I don’t believe that group pathologies are fixable without a sense of cultural 
balance in a society.   Our scientists are at war with our religions rather 
than teaching them about science and developing better thinkers.   Our 
religions are aligned with politics in order to press their agendas that they 
consider basic to their morality although they disagree amongst themselves.    
Our government funds science, religion and culture through tax deductions but 
still acts as an instigator rather than a negotiator and demands nothing in 
return.   Our Arts have been reduced to mental cheese whiz and grow nothing.   
Our Medicine is more expensive than anyplace else, has a life expectancy and 
infant death rate that is worthy of a third world country.  Our education has 
been hijacked for those who can pay who are usually from Asia or Europe.    And 
the sole purpose of commerce is the immoral pursuit of profit even if 
everything else fails.     

 

Fundamentalists call this the seven mountains of society.    I call it the 
seven cultural systems.   Either way, learning how to balance such things 
begins in the systems of the body and the need for balance and respect for the 
purpose of each.    We live in an era of disrespect.    That’s what I was 
saying and am still.   Without balance from the leaders of each cultural 
system, 1. Commerce, 2. Science, 3. Religion, 4. Aesthetics and performance,  
5. Education, 6. Public Health and 7. Government and Law through balance  and 
cooperation in building a professional structure and a legacy we are lost.   
But it’s not just the U.S.    It’s the World Bank destroying nations for a buck 
and leaving the pieces for the Communist Chinese and others to simply harvest.  
 This is not a new story.   There are myriads of jokes about European business 
people all the way back to the Crusades when Suleiman claimed Islam didn’t need 
logistic support because the Europeans would sell them the weapons with which 
to make war against them.    The jokes still flow from the Middle East but we 
don’t seem to get it.  

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of D and N
Sent: Monday, August 15, 2011 3:40 PM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Reminescent of what we used to say on Futurework list.

 

Pete's reply may have triggered such a memory for you, Ray, and clearly no one 
would disagree that hard earned wealth such as realized by your ancestors 
should be no one's to steal, but I don't read his words as anything other than 
a financial analysis of today's situation, in which I would add that the ruling 
class accumulations are so unrealistically, unethically and almost illegally 
acquired that they skewer general representation. Then as a very practical 
observation of why such a system actually fails, i.e. if capitalism is based on 
endless consumerism, the the absence of consumers will bring it down.

I agree that these three reasons given by Bill Gross were only a small part of 
the problem, but I don't expect much from the Washington Post articles. Where 
he states:

But while our debt crisis is real and promises to grow to Frankenstein 
proportions in future years, debt is not the disease — it is a symptom. Lack of 
aggregate demand or, to put it simply, insufficient consumption and investment 
is the disease. 

To say insufficient consumption is a disease is both inaccurate, since it 
should be called a symptom, and beyond infantile, The system is the disease, 
though one might argue that it too is a symptom of some rather diseased public 
thought. A system that, particularly in the US, expends 40% of its treasury on 
wars staged by corporados, trillions more of tax payer's money on corporate 
bailouts and banksters' criminal dealings, yet nothing to bring Wall Street to 
justice, and certainly almost nothing on infrastructure, education or the arts. 
A Federal Reserve that throws $13 trillion more in secret at the elite group of 
banks/corporations who compromised the public purse, the savings and future of 
US citizens, rather than to alleviate any stressors directly affecting those 
who made that pile of cash possible. 

This becomes far too complicated and lengthy to discuss because the real sums 
should include all that was stolen from the treasury, the peoples earnings used 
for fighting unnecessary wars, for subsequently stolen war zone restoration 
funds, for bail-outs, for oil and gas and other industrial subsidies, etc. If 
the real treasury, without misspent funds were ever to be calculated, the 
ultra-rich wouldn't be part of the equation. In fact, far fewer would exist had 
they not been allowed, thanks to deregulation, to steal and spend what was 
never theirs to misuse.

Natalia



On 8/14/2011 5:25 PM, Ray Harrell wrote: 

That reminds me of a lot of the assumptions of the holocaust immigrants to 
America who struggled to become rich in order not to have to belong to anyplace 
that might eventually put them in a camp and kill them.  I heard that on 
several occasions from people who escaped Nazi Germany when I first came to 
NYCity and they were still alive.   
 
It was also an early belief and assumption of Native Peoples before the regular 
population took over their money and made non-Indians legal guardians for the 
1920 equivalent of Kuwait in Pawhuska, Oklahoma and the Osage Nation.    They 
did away with the Osage Nation through the Dawes Act and then appointed 
guardians to "protect the wealth" from "drunk Indians" and then they killed 
over 300 of the richest people on the planet which set it up for the current 
oil families to take it for themselves.   (See the "Death of Sybil Burton" by 
former editor to the Washington Post Dennis McAuliffe or "And Still the Water's 
Run" by Angie Debo.)   My father lived through that.   Debo was censored by the 
state of Oklahoma and it took Princeton University to get her Oklahoma 
University history dissertation released and to become a best seller.   Now's 
she's a hero since she died and can't bother them anymore. 
 
Guilt?   Fear of Karmic retribution?   It could explain a lot of the theft and 
murder metaphors we hear coming from the Right Wing when talking about the 
wealthy paying taxes.   However, I'm not sure how far what you are suggesting 
is, from what the next step would be, which is the solution of Stalin with the 
Kulaks.    First, separate them and make them other and then you can feel 
nothing when you kill them and their families as enemies.
 
That's not my sense of you Pete but it is the place my experience takes me with 
what you proposed.
 
REH 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of pete
Sent: Sunday, August 14, 2011 8:01 PM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Reminescent of what we used to say on Futurework list.
 
 
I mean to discount them in their analysis, to treat the country as if they and 
their money weren't a part of it. After all, that is what they themselves are 
striving for - to live beyond the reach of the mundane world of the less 
wealthy. And as they have such control of the political machine that they can 
essentially make that happen, it would be best to treat it as fact. They don't 
pay significant taxes, don't contribute to the economic life of the country, 
all their dealings are international.
 
If an economic analyst includes all that money in his calculations, he gets 
things like per capita incomes far in excess of reality, due to the skewing 
from huge anomalous numbers at the top end. This makes the country look less 
disfunctional than it really is.
 
It might be even more informative to take, say, the top 500 wealthiest, and 
treat them as their own separate country, and compute what actual direct trade 
this country has with the US. That might be quite revealing.
 
  -Pete
 
On Sun, 14 Aug 2011, Ray Harrell wrote:
 

How would you delete the ultra-rich?
 
REH
 
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of pete
Sent: Sunday, August 14, 2011 1:48 AM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Reminescent of what we used to say on Futurework list.
 
 
Why does Germany continue to do well? It's current problems are just about 
being the Euro purse responsible for propping up limping EU members, but on its 
own, it is thriving. Why is Canada doing well?
Yes, smart legislation allowed us to dodge the sub-prime banking scams, and yes 
we've got resources that people will buy, but that's hardly the whole story. 
The thing we have in common with the northern europeans that has kept us in 
better shape, is our smaller degree of income inequality across the society. 
This means there is more available money to spend, and a middle class able to 
spend it.
 
There's a lot of money in the US, but as long as it is sequestered by the ultra 
rich, there will be no resurgence of consumerism.
You can't have a consumer society when you've obliterated the consuming class.
 
Gross's three points are not insignificant, but they are not the key point. Not 
by far, and the absense of that recognition renders his article absurd. While 
commentators like him ignore this fact, they are doomed to talk nonsense.
 
They would be far better off if they were to conduct their analyses by first 
deleting the ultra rich, and all their money, from the problem, and looking at 
the remainder as the nation in question.
They would then have a far more realistic basis from which to work. Money which 
is more likely to travel the world without ever leaving any footprint of any 
kind at home is best left out of calculations.
 
 -Pete
 
 
 
On Sat, 13 Aug 2011, Ray Harrell wrote:
 

Pete, what are you conflicting with?  Are you saying that robotics 
and technology has nothing to do with it?  How about the recording 
industry in the Arts where one orchestra can do the work of hundreds?
How about a mine where automation can do the work of 3,000 miners and 
replace them with less than a hundred mechanics for the machines.
What about dark factories with a few mechanics and no workers and 
that work 24 hours a day?
 
I don’t' know what your rant was about?  It's unclear to me what that 
has to do with being American?  On the other hand the hyper 
individualism that makes everyone responsible when there is no 
capital IS one of the problems.  The question is whether the system 
is using the three elements of the article or whether they are foundational.
 
This seems to be a problem that runs throughout systems design.  We 
destroy the Arts because they have no utility but they are human 
infrastructure in the development of human psycho-physical 
instruments and not mere evolutionary cheesecake.  We move everything 
off shore because a free market is the best system but the free 
market destroys your consumers.  We hear politicians comparing 
national governments to households and then destroying them across 
the world through the world bank.
 
Is this not an engineering flaw?  Is this not the confusion of large 
scale systems with small scale systems that have parallels but are in 
truth vastly different in complexity and the necessary knowledge to 
make them work?  Is not the same "virus" true of the cultural systems 
that make all cultures work?  Are you saying that we do not, in the 
West, set them off against each other rather than balancing them 
sensibly?
 
China has a culture system's virus as a result of their inability to 
deal with religion that is currently at one tenth of their national 
population.  Even the Communists are having trouble dealing with 
large scale systems with 19th century systems ideas.
 
I'm not an engineer but I work with large scale art forms and the 
rules are different based in scale.  Orchestrating a string quartet 
like a symphony just shows that you don't know anything about the 
rules of symphonic orchestral form.  There are parallels but a 
trombone is not a violin even though the tuning requires the same 
intonation for both with a wildly different tessitura.
 
Making wildly different groups, genders, cultures, professions, etc.
the "same" has been a Western cultural terminal provinciality for as 
long as there has been a "Western" world.  That reality is the root 
of the word chauvinism from the French embodied by a particular 
individual.
 
Have a good day.
 
REH
 
-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of pete
Sent: Saturday, August 13, 2011 12:59 AM
To: RE-DESIGNING WORK, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, EDUCATION
Subject: Re: [Futurework] Reminescent of what we used to say on Futurework list.
 
 
 
On Thu, 11 Aug 2011, Ray Harrell wrote:
 

Opinions  Washington Post
 
 
America’s debt is not its biggest problem
 
 
By Bill Gross, Published: August 10
 

 
[...]
 

 
But while our debt crisis is real and promises to grow to 
Frankenstein proportions in future years, debt is not the disease — 
it is a symptom. Lack of aggregate demand or, to put it simply, 
insufficient consumption and investment is the disease. Debt has 
been simply an abused sovereign and private market antidote to sustain it.
We and our global market competitors are and have been experiencing 
a lack of aggregate demand for several decades. It is now only 
visibly coming to a head, as the magic elixir of leverage is drained 
and exhausted. This potentially fatal disease of capitalism is a 
result of several long-term secular phenomena:
 
(1) Aging demographics, where boomers everywhere spend less, in 
contrast to their youth, as they approach retirement; babies, houses 
and second cars shift to the scrapbook of memories as opposed to 
future spending power.
 
(2) Globalization, where 2 billion new competitive workers from Asia 
and elsewhere take jobs and paychecks from complacent and 
ill-trained 40-somethings in developed markets.
 
(3) Technological innovation, where machines and robots displace 
human labor, resulting in corporate profits but declining wages.
 
The debt crisis as it crests ultimately gives way to these 
growth-inhibiting, spending-contractionary secular forces.

 
What idiocy. A lack of consumption is a direct result of an absense of funds to 
finance consumption. If you want the people to consume, you don't chisel away 
their wages for forty years while concentrating all wealth at the tiny tip of 
the top of the wealth distribution, which is no longer a pyramid, but more like 
a trumpet bell. Globalization may have some effect in retarding wage growth, 
but no where near enough to be responsible for the current situation, and 
really there is nothing but willful venality preventing a far saner wealth 
distribution which would inspire an exuberant economy. Strangle your society, 
and you reap what you deserve.
 
Well, as Churchill said, the americans can always be relied upon...
 
 -Pete
 
 
 
 
_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework
 
 

 
 
_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework
 
 

 
 
_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework
_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to