Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Public House › I admit it. I’ve become a cynic
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May 17, 2020 at 5:10 pm #115035waterfieldParticipant
There are two qualities I detest in people. Cynicism and a sense of being elite. I now have both.
We are at a figurative civil war the only difference being we are not-as yet-shooting guns at our enemies. Donald Trump is not the problem. There will always be someone like him who appeals to a populist movement like the tea party. In the past we’ve been able to circumvent the issue (i.e. Ross Perot, etc)So how did we get to where we are now? At its core is this: Intelligent people have slowed down and stopped having kids. Ignorant people have increased their birth rates.
I don’t see a way out.
May 17, 2020 at 6:38 pm #115037nittany ramModeratorI’m sure many people see me as a cynic because of my bleak outlook about the future, but I think I’m just being realistic. There was a recent study that showed that no matter what steps individual people take, it won’t halt climate change. We, as individual citizens, can do nothing about it. It’s like trying to bail out the Atlantic with a bucket. The climate crisis is a product of our corporate system, and it requires a reform of that system to halt it. It’s funny how the system has always put the onus on individual people to change their habits to stop climate change, but it’s a system issue. Only the corporatocracy can change it.
Thus my cynical (realistic) outlook.
May 17, 2020 at 10:41 pm #115046waterfieldParticipantI’m sure many people see me as a cynic because of my bleak outlook about the future, but I think I’m just being realistic. There was a recent study that showed that no matter what steps individual people take, it won’t halt climate change. We, as individual citizens, can do nothing about it. It’s like trying to bail out the Atlantic with a bucket. The climate crisis is a product of our corporate system, and it requires a reform of that system to halt it. It’s funny how the system has always put the onus on individual people to change their habits to stop climate change, but it’s a system issue. Only the corporatocracy can change it.
Thus my cynical (realistic) outlook.
Your just touching on the issue. In order for corporatocracy to change its contribution to climate change we need new people in office to make changes to corporate law along with an entire systematic change in our governing policies-whether that be a break in our capitalistic economic system or whatever. But that won’t happen until an intelligent electorate marches to the polls and votes. My point is I don’t see enough intelligent voters to overcome the ignorant. So I ask myself how did so many people become ignorant. I think the answer is above.
May 18, 2020 at 12:00 am #115049ZooeyModeratorWelcome to the Slough of Despair.
Bash on, regardless.
May 18, 2020 at 7:24 am #115051wvParticipantThere are two qualities I detest in people. Cynicism and a sense of being elite. I now have both.
We are at a figurative civil war the only difference being we are not-as yet-shooting guns at our enemies. Donald Trump is not the problem. There will always be someone like him who appeals to a populist movement like the tea party. In the past we’ve been able to circumvent the issue (i.e. Ross Perot, etc)So how did we get to where we are now? At its core is this: Intelligent people have slowed down and stopped having kids. Ignorant people have increased their birth rates.
I don’t see a way out.
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Well, i dont think you are cynical enough.
Could ‘selfishnness’ be as big a problem as ‘ignorance’?
What if one huge bloc is mainly ‘ignorant’ and the other is mainly ‘selfish’ ?And yes, ‘How did it get this way’ is always a good question. It didnt just happen over night.
w
vMay 18, 2020 at 9:12 am #115057wvParticipantPink Floyd’s Roger Waters has his own take on the ‘situation’ fwiw:
May 18, 2020 at 9:51 am #115059CalParticipantThe elitism you complain about is easy to fix. A good starting point is reading, asking questions, and fighting against unsatisfactory conclusions.
I don’t know if you’re joking or serious with this quotation: “At its core is this: Intelligent people have slowed down and stopped having kids. Ignorant people have increased their birth rates.”
But the “core problem” is a lot more than ignorance. A lot of the support for Trump is motivated by anger and fear. Part of that anger and fear is (rightfully directed, IMO) at a stupid and corrupt Democratic party that refuses to acknowledge its deep flaws.
A good starting point for moving this country forward is understanding some of the problems that have created Trump instead of just asserting that it’s ignorance.
Here’s a couple of interesting passages about the “great” Democratic savior and president Bill Clinton from Wendell Berry.
“For the past six decades, except for remnants of the New Deal, the government has done nothing for farmers except to quiet them down by subsidizing uncontrolled production, which really is worse than nothing. But this ‘policy,’ in the minds of the dominant politicians, signified that they were ‘doing something for agriculture’ and so relieved them of thinking or knowing about agriculture’s actual requirements. For example, the Democratic platform preceding President Clinton’s first term initially contained no agricultural plank. My brother, John M. Berry, Jr., who was on the platform committee, was dismayed by this innovation, and he said so. He was then told that a plank was being drafted. when he saw the result, he laughed.”
“In 1995 President Clinton spoke to an audience of farmers and farm leaders in Billings, Montana. He acknowledged that the farm population by then was ‘dramatically lower…than it was a generation ago.’ But, he said, ‘that was inevitable because of the increasing productivity of agriculture.’ Nevertheless, he wanted to save the family farm, which he held to be ‘alive and well’ in Montana. He believed we had ‘bottomed out in the shrinking of the farm sector.’ He said he wanted to help young farmers. he spoke of the need to make American agriculture ‘competitive with people around the world.’ And so on.
He could not have meant what he said, because he was speaking without benefit of thought. And why should he have thought when he was not expected to do so? He was speaking forty or fifty years after politicians and their consulting experts had abandoned any effort to think about agriculture. ‘Inevitable’ is a word much favored by people in positions of authority who do not wish to think about problems. When and why did Mr. Clinton in 1995 think that the inevitable ‘shrinking of the farm sector’ had ceased? in fact, ‘the farm sector’ had not bottomed out in 1995; there is no good reason to think that it has bottomed out, at less than 1 percent of the population, in 2016. And how could he have helped young farmers except by giving them the protections against the free market that my brother had recommended three years before? Mr. Clinton was talking nonsense in 1995 because he did not have, and could not have had from his advisers, the means to think about what he thought he was talking about. The means of actual thought about the use and care of the land had been intentionally discounted and forgotten by people such as themselves.”
May 18, 2020 at 2:37 pm #115071wvParticipant…Part of that anger and fear is (rightfully directed, IMO)
at a stupid and corrupt- Democratic party
that refuses to acknowledge its deep flaws.
A good starting point for moving this country forward is understanding some of the problems that have created Trump instead of just asserting that it’s ignorance.”
==========================
Indeed.
We have a capitalist education/propaganda/economic system that did indeed dum down (in various ways) a huge bloc of voters.
And we have a corporate-capitalist-system that created a very selfish professional class (Dems) who dont give a F*** about the ignorant-deplorables.
Its a recipe for Bio-sphere-icide.
w
vMay 19, 2020 at 1:33 pm #115089znModeratorMay 19, 2020 at 2:38 pm #115090waterfieldParticipantThe fact that most people don’t have the slightest idea of how a bill gets passed in congress has nothing to do with Democrats or Corporations. I’s ignorance. The fact that more than half our population refuses to wear masks has nothing to do with democrats or corporations. Its pure selfishness and a lack of care for others. The fact that a huge part of our society still does not believe in man made climate change has nothing to do with the Democratic party or corporations. Its ignorance. The fact that there exists an ever increasing number of people who refuse to vaccinate their children has nothing to do with the Democratic party or corporations. Its ignorance.
At some point we have to stop deflecting our own ignorance by blaming the big targets and look to ourselves and ask -how did we become so ignorant. Otherwise we are trapped into being helpless victims of overpowering forces.
May 19, 2020 at 4:26 pm #115091wvParticipantThe fact that most people don’t have the slightest idea of how a bill gets passed in congress has nothing to do with Democrats or Corporations. I’s ignorance. The fact that more than half our population refuses to wear masks has nothing to do with democrats or corporations. Its pure selfishness and a lack of care for others. The fact that a huge part of our society still does not believe in man made climate change has nothing to do with the Democratic party or corporations. Its ignorance. The fact that there exists an ever increasing number of people who refuse to vaccinate their children has nothing to do with the Democratic party or corporations. Its ignorance.
At some point we have to stop deflecting our own ignorance by blaming the big targets and look to ourselves and ask -how did we become so ignorant. Otherwise we are trapped into being helpless victims of overpowering forces.
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Well, I respectfully disagree. Those things all have to do with a Capitalist-System that has failed American Citizens. And yes, the Dems AND Reps ARE that system. Together. They make up the system.
So again, for the umpteenth time — I blame systems that shape individuals.
You just blame individuals.
You will say ‘individuals make up the system’. And i will say, the system shaped the individuals…..
Anyway. Its bad.
w
vMay 19, 2020 at 9:38 pm #115098waterfieldParticipantThe fact that most people don’t have the slightest idea of how a bill gets passed in congress has nothing to do with Democrats or Corporations. I’s ignorance. The fact that more than half our population refuses to wear masks has nothing to do with democrats or corporations. Its pure selfishness and a lack of care for others. The fact that a huge part of our society still does not believe in man made climate change has nothing to do with the Democratic party or corporations. Its ignorance. The fact that there exists an ever increasing number of people who refuse to vaccinate their children has nothing to do with the Democratic party or corporations. Its ignorance.
At some point we have to stop deflecting our own ignorance by blaming the big targets and look to ourselves and ask -how did we become so ignorant. Otherwise we are trapped into being helpless victims of overpowering forces.
======
Well, I respectfully disagree. Those things all have to do with a Capitalist-System that has failed American Citizens. And yes, the Dems AND Reps ARE that system. Together. They make up the system.
So again, for the umpteenth time — I blame systems that shape individuals.
You just blame individuals.
You will say ‘individuals make up the system’. And i will say, the system shaped the individuals…..
Anyway. Its bad.
w
vIMO we are far behind our brothers in Europe when it comes to having a keen interest in policies. We have little, if any, interest in exploring the current affairs we are dealt with daily. And its getting worse. Fewer and fewer people actually read anything anymore. My experience is that more and more people really don’t want to discuss substantive issues anymore. When they do it becomes a very shallow discussion. I grew up with a single parent who had no higher education other than high school. But to her it was important for me to be at least curious as to what was going on around us. Of course that was immediately after WW 2 and maybe that was simply “the thing to do”. Anyway I find it hard to fathom how the “system” prevented her from instilling curiosity which let to some form of critical analysis in me. Maybe you are right that “corporations” share some responsibility in this entire matter but I also believe that our troubles can also be blamed on an laissez-faire attitude when it comes to actual learning-and I don’t mean formal education either. Just a genuine interest in how things work. So I ask myself why is that? When I do that I always seem to return to my admittedly “Hitlarian” notion that the wrong people are the ones that are having the most kids.
May 19, 2020 at 10:27 pm #115106wvParticipant…So I ask myself why is that? When I do that I always seem to return to my admittedly “Hitlarian” notion that the wrong people are the ones that are having the most kids.
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Well, this is something i didn’t know. I’m not saying it addresses your notion. Just something I thought was interesting.
link:https://qz.com/1125805/the-reason-the-richest-women-in-the-us-are-the-ones-having-the-most-kids/
The reason the richest women in the US are the ones having the most kidst’s one of the best-established relationships in economics: as women’s education and income levels go up, the number of children they have goes down.
But something happened to the American family over the last three decades: that downward slope became a U-turn. Women in families in the top half of the income spectrum are having more kids than their similar-earning counterparts did 20 years ago. Women from the very richest households are now having more children than those less-well off. Less than 28% of 40- to 45-year-old women in a household in any income bracket below $500,000 per year have three or more children, according to data from the 2011-2015 US Census, while 31.3% of families earning more than $500,000 do.
Money has always given wealthy people the option to pay for things that make it easier to have large families: childcare, a bigger house, help with chores at home. The ability to welcome as many children as ones likes into a family and afford them generous opportunities (while still pursuing one’s own career and interests) has to be one of wealth’s greatest perks. But a deeper look at the data shows that increasing abundance for families at the top is built on declining opportunities for those at the bottom.
More income and education used to lower fertility precisely because it raised the opportunity costs of having a child. Women lost a lot economically if they cut back on work to attend to an expanding family, so they had fewer kids and invested more in those they had.
But as wealthy people’s income rose faster—much faster—than poor people’s, it became that much easier for the wealthier to hire low-wage workers to help them care for their children, according to an analysis of the US trend at the UK’s Centre for Economic Policy Research. US families in the top 25% of the income distribution have spent drastically more on childcare since 1990, while those in the bottom quarter were generally priced out of the childcare market, opting instead to leave children with relatives and neighbors.
It’s part of a larger trend of wealthy families investing increasing amounts of time and money in their children’s education and development. It’s also given women at the upper end of the socioeconomic spectrum more choices. In 1990, a woman with an advanced degree was more than twice as likely to not have children as a less-educated woman, the authors found. Today well-educated women are just as likely to be mothers as anyone else.
“When inequality grows, people who have higher incomes can afford to hire people with lower incomes more easily,” said David Weiss, an economics lecturer at Tel Aviv University and a co-author of the paper. “As soon as you can do that, rich women can hire help to take care of their children and simultaneously have a career.”
Inequality has given women the freedom to “have it all”—but only for those who already have a lot.
May 20, 2020 at 1:11 am #115116waterfieldParticipant’m not saying it addresses your notion. Just something I thought was interesting.
It doesn’t because I’m not saying poor people are having more children. I’m saying the raw selfishness and lack of interest in current issues has to do with parents-wealthy or poor. IMO those parents who are unable to give to their children the elementary nature and value of civics are the ones producing far more children. And in order for democracy to work it needs an informed and curious public. It doesn’t work well if we are for the most part ignorant on the issues in front of us. And corporations will always have their way with the ignorant.
May 20, 2020 at 1:22 pm #115128ZooeyModerator’m not saying it addresses your notion. Just something I thought was interesting.
It doesn’t because I’m not saying poor people are having more children. I’m saying the raw selfishness and lack of interest in current issues has to do with parents-wealthy or poor. IMO those parents who are unable to give to their children the elementary nature and value of civics are the ones producing far more children. And in order for democracy to work it needs an informed and curious public. It doesn’t work well if we are for the most part ignorant on the issues in front of us. And corporations will always have their way with the ignorant.
Well, I agree with wv that this is a systemic failure, not an individual failure. I blame this factor – this ignorance and apathy – on the media, and in particular to the dismantling of the Fairness Doctrine. There is a straight line from there to these conditions. Another major driver, imo, is the profit motive in the news media. It is no accident that the consumers of NPR/PBS are the best informed – factually – on current affairs, and the FOX and MSNBC have the most misinformed audiences. Sensationalism will draw more viewers for longer periods of time, and in depth reporting on issues is discouraged by the profit motive.
I don’t think you can separate Americans from the media stew they grow up in. Their ignorance, apathy, and short attention spans are deliberately cultivated and exploited.
May 20, 2020 at 3:37 pm #115132nittany ramModeratorI don’t think you can separate Americans from the media stew they grow up in. Their ignorance, apathy, and short attention spans are deliberately cultivated and exploited.
And I don’t think there was a time in American history where that wasn’t true. It may be worse now, but the powers-that-be have been massaging the message since the beginning. Part of it is that many people today realize that things are not always what they are told, but to them the lies are only coming from the group they don’t identify with. They cling to and vehemently defend the propaganda that fits their own word view, and dismiss out of hand any alternatives as fake news.
May 21, 2020 at 9:28 am #115147ZooeyModeratorI don’t think you can separate Americans from the media stew they grow up in. Their ignorance, apathy, and short attention spans are deliberately cultivated and exploited.
And I don’t think there was a time in American history where that wasn’t true. It may be worse now, but the powers-that-be have been massaging the message since the beginning. Part of it is that many people today realize that things are not always what they are told, but to them the lies are only coming from the group they don’t identify with. They cling to and vehemently defend the propaganda that fits their own word view, and dismiss out of hand any alternatives as fake news.
The saturation level is much higher now, both on TV and the radio, and the message is more consolidated. And I think the message is more proactive now rather than reactive.
May 21, 2020 at 11:25 am #115152waterfieldParticipantYou guys are all wacko. It seems so evident to me that the big boogeyman (corporate culture) feeds on and uses the unintelligent, uneducated, ignorant, to accomplish their own goals. But they didn’t create that vehicle. To deny this just smells of agenda driven opinions.
May 21, 2020 at 12:19 pm #115154znModeratorBut they didn’t create that vehicle. To deny this just smells of agenda driven opinions.
Well lines like that sound agenda driven too, if you want to go there. It’s the old “because my opinion is the truth, your different opinion must be driven by suspect motives” routine.
People aren’t “denying” YOUR truth. They see things differently than you. Which is something worth discussing.
When you meet the god who can tell us which side is infallibly right, be sure and introduce him or her.
Me personally? So this is how I see this stuff. I see all generalizations about human nature and “the way people are” as constructs and fabrications. Near as we can actually tell, “human nature” is open-ended and deeply influenced by culture and history. Different “this is human nature” concepts are basically slogans in different, competing bumper sticker wars. The fact that all sides BELIEVE their perceptions of this are actually truths is just another part of the competing bumper sticker wars.
May 21, 2020 at 12:31 pm #115155CalParticipantYou guys are all wacko. It seems so evident to me that the big boogeyman (corporate culture) feeds on and uses the unintelligent, uneducated, ignorant, to accomplish their own goals. But they didn’t create that vehicle. To deny this just smells of agenda driven opinions.
Here’s another passage from the Wendell Berry book that I’m reading.
“It seems to me that the people who put Trump over the top were largely Rust Belt dwellers whose grandparents were forced to leave the farm for mind-numbing work, whose parents made a go of it with one generation of union-negotiated wages, but who were valued only as laborers and only until a cheaper means of production came along.”
For Berry this movement from farms to factories to Wal-Mart was engineered by the politicians and corporations in America after WWII.
Who do you think engineered the current system that we have that has seen the number of farms in America shrink from 5.6 million in 1950 to just million in 2017??
May 21, 2020 at 12:54 pm #115157wvParticipantYou guys are all wacko. It seems so evident to me that the big boogeyman (corporate culture) feeds on and uses the unintelligent, uneducated, ignorant, to accomplish their own goals. But they didn’t create that vehicle. To deny this just smells of agenda driven opinions.
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Well keep in mind, W, I am not saying the Corporations dummed down the public ON PURPOSE. I have never once talked about a Corporate CONSPIRACY. Or a Capitalist CONSPIRACY. Sometimes i think, that you think, I am talking about some secret cabal of rich people who sit around deciding how to make the masses ignorant.
I have no doubt there ‘are’ a gazillion conspiracies among the powerful in all parts of the political spectrums. But thats a separate subject and no-one is ever going to have much evidence of that.
I’m just saying, if you have an entire system based on profit, then the profit motive is going to…oh….’Snowball’ for lack of a better word. As Corporate-capitalism consolidates its gains, and as fewer and fewer giant corporoations own more and more and more and more…THEIR message dominates more and more and more.
And what is their message? You tell me.
w
v=============
noam:https://billmoyers.com/content/noam-chomsky-part-2/
….BILL MOYERS: Are you suggesting that there’s a conspiracy’? That there are people who gather and decide we’re going to eliminate unions’? That we’re going to eliminate popular participation in political parties’? We’re going to do this, we’re going to do that? Is there a conspiracy’?NOAM CHOMSKY: Well, my point is, in fact, exactly the opposite. I mean, I think, and stress again, that these are institutional effects. These are the ways the institution functions.
Let’s go back to the chairman of the board. There’s no conspiracy in the world of managers to try to raise profits and market share. In fact, if the world of managers didn’t pursue that program, they wouldn’t be in business any longer. It’s part of the structure of the social system, and the way in which the institutions fw1ction within it, that they are going to be trying to maximize profit, market share, decision-making capacity and so on.
BILL MOYERS: Doing what comes naturally.
NOAM CHOMSKY: It’s not that- you might say it comes naturally, because they would never have gotten to that point unless they had internalized those values, but it’s also constrained. If they stop doing it, their stocks start to decline and so on and so forth, then somebody else- it’ll be bought up and so on. Now, pretty much the same is true of these other institutions. If some segment of the political system- suppose we had an authentic political party reflecting the needs of the special interests, the population, it would no longer be supported. It would be denounced by the information system. It would be condemned for being anti-American or subversive and so on. It would not even have the minimal resources to keep functioning. And since we don’t have a network of popular structures to sustain it, it would disappear.
BILL MOYERS: You’ve said that the primary function of mass media is to mobilize public support for the special interests that dominate the government and the private sector. That’s not how the media see it. They claim, we claim that our news judgments rest on unbiased, objective criteria. That’s how we see it.
NOAM CHOMSKY: But, in fact, the chairman of the board also sees what he is doing as service to humanity.
BILL MOYERS: I mean, are we like a lobster in a trap- we can’t see it close behind us?
NOAM CHOMSKY: Well, the point is that no one would even make it to a high decision-making position in the media, whether as columnist or managing editor or whatever, unless they had already internalized the required values.
BILL MOYERS: Internalized?
NOAM CHOMSKY: They believe them. There are a number of things you have to believe to make it to top managerial positions. You have to believe that the United States is unique in history in that it acts from benevolent motives. Benevolent motives are not properties of states, whether it’s the United States or any other one. It’s meaningless to talk about it.
May 21, 2020 at 1:01 pm #115158wvParticipantWho do you think engineered the current system that we have that has seen the number of farms in America shrink from 5.6 million in 1950 to just million in 2017??
===============
poemhunter:https://www.poemhunter.com/wendell-berry/
Manifesto: The Mad Farmer Liberation Front
Poem by Wendell BerryLove the quick profit, the annual raise,
vacation with pay. Want more
of everything ready-made. Be afraid
to know your neighbors and to die.And you will have a window in your head.
Not even your future will be a mystery
any more. Your mind will be punched in a card
and shut away in a little drawer.When they want you to buy something
they will call you. When they want you
to die for profit they will let you know.
So, friends, every day do something
that won’t compute. Love the Lord.
Love the world. Work for nothing.
Take all that you have and be poor.
Love someone who does not deserve it.Denounce the government and embrace
the flag. Hope to live in that free
republic for which it stands.
Give your approval to all you cannot
understand. Praise ignorance, for what man
has not encountered he has not destroyed.Ask the questions that have no answers.
Invest in the millenium. Plant sequoias.
Say that your main crop is the forest
that you did not plant,
that you will not live to harvest.Say that the leaves are harvested
when they have rotted into the mold.
Call that profit. Prophesy such returns.
Put your faith in the two inches of humus
that will build under the trees
every thousand years.Listen to carrion — put your ear
close, and hear the faint chattering
of the songs that are to come.
Expect the end of the world. Laugh.
Laughter is immeasurable. Be joyful
though you have considered all the facts.
So long as women do not go cheap
for power, please women more than men.Ask yourself: Will this satisfy
a woman satisfied to bear a child?
Will this disturb the sleep
of a woman near to giving birth?Go with your love to the fields.
Lie down in the shade. Rest your head
in her lap. Swear allegiance
to what is nighest your thoughts.As soon as the generals and the politicos
can predict the motions of your mind,
lose it. Leave it as a sign
to mark the false trail, the way
you didn’t go.Be like the fox
who makes more tracks than necessary,
some in the wrong direction.
Practice resurrection.
=================The Mad Farmer Revolution
Being a Fragment
of the Natural History of New Eden,
in Homage
To Mr. Ed McClanahan, One of the LocalsThe mad farmer, the thirsty one,
went dry. When he had time
he threw a visionary high
lonesome on the holy communion wine.
“It is an awesome event
when an earthen man has drunk
his fill of the blood of a god,”
people said, and got out of his way.
He plowed the churchyard, the
minister’s wife, three graveyards
and a golf course. In a parking lot
he planted a forest of little pines.
He sanctified the groves,
dancing at night in the oak shades
with goddesses. He led
a field of corn to creep up
and tassel like an Indian tribe
on the courthouse lawn. Pumpkins
ran out to the ends of their vines
to follow him. Ripe plums
and peaches reached into his pockets.
Flowers sprang up in his tracks
everywhere he stepped. And then
his planter’s eye fell on
that parson’s fair fine lady
again. “O holy plowman,” cried she,
“I am all grown up in weeds.
Pray, bring me back into good tilth.”
He tilled her carefully
and laid her by, and she
did bring forth others of her kind,
and others, and some more.
They sowed and reaped till all
the countryside was filled
with farmers and their brides sowing
and reaping. When they died
they became two spirits of the woods.On their graves were written
these words without sound:
“Here lies Saint Plowman.
Here lies Saint Fertile Ground.”
Wendell BerryMay 21, 2020 at 3:32 pm #115163waterfieldParticipantWell keep in mind, W, I am not saying the Corporations dummed down the public ON PURPOSE. I have never once talked about a Corporate CONSPIRACY. Or a Capitalist CONSPIRACY. Sometimes i think, that you think, I am talking about some secret cabal of rich people who sit around deciding how to make the masses ignorant.
I have no doubt there ‘are’ a gazillion conspiracies among the powerful in all parts of the political spectrums. But thats a separate subject and no-one is ever going to have much evidence of that.
I’m just saying, if you have an entire system based on profit, then the profit motive is going to…oh….’Snowball’ for lack of a better word. As Corporate-capitalism consolidates its gains, and as fewer and fewer giant corporoations own more and more and more and more…THEIR message dominates more and more and more.
And what is their message? You tell me.
Not sure this is your point but to the extent it is I agree that a capitalistic society inherently breeds selfishness. Human nature is to gather and protect what we’ve accumulated. And of course that means it is profit driven. But each known economic system has its own darkness. I don’t think any system be it communism, socialism, capitalism has a monopoly on the concern-or lack of- for the sufferers among us. It’s part of human frailty.
w
- This reply was modified 4 years, 6 months ago by waterfield.
May 21, 2020 at 4:32 pm #115167wvParticipant<
… I agree that a capitalistic society inherently breeds selfishness.
Human nature is to gather and protect what we’ve accumulated.
And of course that means it is profit driven.
But each known economic system has its own darkness.
I don’t think any system be it communism, socialism, capitalism has a monopoly on the concern-or lack of- for the sufferers among us. It’s part of human frailty.================================
Yes, I would think that every human system has its weaknesses or darkness.
We are talking-monkeys, after all.But there are places in Europe and Scandinavia that do seem to have more concern for the poor. So, while no human-system is perfect, some human-systems are doing better than others. It would be nice if America could take the best of each major system and adapt it to work here. If nothing else, it would be nice to have a better safety net. If we are gonna live under capitalism, it would at least be nice to have a Green-New-Deal and FDR type leadership, etc. I mean, thats a pretty low bar. And we dont even have that. Voters didnt want it. They had Bernie right there in the race — and twice now, they have said “No, we want the Corporate-Dem.” So, progressives lose, again. Just like in the 1920s 30s, 50s, 70’s, 80’s, 90s, 00s, 10s, and so far in the 20s-again.
At any rate whatever you think of this Corporate-Capitalist-System, W,
its not sustainable. Corporations are killing the life on this planet. For profit. Amphibians, Birds, Fish, Trees, Bufferflies, Polar Bears…Yes, Corporations make nice things. But what is the cost?
w
vMay 22, 2020 at 1:06 pm #115191waterfieldParticipant<
… I agree that a capitalistic society inherently breeds selfishness.
Human nature is to gather and protect what we’ve accumulated.
And of course that means it is profit driven.
But each known economic system has its own darkness.
I don’t think any system be it communism, socialism, capitalism has a monopoly on the concern-or lack of- for the sufferers among us. It’s part of human frailty.================================
Yes, I would think that every human system has its weaknesses or darkness.
We are talking-monkeys, after all.But there are places in Europe and Scandinavia that do seem to have more concern for the poor. So, while no human-system is perfect, some human-systems are doing better than others. It would be nice if America could take the best of each major system and adapt it to work here. If nothing else, it would be nice to have a better safety net. If we are gonna live under capitalism, it would at least be nice to have a Green-New-Deal and FDR type leadership, etc. I mean, thats a pretty low bar. And we dont even have that. Voters didnt want it. They had Bernie right there in the race — and twice now, they have said “No, we want the Corporate-Dem.” So, progressives lose, again. Just like in the 1920s 30s, 50s, 70’s, 80’s, 90s, 00s, 10s, and so far in the 20s-again.
At any rate whatever you think of this Corporate-Capitalist-System, W,
its not sustainable. Corporations are killing the life on this planet. For profit. Amphibians, Birds, Fish, Trees, Bufferflies, Polar Bears…Yes, Corporations make nice things. But what is the cost?
w
vI agree-we seem to be going down the rabbit hole. But I can’t believe that this is all a result of a capitalistic profit driven system of economics. We’ve lived under this system for well over a hundred years. What has changed-IMO-is an attitude of selfishness that is exhibited in today’s response to the virus. It’s all about “me, me, me”. Years ago I can recall growing up during WW2 and watching my mom and our neighbors making tremendous sacrifices for the good of all. I recall my mom driving sick neighbors to clinics and Dr’s offices so we all could save on gas. I recall a “victory garden” where all the neighbors pitched in and planted veggies that everyone shared. Not that long ago I recall a President saying “ask not what your country can do for you but what you can do for your country”. Now, that has been turned on its head. It’s all about “free will”-meaning its all about me. My rights are paramount to your rights. Viet Nam was an enormous catalyst and likely changed us forever (“hell no we won’t go”. That had nothing to do with capitalism but more to do with pride and a fear of ever spreading communism. (Daniel Ellsberg-Most Dangerous Man gives a good account of how we became so entangled in a no win war going as far back as Eisenhower) The 2008 financial crisis-led to a populist revolt over the bail outs. But at the heart of the matter was Joe Friday’s attitude that his home was like his personal bank and he could gather all the toys he wanted by using it as such.
Of course there are those who will argue this is all a product of Capitalism and Corporations. To me that’s akin to saying it’s a product of the sun rising. You can find a “connection” in anything you set out to believe. What’s striking to me is the simple change from caring about others to caring only about oneself.
Having written all that I do see how “big issues” such as climate change has been impacted and influenced by corporate interests. After all to address the issue squarely would certainly impact investment returns. But my question goes beyond that: how did we become so greedy and unsatisfied with what we do have. Have we always been that way? Maybe we have.
May 22, 2020 at 1:18 pm #115192waterfieldParticipantP.S. (to WV) IMO the reason people didn’t vote for Sanders has nothing to do with corporate influence or capitalism. It has to do with fear the voters had of “he’s going to take away my stuff”. And that may be my entire point above.
May 22, 2020 at 2:03 pm #115194waterfieldParticipantA personal anecdote-then I’m through. My wife just returned from CVS where she picked up some prescriptions. While standing in line she was wearing a mask and surgical gloves. So was the man behind her who was about the same age. A much younger woman barges in to pick up a greeting card near where they were standing. Barb says “you should be wearing a mask” . The woman responds “fuck you I ain’t wearing no mask” My wife says “its not so much to protect you as to protect other”. Woman: “fuck them” After she stomps out with her cards the man behind Barb says “they just don’t care about us do they”. Corporatocracy has nothing to do with that woman’s attitude of “me, me, me”.
May 22, 2020 at 2:06 pm #115195nittany ramModeratorP.S. (to WV) IMO the reason people didn’t vote for Sanders has nothing to do with corporate influence or capitalism. It has to do with fear the voters had of “he’s going to take away my stuff”. And that may be my entire point above.
I think the reason people think that has everything to do with the propaganda our corporate overlords have been promoting since the Red Scare. How many deaths in East Asia and Central America can be attributed to protecting US corporate interests from socialist governments that had had enough of their exploitation?
May 22, 2020 at 4:10 pm #115208waterfieldParticipantP.S. (to WV) IMO the reason people didn’t vote for Sanders has nothing to do with corporate influence or capitalism. It has to do with fear the voters had of “he’s going to take away my stuff”. And that may be my entire point above.
I think the reason people think that has everything to do with the propaganda our corporate overlords have been promoting since the Red Scare. How many deaths in East Asia and Central America can be attributed to protecting US corporate interests from socialist governments that had had enough of their exploitation?
I wouldn’t call Eisenhower a “corporate overlord” or even a tool of them-whoever they are-but he was so concerned about the “red scare”-as you call it-that he began protecting the US interests in south east asia. It was an honest but misguided attempt at preventing the fall of a strategic part of the world to communism. ( can you say China) It had squat to do with “corporate overlords”. Hồ Chí Minh was not a socialist and we did not have any corporate interest in S/E Asia. Our interest was simply to protect an area that provided us with military access close to China.
And even if your corporate warlord notion is correct the questions are: Why are people so vulnerable to the propaganda?. Why aren’t you ? How come I’m not. Why do some have the ability to critically analyze issues while others don’t. How did we become a country of minions ? To me that is at the core of these issues-not- we are all at the mercy of “corporate warlords”. The latter is a simple response because we can use that to answer anything we dislike about our country. The former is a very, very complicated social issue .
May 22, 2020 at 5:59 pm #115211nittany ramModeratorP.S. (to WV) IMO the reason people didn’t vote for Sanders has nothing to do with corporate influence or capitalism. It has to do with fear the voters had of “he’s going to take away my stuff”. And that may be my entire point above.
I think the reason people think that has everything to do with the propaganda our corporate overlords have been promoting since the Red Scare. How many deaths in East Asia and Central America can be attributed to protecting US corporate interests from socialist governments that had had enough of their exploitation?
I wouldn’t call Eisenhower a “corporate overlord” or even a tool of them-whoever they are-but he was so concerned about the “red scare”-as you call it-that he began protecting the US interests in south east asia. It was an honest but misguided attempt at preventing the fall of a strategic part of the world to communism. ( can you say China) It had squat to do with “corporate overlords”. Hồ Chí Minh was not a socialist and we did not have any corporate interest in S/E Asia. Our interest was simply to protect an area that provided us with military access close to China.
And even if your corporate warlord notion is correct the questions are: Why are people so vulnerable to the propaganda?. Why aren’t you ? How come I’m not. Why do some have the ability to critically analyze issues while others don’t. How did we become a country of minions ? To me that is at the core of these issues-not- we are all at the mercy of “corporate warlords”. The latter is a simple response because we can use that to answer anything we dislike about our country. The former is a very, very complicated social issue .
Well, I won’t disagree that there was a misguided but benevolent motive behind stopping the “spread of communism”. But that wasn’t the driving force.
That simple fact that our biggest rivals (Soviet Union and USSR) were Communist was also a reason.
However, the main reason why capitalists hate communism was because they believed it was a threat to their pocket books. That was especially true in this hemisphere. It had little to do with liberating the poor souls bound to the communist yoke, (that’s the message, not the motivation) and a lot to do with protecting a fruit company. We killed a bunch of people to protect a fruit company.
I agree that the question of why some of us see this while most don’t is complicated. It involves are sorts of psychological, social, cultural etc reasons that would be interesting to research and talk about.
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