Thanks, Ray, for the NY Times piece about the 6,900 refugees from the area of the nuclear disaster. Perhaps now you will quote something about the half million refugees who have lost their homes after the tsunami. Maybe I missed it, but you have been so anti-nuclear that you seem to have forgotten about the greater tragedy. You also have another dig at the market - certainly the best thing for consumers. Most of your criticism of the market involves the anti-market actions of big business. These result from the alliance of big business with big unions and politicians. Thus, the alliance between the car companies and the auto unions to place barriers against imported cars. They do well out of it while the consumer at all levels pays through the nose. This is perhaps paralleled by the government unions, government bosses, and politicians. Again, the consumer is milked of his substance by this alliance. When I gave you facts and figures about Wisconsin government union benefits - almost as much as salaries - you answered "garbage" - which is your way of failing to face the truth. Values are individual. Your values are different from other people's values. But this doesn't make them better - just different. It is to be expected that you favor values that support your interests - and coat them with superiority. Yet, every person's primary value is saying alive. Survival requires food, clothing, and shelter, so they naturally come first. That is the first utility. That's the job of economists, That they don't do a very good job of it is another matter. Perhaps, they face the problem of politics. Yet in your attacks on the free market, you never mention the ineptitude and often pure corruption of the political process. That perhaps because your alternative to the market requires more government action. Politicians love spending other people's money on the "Arts", which makes them very good targets for the artists. They can skip past what people want and spend money on what they want, which is support for their wonderful "values". Harry ****************************** Henry George School of Los Angeles Box 655 Tujunga CA 91042 (818) 352-4141 ****************************** From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ray Harrell Sent: Saturday, April 02, 2011 2:06 PM To: 'RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION' Subject: Re: [Futurework] No business meetings Might this extend to the "no business" marketplace that has ridiculous bonuses and great alienation from the bulk of the consumers who are slowly being strangled? I believe the term is Goupthink and denial is the energy that feeds this psychological pathology of groups. [We have it on this list as well] It should be obvious that we have a severely sick marketplace and national political structure at the moment. While the deniers become simple enablers. Value is, in this market, walking in place and getting paid for it such as you find here in this discussion of the disaster in Japan in the NYTimes. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/03/world/asia/03futaba.html?hp I would propose that we need a renewal of a psycho-physical pursuit of values. Since the classical definition of the abstract principles Art are: "A psycho-physical pursuit of values in all of the elements of human communication and sustenance" [Bela Rozsa, "Ibis", 1943 Univ of Iowa Press] It would seem that such an Artistic research into what are the ultimate values of society and the human soul, as started the blossoming of science growing out of the Camerata di Bardi and the boy child sitting at their feet (Galileo Galilei) should once more be the order of the day. But instead we get the feeding of the "Leviathan" (as William Blake put it in another time). A useless activity when even according to best Utilitarians, Usefulness = Value. [Jevons/JS Mill] The problem economics today is: that which devours the world in the pursuit of simple sustenance is ultimately without utility. But you won't get any economist that I've known to even ask the question about "value." Not since I've been asking them since the early 1990s anyway. The issue is not theoretical but the giving up of the political power that currently accrues to anyone in the pursuit a "science" of economics. For them, the parallels between their values and simple groupthink is too threatening to consider. A discussion of the ultimate values of human existence is just beyond the kin of their mathematical statistical over-simplicities. Today they find themselves aligned with Sarah Palin and Michelle Bachman. That's quite and intellectual club they inhabit. Instead of "economics the servant of humanity", it's Economics the King supported by the barbaric. Who wants to give up a crown for an apron even if the Crown is rancid? REH From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ed Weick Sent: Saturday, April 02, 2011 4:05 PM To: [email protected]; [email protected] Subject: [Futurework] No business meetings I've been reading John Kenneth Galbraith's "The Great Crash 1929". I've been going through the book rather quickly, but one passage slowed me right down. It concerns the "no business" meetings that were held in the wake of what happened in 1929. It took me way back and made me think about how many "no business" meetings I attended during my thirty or so years of working in government. Here's what Galbraith says about such meetings. ... Men meet together for many reasons in the course of business. They need to instruct or persuade each other. They must agree on a course of action. They find thinking in public more productive or less painful than thinking in private. But there are at least as many reasons for meetings to transact no business. Meetings are held because men seek companionship or, at a minimum, wish to escape the tedium of solitary duties. They yearn for the prestige which accrues to the man who presides over meetings, and this leads them to convoke assemblages over which they can preside. Finally, there is the meeting which is called not because there is business to be done, but because it is necessary to create the impression that business is being done. Such meetings are more than a substitute for action. They are widely regarded as action. The fact that no business is transacted at a no-business meeting is normally not a serious cause of embarrassment to those attending. Numerous formulas have been devised to prevent discomfort. Thus scholars, who are great devotees of the no-business meeting, rely heavily on the exchange-of ideas justification. To them the exchange of ideas is an absolute good. Any meeting at which ideas are exchanged is, therefore, useful. This justification is nearly ironclad. It is very hard to have a meeting of which it can be said that no ideas were exchanged. Salesmen and sales executives, who also are important practitioners of the no-business gathering, commonly have a different justification and one that has strong spiritual overtones. Out of the warmth of comradeship, the interplay of personality, the stimulation of alcohol, and the inspiration of oratory comes an impulsive rededication to the daily task. The meeting pays for itself in a fuller and better life and the sale of more goods in future weeks and months. The no-business meetings of the great business executives depend for their illusion of importance on something quite different. Not the exchange of ideas or the spiritual rewards of comradeship, but a solemn sense of assembled power gives significance to this assemblage. Even though nothing of importance is said or done, men of importance cannot meet without the occasion seeming important. Even the commonplace observation of the head of a large corporation is still the statement of the head of a large corporation. What it lacks in content it gains in power from the assets back of it. Ed
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