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Delusion and Denial Part 1: Work, Jobs, Careerism, Charity
By the way, if anyone here is in advertising or marketing – kill yourself.
---Bill Hicks
I am no aficionado of Superman, but I must admit, I am one of “Seinfeld.” With reference to the latter and by default, the former: Everything around me these days makes me feel like I am living in Bizarro World. Everything is exactly the opposite of what it should be. To quote fictional Jerry, “…In the backwards Bizarro World….Up is down. Down is up. He says hello when he leaves, goodbye when he arrives.” The only problem is that unlike in “Seinfeld” this Bizarro World is far from hilarious.
I find nothing much less bizarre than our notions of jobs and work. Because we westerners premise every aspect of our lives on money and the economy, we are all (but a very select elite few) wage slaves who have become totally and utterly dependent on working for an income in order to pay for our basic necessities of life. Part of the problem is that we have (purposefully) lost most of our previously held skills. Renaissance men and women and people who possess wide-ranging abilities are less valued than those who focus on a particular specialization. And of course, by specializing, we become more reliant upon the corporate-controlled structure of production to acquire our basic needs.
Yet, as we can readily know from non-western, indigenous cultures, these basic necessities are not predicated on money. In reality, human beings as a particular animal species do not need money to live. So, why do we rely on this monetary system, dominated by corporate capitalism? We can give excuses like this way of life enables technological, intellectual, and creative “progress” that could not be accomplished otherwise. That is a nice conceit. The premise is based on the false assumption that our modern way of life has led to more leisure time during which we do not have to work for basic necessities and can accomplish feats of intellectual, creative, and technological marvel. The truth is we have less leisure time than we used to, and most of it is spent observing and imbibing the spectacle of bread and circuses.
We can also pretend that we all have very valuable roles to play in our society, and that working hard in these roles is virtuous. But our jobs are no longer (if they ever were) for the benefit of us, our communities, our society; they are for the benefit of the corporate elite. We are merely their dutiful servants, and for the most part, the more success we have in our job, the more likely we are to be an unethical, immoral drone, generating widespread damage to our world.
In my youth, many children aspired to pretty altruistic professions like firefighting or teaching. They recognized, however unconsciously, the moral imperative to mix productivity with service. Yet, by the time we reached high school, pragmatism and careerism reigned supreme.
Most people do not bother with the “service” aspect of their careers. And who could blame them? From a very young age, what is presented as of principal concern is making a good living to provide for you and your family - or better yet, making lots and lots of money as fast as possible. How that is accomplished, and what harm may be done to other people, communities, or society in doing so is wholly and utterly neglected.
Of course, many people have fewer career choices than others. They have no opportunities in terms of attending college, let alone graduate/professional schools. In some cases, these marginalized peoples turn to crime because they see it as their only means of making that decent living. But in reality, the crimes of the marginalized members of society, such as the drug gangs in inner cities throughout the U.S., differ little from the crimes committed by people who work for multinational corporations in the U.S. The only subtle differences are that gangs kill far fewer people directly while corporations kill far more people indirectly, and that gang crimes are prosecutable while corporate crimes are completely legal. (David Simon beautifully, poignantly, and realistically portrays this parallel yet inequitable work structure in his magnificent series “The Wire.”) In both instances, concern about self trumps concern about community and others.
This self-concern is the primary objective given to work today. We are constantly reminded about the virtues and rewards of hard work. We work mainly to amass wealth for ourselves and our families – or, more likely nowadays, to try to maintain the basics needed to survive. However, not only is this self-concern an illusion promulgated by corporate interests to feed our egos and make us feel empowered as indentured servants, the value of work in and of itself is a fallacy. Jobs do not have inherent value; indeed many, if not most, do much more harm than good.
When I was an undergraduate at a Roman Catholic university, the Jesuit influence in our education held both academics and service in high esteem. Ironically, while the majority of undergraduates at my university were on pre-professional tracks – going into law, medicine, or business – no one thought to ponder the service of these professions. Careerism there, and on every college campus dominates. What service meant to our school was charity and volunteerism. But what good is charity when your career necessitates the need for the charity in the first place? This idea is rarely thought, much less spoken. Hard work, goal-setting, and dedication to a successful outcome is viewed as worthy of honor, even if that outcome is unethical, immoral, or of little to no qualitative value whatsoever.
To rationalize our self-absorption and selfishness, we engage in charity/volunteering. So what we are left with is one step up, two steps back for society. Charity merely signifies an excuse for injustice and demonstrates the failure of a society as a whole.
In graduate school, this careerism flourishes as well. Few conversations are had about the value and worthiness of research. What are more often discussed are the criteria necessary to gain prominent positions in the future. Time spent conducting studies of quality geared toward the betterment of our society or of our environment is secondary to time spent just getting a study – any study – done. Quantity of research and publication is far more important than quality, and success is measured in terms of how much is accomplished, not how valuable those accomplishments are.
In Hollywood, for actors and film/television crews, being booked on a job is seen as a success. Nearly everyone in these fields takes whatever jobs they land, as these jobs are scarce and competition is fierce. Until you have “made a name for yourself” or made certain connections, it is all the same to land work on a creatively innovative movie or an offensive reality show, a cerebral satirical program or a broad mindless comedy, a politically and culturally educational film or a porn flick. (The latter is sometimes the sole criterion for turning down a job.). Not too much is different in other fields, either.
While people fortunate enough to have college educations frown upon working at places like McDonalds because of the lack of prestige, non-living wage, repetitive mindless work, and lack of benefits, few mention problems with McDonalds’ direct connection to the proliferation of agribusiness and destruction of family farms, of factory farming and torture of livestock animals, or of environmentally destructive farming practices and commodification/monopolization of seeds.
The fact that corporate business models are revered as the lone models to emulate in each and every career field now only aggravates the problem with work. For example, when I (not proudly) worked for a short time at a large bookstore chain, I was paid barely over minimum wage and had no benefits. The company attempted to spew propaganda about being a work “family,” but did not even attempt to pay a livable salary. When their quarterly profits turned out to be less than anticipated, they fired a third to half the workforce and had the rest of us fill in - i.e., take on more responsibilities – for no more pay. Mind you, profits were garnered handily by the corporation, but the yield was not high enough.
Contrast that job with the time I spent working for a local sandwich shop. This business had limited hours, not because it wouldn’t have profited from being open longer, but because the owners preferred time spent at home with family to time spent making more money. They did not advertise and relied only on word of mouth, so that they could keep their business at a manageable scale to enable their modest but comfortable lifestyle. Despite the popularity of their business, they did not want unlimited growth and unlimited wealth for its own sake. They paid me almost twice the minimum wage to be a cashier, order assembler, and delivery person because they valued me as worker and did not feel the need to pocket the extra cash they could have taken for themselves. They even respected my vegetarianism and allowed me to stay clear of the meat in their sandwiches! Indeed, theirs was a vastly successful and useful business following an anti-corporate model, which exemplified how you can make a very good living, treat your workers well, and remain successful on your own terms rather than society’s.
But that sandwich business remains a huge anomaly. And though I could probably find small ethical quandaries in that job as well, they were minimal compared to most other jobs that currently exist.
The Hippocratic Oath taken by physicians, commonly translated as “do no harm,” rarely enters into the careerist picture for any workers – not even for doctors. There is a reason that we experience a decrease in deaths when hospitals temporarily shut down, and why environmental conditions tend to improve when the economy is bad. Our work – even in those professions that purport to be of service - is often harmful (at the very least) in the way it is currently conceived and conducted according to corporate principles.
The fact remains that we seldom question the corporate model of efficiency in work, in which the most amount for the least cost and/or least amount of time is the only value. Nor do we question the qualitative, ethical, or moral value of the work we do. Occasionally, people quit or refuse to participate when direct effects of harm are obvious in their job, but more often than not, our jobs produce tremendous amounts of indirect harm for which we remain complacent and complicit.
So, while unions currently remain one of the few means of protecting us workers from completely being enslaved, they are but an interim piece in the sustainability of working in general.
We need to rethink all the jobs we do, and look toward creating alternate paradigms of “making a living.” We should stop rationalizing our jobs with excuses that we are “just earning a living,” and “just paying the bills”; we should make the ethical and moral implications of our work of paramount importance. Furthermore, we need to reinvigorate local connections, renew sharing and bartering, and relearn basic skills to help us become less reliant on corporations to provide the necessities we need in life. We need vibrant local communities to help one another outside of the corporate structure, rather than compete for the scraps that corporations throw our way as if we are vermin.
And while we vigorously fight the austerity measures being forwarded by our governments - which do nothing more than redistribute wealth from the people with the least to the people with the most – we should reconsider voluntary austerity in our own personal lives.
My partner’s beloved uncle, may he rest in peace, was an icon to emulate in this regard. Not only was he a vibrant member of the community at large, giving and sharing with his neighbors, he was a college professor who voluntarily worked part-time to enable the hiring of another worthy employee. His austerity allowed for another’s prosperity.
Through a qualitative reassessment of our work values and our jobs, in addition to a reinvigoration of local communities and camaraderie, and a re-education in basic life skills, we may help allow for the prosperity of both people and the planet. Through the rationalization of careerism, corporate efficiency, and self-concern in work, we foster individualization in our society and ensure its inevitable collapse.
(Still to come … Delusion and Denial Part 2: Ecology)


206 Comments so far
Show AllMs Mattis says some noble things, but few people can emulate the professor she mentions at the end. It is one thing to say "I will buy fewer commodities at the big box stores, and I will volunteer at the local animal shelter." And lots of pepole in small towns do such things. But most people have mortgages, car loans, college tuition for their kids, etc. They cannot take her ideas to their logical conclusion and adopt the life style of the Amish, who work to raise their families, not to "make a living."
"They cannot take her ideas to their logical conclusion and adopt the life style of the Amish..."
Aside from the fact that that is not necessarily the "logical conclusion" of the writer's argument...
Take our current system: The privileged among us pay exorbitantly for education in hope we will "earn" more money; work for the highest money wages we can get; "fulfill" ourselves with consumer commodities paid for with the money we earn; distract ourselves with commodified "entertainment" and "news"... Take this to its "logical conclusion": We destroy the living Earth that sustains us; dissolve the social fabric that sustains us; and thrash about in wailing ignorance as our world disintegrates around us.
If her critique of wage slavery and one-dimensional money-based definitions of work, value and success "logically concludes" in your view with a pipe-dream return to an unfeasible non-consumer life, where does your critique begin and logically conclude?
""fulfill" ourselves with consumer commodities paid for with the money we earn; distract ourselves with commodified "entertainment" and "news"... Take this to its "logical conclusion": We destroy the living Earth that sustains us;"
That is her point, and mine when I mentioned the simpler life of the Amish. It is NOT reasonable to believe that a substantial number of people will want to do that, or that they could do it if they wanted to.
sheepherder wrote:
""fulfill" ourselves with consumer commodities paid for with the money we earn; distract ourselves with commodified "entertainment" and "news"... Take this to its "logical conclusion": We destroy the living Earth that sustains us;"
That is her point, and mine when I mentioned the simpler life of the Amish. It is NOT reasonable to believe that a substantial number of people will want to do that, or that they could do it if they wanted to.
* * * * *
My Reply:
Good point!
But unless we are able to act together in communities and between communities in order to take power away from large corporations, we will of course find ourselves in much more serious circumstances than we are now.
Who ever makes it that far, however far that far is, may find themselves living something like the Amish whether they want to or not.
Stephen Gaskin and the hippie folks who founded The Farm Community communes, first in Summertown, Tennessee in 1971 and then elsewhere; were described by the locals as technocolor Amish, undoubtedly because of their colorful clothes and possibly also because of their electricity powered music including both electric guitars and electric violin.
A number of years ago, 2004 I think, Stephen Gaskin sought the Green Party nomination for president.
Someone else was nominated that year: David Cobb for President and Pat LaMarche (whose articles sometimes appear on Common Dreams) for Vice President.
The Farm Community URL: www.thefarmcommunity.com/
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How do the French say it?
"Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose."
"The more things change, the more they stay the same."
maciek (in apparent reply to PuffinThrush) wrote:
I think we know all this already. Endlessly regurgitating the finer points of disaster capitalism is not really helping us to extricate ourselves from it. It might, in fact, be detrimental in as much as we are continuously distracted in our focus on the big Rhino in the room."
Capitalism, capitalists, capital: Banksters colluding with Versailles. Fix that, and the rest may start falling into place; ignore it, and we'll be on this elevator treadmill into debt peonage and ecological destruction in 'perpetuity'.
I suggest we start promoting, on every blog in the Tri-State, THIS for starters:
http://mosquitocloud.net/beat-the-banksters/
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My Comment:
Given that your posted comment bares no relevance whatsoever to my post, I assume that your replied to my post in error.
However, I would say that “Banksters colluding with Versailles” as you put it is a part of disaster capitalism and disaster capitalism is a part of “Banksters colluding with Versailles”, which doesn’t mean that they are the one and the same thing.
- -
You did get my attention, I guess for the first time, regarding your link though. I thought I had checked it out before, but apparently not.
Why don’t you post some detail?
Maybe you can attract more people’s interest that way.
Maybe not.
But at least they would be more likely to know something about it.
- - - - -
Article URL: http://mosquitocloud.net/beat-the-banksters/
Beat the Banksters — Be There or Be Eated!
On May 12
Make Big Banks And Millionaires Pay
The Big Banks crashed our economy, destroying jobs, foreclosing on millions of homes and wrecking cities and states budgets across the country. After trillions in taxpayer funded bailouts, Wall Street is making billions in profits and giving away record bonuses to CEOs. But our communities are still hurting. Here in New York City, tens of thousands have lost their homes and their jobs. Now, Billionaire Mayor Mike Bloomberg is proposing devastating budget cuts as the only solution to the economic crisis that Wall Street caused. Enough is Enough. On Thursday May 12, 2011 we’ll be bringing some of that spirit of Wisconsin to Wall Street when thousands of people, from all walks of life, converge in a unique and inspiring action in the heart of the financial world — Wall Street. Join us — because it's time to make the Big Banks and Millionaires pay!
ON MAY12
A growing coalition of community, labor, and progressive groups will kick off a week of events on May 9th, calling for Mayor Michael Bloomberg to tax Wall Street and millionaires to mitigate his proposed budget cuts, and culminating in a major mobilization in Lower Manhattan on Thursday, May 12.
Join in on May 12, which promises to be more than a typical “rally." It will be a day of diverse, and creative actions across the financial district.
Find out more at onmay12.org!
WHEN
May 12, 2011 at 11:00 AM
WHERE
Wall Street
Financial District
New York, NY 10005
Article URL: http://mosquitocloud.net/beat-the-banksters/
You are welcome!
Well some might reasonably disagree with your conclusion.
BUT, you did not address the other side of the choice. We are destroying the Earth and the society that sustain us. What is YOUR starting point, and what is YOUR end? What would you do, what would you have people do?
You sound thoroughly beaten and in despair.
Don't kill yourself or quit your day job based on this "Permanent Students" opinion It must be nice to have time to judge others sight unseen and write about it. For most of those though, our lives are go to work, take their shit, cash the check, rinse and repeat. The Amish way doesn't appeal to me, or odviously to most people as there are way less Amish than their the rest of us.
I live a low impact life with my 10yr old hybrid car, and my 30yr old motorcycle, everything doesn't have to be new, and we all use the same internetwork, to communicate. It may not be ideal but it's not that bad either, You do what you can.
RichardsCatz wrote:
"Don't kill yourself or quit your day job based on this "Permanent Students" opinion It must be nice to have time to judge others sight unseen and write about it."
- - - - -
Kristine Mattis' bio provided at end of article:
Kristine Mattis is PhD student in the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies at UW-Madison, and a member of the Teaching Assistants’ Association (TAA), the union of graduate employees. She was also previously a secondary school teacher and a member of the United Teachers of Los Angeles (UTLA).
* * * * *
My Reply:
RichardsCatz,
Thank you for the kind concern that some of the readers here might commit suicide or quit their day job solely based upon Kristine Mattis article. Either way, that would truly be a rash and in the former case of course a life ending act.
You probably noticed that Kristine Mattis is a relatively young woman who described in her article two of the jobs she has had in the past. Her bio at the end of the article also indicates that she was previously a secondary school teacher and is working as a teaching assistent while she earns her Ph D.
That doesn't sound at all like a permanent student to me.
Do you have a problem with education in general, or simply with people who work to obtain advanced degrees, or with young people expressing their opinions about how things work, or all of the above, or what?
We all can't help but notice that you have the time to post ad hominem attacks on the author. I think we can assume that you are not a student, if we don't know that already statement you have made here about yourself. But you do have the time, or so it seems.
Clearly her article offends you.
You also do not answer the other side of the question:
Continuing under THIS PRESENT system is itself a fantasy, it is destroying the living Earth that sustains us, and it cannot and will not continue, debate as we might the precise timing and trajectory of its end, and what might possibly follow.
i believe you will not attempt to give a serious answer, because you are steeped in this fantasy, and you refuse to accept the plain evidence before you that the living systems of the Earth are already seriously destabilized by our human systems.
As long-time CD posters know, your loyalties lie in subservience to authority. Attempting to have a productive challenging interaction with you is itself a game of fantasy. But nevertheless, you-who-have-been-banned-repeatedly under numerous names for precisely such bull-headed intransigence: what is YOUR "logical conclusion"? Pay whatever the market rate is for an "education" so you can scrap for the highest income achievable without challenging the ecological and social destruction inherent in the system? Is this our path to the future?
(PS: Not to be a complete ass, but since you spend so much of your time writing, and this has been pointed out to you more than once here, you might study the correct uses of the apostrophe. Critique's? Fantasy's?)
"Lastly, if you check her resume you will see she has never been a member of the actual working society that she critique's."
-- It is apparent that you are using the 'attack the messenger ploy' to undermine the message in this article. Why are you doing this?
You also clearly have a problem with your writing skills, so I have to wonder if you have a problem with your reading skills too. Did you not notice when she wrote about her actual working experience?
Mattis stated: "For example, when I (not proudly) worked for a short time at a large bookstore chain, I was paid barely over minimum wage and had no benefits." --- AND--- "Contrast that job with the time I spent working for a local sandwich shop."
likeitornot wrote:
"Sheepherder is correct. "They cannot take her ideas to their logical conclusion and adopt the life style of the Amish, who work to raise their families, not to "make a living." The idea of returning to the land or other Luddite fantasy's are just that, a fantasy."
* * * * *
My Reply:
Actually, quite a few sixties hippies did just that. They chose to return to the land and many of them chose to live off the grid (i.e. the electric power grid) and still are living off the grid. Among those who chose to live off the grid were the founders of Home Power Magazine, Richard and Karen Perez. Hippie folks who chose to live off the grid, also chose to live low consumption live styles and were leaders in the use and development of alternative renewable energy. You can call them Luddites if you like.
- - - - -
Home Power Magazine
About
Twenty years ago, solar, wind, and hydro-electric technologies made it possible for people to live beyond the reach of the utility grid and harvest renewable energy to power both their homes and lives. With this time-tested history in hand, over the last decade, renewable energy has come to town. Today, on-grid solar-electric and solar hot water systems are becoming a common sight in suburban and urban locations across the country. And each of these systems is an integral part of a movement that is fundamentally reframing the future of energy.
When Richard and Karen Perez launched Home Power in 1987, their mission was to change the way people generate and use energy, one rooftop at a time. And for two decades, we’ve continued to broadcast this message, loud and clear. Over the years, Home Power has become the editorial venue for homeowners, business owners, and renewable energy professionals to exchange equipment, design, installation, and system performance experiences. This information exchange has helped create an industry with not only cutting-edge technology, but perhaps more importantly, a common goal: reducing the use of polluting fossil fuels and replacing this generation capacity with the infinite supplies of renewable energy that surround us.
Over the last 20 years, we’ve published more than 120 issues of Home Power. Each issue contains the most comprehensive, technical coverage of solar, wind, and microhydro electricity, energy efficiency, solar hot water systems, space heating and cooling, energy-efficient building materials and home design, and clean transportation options. We’re here to help you make informed, fiscally sound decisions about your energy generation and use, so you too can experience the wide range of benefits that renewable energy has to offer us, individually and collectively.
Thank you for the beautiful comment.
Solar and low electric use is going mainstream. Thank you all for keeping that movement alive.
We need the solar plug in electric cars right now, sold with the solar or wind charge station for those farflung & suburban folks who have garages.
That's an American dream, stillborn in 1980. "Tear down the Sun", Raygun
But maybe a phoenix is stirring. Plenty of motorheads would like a try!
I'd rather see practical solar power satillites in orbit, both sending power by beam and also along carbon fibre teathers that can also be used to get people and machines into space where manufacturing can be done without affecting the planet at all, Eventually both power and resources can both be brought from space to serve the need of the people so there'll be less need to kill each other just to have a comfortable life.
Ground based solar will never produce the energy needed for our species to truly be free. And it clutters up the ground, we could build a ring of solar collecters 1000 miles wide around the planet at 23,000 miles supplying all the energy we could ever use, an it would hardly be noticible in the sky.
>^^<
Personally, I have more confidence in a more "down to earth" approach that includes various kinds of ground based solar, geothermal, conservation, innovation in meeting needs more flexibly and efficiently, and significant changes in lifestyle.
In my view, your comment illustrates an unfortunate and cruel indoctrination we've had as Americans. The 'logical conclusion' isn't an Amish lifestyle. It's a community lifestyle. Its bottom line is about 'us'-- instead of 'I'. This is the author's main point.
Society is about 'us' and 'we' -- as opposed to a self-centered, fear-based, fight-or-flight survival mode that drives the rugged individualist. Rugged individualism was fine for the pioneers but should have died with them, too. It is not a foundation for society.
Seen properly, money is one of many tools used to achieve a larger objective. Ideally, this larger objective--which is expressed in wildly diverse ways and imaginative styles--would be the relief of suffering and more than that: It would be civil society and the blossoming of our full human potential. Can we imagine where we'd be today if oil company CEOs hadn't thwarted President Carter's full-throttle approach to visionary energy solutions instead of oil dependency?
Someone said that we have two basic choices: Love--or fear. Only one of these choices brings relief and lasting happiness. If the accumulation of 'more' were the answer, Americans would be extremely happy people. Most Americans, including me, have had far more than we've needed, more of everything. Even though we have tough times and there's tragic suffering, the majority of the world's population has been living in desperate poverty on $2.00 a day. We Americans have had far more luxuries, blessings and indulgences than we've been aware of or grateful for.
American communities have been blown apart by the car, by economic globalization, by thoughtless development, by the capitalists' misguided notion of needless growth for growths' sake, by lies, fears, comparisons and competitions we've been taught to believe. Note that corporate-owned news doesn't report anything about the consequences of the consumer culture which the capitalists have fueled--as if choices had no consequences. This is delusionary. We don't 'get away with' anything. It's to us to make better choices which have better consequences. 'More' has been devastating to the planet, to us, to future generations. If unregulated capitalism were a wholesome system--which it is not--CEO's and politicians wouldn't have a need to deceive or lie. They would not be trying to 'get away with' something.
In my view, the author is suggesting that we return to being the caring social creatures we truly are by working cooperatively to support and strengthen our local communities and the individuals and families who live and work in them.
My guess is that the bigger question is: Who or what are we working FOR? A machine can make money. Money makes a fine slave but cruel master.
As to community, "I am somehow less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein's brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops." Stephen Jay Gould
Well said barredowl!
BARRED OW: Most excellent post.
A bit of personal anecdotal info in support of the writer's well laid-out thesis. When I was a young woman, The State University of New York (at Albany) was known as a "Teacher's College." As the l980's came into play with the Reagan Doctrine the unspoken cultural Logos of the land, it morphed into becoming a Business College. More and more people migrated away from "service" jobs into those that promised the big bucks. "Wall Street: Here we come!" style.
Recently CD featured at article that cited the numbers of Ivy League School students gravitating towards that wonder of wonders that uniquely does NOTHING positive in any way, shape, or form... Hedge Funds!
With media pumping out images of the so-called "Good Life," and churches equating prosperity with God's Will, and rabid capitalism assisted by heavily funded think tanks which have not only gained control of most mainstream media, but learned how to CONTROL and FRAME The Conversation... Mammon has trumped all other concerns in our land. A number of agencies have led to this spiritually-bankrupt outcome.
Working against this Banquet of Greed is Nature, the end of oil, the cost of conflicts in the Middle East (and spreading), and basic karmic blowback. One way or another people WILL return to barter, societies or communities based upon sharing, and an ethos that is far more holistic than "he with the gold gets to make the rules." That outcome is largely inevitable; however the process of its unfolding is based on numerous variables. We must have all signed up (pre-birth) to "Live in Interesting Times."
Some local pals and I are starting an a-typical book discussion group about the book, "Get Up Stand Up" by Bruce Levine, a clinical psychologist. Levine has a YouTube video about it, and David Swanson wrote a good editorial about it recently. Please check out this book, see what you think about it. The hope is that it will be a terrific community-organizing tool.
We've been summoned & assembled for the graduation ceremonies; the class of 2012 (an industrial revolution had to be created JUST TO ACCOMODATE the large graduation class).
I've read that the grand Empress herself (lady GAIA) is getting an upgrade (ie. from elementary school-to-high school), so subsequently her base-line frequency is being increased. Most of us will be off to other realms. Some will stay on to carry on (probably get to work closely with the Faerie race now).BTW the real reason democratic republicans do not bow to kings & queens(pretenders one-and-all) is we aleady have a Lady Empress, and She's always in touch with every atom of Her Realm.
You attended spaceship sunya?
Never heard of it. Sounds like some opportunistic scam; but that's not really fair as I don't know who/what they are. Just reading (words & signs). One has to be blind not to see it; but that does describe most of humanity. Do you think we board spaceships when we die? That's a new one to me too.
I was referring to SUNY (referenced in SR's comment )at Albany and it's spaceship like architecture.
barredowl wrote:
"In my view, your comment illustrates an unfortunate and cruel indoctrination we've had as Americans. The 'logical conclusion' isn't an Amish lifestyle. It's a community lifestyle. Its bottom line is about 'us'-- instead of 'I'. This is the author's main point.
Society is about 'us' and 'we' -- as opposed to a self-centered, fear-based, fight-or-flight survival mode that drives the rugged individualist. Rugged individualism was fine for the pioneers but should have died with them, too. It is not a foundation for society."
* * * * *
My Comment:
Sometime in the 1980s Lewis Lapham,then the editor of Harper's Magazine, wrote a wonderful essay debunking the myth of rugged American individualism.
Sure, there were people like Jedediah Smith: "hunter, trapper, fur trader, trailblazer, author, cartographer, and explorer of the Rocky Mountains, the American West Coast and the Southwest during the 19th century."
Wikipedia URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jedediah_Smith
And living on the frontier wasn't easy. Life could be hard. People needed to be tough.
But Lapham pointed out that it wasn't rugged individual that enabled people to survive, but their ability to work together as a community or as neighbors when necessary that was key to their survival.
Seems to me that Frenchman Alexis de Tocqueville made similar observations about people living in the United States in his work "Democracy In America" published in 1835.
Wikipedia URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexis_de_Tocqueville
Small towns?
Actually, I find that people in small towns are even more dependent on big-box stores - the Wal-mart, Lowes, or Kroger (with absolutely no local produce) out on the 4-lane strip beyond the vacant center of town.
The greatest amount of community engagement I've experienced is in urban neighborhoods.
And the alienation of the employment and debt driven treadmill that you describe is exactly the sort of thing the author is calling for us to reconsider - even as we must participate to some small extent under this awful system to survive.
That depends, of course, on how small the town is and how sparsely populated the region is where the small town is.
If you live in Derby Line, VT which is right on the U.S - Canada border with Quebec for instance, then the nearest big box stores are in Littleton, NH some 70 miles and at least a good hour away. People living in the Northeast Kingdom region of Vermont, which is where Derby Line is, do travel to Littleton to shop, but I would not describe them as dependent on the big-box stores there.
Big cities can be nice. There are several I like a lot. There is one in particular I hope to return to someday to live.
I guess you haven't been to all of the small towns in America. The small town I live in has a co-op garden, a co-op farm, a family owned cattle ranch, a locally owned natural foods store, and a small goat farm. Every restaurant (except Subway) is owned by locals... a few restaurants get their produce from the local co-op garden, goat farm and cattle ranch.
City Market (Krogers) is the only big box store in my small town, and Walmart is located about 30 miles south in another small town. And, yes... they are both pretty busy places. But, each year the small local producers of food in our community continue to grow (in ALL senses of the word).
Check out Kropotkin's "Mutual Aid", circa about 1914. This work was the impetus for many mutual aid societies and granges.
Dmadrone,
Thanks for the tip.
The complete text of Peter Kropotkin's "Mutual Aid" is available on the web from Anarchy Archives. "Mutual Aid" apparently was published in 1902.
Kropotkin's Mutual Aid URL: http://dwardmac.pitzer.edu/Anarchist_Archives/kropotkin/mutaidcontents.html
"Mutual Aid: A Factor in Evolution", as the subtitle suggests, paints with a pretty broad brush.
Check out Kropotkin's "The Conquest of Bread" for a vision of mutual aid and co-operation supporting a "Revolutionary city".
And for -now largely outdated- specifics on co-operative production potentials and a sketch of a new way of "working" check out his "Fields, Factories, and Workshops: Or Industry Combined with Agriculture and Brain Work with Manual Work".
-matti.
Yes, I was going to mention anarchists and anarchism as one more thing I came to know when I moved to the city.
Excerpt: Delusion and Denial Part 1: Work, Jobs, Careerism, Charity by Kristine Mattis, May 1, 2011.
“Furthermore, we need to reinvigorate local connections, renew sharing and bartering, and relearn basic skills to help us become less reliant on corporations to provide the necessities we need in life. We need vibrant local communities to help one another outside of the corporate structure, rather than compete for the scraps that corporations throw our way as if we are vermin.”
- - - - -
Excerpt from the Ten Key Values of the Green Party of the United States.
Article URL: www.gp.org/tenkey.shtml
“5. DECENTRALIZATION
Centralization of wealth and power contributes to social and economic injustice, environmental destruction, and militarization. Therefore, we support a restructuring of social, political and economic institutions away from a system which is controlled by and mostly benefits the powerful few, to a democratic, less bureaucratic system. Decision-making should, as much as possible, remain at the individual and local level, while assuring that civil rights are protected for all citizens.
6. COMMUNITY-BASED ECONOMICS AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE
We recognize it is essential to create a vibrant and sustainable economic system, one that can create jobs and provide a decent standard of living for all people while maintaining a healthy ecological balance. A successful economic system will offer meaningful work with dignity, while paying a “living wage” which reflects the real value of a person’s work.”
* * * * *
The following three comments were originally posted under the article “The New Corporate World Order” by Robert Scheer, TruthDig.com, April 20, 2011.
Article URL: www.commondreams.org/view/2011/04/20
- - - - -
SteveS wrote:
"What we progressives need to do is come up with alternative ways to do business without having to enrich corporations. A list of mortgage companies that aren't part of the half dozen companies at the top. Alternatives to Koch Industries products, a move to move our money from big banks to local credit unions, etc.
This list needs to be localized per region, local clothing makers, local farmers, etc."
- - - - -
ezeflyer (in reply to SteveS) wrote:
“Agreed”
* * * * *
My Comment:
SteveS and ezeflyer,
Maybe you two should consider the idea of "alternative currencies" as a means of localizing your own and your community's economic activity.
Years ago there was an "alternative currency" in Great Barrington, MA which was based upon a basket of local commodities if I remember correctly. But I don't think it has existed since the 1980s.
There are other ways in which "alternative currencies" have been implemented.
The two "alternative currency" systems that come to mind are Ithaca Hours (Ithaca, NY) and the LETSystems (originally implemented on Vancouver Island, BC)
* * * * *
Ithaca Hours:
If you go to the Ithaca Hours website you will find a description how Ithaca Hours works as well as other information including a link (click "other hours") to a list of other places in the United States and Canada that have their own versions of Ithaca Hours. For what it is worth many of these places are "college towns."
Ithaca Hours URL: www.ithacahours.com/
* * * * *
LETSystems:
Excerpt from Wikipedia:
"Michael Linton originated the term 'Local Exchange Trading System' in 1983 and for a time ran the Comox Valley LETSystems in Courtenay, British Columbia. The system he designed was intended as an adjunct to the national currency, rather than a replacement for it, although [supposedly] there are examples of individuals who have managed to replace their use of national currency through inventive usage of LETS."
Wikipedia URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Local_Exchange_Trading_Systems
- - - - -
Excerpt from LETSystems home page.
"Theory and overview
The LETSystem Design Manual
A comprehensive manual detailing all aspects of LETSystem design and development, by Michael Linton and Angus Soutar.
LETSystems - FAQs
Frequently asked questions answered.
LETSystems - new money
An overview of LETSystems, local currencies and the future of money by Michael Linton, designer of the LETSystem.
---
Practice
LETSgo - community way
Current LETSystem development materials.
Materials for downloading
Tools for LETSystem builders - software, administration and user materials."
LETSystem URL: www.gmlets.u-net.com/
The Ten Key Values of the Green Party of the United States.
Article URL: www.gp.org/tenkey.shtml
1. GRASSROOTS DEMOCRACY
Every human being deserves a say in the decisions that affect their lives and not be subject to the will of another. Therefore, we will work to increase public participation at every level of government and to ensure that our public representatives are fully accountable to the people who elect them. We will also work to create new types of political organizations which expand the process of participatory democracy by directly including citizens in the decision-making process.
2. SOCIAL JUSTICE AND EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
All persons should have the rights and opportunity to benefit equally from the resources afforded us by society and the environment. We must consciously confront in ourselves, our organizations, and society at large, barriers such as racism and class oppression, sexism and homophobia, ageism and disability, which act to deny fair treatment and equal justice under the law.
3. ECOLOGICAL WISDOM
Human societies must operate with the understanding that we are part of nature, not separate from nature. We must maintain an ecological balance and live within the ecological and resource limits of our communities and our planet. We support a sustainable society which utilizes resources in such a way that future generations will benefit and not suffer from the practices of our generation. To this end we must practice agriculture which replenishes the soil; move to an energy efficient economy; and live in ways that respect the integrity of natural systems.
4. NON-VIOLENCE
It is essential that we develop effective alternatives to society’s current patterns of violence. We will work to demilitarize, and eliminate weapons of mass destruction, without being naive about the intentions of other governments. We recognize the need for self-defense and the defense of others who are in helpless situations. We promote non-violent methods to oppose practices and policies with which we disagree, and will guide our actions toward lasting personal, community and global peace.
5. DECENTRALIZATION
Centralization of wealth and power contributes to social and economic injustice, environmental destruction, and militarization. Therefore, we support a restructuring of social, political and economic institutions away from a system which is controlled by and mostly benefits the powerful few, to a democratic, less bureaucratic system. Decision-making should, as much as possible, remain at the individual and local level, while assuring that civil rights are protected for all citizens.
6. COMMUNITY-BASED ECONOMICS AND ECONOMIC JUSTICE
We recognize it is essential to create a vibrant and sustainable economic system, one that can create jobs and provide a decent standard of living for all people while maintaining a healthy ecological balance. A successful economic system will offer meaningful work with dignity, while paying a “living wage” which reflects the real value of a person’s work.
Local communities must look to economic development that assures protection of the environment and workers’ rights; broad citizen participation in planning; and enhancement of our “quality of life.” We support independently owned and operated companies which are socially responsible, as well as co-operatives and public enterprises that distribute resources and control to more people through democratic participation.
7. FEMINISM AND GENDER EQUITY
We have inherited a social system based on male domination of politics and economics. We call for the replacement of the cultural ethics of domination and control with more cooperative ways of interacting that respect differences of opinion and gender. Human values such as equity between the sexes, interpersonal responsibility, and honesty must be developed with moral conscience. We should remember that the process that determines our decisions and actions is just as important as achieving the outcome we want.
8. RESPECT FOR DIVERSITY
We believe it is important to value cultural, ethnic, racial, sexual, religious and spiritual diversity, and to promote the development of respectful relationships across these lines.
We believe that the many diverse elements of society should be reflected in our organizations and decision-making bodies, and we support the leadership of people who have been traditionally closed out of leadership roles. We acknowledge and encourage respect for other life forms than our own and the preservation of biodiversity.
9. PERSONAL AND GLOBAL RESPONSIBILITY
We encourage individuals to act to improve their personal well-being and, at the same time, to enhance ecological balance and social harmony. We seek to join with people and organizations around the world to foster peace, economic justice, and the health of the planet.
10. FUTURE FOCUS AND SUSTAINABILITY
Our actions and policies should be motivated by long-term goals. We seek to protect valuable natural resources, safely disposing of or “unmaking” all waste we create, while developing a sustainable economics that does not depend on continual expansion for survival. We must counterbalance the drive for short-term profits by assuring that economic development, new technologies, and fiscal policies are responsible to future generations who will inherit the results of our actions.
-
Ten Key Values from other state and local Greens.
There is no authoritative version of the Ten Key Values of the Greens. The Ten Key Values are guiding principles that are adapted and defined to fit each state and local chapter.
* * * * *
My Comment:
Regarding differences in The Ten Key Values adopted by state parties and local chapters:
There are, of course, far more similarities than differences amongst The Ten Key Values adopted by the national, state, and local chapter organizations that make up the Green Party. The differences are for the most part more descriptive and substantive.
We agree.
I suggest a new Constitutional Convention movement.
Peaceful and Legal Revolution built into the system for just such times.
The struggle would be fought at the State level, where the People are not as overwhelmed by the Money-Boys as they are in D.C.
Think about it. ;)
-matti.
Iceland has shown the way!
In a US capitalist democracy, one slim hope is to vote out the government 3 times.
First the corrupt ruling party must be defeated by elections
Then the corrupt "reformers" waiting in the wings must be overthrown/defeated in elections
Then the corrupt revolutionaries must be overthrown
revolution
goes worldwide
to the people
The recent Conventions and new Constitutions in South America would appear to contradict your assertion that such a Convention would be surely subverted.
I'm not into killing Capitalism, actually.
I don't hold with the notion that mentalities from competition will get us to a place of co-operation.
We don't need to kill the Wall Street Squid, we just need to find adaptations that will keep us free of its tentacles. Denied enough sustenance, the Squid will also either adapt or die.
Money and capital-generation may well play a key role in starting a transition to a co-operative society, after all.
-matti.
Seriously?
Does "walking dead" imply that my death is immanent?
Sort of like a threat?
Well, I guess I'm not TOO bummed out. ;)
Do drop me a line and let me know how the Social Revolution goes though, won't you? I'm sure that after 150 years of failure it will finally succeed, here and now.
-matti.
Do I truly hold myself in "high" esteem?
Or is it rather that I esteem my own ideas as highly as you esteem yours, and that bothers you because you believe yours to be higher?
Keep trying to magically force failed ideologies on everybody, that will surely lead to something as well.
I mean, you've obviously got it MADE in the charm department, so things should all fall into place for you.
Good Luck!
And when you have smashed the Wall Street Squid with the Glorious Whale-Tail of Revolution and find yourself in need of some vittles and socks, please look us up again and see what we've been doing. :)
-matti.
"please look us up again and see what we've been doing. :)"
hahaha
did yur slip slip?
RU Wall Street Matti?
Let me look u up
Oops.
You said "the Wall Street Squid" is "we." That is a pretty clear admission, if inadvertent, as to exactly where you are going with all of this.
So you don't think we can get along without you - you and the rest of the investment crowd, the "we" to which you so clearly are referring - eh? Otherwise, no food or clothing for us? Wow.
Here you are aggressively promoting white supremacy and Reganomics - albeit it in a highly deceptive and progressive-y sounding way - yet you accuse others of "forc(ing) failed ideologies on everybody?" Again, wow.
How did you guess my racist attitudes just from my discussion of mutual aid?!?
Truly you are perceptive!
Why it was only yesterday that I was saying to my white friends at our meeting of the Club for White People Who Don't Want to be Around Non-Whites how funny I thought it was that no one ever connected my discussion of co-operation without recourse to -illegal- Revolution to my obvious racism!
Got me!
I would say that Venezuela represents just the sort of thing I am talking about:
They had a Constitutional Convention and changed things. Then the PSUV and Chavez wanted to take the Constitution much further toward Socialism. They failed. Now they work to do so within the current system.
Capitalism was NOT killed in Venezuela.
Alternatives to Capitalism are being given real opportunity to grow there.
Venezuela backs up my position not the other fellow's.
Thanks.
-matti.
1. That's an outright LIE and I wonder if you should be losing another CD account over it? Nasty, nasty thing to do, just label someone "racist" and then pretend they have made "hatefully racist comments in the past". Did I? PROVE IT YOU LIAR!
2. How was my history of Venezuela inaccurate? I admit that I only get my info from sites such as Venezuelanalysis.com as opposed to firsthand, but does that mean citing their version of events is "flapping (my) ignorance around"?
Are you really gonna ignore me?
It would really be a great favor, thanks!
-matti.
I'm not sure you understand how ignoring someone works? ;)
I'll let the outright "racist" and "troll" labels pass, AND the insinuation that I am making threats, for now.
'Cause I'm nice.
But you really aren't allowed to do such things in this forum.
-matti.
Ha ha!
See the way ignoring someone USUALLY works is that one doesn't read their posts and doesn't respond to their posts...
But I like your way too. ;)
readbetweenthelines matti
You have made racist comments right here on this thread. That is the "nasty thing to do," not someone calling you on them. I would be happy to explain to you exactly how your comments were racist. It is racist to try to suppress discussion about racism by turning it into a charade of being personally hurt and offended - "how dare you call me a racist!!" - when your remarks are challenged and countered, ala the white supremacists and extreme right wingers with their "reverse racism" nonsense that claims that the "charge of being a racist" is somehow the real problem and not racism itself.
Is that sufficient proof for you that you are in fact making racist comments? This post of yours that I am responding to is racist. I would be happy to go into this in more depth and length.
You have attacked and labeled someone yourself - as a "liar." I do not believe you can support and defend that remark.
Sure it does.
1. The coup FAILED.
2. The successful Revolution was a Peaceful Legal one employing a Constitutional Convention power copied from our own.
3. Capitalists still exist in Venezuela.
4. The focus there is on providing growing space for alternatives to Capitalism, not killing Capitalism, despite the rhetoric of Chavez.
So the Venezuelan example backs me and refutes you on at least four key points, sport, your response?
I must have missed out on the blissful feeding during all the recessions, outsourcing, and freezing of real wages during the last 40 years or so, shame.
Last, I don't know what "little gatekeeper plan" you are referring to?
-matti.
Still not willing to actually absorb my points, eh?
The coup FAILED.
Legal Revolution through a Convention worked.
It was Chavez both times.
The coup Chavez did not create the candidate Chavez, he nearly killed him!
The last 40 years have not been a period of "blissfully feeding" off the exploited of other countries for many, many USAns. Even those that were well fed by it weren't always "blissful". The Squid fed well, but many of us did not, that is my point.
Whenever you want to stop the insults, I'd welcome it! :)
-matti.
You think wrong then smart-guy!
Never voted for the Blue or Red Parties in my life. :)
1. I was following Kropotkin's own lead. He assumes the Revolution in "The Conquest of Bread" and gets down to the practical matters of meeting needs. You seem unfamiliar with the book?
2. What's the penalty for "pooh-poohing social revolution"? Do I get kicked out of the Faculty Leftist Club? Shame that.
3. Why kill what you can just do without?
4. Is there a BRAVE way to post comments on the Internets?
5. My bet-hedging is always QUITE inspired, I assure you. ;) You just haven't seen any of it here, today. Instead you have seen me merely attempting to reference Kropotkin in discussing mutual aid and co-operation.
Have a nice day,
-matti.