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Fire the Culture

clock October 30, 2011 10:01 by author bluewolf

1.       Corporate Capitalism [CC] (as defined in Life, Inc.) has failed. What I mean by that is that it has failed almost every group in our society. It has succeeded magnificently for the few elite wealthy who now control the lion’s share of the income and the wealth in the country. For them, CC is a good system and they don’t want any significant changes. They would like to make their success more complete by doing away with all the remaining collective bargaining rights in the country. They wish to dismantle the social safety net, ie. Social Security and Medicare also. They have already created a department in the government whose mission is to control the population, the Department of Homeland Security. The real purpose of this department is to protect the government from its own people, not to protect the country from terrorists.  CC has failed the young people – the unemployment rates among the young are at 25% and many of them are facing permanent unemployment since they are sliding into the group of the long-term unemployed. CC has failed the middle class. Their incomes have stagnated over the last 20 years. Their jobs are still being outsourced overseas, or nowadays, just outrigh-t eliminated. Their homes are being taken away, due to the unprecedented rates of repossession, still going on. The CC system, has of course, failed the poor. Their ranks are swelling; education is out of reach for them and their safety net has been taken away. Their lot is worse than ever. CC has failed the environment. Global warming is now in a runaway mode. Important natural resources, such as water, energy, and arable land are now in increasingly shorter supply.

2.       Corporate Capitalism is in big trouble: I have come across more information that indicates that Corporate Capitalism may be at the end of the line, although Marx prematurely predicted that over 100 years ago. This new evidence from Paul Gilding is much more convincing. He has written a book called “The Great Disruption”. You can read the information for yourself. He is convinced that humanity has reached the end of growth. His basic premise, gathered from scientific data, is that we are now at a state of 1.5 planets, that is, we’re using up 1.5 planets worth of resources to maintain our economy and lifestyle. This trend is forecast to increase to 2 planets in about 10 years, and the trend is pointing to 4 planets by 2050. He says this is unsustainable and won’t happen.

a.       http://paulgilding.com/

b.      http://www.marketwatch.com/story/an-apocalyptic-end-to-worlds-biggest-bubble-2011-10-25?pagenumber=2

3.       Crisis of Capitalism in the 30’s:  Back then, capitalism had again failed the same groups of people it is now failing. The biggest difference that I see is that the environmental crisis wasn’t nearly as severe as it is now. FDR’s mission in the 30’s was to rescue capitalism from its Crisis. The problem is that capitalism tends to self-destruct if left to its own devices. Wealth is increasingly concentrated into the hands of an elite few who then attempt to impose control from above, first by persuasion, but also by force, if necessary. Sooner or later, the classes that got left behind become aware of the Great Con-job and become increasingly harder to control. At some point a Crisis erupts. In the 30’s, I believe there was genuine alarm in the ruling elite that their system was in danger of being overthrown. FDR, who was from the wealthy class himself, came to the rescue of the system. The reforms he found necessary was bitter medicine to the ruling elite. A progressive tax rate was among one the most bitter pills. The acceptance of unions and collective bargaining was another bitter pill. FDR did answer to the complainers that he was saving their system for them, and they ought to be grateful and shut up.

4.       Three Responses to the Crisis: One response to this crisis is protest and an attempt at changing the system politically. This is the route that the Occupy Wall Street protesters are taking. I admire them a lot and fully support their action. I will probably find myself taking food and sleeping bags down to them some time in the future. I liken that response to a very simple analogy. I remember when I was in pre-school. There are sand-boxes in the play yard. Lots of kids are playing in the big sand box and soon the local bully takes over. The bully begins to run the system and hog all the best toys and coerce everyone else. There are several responses: a) You can go along with the system and try to get the best crumbs from the bully. The problem with that response is that bully never wants to share his toys and will only give you the ones he’s tired of playing with or the broken toys. B) You can oppose him and pick a fight with him. If he’s bigger than you, and has a gang assembled, you’re in trouble. But even if you can successfully fight with him, he’s OK with that too. He’s still the Big Guy in the sandbox, whether you’re for him or against him. He can live with that – just as long as he’s the Big Guy.  C) You can pick up your toys and go play in another sand box. Ignore him, don’t play his games any more, just go away and make up and play your own games in another sand-box. To follow you over to the new sandbox, he has to leave the nice one he’s in.

5.       Localism: My personal response to this crisis is localism. I, by myself, have no chance of overthrowing the system, although that seems to be working in Egypt, Libya, Tunisia and Syria. Even the Saudi establishment is moving to buy off their population – the king just gave women the right to vote over there. That’s a pretty harmless concession because the choice they get to vote for have already been vetted by the male establishment. Besides, if the good ole’ boys are counting the votes, as well as checking to see who voted for whom, they’re guaranteed to win every time. Rigged elections are a favorite window-dressing technique for almost every autocrat on the planet.

6.       How to Fire the Culture: So my choice, for now, is to fire the system. It certainly involves a lot less hassle and violence. After all, there’s only one of me and millions of THEM. There are various ways to opt out and fire the system:

a.       Don’t bother firing the actors: There are a lot of bad actors in the on-going drama: Wall Street, dictators like the late Muammar  Quaddafi, corporate CEOs, corrupt government, et. Al. It’s tempting and very common to blame the bad conditions on different actors in the drama. “If only we had a new government…” “If only we could get rid of these big corporations…” “If only we go rid of the President…”  Unfortunately, getting rid of the various actors in the drama just leads to the situation that the Who sang about “Say hello to the New Boss – just like the Old Boss..” I had an “aha” moment after reading Riane Eisler “The Chalice and the Blade”. She got right to the point. The villain is the culture – the Dominator Culture that has run much of humanity for the last 5000 years. She argues: “Fire the culture”. And I agree with her – get right to the point and fire the culture. I don’t have to accept this present culture even if there is no apparent alternative right now. I don’t care if it is the dominant culture – I’ll fire it in my mind and with my actions. And what happens if enough of us begin to fire the Dominator Culture?

b.      How do you fire the culture? Examine what kind of influences it has in your life. Where does it have the biggest hold on you?

                                                               i.      Well, the culture has a very large hold on a person through their means of subsistence, that is, the economy. You have to make a living, and the culture determines how you do so. And as you participate in making a living, you have to cooperate with the culture in order to do so. And in this way, the culture exerts a huge influence on you and especially on your thinking. I don’t have enough time or room to go into great detail. To put it bluntly – you are going to be loyal and believe in the culture that feeds you. In these difficult economic times when it’s become harder to feed yourself (and I don’t just mean food, but everything that makes your life comfortable), the economic grip of the Dominator Culture on your thinking and belief system weakens and the protests begin. If you were completely self-sufficient for food, warmth, shelter, entertainment, etc. like some hermit living out in the boondocks, the Dominator Culture would have very little, if any hold on you. You would begin having thoughts that the Culture did not put into your mind. You would “be off the map”.  

                                                             ii.      Another way the culture has a grip on us is in the realm of images and ideas. So another way to fire the Culture is to reject the media: the newspapers, the movies, the books, the advertising, etc. The Culture disseminates itself through a physical media. We are all interconnected today, even more so through the Internet. Everybody, it seems, spends their days walking around with their face in their Smartphones. Much of what they are absorbing is the Culture: advertising, shopping, information, etc. from the corporate sponsors of the Smartphone culture.

                                                            iii.      Finally, and I think most important, is the grip that the Culture has on us through religion. The role of religion is to provide a way for humans to “re-late” to their existence. Religion comes for two Latin words:  “Re – again, toward and “ligeo” – literally meaning to relate. Religion gives meaning to life and creates a picture and a context in which we live. It influences our politics and even our perceptions. The Dominator Culture has provided at least three Dominator Religions for humanity to partake of so that It (the Culture) can perpetuate itself. The Big Three are:  Judaism, Christianity and Islam. These are the big three male-dominant patriarchal (is that redundant?) religions.

c.       Fire the banks: OK, what practical methods can I (we) take to fire the Culture? First of all, fire the banks – take your banking out of the big corporate banks and move it into much smaller regional banks or credit unions. Weren’t credit unions a product of the 30’s anyway?

                                                               i.      http://www.marketwatch.com/story/high-fees-heres-how-to-fire-your-bank-2011-10-07    Jennifer Waters – Here’s how to fire your bank

d.      Fire the currency – make up a local script and start using it. Example: a small town in PA, Berkeshire? Has come up with its own script and it is being using it to keep the local wealth local and it seems to be partially working.  

                                                               i.      http://www.berkshares.org/whatareberkshares.htm

                                                             ii.      http://www.ithacahours.org/

                                                            iii.      http://www.rushkoff.com/

e.      Fire the investment system – pull your investments out of the giant corporate Wall Street casino, which is mostly set up to loot retail investors anyway with their microsecond ultra high speed trading. Pull your investments out of that system and invest locally. There seem to be more and more local investment clearing houses springing up in small regions all over the country.

                                                               i.      http://locavesting.com/Locavesting_homepage.html

                                                             ii.      http://www.l2020.org/index.php?page=investing-opportunities

f.        Fire Big Food. Corporately produced/processed food is inherently unsafe, innutritious and unhealthy these days. Farmers’ markets are becoming pretty common these days all over the country, as well as the new version of the old “Victory Gardens”. Food co-ops are beginning to invade the big cities. Michelle Obama is using her influence to bring locally produced produce and food into the big city food deserts. Just stop purchasing from the big vendors and go to the smaller producers and especially to local growers.

                                                               i.      http://www.farmersmarketla.com/

g.       Fire Carbon Based Power.  Energy can be locally generated right at home. Solar and wind installations are becoming cheaper and more efficient by the year. Their lack of big commercial success has a lot to do with the carbon-based cartels undercutting the profitability of renewables.  However, the carbon-based cartels are becoming increasingly vulnerable. Electric car manufacturers are springing up, in all places, Silicon Valley itself. The stranglehold of Big Carbon is slowly beginning to be broken – partially as a result of the increasing scarcity of carbon-based fuels, as well as a growing public acceptance of global warming and its cause in carbon-based energy generation. Lately though, Carbon-Based Power is making a strong bid to maintain its dominance during the Great Recession. Their argument: “We can’t afford Green Power – it’s cheaper to stay on Carbon-based power, and besides, there’s still a lot of it left.” Many Green power companies are finding tough sledding and some of the start-ups are beginning to fail. I recently came across an article where carbon recovery and sequestration efforts are quietly being abandoned by the West. Furthermore, it appears that efforts to build a huge new pipeline to bring Alberta’s Tar Sands oil to the US are going to succeed. This should continue to maintain America’s addiction to oil.

                                                               i.      http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn20761-uks-carboncapture-failure-is-part-of-a-global-trend.html

                                                             ii.      http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/story/2011-10-30/keystone-pipeline-opposition/51000802/1

h.      Fire Big Media – This one is going to be a little more difficult to pull off. There are many competing media sources on the planet today, thanks to the Internet.  No single source of news can achieve a monopoly position any more, and that includes FOX. There are dozens of sources available to vet any single source. The young are using the social media to go around the Big Commercial media anyway. One of the problems is going to be the physical media itself – the physical structure of the Internet is in the hands of large corporations, and these organizations are vulnerable to the influence of their owners (primarily profit driven, I think) and government influence. The Egyptian, Libyan, Iranian and Libyan governments succeeded in getting the social media turned off in their countries, albeit too late. However there are some encouraging engineering innovations that may make it easier to get around these centralized physical media providers. Just lately I noticed that “micro cell phone” hubs are being marketed. These are a fraction of the size and power of a large commercial  cell phone hub. These could be put up on rooftops and quickly and easily taken down and moved, enabling a localized and highly mobile wifi net to be set up in neighborhoods. Technology is certainly making it easier now to communicate electronically w/o the large centralized media providers.

                                                               i.      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microcell

                                                             ii.      http://www.democracynow.org/2011/10/21/headlines

                                                            iii.      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Community_television

i.         Fire Big Medicine. Here is an establishment that swallows money like a black hole. You can shovel dump truck loads of money into this establishment w/o making a noticeable dent in the situation. Certainly these corporations are seeking to hold the health of the general population hostage – what a dependable and easy way to make a profit! This stranglehold must be broken also – again, this will be quite difficult. Much of the technology and infrastructure associated with medical care is very expensive and must be centralized into a few large facilities in order to take advantage of numbers. But it seems to me that there might be a way to crack this monopoly open also. Medical coops? There are a couple of large medical coops in the country – one of them is in Seattle. Perhaps the key here is ownership. The coop could and should be owned by the patient base and the providers. It seems important that the wealth that is poured into the medical provider establishment remain local.

                                                               i.      http://www.ghc.org/

                                                             ii.      http://www.ncba.coop/ncba/about-co-ops/co-op-sectors/146-healthcare

j.        Fire the Dominator Religions – I’ve written extensively about this one.

                                                               i.      “The poison comes from the pulpits” Religion shapes our belief systems, our behavior, our social institutions, our learning, and even how we perceive the world around us. The Dominator Culture has not just one, but three patriarchal religions in place to cement its dominance over humanity. The Big Three have ruthlessly wiped out all manner of indigenous cultures in its relentless advance. The history of this cultural obliteration is a reader of human brutality – it constitutes some of the ugliest journals of the history of humankind. The Dominator Culture realizes how important religion is to a culture and so it has been very careful to wipe out the last vestiges of indigenous culture and religion as it advances. In the face of this obliteration, many brave ethnic groups have struggled to maintain some semblance of their cultures and religions, including their language. A sometime amusing by-product of these Dominator Religions is that they are so aggressive that they are unable to coexist peacefully with themselves. In fact, the two branches of Islam are apparently eating themselves, as well as the infidels around them. These religions remind me of a gang of rabid pit-bulls fighting among themselves. Much of the cultural and political toxins that currently infect humanity originate in the pulpits of the Big Three. A key step in firing the Culture is to fire the Big Three. I already have and haven’t looked back since. Good riddance.

                                                             ii.      The Catholic Church has apparently outlived its usefulness in Europe and the locals there are firing the Church. It still has a large influence, but it is waning. The Irish government just recently declared independence from the Church, pissing It off pretty well. There is a big movement toward local religion and secularism. The young people in the Arab Spring movements have shown marked disinterest in religious fundamentalism. Religion has a large influence on the culture, and if the hold of Old Religion on the culture can be loosened, this will free up the culture for substantial changes.

1.       http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5ifDsLV9umKCEksHSxf46Jutu0izA?docId=71de3e374e1f4b5e93904f01a6063a73

 

 

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The Left Has Awakened

clock October 16, 2011 11:48 by author bluewolf

1.       The American government is currently deadlocked due to the extreme polarization of the country. This deadlock is the logical conclusion of at least 2 decades of the unraveling mentioned in the Fourth Turning, and the fear and intransigence of the Baby Boomers. All the hand-wringing, blame-setting and well intentioned urging toward “cooperation” will come to naught. The Republican hard-liners have one unstated goal in mind – one-party rule. They aren’t interested in bilateralism, or in governing or cooperating with the President. They want power. Fueled by the ideological intransigence of Baby Boomers, driven by fear, the Tea Party hardliners will not give in. The Wall Street insiders in the GOP have a good thing going and don’t want this party to end. These reactionaries must be pushed aside if we are to have social and economic progress in this country.

2.       The upcoming election will solve nothing. Presidents and elections are over-rated. The country will remain as polarized after the election as it was before. It doesn’t matter that much who the next president will be, nor does the makeup of Congress matter that much either. It’ll just make somewhat of a difference depending on which party is in charge. The Republicans will attempt to move the country sharply to the right. The Democrats will attempt to keep the country from moving so sharply to the right. 

3.       There is a Crisis coming which was predicted in the Fourth Turning. Only the meltdown which comes in this Crisis will break this deadlock.  Up until now, the wealthy class has been resoundingly successful in re-directing the accumulating social anger and fear away from themselves and onto to red herring issues like immigration, gays, Muslims, terrorism, and countless other fake issues. Their chief mouthpiece for deflecting the social anger has been the Fox Network. But as the social stress and misery mounts,  the re-direction is beginning to wear thin and becoming more and more riddled with its own contradictions. Remember Grover Norquist’s “pledge”?  The pledge he made all Republican Congressional candidates sign was “no new taxes under any circumstances”. Unfortunately these same “No-tax” people are calling for raising taxes on the poor:  “Everybody has to have some skin in the game.” Their arguments are becoming more and more disingenuous and transparent. They are providing a lot of material for the comedians on late night TV.

4.       Since I first wrote this, it has become obvious that the tide of public opinion is turning against the wealthy. Here are some examples:

a.       Obama has openly come out for taxing the rich. More and more popular anger is now being directed toward rich individuals and corporations. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/18/us/politics/obama-tax-plan-would-ask-more-of-millionaires.html?scp=1&sq=buffet%20tax&st=cse

b.       Warren Buffet and other tycoons have openly come out for raising their own taxes. http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/09/30/buffett-takes-his-case-to-wall-street/?src=dlbksb

5.       The Occupy Wall Street movement has caught fire all around the   planet. When the young people weigh in on the direction our country is headed, they won’t be voting in the polls or voting booths. They are  voting in the streets.

a.       http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/01/police-arresting-protesters-on-brooklyn-bridge/?hp    

b.       http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/28/world/as-scorn-for-vote-grows-protests-surge-around-globe.html?scp=1&sq=scorn%20political%20protest&st=cse

6.       It hasn’t been emphasized much in the media lately, but I’m convinced that one of the chief causes of the present distress is demographic. The West has an aging population. The elderly portion of the society has benefitted well from the earlier years of the “Spring” and “Summer” years of the present seaculum. These older people are largely fearful of the Great Recession and their twilight years and want to hold onto what they have, apparently even if it means that their grandchildren will suffer. The younger generation, the “Gen-Y” generation appears to have done everything right – worked harder, got educated as well as they could and prepared themselves for a place in society. And due to the Great Recession and the general economic malaise, they don’t see a place opening up for them. Who can blame them for being frustrated? So I believe there is a huge generation gap that has opened up that few, if any, in our present media talk about. Take a look at the Tea Partiers – how many grey heads do you see in that group? Then look at the Wall Street Occupiers. How many of them are the young?

a.       http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/10/16/us-protests-global-idUSTRE79F1CH20111016

7.       There are those who are dismissive of the Occupy Wall Street protestors. They believe the protesters will have their day of attention and glory and then eventually fade away. Some are thinking that the winter will dampen and put an end to the protests. They think that the rage that fuels them will eventually go away on its own. I’m convinced that these pundits who make light of the protesters don’t know whom they’re dealing with. They imagine the protestors to be like themselves – the Boomers. Eventually they’ll lose interest and go off, get work and start earning enough money to buy their first BMW. This is not that generation. This generation doesn't have new jobs to go to. This young generation that is finding its voice are the Millennials. They are the same kind of generation that was called the “Greatest Generation”. They are a Hero generation, a generation that will not take “No” for an answer. That should be obvious now in the Middle East. Bashar Al-Assad has pulled out all the stops in Syria, employing all the force and murderous brutality that his government can muster – and yet these people keep on coming. These people keep on coming, knowing full well that they will get shot at and some of them won’t live to see the evening. This is a generation that won’t take “No” for an answer. This is a generation that is connected to one another by the Internet. Everywhere you see the ubiquitous mobile phone devices. Check out some of the rock concerts these young Millennials have been attending. I watched a couple these concerts. The raw and focused power and psychic energy that these young people radiate raised the hair on the back of my neck. This is not the Woodstock generation. This is not the Sid Vicious generation either. Their energy is positive, focused and powerful.

a.       http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generation_Y

8.       I don’t know exactly when or how the Crisis will start or even what event will touch it off.  Who could have predicted that the suicide of a fruit vendor in Tunisia would have touched off the Arab Spring? What I do know is that the social contract, as predicted in the 4th Turning is continuing to unravel. My gut feeling is that the present deadlock in the US won’t be resolved until some kind of Crisis occurs that causes some kind of social “meltdown”. This meltdown will liquefy the social milieu that keeps the existing social structures in place. During this crisis, that which was once impossible will now become possible. During this Crisis, great social changes suddenly become possible and will happen.

a.       http://www.fourthturning.com/

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