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Consumers Are Sleeping With the Enemy – and Paying for It
"Those who manipulate the unseen mechanism of society constitute an invisible government which is the true ruling power of our country. We are governed, our minds molded, our tastes formed, our ideas suggested largely by men we have never heard of… In almost every act of our lives whether in the sphere of politics or business in our social conduct or our ethical thinking, we are dominated by the relatively small number of persons who understand the mental processes and social patterns of the masses. It is they who pull the wires that control the public mind."
-Edward Bernays-
Anyone whose mission it is to ‘control the masses’ knows it all begins with good marketing.
Public relations aficionado Edward Bernays understood that.
One of the country’s original PR flacks, Bernays is perhaps best known for forging the decades-long marketing alliance between the AMA and the tobacco industry. The ‘Father of Spin,’ as he is known, also played a major role in the marketing and selling of the First World War to the American public with his now infamous slogan, "Making the World Safe for Democracy." Having mastered the art of seduction, Bernays understood that luring the public into purchasing products they didn't need was a simple matter of connecting those products to their unconscious desires and (perceived) unmet needs. He called this scientific technique of opinion molding the “engineering of consent.”
Corporations have come a long way since Bernays first began coaching them in the stealthy art of consumer seduction. And we have been forever changed by their success. From credit cards to satellite television to fossil fuels, American consumers, having succumbed to corporate seduction, are today paying a very high price for their acquiescence.
Coal-fired Facebook Fires Up Activists – sort of
The series of events following Facebook’s recent announcement that their ‘energy efficient’ data center in Prineville Oregon would be powered by the dirtiest fossil fuel on earth (coal) is illustrative of the problem.
When Facebook announced the opening of its new data center, its PR people made a point of emphasizing that the facility would be “among the greenest in the industry.” So, it was little wonder that clean energy activists were up in arms when it was revealed that the social networking site had contracted with mega-utility PacifiCorp for its power - since PacifiCorp’s primary power-generation fuel is coal.
What followed was a flurry of Facebook activity, mostly in the form of negative comments on the site itself, but also including at least two petitions - one initiated by Change.org and another by Greenpeace – demanding that FB’s CEO Mark Zuckerberg either clean up or abandon the company’s contract with PacifiCorp. At least so far, the contract is unaltered, although it remains to be seen whether Facebook will succumb to the pressure being applied by its more energy-conscious users.
The proverbial ‘rub,’ of course, lies in just how much pressure FB users will be willing to apply. It may be that the Internet, as Chris Hedges recently asserted, “has become one more tool hijacked by corporate interests to accelerate our cultural, political and economic decline.” Yet, the inevitability of such a prediction is far from certain. How social networking tools like Facebook ultimately impact our collective future and whether or not they actually live up to their promise to “promote democracy and unleash innovation and creativity” may well be up to those who use them.
Having become the most popular social networking site in the world (and the one most utilized by activists of all stripes), Facebook is clearly holding most of the cards. And this is where Bernays’ theory of ‘perceived need’ kicks in big time. After all, FB users need to communicate with one another. We have products to sell, thoughts to express, ideas to flesh out and events to publicize. And, let’s face it, social networking is the most effective and efficient means toward those ends. Given this (perceived) need, the threat of a boycott – likely the only truly effective tool activists have to make their point - seems all but out of the question. The irony of consumers feeling empowered by the same technology that captivates them is difficult to miss.
One liberal-leaning blogger expressed the dilemma succinctly: “Do I want more ads and more privacy issues to deal with so Facebook can afford to buy more expensive but cleaner power? Definitely not. Would I use a greener Facebook competitor if it existed? Yes, but not if I had to sacrifice functionality.”
We consumers are not very good at sacrifice.
The Enemy is Here – and We’re Addicted to Their Products
In the same way consumers have become captive to the social networking industry, we have likewise become captive to the telecommunications, satellite television, pharmaceutical, fossil fuel, fast food and credit card industries (to name a few). We may not like the ways in which these corporate behemoths treat us, but we’re too addicted to their products to do much about it. Those addictions to everything corporate may offer the only cogent explanation of why we remain paralyzed in the face of apparently unlimited corporate power.
How much progressives will be willing to sacrifice in order to create the world we (say we) want is not yet clear. But one thing is certain: As long as we remain unwilling to stretch the boundaries of our comfort zones in the interest of the greater good, we will remain relatively powerless. We will, in the most perverse sense of the term, “get what we pay for.”
We are here now – at this point in history. The battle lines between ‘We the People’ and the Corporate State have never been more clearly drawn. At this moment, progressives still have the opportunity to determine the outcome of that battle. But it is only a moment, and we will never get it back. No less than the future of our culture and our species will depend upon what we choose to do next. If we let the moment pass, that non-decision will become our collective destiny.
It seems entirely possible that American consumers are already so damaged by our cultural addictions that we lack the ability to give them up. It is also possible that, like all addicts, Americans will continue consuming their preferred ‘poison’ until the supply is gone or until something equally untenable occurs. Yet, all addicts hit bottom sooner or later – however far down that might be.
We’d better hope that happens sooner than later.
- Posted in

71 Comments so far
Show AllKinda strange that the author uses the same language as the oppressor she attempts to dispel. By referring to human beings as "consumers" she serves to reinforce the corporate ideology and regurgitates the propaganda herself.
Simply by referring to folks as "consumers" gives an imperative for us beings to do exactly what she rails against as defined by our "consumerness." What else is a "consumer" to do?
Personally I find it insulting to be referred to as a "consumer" and hope the author will as well one day. Pretty hazy article. Try again.
I, too, hate the term "consumer", but I think you missed the subtle gist of the use of the word. The author of this article is using that to highlight where we find ourselves. We have allowed ourselves to be classified as consumers, instead of citizens or people. While mind-controllers like Bernays have redefined who we are, we have allowed them to. It is our minds they are controlling - OUR minds.
I think this piece is one of the most important that have seen the light of day here on Common Dreams. This gives us a look into the man behind the curtain and allows us to make a crucial choice as to how we want to go forward. If we choose to opt out as consumers and opt in as caring citizens with our own choices, the world will change - it will have to.
There are examples and ways to start to wean ourselves off the drug of consumerism. If we choose to, we can be mindful of what is going on and make the right choices.
Two that come to mind are:
http://noimpactman.typepad.com/
http://yourmoneyoryourlife.info/
These are but two examples (and tools) of how we can start to wean ourselves. There are many more.
Warning: They challenge us to look at our lives in new ways and to change. Not many people, progressives included, are willing to do that. So, they will feel threatened and attack the messenger. If you feel threatened by this piece, stop and ask yourself why.
[Edited for changes]
Man, I snorted some Iraq and shot up some Afghanistan but I still got the shakes. I am hanging for some Iran and Venezuela now.
I do not now, nor have I ever had a Facebook, MySpace, etc. page...
I do not support free email from Gmail, yahoo, etc.
I do not support fre hosting from Tripod, Geocities(now defunct... yea!), etc.
I pay for hosting and email and believe that all "free" ad-driven "services" should stop.
In the past, these services helped get people engaged in the new internet technology... now, they simply clog up the net and provide a place for these manipulators to have ingress to the populace.
JUST SAY NO.
Shut your Facebook pages, etc. down... (of course, you didn't read the EULA so you don't realize that even if you close your account Facebook still owns the rights to everything you've ever posted there... didn't know that, huh?)
Stop using gmail and all of the spammer email services (I have gmail blocked at my mail server it's such a tool of spammers and hackers.)
Stop using free hosting.
Pay a lousy $5 a month and you can have it all on a server hosting plan you control.
If you're too cheap to pay $5 a month... why should I believe that what you have to say important? If you don't believe in what you say enough to put up $5 a month for the world to know about it, they no one else probably will believe it either.
How does this tie in with the article??? Easy... stop depending on the companies you hate to deal fairly with you or treat you well... take you life into your own hands. Stop listening to the hype.
Turn off your TV!
They call it "programming" for a reason! The whole purpose of "television programming" is to transmit a "process message"... not to entertain.
Don't believe me? Look it up. The concept of "process message" (buy this ... do this ... etc.) is basic television 101.
Look up Bernays on YouTube and watch the videos you'll find there. Learn what an evil, manipulating pig this "man" was.
EDUCATE YOURSELVES AMERICA ... YOUR OWN KNOWLEDGE IS ALL THAT WILL HELP YOU SOON.
It was fun reading your comment, Homeless Bob.
Your are a man of simple needs and well honed principals. I have a brother with a world view I suspect to be similar to yours, but with the good fortune of not being homeless and well tended to by a good wife, allowing him the time to pursue his vocation of advocating against privatization of US prisons. I behave in a somewhat similar vein, but am weakened severely by an addiction to the iPhone.
The first step is easy; BOYCOTT THE CORPORATE MEDIA! TVs are for film monitors only. Isolate yourself and your children from Bernaysian intellectual poison and trash TV. Make these lying hucksters irrelevant.
I completely stopped watching TV about four years ago. (I watch the occasional movie on my laptop in bed at night.) Best move I ever made. I switched a TV on in a hotel room for about ten minutes last week, buzzed through all the channels, and was once again reminded what a low quality experience it is, from top to bottom. I am not losing anything by giving up TV, I am in fact improving my life experience. My next goal is to give up my automobile.
Good job, eliminating TV from your life. I did that about 50 years ago and have never regretted it. My sister, who has a degree in Communications, once told me that I could never convince anyone that I was an American, because by avoiding TV, I know nothing about the culture. That is too bad. It gives me time to read.
I keep getting emails from people suggesting I become a "friend" of theirs on Facebook, but I have resisted that too. I have never looked at Facebook and am not sure why anyone would. My small business gets along just fine with a web site and an email mailing list. Social networking may not be a passing fad, but it is not essential for a small business.
Aye - Me Too - in the 70's Nothing but Trash - and the Advertizements - every 5 minutes - geesh!
If anyone wants to do 'something' just STOP consuming the 'products'
Try it out - it 'hurts' for only a short while
I spend 'corporate' ONLY when I have to
nuff said
Bravo for you. Completely shut yourself off from the rest of society and the world. It makes sense for a moment and then when one considers everyone in their own way have shut out the rest of the world it is no wonder that we are headed for disaster of proportions unimaginable. And just maybe that is the way it is supposed to be. Nothing lasts forever.
The rest of society and the world is still out there waiting for some one-on-one human interaction, instead of being holed up in their rooms tweeting and facebooking their every move.
It's a continuum, and not watching TV doesn't mean we don't interact with society. And, what is "society" and what is "community?" Have we let those words be redefined also so that we are even more disconnected from each other?
Again, if we feel threatened by those who are choosing to disconnect from the virtual world and reconnect with the real nature of things, we should ask ourselves why. Maybe we are afraid of what that may say to us. But let's not stop there, let's look at that fear and question why it's there. Maybe that will instruct us as to why we are addicted to being consumers.
Thats an interesting take on things. Just what is the real nature of things. What things? Are you referring to Naturalism? Materialism? Or whose subjective definition of what "the real of nature of things?" Are you referring to human nature or mother nature? Myself I feel we went to far after we climbed down from the trees. At the most hunting and gathering. Is the real nature of things growing things which is really the reason we have been so successful in populating almost the entire planet with overcrowding in urban areas. Just what is the real nature of things? At least what is your definition to such a vague construct?
What I mean is a life that doesn't leave one wondering whether it is real or whether it is vague. A life that leaves one feeling like they are satisfied and full.
Is talking to a friend face-to-face real or vague? Is visiting a shut-in real or vague? Is growing a garden real or vague? (and gardening is not responsible for overcrowding, unnatural totalitarian agriculture is). Is taking a walk anywhere outside real or vague?
Your questions lead me to believe that you live in your head. You should get out more and breathe and see things. I don't mean this in a condescending way, but in a helpful way. And, by the way, I am speaking to myself as much as I am speaking to you.
There are many ways to interact with the real nature of things, however, only a few leave us satisfied. This article talks to that, and how we fall for those things that so often leave us dissatisfied. We need to stop playing mind games and just get out and connect with each other. Reach out, join others, do things outside our comfort zones that build community.
And if you feel like everything is hunky dory, that tweeting and facebooking and consuming are serving you well, what are you doing in this thread, a thread about how manipulative consumerism and marketing are? Don't you feel as I do, that we are being controlled? All I am saying is, stop being controlled.
Disconnecting from the virtual world of TV has given me time to connect with the virtual world of books, not necessarily with the world of nature. But with books, I have control over what I am doing. I can stop anytime and restart anytime. I have time to think about what I am reading. I can go back to earlier parts of the text at any time. The book is a random-acess medium, unlike the electronic media.
In 1928, in her book, Orlando, Virginia Woolf wrote about society: "How in so short a time, she had passed from intoxication to disgust, we will only seek to explain by supposing that this mysterious composition which we call society, is nothing absolutely good or bad in itself, but has a spirit in it, volatile but potent, which either makes you drunk when you think about it, as Orlando thought it, delightful, or gives you a headache when you think it, as Orlando thought it, repulsive."
I find it humorous that not going along with things like facebook and twitter is supposed to mean that you aren't participating in society. What a freaking crock!
We managed to have a society for over 200 years without facebook or twitter. It's also funny how with all these methods of "communication" we have now, no one actually talks face to face, anymore. If you ask me, all this BS has contributed to the LACK of a society that we used to have. People USED to get together and meet with each other, getting t5o know who they are talking to. Now, we do "talk" with people from all over the country, indeed the world, but we don't KNOW anyone anymore. In that respect, all this technology allows us to communicate, but we never come out of our houses enough to actually meet anyone anymore.
Really, I preferred things the way they were before. At least then you knew people and said hi to folks when you met them. Now, you could email to people for years and pass them on the street, never knowing who they really are. Those who actually talk to people, who do business with them, who recognize people on the street, THEY are the ones keeping society going, not those who never get off of the computer all day.
I've never been on facebook, never twittered a word, and don't own a cell phone. I hate those things and have NO need for them. I've had more emails from people I don't even know asking me to be their facebook friend, and it's just annoying, not flattering in any way. I prefer talking to humans, not computer words.
At this point, I don't think we even HAVE a society anymore. After 30 years of divide and conquer by our "leaders", we have been turned against each other in a way that no terrorist could envision. We are destructing from the inside, and part of that is because no one actually KNOWS anyone anymore. We are now a country of individuals, and to hell with the country. Facebook and twitter isn't changing that, in fact, I think it's just more divide and conquer. Keep people in their homes and don't ever let them meet, and they are far easier to control.
only one disagreement, W, and that is that we had a society for 4 million years, plus or minus, before facelessbook and the rest of the pseudo-intimate typing practices.
Yeah, I've stopped watching too. I really never watched anyway and they did me a favor by going off the air back in June. I can't see paying to watch TV. Maybe I'm cheap, I don't know.
It gets even better than Freud's nephew Edward Bernays; witness the career of John B. Watson, the founder of behaviorism, the first man to ever run a mouse through a maze, and his career subsequent to academia with J. Walter Thompson Advertising Agency.
http://www.allbusiness.com/professional-scientific/advertising-related-services/116874-1.html
http://www.sonoma.edu/users/d/daniels/Watson.html
http://a-s.clayton.edu/mccarty/PSYC3540/Web%20links/watson.html
You are the Trojan Horse you fear. Only free content can free the internet and only socialism can make us able to provide free content without the need for ads or lawsuits for intellectual property:
"From each according to one's abilities, to each according to one's needs."
(Just give credit where it is due for the sake of reputation and vanity.)
ClassAct, you forgot to do what you said should be done and didn't attribute the quote, didn't give credit where credit is due: "'From each according to one's abilities, to each according to one's needs."' (Just give credit where it is due for the sake of reputation and vanity.)"
Of course many may already know but there are people who don't. The quote is from Karl Marx's, Critique of the Gotha Program, written in 1875 and deserves to be given in context: "In a higher phase of communist society, after the enslaving subordination of the individual to the division of labor, and therewith also the antithesis between mental and physical labor, has vanished; after labor has become not only a means of life but life's prime want; after the productive forces have also increased with the all-around development of the individual, and all the springs of co-operative wealth flow more abundantly -- only then then can the narrow horizon of bourgeois right be crossed in its entirety and society inscribe on its banners: From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs!"
"We are here now – at this point in history. The battle lines between ‘We the People’ and the Corporate State have never been more clearly drawn. At this moment, progressives still have the opportunity to determine the outcome of that battle. But it is only a moment, and we will never get it back. No less than the future of our culture and our species will depend upon what we choose to do next. If we let the moment pass, that non-decision will become our collective destiny."
What she said.
The battle lines between ‘We the People’ and the Corporate State have never been more clearly drawn.
The battle line? The property line...
Same line.
It's fascinating how the corporate culture uses the language
to deceive. One of the worst examples is the change from the personnel department to human resources department. I suppose people are too dumb to see the difference between personal and personnel. Human resources to me brings back memories of lamp shades and soap.
"Our children are our most important resource"...
They used to say that. Now maybe it's oil -- or maybe chickens, or small foreign countries to invade, or clean water. Hard to tell, when talking about which of those resources we should exploit. Or it could be consumers. Maybe it still pays off best to exploit children -- at least until old style slavery is brought back (it's on the way).
I don't watch TV, I listen to KPFA radio, watch videos online, or DVD. I don't use Facebook, Twitter or the like.
Like the snot-nosed kid CEO of Facebook needs to make another 10 billion dollars, at least he aint gettin it from me. I wish the 400 million other folks in the world would boycott it as well.
YouTube has the story of Ed Bernays, "The Century of Self". Everyone should take the time to watch the whole thing but even the first episode of the first segment is better than not seeing any of it. Its sequence is badly referenced but it begins w/"Machines of Pleasure" (I think), and ends (3rd segment) w/"8 people Drinking Wine In Kettering". While you're on YouTube you might look for posts on TV's effect on your brain.
I recommend that documentary as well as others by Adam Curtis: "The Trap" and "The Power of Nightmares" also available on http://www.documentary-film.net/
It is a real shame that PBS has not aired any of Curtis' documentaries. They were originally produced for BBC2 in the UK and have aired in many other countries, but not here in propaganda spin land.
I even called the program director of KQED (PBS station in San Francisco) and asked why they do not air them. She gave me a ridiculous excuse that BBC has to request them to be aired, and they (KQED) could not request them. I then called BBC World in New York and they told me that KQED could indeed request them but had no record of any request. Someone is telling me a lie. Either BBC World or KQED and I have a very good idea who is lying.
socialist: Thanks for relating your personal experience with KQED and BBC World. Very interesting, but not exactly surprising, either.
I have watched all of the Adam Curtis documentaries on Google Video, and I agree that they are well worth the time! I also read one of the books written by Stuart Ewen, who is interviewed extensively in The Century of the Self -- P.R.: A Social History of Spin, published in 1998.
The authorities and corporations, with the help of psychologists, educators, our very own elected officials, etc., undermine us at every turn! Our so-called addictions are very difficult to keep in check!
About our so-called credit addiction:
Two nights ago, when I left the library, I walked up First Avenue in NYC, and stopped in front of an independent DVD rental store located at 1716 1st Avenue -- We Deliver Videos. I noted that the store had a couple of DVDs I wanted to see -- the kind you can’t rent at Blockbuster, and I haven't found them at the library, either.
First, I will be very clear -- I had NOT previously attempted to rent from this store. At the checkout, I pulled out my very valid ID, with photo, and they wanted my credit card, a credit card instead of a valid ID. I told the young woman that I did not have credit cards, that I had cut them up, so to speak, and did NOT intend to add to the wealth of those predatory companies. In addition, I intended to pay her cash for the rentals, and didn’t understand the necessity for a credit card that she would keep on file at their rental store. (I do, though, understand about loss of product, etc., but I know people who have had their credit cards charged after they have returned the rented product.)
Finally, I said, “Well, I guess I won’t be renting anything from your store, anytime soon!” -- which, BTW, wasn’t exactly cheap. The man standing behind the other cash register commented, “Ma’m, you don’t need to be so hostile.” I hadn't raised my voice, but I do admit to being a bit sarcastic.
This is the kind of independent store/business that I like to support whenever possible, but my money/cash and/or debit card do NOT fit into their rules. They require credit cards, even though their advertisement, online, states that they accept credit cards. Accepting credit cards is NOT the same thing as REQUIRING credit cards!
The credit cards and businesses, independent and corporate, play the same game with us. If you don’t have a credit card, a customer is NOT welcome and is unworthy!
Jon Stewart, the other evening, did a segment on credit card reform, or not, and it's quite telling. If you haven't already seen it, you can go to:
http://www.truthdig.com/avbooth/item/daily_show_bank_of_america_20100224/
That's interesting (repulsive, too!). But I thought all debit cards were also credit cards (mine certainly is--MasterCard logo and all). Not so?
Every consumer is an excreter, but they want our attention up top on the gnashing greasy happy mouth, not the blasting anus below the table.
ooooh...well done...
for Face book the solution is simple
BOYCOTT THE SPONSORS OF FACE BOOK !!!
and tell the sponsors why your boycotting them
the same tactic works for other companies
spend your money with an eye on the world you want to live in
and tell them how they made there sales to you
the corporations vote with there money all the time
( look at who owns the government )
you should to
"In the same way consumers have become captive to the social networking industry, we have likewise become captive to the telecommunications, satellite television, pharmaceutical, fossil fuel, fast food and credit card industries (to name a few). "
This is funny, because most of you consider yourselves to be Socialists. I am an Anarchist interested in a a TRUE Free-Market, yet I am NOT on facebook, nor myspace or any of those social networking things. I do NOT own a TV set, never have owned my own. I do watch movies, netlfix on my computer. I do NOT support the pharmaceutical industrial complex, I am very interested n Natural healing and medicines, taking care of yourself, I guess like Obombers preemptive WARS, I like preemptive healthcare. I do use gas in my car, but I hardly drive these days. Fast food, disgusting. I am a Vegan. I do NOT eat meat nor drink soda, etc. Credit Cards, all cut up and by the end of this year my last one will be paid off.
I am not a consumer of waste, only of need. I try to mend or fix anything I can, or just make what I have last as long as possible. I love to create, so I make my own greeting cards instead of wasting money to support hallmark or whatever. The list goes on and on and on.
Edward Bernays is an evil criminal. Sort of like Al Gore is in mine eyes.
"We may not like the ways in which these corporate behemoths treat us, but we’re too addicted to their products to do much about it."
Thats the problem. You are addicted to governments as well. That is another problem. Governments support corporations and vice versa. You need to buy as much American made as possible, if you really need to buy. For sneakers I recommend New Balance. Anyway, STOP Shopping at all if possible - I don't mean stop eating, but buy local. STOP eating meat. Meat is owned by like 5 major corporations, just like the mainstream media is, and we know how evil they are too. Plus meat will kill you. It's dying from all the corn they feed it. Corn, government subsidized farming, which A. Destroys local farming, B. is in Cahoots with government functions like NAFTA/CAFTA/WTO which of course destroys other countries farming, like say Mexicos, driving their people here, which of course causes the whole stupid issue of illegal immigration and all that - again a government caused issue. And do not forget about Monsanto, very evil - create seeds that will not re-seed or whatever that is, also the same company that made Agent Orange in vietnam era.
"How much progressives will be willing to sacrifice in order to create the world we (say we) want is not yet clear."
Well put, "Say you want" - thats why I say and I do what I could, like by NOT being a consumer. I don't call myself a progressive, nor a liberal, and yet I think I am more of both than those who do call themselves these things. I say, Local. Local farms, businesses, economies, Local Currencies. Get rid of federal and get rid of corporate and we will be a hell of a lot better off. A local, say if we were all local city governments, we would NOT be able to go invade Afghanistan.
What is it our government is always telling people to do, SHOP?
Don't worry about all the problems of the world, the country, the WARS, the federal reserve destroying your economy, go SHOP (as your dollars purchasing power continues to decrease) SHOP SHOP SHOP while the Bombs DROP DROP DROP!
This is why BIG and Central governments are NO good.
anyway, I am rambling now.
peace. love. anarchy
I'm also an anarchist, libertarian. It seems funny to me also when I read "liberal" articles about not using Facebook, Turn off TV Week and making sacrifices like Buy Nothing Day. I don't own a TV in the first place, I've gone months without watching TV, I can barely stand a second of it when I do see it occasionally because it is so incredibly stupid. I work hard and save. I am a lousy consumer. I don't want or need anymore of the junk they try to push on us. I have a fuel-efficient car I rarely drive. I'm not vegan but don't eat much meat at all, mostly local, organic produce. I don't use or wear any leather products. I buy shoes from companies like Vegetarian Shoes in the UK (voting with my dollars). I don't use Facebook, although I do like MySpace for music. Nonetheless despite all this, "liberals" who can't seem to "sacrifice" don't stop lecturing me about moral issues because I refuse to accept that the blame is entirely in the private sector for the world's problems and that the government is the savior. I don't know what the sacrifice is anyway. The less stupid junk you buy, TV you watch and time you spend on Facebook, the more you gain in life. What is the sacrifice?
You are exactly right, that people have to realize they are addicted to governments and that's a big part of the problem. If they can't see the problem for what it is they are not going to be able the change anything or their own lives. I'd like to add to your comment that the government subsidizes a lot of what liberals see as problems. Why is coal cheaper? Why is factory farm food cheaper? Why is there so much debt? The government subsidizes coal, nuclear but not renewables. The government subsidizes the corn production that is the basis of the factory farms. The government backs and guarantees the debt the allows banks to take so much risk so recklessly. If people want to stop corporatism, want to see natural foods, renewable energy and healthy banks that are successful and affordable, they have to shut down the federal government. They have to put an end to subsidies and government support. The problem is a lot of well-meaning liberals will support increased federal power and government intervention without connecting the dots to realize how it only increases the same corporatism they oppose. Not to mention the unbelievable corruption. Just think of HUD for an example of that, to mention only one. Anyway, I guess I am done with my rant too.
Cicero: "Freedom is participation in power."
You don't know enough U.S. history of the 20th century to comment intelligently on this topic so quit boring those of us who do.
So your point is all of the government agencies created in the past century to benefit corporations are actually an opportunity for freedom if we only become more politically engaged? Being politically engaged to me means calling for the abolishment of these wasteful and corrupt federal powers that do nothing but rob people domestically and drop bombs on people globally.
Choose your identity carefully.
In the strictest sense of the words, one could be both an anarchist and a libertarian, but within the cultural (or socio-political) context of the United States, and I am assuming you are a resident or citizen of that nation, people have to self identify with one or the other and not both. A Libertarian in the US is one who advocates for rule of minimalist government. An anarchist in every sense of the word is one who would choose to belong to a social grouping of people with no government. The Greek word "anarchia" means literally "leaderless". Leaderless or solitary living is not the nature of most larger, higher order primates (except the orangutan).
You can only be one or the other, take your pick!
I'm not sure that's quite true.
The rightwingers have hijacked the term "Libertarian" in the US, it's true. But elsewhere in the world small-ell "libertarian" still means what it originally meant: someone who is pro-social and anti-ruling-class.
Like Chomsky, and the much-mourned Prof. Zinn, I identify variously as an anarchic socialist, a libertarian socialist, a pro-social anarchist, etc. I add the qualifications because I don't want to be mistaken for someone who's immature and hard-of-thinking, which is the state of most cap-ell Libertarians.
It's significant, I think, that most Libertarians are male -- girl-socialisation tends to prevent that particular kind of embarrassingly shallow self-centeredness.
The few women Libertarians I've met have all accepted the identity to please their spouse or SO, and have been more than a little uncomfortable and defensive about it. A woman I worked with ten years ago had more reasons than most to be a socialist, but accepted a Libertarian identity to please her husband. She was so conflicted that she couldn't even bear to talk about it, which was painful for everyone around her, too.
mairead: you are right about small-ell libertarians. The neocons have taken over the political party. I once read that in the 60's and 70's most libertarians were scientists and engineers which explains a lot. I've also read interesting women libertarians like Karen Kwiatkowski.
Sacrifice? Not in our entitled Western society. People want it all despite the fact that it cant be done. They want livable wages, but then shop at Walmart. They want an end to war, but then drive their F350s and Titans everywhere. They want healthy active kids but take them to McDonalds. They want free high quality health care and education(writing from Canada) but support the Olympics which is siphoning off billions of public dollars. Their is no connection for them, unless it is spelled out on national TV, and WE know that is not going to happen. Additionally, people invest a lot of time at jobs they dont like to earn their money. Trying to convince them not to spend that money on all the shiny things that are available is like telling them they are working for nothing.
Part of the problem stems from the convoluted manner of business in our society. Mergers, conglomerates, and horizontal diversification have led companies to have stakes and owernship in a huge variety of products that they should not be associated with. People may think thye are buying green only to find out that the "green" company is owned by a far larger destructive company. Or they watch their favourite shows not realizing that the network is operated by war hawks or propagandists. Im not saying this an excuse for the masses. Everyone needs to own their actions.
The answer is of course to drop out as much as you can and hope that others follow along. Two years ago I quit my job as a product whore for the consumer electronic industry, quit eating meat, and took a position working with youth in group homes. i ride a bike in the summer and take the bus otherwise. It works for me, but its a pretty tough sell to those I talk to.
The masses are never going to change unless forced to by government or circumstance. I am currently waiting for America to collapse under hyperinflation. You guys are still sitting on a couple time bombs, and so is the rest of the world as evidenced by recent events in Greece. Maybe once the system really falls apart people will get the message.
CosmicCrushed, excellent post. Until we become We the People and take back our country, we're toast. And I believe that by the time people wake up to that, there won't be much left for us. Yes, our addictions will do us in. When the corporations have picked our bones clean they will head for greener pastures and leave us with a train wreck instead of a country. Reminds me of the Twilight segment "To Serve Man" where people are marching like zombies onto a spaceship and the man who finally translates the book brought by the alien is futilely trying to stop them saying "It's a cookbook!" But no one can hear him.
Be interesting to see how this turns out.
When the people fear their government there is tyranny,
when the government fears the people there is liberty.
~ Thomas Jefferson
And Bernays wrote the book on propaganda, aka public relations and marketing. His Green Ball and Torches of Freedom Parade are still to be admired. He is the bedrock upon which modern marketing thrives.
Propaganda by Edward Bernays, 1928, Excerpts
Modern propaganda is a consistent, enduring effort to create or shape events to influence the relations of the public to an enterprise, idea or group. This practice of creating circumstances and of creating pictures in the minds of millions of persons is very common. Virtually no important undertaking is now carried on without it.
Propaganda exists on all sides of us, and it changes our mental pictures of the world. Its use is growing as its efficiency in gaining public support is recognized. It takes account not merely of the individual, nor even the mass mind alone, but also the anatomy of society, with its interlocking group formations and loyalties. It sees the individual not only as a cell in the social organism but as a cell organized into the social unit. Touch a nerve at a sensitive spot and you get an automatic response from certain specific members of the organism.
The public is made up of interlocking groups – economic, social, religious, educational, cultural, racial, collegiate, local, sports, and hundreds of others. The whole basis of successful propaganda is to have an objective and then to endeavor to arrive at it through an exact knowledge of the public and modifying circumstances to manipulate and sway that public.
Propaganda, since it goes to basic causes, is most effective through the manner of its introduction.The media by which leaders transmit their messages to the public include all the means by which people today transmit their ideas to one another. There is no means of human communication which may not also be a means of deliberate propaganda. The motion picture can standardize the ideas and habits of a nation. Because pictures are made to meet market demands, they reflect, emphasize and even exaggerate broad popular tendencies, rather than stimulate new ideas and opinions. There are multitudes of other avenues of approach to the public mind, some old, some new as television.
http://theformofmoney.blogharbor.com/blog/_archives/2008/1/9/3446147.html
Coincidentally enough, I JUST finished reading this very book ("Propaganda") by Bernays last night.
Makes me yearn for the simpler morality of our Founding Fathers. Oppressed? Kill the oppressors until they stop.
Excellent article. Hesitate to criticize so many of you but,
Instead of beating your chests about the Corporate addictions you avoid, why not make vows to avoid other addictions and possibly explain how to avoid the most difficult to avoid.
Interesting how all this social networking is, according to USA propaganda going to create a democratic revolution in Iran but in this article may not be healthy for USAans.
Actually we should avoid all the harmful Corporate addictions, but a genuine democratic use of social networking would seem to be one of the best tools for the change that is needed( disclosure me, email and radio only).
Good point, glenn.
For me, the distinction of whether a tool is useful or harmful is whether the person is using the tool, or the tool is using the person.
And I agree, the internet can be a good tool for change. However, we need to be aware of the trade-offs that we are ceding (tracking, marketing, etc.).
There is no easy answer to this. We just have to be aware...and smart. The thing I am re-training myself to do is to ask, whenever I want something, whether it is a desire I came to out of necessity or out of marketing (aka, mind control). I have 54 years of mind control to deprogram, so I am not being too hard on myself - but I do need to be mindful and persistent 'cause it's not easy.
The writer writes:
"In the same way consumers have become captive to the social networking industry, we have likewise become captive to the telecommunications, satellite television, pharmaceutical, fossil fuel, fast food and credit card industries...
"As long as we remain unwilling to stretch the boundaries of our comfort zones in the interest of the greater good, we will remain relatively powerless...
"We are here now – at this point in history. The battle lines between ‘We the People’ and the Corporate State have never been more clearly drawn. At this moment, progressives still have the opportunity to determine the outcome of that battle. But it is only a moment, and we will never get it back. No less than the future of our culture and our species will depend upon what we choose to do next. If we let the moment pass, that non-decision will become our collective destiny..."
i agree about the massive importance of this present moment as a "tipping point" determining the direction of the future...
But i also see the entire progression of human technological and social development from the discovery of agriculture as being inevitable outcomes of the discovery of agriculture...
On the one hand, humans at every moment of history make choices and decide the future path of society...
On the other hand, we are bound on the trajectory we chose 15,000 years ago...
Especially since electric and then electronic technology began transforming society - from telegraph through telephone to radio and television and then computers and microprocessors and the internet and the iPhone and wireless and Bluetooth and Google and Facebook and Twitter and...
i see us INEVITABLY continuing on this path, through ongoing research into direct interface between the optic nerve (line to the brain) and computer chips, until we are each QUITE LITERALLY nodes on a vast bio-technologic network...
AND, i see us as making choices: i quit watching television decades ago, i have never had a cell phone, i do not use Facebook or Twitter (nor do i fly or use automobiles, i bank at a Credit Union, i use cash for most transactions etc).
But my boycotts, resistance and feeble propaganda are drops in the ocean. Humanity continues on the technological trajectory begun far in the past. The writer's insistence that THIS is the key moment of final opportunity seems mistaken. On the one hand, EVERY moment is "the key moment" of opportunity for change. And at the same time, "the key moment" was LONG AGO.
Well said, webwalk.
But still, you know that doing what you believe in is the right thing to do.
And, doing what you believe to be right, in spite of the fact that you may be just a drop in the bucket, is the essence of integrity.
You have my respect.
Agreed, webwalk's is an excellent comment.
But (one more "but"):
Never before in the history of humankind did "engineering of consent" exist as a form of scientific enterprise, encompassing everything from neurology to mathematical modelling.