Attached is an interesting observation on US (and other) urgings to buy,
buy, buy as a patriotic duty.  Buy to create jobs so people can buy?
Sally Lerner
http://ens-news.com/ens/oct2001/2001L-10-05g.html
Healing Our World: Weekly Comment

By Jackie Alan Giuliano, Ph.D.

Spend, Spend, Spend - Patriotism or Disconnection?

"If all of us acted in unison as I act individually
there would be no wars and no poverty.
I have made myself personally responsible
for the fate of every human being
who has come my way."
- -- Anais Nin

In the wake of the September 11 tragedies, people all over the world began
doing what our political and business leaders have deemed unpatriotic - they
stayed closer to home, spent more time with their families, and bought only
what they needed. A glorious opportunity was missed by those that govern us
to begin fostering a nation and a world whose values could not be disputed.

The last few weeks have provided undeniable proof that the indicator chosen
to measure a nation's health - the economy - is a flawed, outdated,
environmentally and socially destructive concept that is totally
unrepresentative of the true values of a culture.

The world's leaders all missed a pivotal moment in modern human history.
They missed the chance to tell the world, "Our endless quest for wealth so
that some can be rich while others are bitterly poor is over. We will now
make our business the health and welfare of the people of the world."

But of course they would miss it. They are the leaders appointed by the
world of business, not the world of humanity. Their job is to employ the
masses to produce consumer goods so that the masses will buy them. And we
have bought this line of garbage, as the fishers would say, hook, line, and
sinker.

Amidst the blather of the endless radio and television talk shows over the
last few weeks, people have been expressing their confusion and desire to do
something to help. Rather than ask for an outpouring of compassion, the
government has asked for increased consumption. Many are realizing that our
leaders are not there to protect the health and welfare of their people.
Rather, they are the ultimate publicists and cheerleaders for businesses,
many of which they own.
Just when we started to get access to that inner strength that comes from
staying home, facing and holding loved ones, and examining one's life to
find out what is really important, our leaders came on the TV and
essentially told us to return to being consumers, to take hard earned money
out of our pockets and give it to that mysterious entity called The Economy.

What is The Economy, really? We are told that it is a collection of business
and property owners who act on demand from the population and extract
resources from the Earth as needed to create the goods that we demand. But
how many of you have ever really demanded a product from a manufacturer? We
are told that in order to be happy and content, we must purchase these
items.

And now we are being told it is unpatriotic NOT to buy. How convenient this
is for the business owners.

The news media is wildly playing into this strategy. Every channel is
broadcasting endless analyses of the events, creating more and more
unmanageable fear. We have already been taught since we were children that
to feel better, you buy something, so the current orders from our President
to consume fit right in to that psychosis.

In the aftermath of the terrorist attacks on September 11, we were beginning
to feel less like isolated individuals and more like beings who were part of
something larger and more important than our daily lives. We began to feel
less comforted by the shopping mall and more secure in the arms of our
families. We began to look out our windows and see a sky filled with clouds
rather than airplanes and their noise and pollution. We began to think about
the future and realize that we can decide what it looks like.

But by beginning the process of restoring our connection to ourselves and
the natural world, we threatened the very fabric of the part of American
culture owned by the one percent of the population who controls 90 percent
of the property and money.

Since these people are the very ones who run our cities and our nation, they
were able to regain control, to tell us to separate from our innate values,
and to return to being the frightened, isolated beings whom they have
carefully crafted.

Individual consumers are separate from everything. They need no one and
nothing except their credit cards and checkbooks.

Chellis Glendinning describes our modern day definition of our personal
boundaries in her book, "My Name is Chellis and I'm in Recovery from Western
Civilization." She calls it a "fence, a national boarder, a property line, a
suit of armor or a Giorgio Armani suit, a well-fed ego, a psychological
defense mechanism." Our concept of psychological boundaries mirrors our
political and economic systems. The Earth is viewed as a thing to be
acquired, divided, used, and defended just as our psychological boundary is
to enclose, protect, armor, and, ultimately, alienate.

But we can't be blamed for succumbing to this mindset. We are afraid. Fear
paralyzes so many of us and keeps us from achieving our dreams. How
differently we would all act if we didn't have fear of losing our jobs, not
paying the rent, our bosses, of standing out in the crowd, of someone else
stealing our work and getting credit, of not being powerful, of being harmed
by a terrorist, and on and on and on.
Fear keeps us from acting, from challenging assumptions, and from calling
things by their right name.

Where do so many of our life assumptions come from? Many come from our
families of origin, to be sure. Yet many are supplied by the culture from
the moment we are conceived. Glendinning says we have a deep mindset, a
mindset of imperialism and of domination. Virtually all of us have been
touched by the disassociated and disconnected values of our culture. How
else can we explain that in a single day, people of the United States:

throw out 200,000 tons of edible food
use 313 million gallons of fuel - enough to drain 26 tractor-trailer trucks
every minute
take 18 million tons of raw materials from the Earth
use 6.8 billion gallons of drinking water to flush toilets
throw 1 million bushels of litter out of car windows
add 10,000 minks to their closets and coat racks
spend $200 million on advertising
saw up 100 million board feet of wood
use 250,000 tons of steel
use 187,000 tons of paper
We have been practicing this disconnected way of life for a very long time.

Early in the 16th and 17th centuries, the last vestiges of thinking of the
cosmos as alive and of identifying the Earth with human beings in spirit and
body was considered naive, barbaric, and childish. The image of the universe
was far from alive any longer. It was, as Isaac Newton spoke of it, a giant
clock, a machine.

Kirkpatrick Sale says this time marked the demotion of god and goddess to
little more than clock-winders. Slowly and powerfully, the values we embrace
today were formed, and this paradigm transformed the attitudes of Western
society toward nature and the universe.

Sale, in his book "Dwellers in the Land," says that Europe's treatment of
the New World that was opened up about the same time was being formed by
these new values. He reminds us that, "Two continents, pristine jewels of
unimagined glories, were perceived as nothing but empty spaces for unwanted
populations, repositories of wanted ores, tracts of trees to fell and fields
to plow, virgin territories with no other purpose but to be worked. Those
who inhabited those spaces could be honorably and properly displaced, for
they were only hunters and foragers who did nothing to 'improve' the land
and thus had no standing in the eyes of European law."

Over the next century and a half, the New World was ravaged and plundered
with the aid of forced labor of over 100,000 slaves per year. Many mindsets
were formed during this period and a new relationship with nature became
firmly entrenched in our culture. Nature became the provider of resources,
the wild land to be tamed, and the prize to be owned.
It is imperative that we all believe that we were NOT wrong or unpatriotic
to return from the malls to our homes and reclaim our souls over the last
few weeks. That was the right thing to do. Don't succumb to the call to show
the world our might through our consumption. We must show the world our
might through our compassion and our willingness to look within and see what
is really important.

When you look inside, the imperative to shop is NOT what you see.

RESOURCES

Need help getting off the consumer treadmill? These folks can help:

1. Read about redefining the American Dream at:
http://www.islandpress.com/ecocompass/dream.html

2. Learn how to simplify your lives from the Simple Living Network at:
http://www.simpleliving.net/default.asp

3. Learn how to redefine your relationship with money from the New Roadmap
Foundation, the producers of the transformative book, "Your Money or Your
Life," at: http://www.newroadmap.org/default.asp

4. Take back your life with the help of Seeds of Simplicity at:
http://www.seedsofsimplicity.org/default.asp

5. Visit the Center for a New American Dream at: http://www.newdream.org/

6. See the effects of the media on our lives with the help of the National
Institute on Media and the Family at:
http://www.mediaandthefamily.org/index.shtml

7. Learn how to get rid of your TV from the TV Turnoff Network at:
http://www.tvfa.org/

8. Redefine your relationship with media with the help of The Media Reform
Information Center at: http://www.corporations.org/media/

9. See beyond the commercials with The Media Foundation, producers of
Adbusters magazine, at: http://www.adbusters.org/

10. Keep an eye on corporations with the help of Corporate Watch at:
http://www.corpwatch.org/

11. Find out who your Congressional representatives are and e-mail them.
Tell them that you want an end to the rhetoric that spending is patriotic.
If you know your Zip code, you can find them at:
http://www.visi.com/juan/congress/ziptoit.html

{Jackie Alan Giuliano, Ph.D. is a writer and teacher in Seattle. He can be
found flying an Earth Flag and saving what little money he has for his
child's future. Please send your thoughts, comments, and visions to him at
[EMAIL PROTECTED] and visit his website at:
http://www.healingourworld.com}

*** NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material
is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest
in receiving the included information for research and educational
purposes.***

Should We Consume for the Cause?

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