the havoc being wrought on ecological diversity, social and basic economic balances.
the inversion of love so humorously posted above comes out evol.
There was a story told by 90 year old activist some years back. Riding a bus to Washington he looked to the back and read the directions over the emergency door. Wait for the light and then push. Like the rising of the sun, in simple clarity, the light comes through even the worst of times. Its not a sparkler or a flash - it is a sunrise, solid, calm and sure that sustains.
We each might feel it at different times focused in different ways, but it is benign, good and in for the long haul for all of us.
One aspect of what is crumbling is the notion of an apex, answer, final solution. The journey is emerging.
"It is perhaps fitting that we should begin by examining why it is necessary for us to think collectively about a problem we never created". Steve Biko
How many lawyers does it take to screw in a light bulb?
Two. One person can't screw anywhere.
Now, since we are discussing lawyers...what is black and tan and looks great on a lawyer? A Rottweiler.
The only good lawyer is . . .
the one on your side!
Trust? After Vietnam I never trusted our Gov't again, no matter who runs it temporarily. Our whole system is so rotten too the core now that words like trust , honor, dignity, faith , hope just sound the same way anymore.
This Vietnam war veteran proudly agrees. I'll add one thing though. We need to clean up government not only in Washington but in our own state and local levels first.
A nice dose of carpe dien to brighten the gathering gloom of each new or anticipated Obama appointment. Whether our glass is half empty or half full will depend on how the leadership we elected uses the opportunities presented by the wreckage the Bush adminstration leaves to it.
Whether they do that is probably going to depend on how determined "We the People" are to make sure they know that "business as usual" cannot and will not be allowed to continue. The time to get ready for the 2010 mid-term elections is NOW! Otherwise President Nice will continue to think anything he does is okay with the rest of us.
Poet
Yes.
Yes, but…
The question is not whether the glass is half empty or half full but whether it’s completely empty already or will be soon. We can’t tell because the glass has been stolen.
2010 and before and beyond, yes. How ’bout a little carpe government in this world of fall? People’s projections have been shattered and recalled, our belief in the systems we know, economic and political and otherwise, have been destroyed. Since most of us have also had stolen our ancestors and other extended family, and our ability to perceive our connection to the ecological matrix on which our lives actually depend, there is little but false religion and celebrity to grab onto. It will take some time before society can start projecting both our light and our darkness onto someone or something else.
In the 1930s FDR gave people jobs and the appearance of stability and fairness, and a hero to project onto, hiding his wheelchair to make that easier for them, but until we got into World War II and could fully place our darkness in the evil Other full recovery couldn’t happen. Maybe it was the economic stimulus of a big war; maybe that’s just the mechanism by which we measure and regulate our belief. After the fall of the Berlin Wall and the Soviet Union it was inevitable that the US find other enemies to project onto, and so we have, a succession of pitifully small, desperate, angry groups powerless to hurt us, starting with Kaddafi and moving the roving beam through Grenada, bin Laden and Saddam Hussein and loads of others.
The question now is whether we will split our projections onto Obama and terrorism, or something and something else, or whether we can drag each other out of the muck enough to begin to stop projecting, and act wisely and maturely in the face of wreckage and ruin.
Know thyself. Embrace the system that links us to our enemies. If you’re up for a challenge and really want to understand, read Projection and Re-Collection in Jungian Psychology by Marie-Louise von Franz.
The enemy is ourselves and Barack Obama is both the reflection and the reality of our internal contradictions. When we deal with those contradictions we will be better able to deal what they (both our collective selves and Obama their reflection)have created and are creating. The book sounds interesting.
Poet
There is still one thing We The People trust at the moment:
We trust that this sick, twisted, ruthless gang of "leaders" will not hesitate to rain pain and fear down upon any who dare to protest, whether you're a nun or a grandmother or even a Vet.
We trust that "they" will use all available means - illegal spying, violence, indefinite detainment without charge or council, torture, etc. - to maintain their grip. Hell, "they" have killed and wounded millions just in the past few years without the slightest blink. Message received.
That trust, above all else, is what is keeping thoughts of revolt quelled to a virtual silence.
yes, on one hand, the very real need to disavow much of the disingenuous philosophic, religious and economic theories we've been handed, and supplant them with original thinking, preferably geared toward smaller, agrarian societies...on the other, a huge, established and well-oiled military-industrial machine, watching, working and weaponed, growing ever more powerful, staffed by fellow creatures willing to inflict pain upon their brothers and sisters for money and sport...
waiting in the wings: a planet in the throes of human-induced molecular alteration that may well exceed the very narrow bounds of human living conditions before too long due to those alterations...air, water and food still necessary, even in these exciting technical times...if only one could click on a picture of an apple and have their hunger satisfied, but that's not how it works, is it?
so many damaging lies told and swallowed, and we're smack in the middle of a couple of the biggest right now, with this current holiday season...
The cornerstone of capitalism, it has been said, is a handshake. Meanwhile, the guy who has come up quietly behind you picks your pocket while you are shaking hands. No wonder the guy whose hand you are shaking, who at various times in the past has resembled George Wanker Bush, Bill Cliton, George Herbert Wanker Bush and Ronald Rogaine, no wonder he's smiling at you. He has stolen from you without using a weapon. To his way of thinking, he has humiliated you. He may even have convinced you that having your pocket picked feels as good as sex with someone you love. And sometimes if the guy who comes up quietly behind you is feeling particularly cocky and full of himself, he'll put a bullet in the back of your head just because he feels like it. Bleep the handshake; that's capitalism.
Hussein and Adam Smith’s Valley
Yea though I walk through the valleys of greed
Yea though I walk through the swamps of need
Yea though I walk through oceans of inequity
I will fear all evil
And I will savor my fear
For fear is what feeds us
It’s the shadow that needs us.
My horse is anointed with oil
My enemies color up the soil.
Yea it’s hard work:
It’s hard work…….., Coloring up the soil
It’s hard work, plodding through this valley,
While, I wear the ‘thou’ on my flag,
While, I wear the ‘thou’ on my flag.
I tired of empty hope words.
For I know my dollar is my virtue that comforts me.
The biggest stick and a loyal staff, are my rod.
For don’t selfishness breed equality?
There will be a trickle down somewhere.
For I write the history of this valley.
The table is before me
Surrounded by those I smote.
And I will dwell in the shining house, the sunrise of O
And I will dwell in the shining house, for four more years.
It’s hard work in this valley of ‘thou’
Yea it’s hard work in this valley of ‘thou’
Yea though I walk through oceans of inequity,
I will fear all evil,
And I will savor my fear
For fear is what feeds us.
Ain’t ‘Audacity and Hope’ out to destroy us?
Richard I appreciate your article but I miss your point.
You write that the Greeks rioting in Athens are somehow acting in a way that is counter to our "American" democracy.
<< The astonishing thing about this country, at the present moment, is that our rage took the form of lowering the approval rating of our leaders and voting them out of office in the belief, apparently, that we might rebuild trust. Is that good will, a belief in democracy and its processes that distinguishes Americans for the moment from rioting Greeks in the streets of Athens? Or are we simply stunned for the moment, trying to understand the enormity of what just happened? >>
I understand your confusion in the Orwellian times we live but I am afraid you've fallen for the great 'lie' of American Democracy - vote for me, trust me and I will change it.
I would argue that in the place that Democracy was invented the Greeks may have it right. Demo-cracy BTW translates as People/government not "Our Great Trusted Leaders/Government."
Perhaps what is going on in Greece is what Democracy looks like - how would our 'Leaders' be acting differently if our youth were out in the streets and the Banks and Wall Street investment firms were burning?
I think the piece underscores your point perfectly well. How much will we just sit here and take before we start getting the attention of our rulers by simply shutting shit down. Or burning it down. It's our country. Obama is not going to take it back for us. I don't think he will even listen to us unless we build a big enough fire. What will it take? How many homeless? How many hungry? How many frozen? How many flooded, burned, and mortgaged out? How many dead? Or will it be starvation, or climate migration?
Greece is what democracy looks like. Let's get democratic, shall we?
Peace would be nice!
"A "news anchor" said the other day, speaking of the sinking economy, it has gotten so bad that "people are only buying what they need."
"Let that sink in. It is so bad that people are only buying what they need."
This is a revolutionary concept - and a good thing. This is anathema to the whole culture of mind control, aka, marketing. And buying what we DON'T need is what makes our current world go 'round.
If we could grasp this one concept - that we have been controlled to buy shit and that we need armies to go to war to defend our (mind controlled) "right" to buy more shit, we could change this world virtually overnight. If we keep buying only what we need, this system will self-correct - it will have no choice. This is our ultimate power - the only one the controllers know, the only one that they cannot take away from us. So, they have broken their trust with us. Let us break our trust with them. This is a singular and collective act to stop the madness. Amidst all the madness of this mad holiday, let's start the revolution right here, right now. Don't buy their shit! Buy only what you need, and really consider what it is you need. That's my challenge to myself. I hope others will join me.
Dig it: "Simply stated, our survival as a species is dependent upon minimizing the threat from advertising and the commercial culture that has spawned it."
http://www.sutjhally.com/articles/advertisingattheed/
"All Nature's difference keeps all Nature's peace." Alexander Pope
What a welcome voice - please post early and often - to paraphrase Mark Twain...
A perceptive point to which I would add that both we and they are coauthors of this "creatuion" and its dissolution will be as painful as it is exhilerating. Some practical steps include:
1. Stop watching commercial and public TV both of which exist for the purpose of presenting as many numbed minds to their underwriters for programming as possible.
2. Grow something you can eat and share with neighbors (food is a great way to make friends).
3. Give modest gifts (and volunteer time if you can) to your local food bank, homeless, or battered woman's and children shelters.
Poet
My dad used to say that when he looked at something in a store he would ask himself, "Can I live without this?" If the answer was "yes" he put it back. That is the atitude of a man who grew up in the depression. That is an idea for times like these.
Yep. I've been reading about the Viet Nam revolution, it took 20 years of war and death.
All the US people have to do is sit there and watch TV and the whole thing will collapse.
n the USA there are only TWO things that are really recognized culturally and legally and officially :
PRIVATE PROPERTY RIGHTS
GOVERNMENT PROPERTY RIGHTS.
in NEITHER case is the TRUE COMMONS ever considered. that which is the LAND and AIR and SPACE that is COMMON to ALL and NO ONE OWNS.
the adoration of Private property rights is the one that is the root of the EXPANSION of "ownership by individuals" over vast spaces - by TAKING IT AWAY from commons.
commons is the land and space that no one owns , neither the government nor private "owners" where ANYONE can USE it PRIVATELY - for his or her own needs and NO MORE with a natural instinct and recognition of respect towards OTHERS who also COMMONLY own it and ONLY because it was given to us by the earth .
WE did NOT create LAND - we ONLY put ON land "values" by BUILDING on it, and by WORKING on it, and making it produce for our needs - and by making CLAIMS on it that are legalized or put in effect in some way.
but ultimately NO ONE OWNS IT. private property owners and government owners of land and natural resources should be called and treated as RENTERS just like everyone else.
ON COMMON LAND. and which no one should EVEN be given "titles of ownership to" .
REMOVE that "right" of "private and government ownership" to COMMON LAND -- and capitalism will collapse ENTIRELY. even its banking system will be unnecessary which of course is nothing more than a parasite by turning profits on the private property functions .
I believe all of these events are happenint to devalue the american dollar to the point of our country being bankrupt (which I think we already are) and that will make it all the easier for "them" to implement our new currency, the Amero,and they already have it all printed up, waiting for the "big crash". It's the next step in the NAFTA, New World Order, G8, global economy. The north and south americas on one "paper currency"' just like europe, then when we cant pay our debts to the asian markets, we'll wait for their economies to fail and china will do what we are doing right here now. the next step after that will be a global currency, and a global ruler. New World Order, Run by the G8. only by then it will be the G1. The paper we use for money is worthless, It's who controls the Precious metals thats the "Big Boss Man".....Always Question Authority!!
Richard Thieme's article on Betrayal of the Commons is by far one of the best descriptions and narrative cores out there. This level of discourse must be reached to change the narrative of America, and to develop a new one of, by, and for the Commons.
Oh, some might dispute a word or two of his somewhat restrained tone, such as the way one commentator criticized the author for not describing what is happening as a "rape." Those who already know that this is a rape, have been following and understanding the "proceedings" critically for some time now.
This article does the service of spelling it out to those who may not have noticed yet or who have given too much trust.
Great job, great service, Richard.
There is something missing, however. He forgets to mention a notion whose understanding is critical to our survival.
To the dismay of some, perhaps, I find we absolutely must add this to his list:
• the betrayal of the trust given to our predominant political parties.
Both Republicans and Democrats actively and willingly each addressed their own constituencies in a manner to keep them as trusting members of their respective choirs, and not looking, nor counting, nor blaming. No solution can come from them. No amount of "reform" will ever be sufficient. Period. They are committed to (and financed by) the conditions producing the rape.
We cannot even begin to develop a necessary new narrative with both of those compromised and rotten institutions constantly covering and triangulating for their corporate sponsors. They are both "down with" the current paradigm and work to sustain it. They acted as the sales force, if not the architects, for corporate globalization — for decades now. Together they have pushed for the obscene media consolidation required to keep the American people effectively disoriented, brainwashed — and trusting.
Different political affiliations are needed now to build, frame and promote a new sustainable political model that puts and keeps people — citizens — at the center, participating actively and continually in its own destiny.
While this fact might make some feel that the already daunting tasks ahead of us are even more difficult to contemplate ("oh, no, we have to build another party big enough to change things?"), not doing so will keep us endlessly mired in fighting the people "on our team" who helped bring all this mess about, and who are working for goals very different from ours. With traditional resources becoming ever more scarce, it is essential that we be rowing in the same direction with dedicated partners who share a destination.
There may be additional solutions, but I know the the Green Party has been working to build people-centered communities for decades now. There is an infrastructure, elected officials, and a platform that is a model for such a sustainable political vision. They received 11% in the Illinois and Maine governor's races. 48% for mayor in San Francisco. With a little effort and some reforms like clean elections and Instant Runoff Voting, it is eminently doable. Perhaps it is time to put energy into such an affiliation that not only sounds like our hearts and minds, but also, with our collective efforts, can help lead America to a new model that embraces the Commons.
We need all kinds of new institutions, but a political party that raises the banner and leads the way towards a new vision of a better, caring and reality-based world, is an absolute necessity. This cannot be done at the margins of an old vision.
We must come together anew and, trusting our own handshakes and embraces, dedicate ourselves to the proposition of building a new politics of meaning, responsibility, justice and respect — an America we want, whose Constitution and laws, as well as aspirations and achievements, benefit us all.
Article hits the problem squarely and hints at a solution. There's a very direct connection between the words of the anonymous Bilderberger cited herein (reminiscent of FDR on the New Deal, which he explained was far preferable to the Bohslevik alternative...) and the reference to "virtual reality" at the conclusion; we're unhappy, untrusting, we feel the riot in our bones ... but we have 400+ HD channels, a new Wii system, the Net, a direct link to updating our Facebook page on our blackberry, all that handheld christmas party video to upload and disseminate among our onine "social networks..."
In Massachusetts, we just decriminalized weed. Might as well: The Screens that surround us, that seduce us from every meaningful task and that sap our nascent revolutionary impulses--THAT's the drug of the new millenium, that makes the somewhat sedative effets of the kindly herb look like child's play.
So I'm really not sure that we aren't doomed. When the Spectacle hems you in at every turn, when even those of us who, in all modesty, are at least aware of it can't get around it--unless you pull a Scott Nearing and head for the hills--I see things getting worse as we become increasingly cocooned. Our leaders can't help, either, because what needs to be is That Which Can't be Uttered--the notion than the basic questions are phrased incorrectly. Our leaders ask, "how can I solve problem x, which threatens the over-abundant consumer culture that is America?," and which implies that we can keep on "having it all" so long as we solve, in our techocratic fashion, whatever would prevent us from enjoying the same. Sadly, the fundamental, underlying myth goes unchallenged, the notion of increased growth and prosperety till kingdom come.
More on similar themes at http://www.nosuppertonight.com if you're interested.
m horan
http://www.nosuppertonight.com