Money is a hoax
“The Western worldview says, in essence, that
technological progress is the highest value and that we were born to consume,
to endlessly use and discard natural recourses, other species, gadgets, toys,
and often, each other. The most highly prized freedom is the right to shop. It’s
a world of commodities, not entities, and economic expansion is the primary
measure of progress. Competition, taking, and hoarding are higher values than
cooperation, sharing, and gifting. Profits are valued over people, money over
meaning, entitlement over justice, “us”
over “them.” This is the most
dangerous addiction in the world, not only because of its impact on humanity
but because it is rapidly undermining the natural systems that sustain the
biosphere.” –Bill Plotkin
It is not the more evolved
aspect of ourselves that tricks us into thinking that we need money to survive;
it’s the less evolved aspect of ourselves that does the
tricking. With our advanced technologies we imagine that we know the way the world
works, when, for the most part, we have forgotten how everything is connected.
Until we can relearn “a
language older than words,” and once again
engage in a healthy dialogue with nature and the cosmos, we will continue to be
tricked by the less evolved aspects of ourselves. The more awareness we bring
to this extremely complicated cognitive dissonance, the more possible it will
be to achieve an ecologically, economically, and socially sustainable world.
As it stands, however, the
Federal Reserve is a house of cards guarded by a red herring. Money is the
opiate of the masses, and the masses are too busy spending it on worthless crap
to get to know each other as healthy individuals, let alone as a healthy
community. We have become Pavlov Dogs, and money is our dinner bell. But money
was never meant to be horded, or even amassed, it was meant to circulate as a
way of uplifting the community. And yet here we are, hoarding and amassing,
while our communities are in unhealthy disarray. It’s
high time we abandoned the force-fed shibboleth that having more money makes us
better people. It doesn’t. Being healthy, compassionate and moral is what
makes us better people.
2) Debt is fiction
“There are two ways to conquer and enslave a nation.
One is by the sword. The other is by debt.” –John
Adams
Unfortunately our nation has
been enslaved by debt. Our current system is not an economic system at all, but
an ecocidal system; an intrinsic obsolescence of conspicuous consumption. It’s
a grave misfortune that efficiency, sustainability, and preservation are the
enemies of our socioeconomic system. This has got to be the most bizarre
delusion in the history of human thought, a retarded Ponzi scheme en masse.
But it’s
difficult to get people to understand something when money, and especially
debt, prevents them from understanding it. Instead of ownership, give us
strategic access. Instead of equity, give us equality. Instead of
one-track-minded profit, give us open-minded people. Instead of unsustainable
monetary-based economics, give us a sustainable resource-based economy, which
is basically the scientific method applied to ecological and social concerns.
As tough as it is to hear,
nature is a dictatorship. We can either listen to it and fall into harmony or
deny it and suffer. Ask yourself this question by Fleet & Lasn: “When
the economic system fails, will we know how to behave, how to act, how to
appreciate, how to value, how to survive, how to be and how to love in a world
that no longer defines relations by money?”
3) Media is manipulation
“Any dictator would admire the uniformity and obedience
of the U.S. media.” –Noam Chomsky
Media has always been an
effective method for manipulating people. We are social creatures who are also
psychological creatures. This combination makes us unwittingly vulnerable to
the power of suggestion. As it stands, media has been our Achilles Heel. These
days the “news” we receive from
corporate media is more likely to be disinformation. Skepticism is a must when
reading or viewing the information provided by these outlets.
Defenestrate your TV set!
The key: Don’t
believe anything you hear and only half of what you see. Analyze the Kool Aide
before you swallow it. Even then, be prepared to vomit it back up at the first
sign of deception. Remain circumspect and question all authority. They don’t
have our best interest at heart. They only want our money, and to remain
powerful.
Like Wendell Berry wrote in
the Unsettling of America, “People whose
governing habit is the relinquishment of power, competence, and responsibility,
make excellent spenders. They are the ideal consumers. By inducing in them
little panics of boredom, powerlessness, sexual failure, mortality, paranoia,
they can be made to buy virtually anything that is “attractively
packaged.””
We are slowly becoming more
aware of corporate media lying to us. But they know we know they’re
lying to us. And we know they know we know they’re
lying to us. With enough inertia, this debacle of a process just continues
until we are eventually lying to ourselves. And here we are. Like the great
Baruch Spinoza once surmised, “The supreme mystery
of despotism, its prop and stay, is to keep men in a state of deception, and
cloak the fear by which they must be held in check, so that they will fight for
their servitude as if for salvation.” And here we are,
unless we decide to wake up.
For it is seeking you
4) Government is a
corporation
“The end of democracy and the defeat of the American
Revolution will occur when government falls into the hands of lending
institutions and moneyed incorporations.” –Thomas
Jefferson
Here’s
the thing: we do not live in a democracy, and we probably never really have. A
prestigious Princeton study recently concluded that we live in an oligarchy:
rule by a few individuals. And these individuals just so happen to be
plutocrats, making this particular flavor of oligarchy a plutocracy: rule by
the rich.
The problem is that money
itself has become an immoral agent within an otherwise amoral system that
praises itself as moral. Ask yourself: do you wish to live out harried lives of
nine-to-five slavery, giving up your days to heartless corporations that don’t
give a damn about anything except making money, or do you wish to live a happy
life of loving compassion, doing what you enjoy, in spite of plutocracy,
oligarchy, and tyranny?
The Occupy Movement succeeded
in shifting the tenor and shape of debate in the world, but we must not rest on
our laurels. Trickle-down economics DOES NOT WORK! Austerity economics DOES NOT
WORK! Corporations are NOT people. Money does NOT equal speech. It’s
a trap. If we don’t get big money out of politics then everything we
want to do will be hopeless. We need to be smarter with our mobilization
tactics for the change and allocation of power within our society. So far the
security and surveillance state has boxed us in, like the great MLK Jr. said, “Those
who love peace must learn to organize as effectively as those who love war.”
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